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diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes new file mode 100644 index 0000000..6833f05 --- /dev/null +++ b/.gitattributes @@ -0,0 +1,3 @@ +* text=auto +*.txt text +*.md text diff --git a/17323-0.txt b/17323-0.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..7add3cf --- /dev/null +++ b/17323-0.txt @@ -0,0 +1,9388 @@ +The Project Gutenberg EBook of History Of Egypt, Chaldaea, Syria, +Babylonia, and Assyria, Volume 3 (of 12), by G. Maspero + +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: History Of Egypt, Chaldaea, Syria, Babylonia, and Assyria, Volume 3 (of 12) + +Author: G. Maspero + +Editor: A.H. Sayce + +Translator: M.L. McClure + +Release Date: December 16, 2005 [EBook #17323] +Last Updated: September 7, 2016 + + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: UTF-8 + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HISTORY OF EGYPT, CHALDAEA *** + + + + +Produced by David Widger + + + + + +HISTORY OF EGYPT CHALDEA, SYRIA, BABYLONIA, AND ASSYRIA + + +By G. MASPERO, +Honorable Doctor of Civil Laws, and Fellow of Queen’s College, Oxford; +Member of the Institute and Professor at the College of France. + +Edited by A. H. SAYCE, +Professor of Assyriology, Oxford. + +Translated by M. L. McCLURE, +Member of the Committee of the Egypt Exploration Fund + + +CONTAINING OVER TWELVE HUNDRED COLORED PLATES AND ILLUSTRATIONS + + +Volume III. + + +LONDON + +THE GROLIER SOCIETY + +PUBLISHERS + + +[Illustration: 001.jpg El Hammam (The Bath)] + + +[Illustration: 002.jpg THE BANKS OF THE EUPHRATES AT IIILLAH] + + Drawn by Boudier, after J. Dieulafoy. The vignette, which is + by Faucher-Gudin, is reproduced from an intaglio in the + Cabinet des Medailles. + + + + +CHAPTER I--ANCIENT CHALDAEA + + +The Creation, the Deluge, the history of the gods--The country, its +cities its inhabitants, its early dynasties. + +[Illustration: 002a.jpg] + +“In the time when nothing which was called heaven existed above, and when +nothing below had as yet received the name of earth,* Apsu, the Ocean, +who first was their father, and Chaos-Tiamat, who gave birth to them +all, mingled their waters in one, reeds which were not united, rushes +which bore no fruit.” ** Life germinated slowly in this inert mass, in +which the elements of our world lay still in confusion: when at length +it did spring up, it was but feebly, and at rare intervals, through +the hatching of divine couples devoid of personality and almost without +form. “In the time when the gods were not created, not one as yet, when +they had neither been called by their names, nor had their destinies +been assigned to them by fate, gods manifested themselves. Lakhmu and +Lakhamu were the first to appear, and waxed great for ages; then Anshar +and Kishar were produced after them. Days were added to days, and years +were heaped upon years: Anu, Inlil, and Ea were born in their turn, for +Anshar and Kishar had given them birth.” As the generations emanated one +from the other, their vitality increased, and the personality of each +became more clearly defined; the last generation included none but +beings of an original character and clearly marked individuality. Anu, +the sunlit sky by day, the starlit firmament by night; Inlil-Bel, +the king of the earth; Ea, the sovereign of the waters and the +personification of wisdom.*** Each of them duplicated himself, Anu into +Anat, Bel into Belit, Ea into Damkina, and united himself to the spouse +whom he had deduced from himself. Other divinities sprang from these +fruitful pairs, and the impulse once given, the world was rapidly +peopled by their descendants. Sin, Shamash, and Kamman, who presided +respectively over the moon, the sun, and the air, were all three of +equal rank; next came the lords of the planets, Ninib, Merodach, Nergal, +the warrior-goddess Ishtar, and Nebo; then a whole army of lesser +deities, who ranged themselves around Anu as round a supreme master. +Tiamat, finding her domain becoming more and more restricted owing +to the activity of the others, desired to raise battalion against +battalion, and set herself to create unceasingly; but her offspring, +made in her own image, appeared like those incongruous phantoms which +men see in dreams, and which are made up of members borrowed from a +score of different animals. They appeared in the form of bulls with +human heads, of horses with the snouts of dogs, of dogs with quadruple +bodies springing from a single fish-like tail. Some of them had the beak +of an eagle or a hawk; others, four wings and two faces; others, the +legs and horns of a goat; others, again, the hind quarters of a horse +and the whole body of a man. Tiamat furnished them with terrible +weapons, placed them under the command of her husband Kingu, and set out +to war against the gods. + + * In Chaldaea, as in Egypt, nothing was supposed to have a + real existence until it had received its name: the sentence + quoted in the text means practically, that at that time + there was neither heaven nor earth. + + ** Apsu has been transliterated kiracruv [in Greek], by the + author an extract from whose works has been preserved by + Damascius. He gives a different version of the tradition, + according to which the amorphous goddess Mummu-Tiamat + consisted of two persons. The first, Tauthe, was the wife of + Apason; the second, Moymis, was the son of Apason and of + Tauthe. The last part of the sentence is very obscure in the + Assyrian text, and has been translated in a variety of + different ways. It seems to contain a comparison between + Apsu and Mummu-Tiamat on the one hand, and the reeds and + clumps of rushes so common in Chaldaea on the other; the two + divinities remain inert and unfruitful, like water-plants + which have not yet manifested their exuberant growth. + + *** The first fragments of the Chaldaean account of the + Creation were discovered by G. Smith, who described them in + the _Daily Telegraph_ (of March 4, 1875), and published them + in the _Transactions of the Society of Biblical Archaeology_, + and translated in his Chaldaean account of Genesis all the + fragments with which he was acquainted; other fragments have + since been collected, but unfortunately not enough to enable + us to entirely reconstitute the legend. It covered at least + six tablets, possibly more. Portions of it have been + translated after Smith, by Talbot, by Oppert, by Lenormant, + by Schrader, by Sayce, by Jensen, by Winckler, by Zimmern, + and lastly by Delitzsch. Since G. Smith wrote _The Chaldaean + Account_, a fragment of a different version has been + considered to be a part of the dogma of the Creation, as it + was put forth at Kutha. + +[Illustration: 006.jpg ONE OF THE EAGLE-HEADED GENII.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin from an Assyrian bas-relief from + Khorsabad + +At first they knew not whom to send against her. Anshar despatched his +son Anu; but Anu was afraid, and made no attempt to oppose her. He sent +Ea; but Ea, like Anu, grew pale with fear, and did not venture to attack +her. Merodach, the son of Ea, was the only one who believed himself +strong enough to conquer her. The gods, summoned to a solemn banquet in +the palace of Anshar, unanimously chose him to be their champion, and +proclaimed him king. “Thou, thou art glorious among the great gods, thy +will is second to none, thy bidding is Anu; Marduk (Merodach), thou art +glorious among the great gods, thy will is second to none,* thy bidding +is Anu.** From this day, that which thou orderest may not be changed, +the power to raise or to abase shall be in thy hand, the word of thy +mouth shall endure, and thy commandment shall not meet with opposition. +None of the gods shall transgress thy law; but wheresoever a sanctuary +of the gods is decorated, the place where they shall give their oracles +shall be thy place.*** Marduk, it is thou who art our avenger! We bestow +on thee the attributes of a king; the whole of all that exists, thou +hast it, and everywhere thy word shall be exalted. Thy weapons shall not +be turned aside, they shall strike thy enemy. O master, who trusts in +thee, spare thou, his life; but the god who hath done evil, put out +his life like water. They clad their champion in a garment, and thus +addressed him: ‘Thy will, master, shall be that of the gods. Speak the +word, ‘Let it be so,’ it shall be so. Thus open thy mouth, this garment +shall disappear; say unto it, ‘Return,’ and the garment shall be there.” + He spoke with his lips, the garment disappeared; he said unto it, +“Return,” and the garment was restored. + + * The Assyrian runs, “thy destiny is second to none.” This + refers not to the _destiny_ of the god himself, but to the + fate which he allots to others. I have substituted, here and + elsewhere, for the word “destiny,” the special meaning of + which would not have been understood, the word “will,” + which, though it does not exactly reproduce the Assyrian + expression, avoids the necessity for paraphrases or formulas + calculated to puzzle the modern reader. + + ** Or, to put it less concisely, “When thou commandest, it + is Anu himself who commands,” and the same blind obedience + must be paid to thee as to Anu. + + *** The meaning is uncertain. The sentence seems to convey + that henceforth Merodach would be at home in all temples + that were constructed in honour of the other gods. + +Merodach having been once convinced by this evidence that he had the +power of doing everything and of undoing everything at his pleasure, the +gods handed to him the sceptre, the throne, the crown, the insignia of +supreme rule, and greeted him with their acclamations: “Be King!--Go! +Cut short the life of Tiamat, and let the wind carry her blood to the +hidden extremities of the universe.” * He equipped himself carefully for +the struggle. “He made a bow and placed his mark upon it;” ** he had a +spear brought to him and fitted a point to it; the god lifted the lance, +brandished it in his right hand, then hung the bow and quiver at +his side. He placed a thunderbolt before him, filled his body with a +devouring flame, then made a net in which to catch the anarchic Tiamat; +he placed the four winds in such a way that she could not escape, south +and north, east and west, and with his own hand he brought them the net, +the gift of his father Anu. “He created the hurricane, the evil wind, the +storm, the tempest, the four winds, the seven winds, the waterspout, the +wind that is second to none; then he let loose the winds he had created, +all seven of them, in order to bewilder the anarchic Tiamat by charging +behind her. And the master of the waterspout raised his mighty weapon, +he mounted his chariot, a work without its equal, formidable; he +installed himself therein, tied the four reins to the side, and darted +forth, pitiless, torrent-like, swift.” + + * Sayce was the first, I believe, to cite, in connection + with this mysterious order, the passage in which Berossus + tells how the gods created men from a little clay, moistened + with the blood of the god Belos. Here there seems to be a + fear lest the blood of Tiamat, mingling with the mud, should + produce a crop of monsters similar to those which the + goddess had already created; the blood, if carried to the + north, into the domain of the night, would there lose its + creative power, or the monsters who might spring from it + would at any rate remain strangers to the world of gods and + men. + + ** “Literally, he made his weapon known; “perhaps it would + be better to interpret it, “and he made it known that the + bow would henceforth be his distinctive weapon.” + +[Illustration: 008.jpg BEL-MERODACH, ARMED WITH THE THUNDERBOLT, DOES +BATTLE WITH THE TUMULTUOUS TIAMAT.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin from the bas-relief from Nimrud + preserved in the British Museum. + +He passed through the serried ranks of the monsters and penetrated as +far as Tiamat, and provoked her with his cries. “‘Thou hast rebelled +against the sovereignty of the gods, thou hast plotted evil against +them, and hast desired that my fathers should taste of thy malevolence; +therefore thy host shall be reduced to slavery, thy weapons shall be +torn from thee. Come, then, thou and I must give battle to one another!’ +Tiamat, when she heard him, flew into a fury, she became mad with rage; +then Tiamat howled, she raised herself savagely to her full height, and +planted her feet firmly on the earth. She pronounced an incantation, +recited her formula, and called to her aid the gods of the combat, +both them and their weapons. They drew near one to another, Tiamat and +Marduk, wisest of the gods: They flung themselves into the combat, they +met one another in the struggle. Then the master unfolded his net and +seized her; he caused the hurricane which waited behind him to pass +in front of him, and, when Tiamat opened her mouth to swallow him, he +thrust the hurricane into it so that the monster could not close her +jaws again. The mighty wind filled her paunch, her breast swelled, her +maw was split. Marduk gave a straight thrust with his lance, burst +open the paunch, pierced the interior, tore the breast, then bound the +monster and deprived her of life. When he had vanquished Tiamat, who had +been their leader, her army was disbanded, her host was scattered, and +the gods, her allies, who had marched beside her, trembled, were scared, +and fled.” He seized hold of them, and of Kingu their chief, and brought +them bound in chains before the throne of his father. + +He had saved the gods from ruin, but this was the least part of +his task; he had still to sweep out of space the huge carcase which +encumbered it, and to separate its ill-assorted elements, and arrange +them afresh for the benefit of the conquerors. He returned to Tiamat +whom he had bound in chains. He placed his foot upon her, with his +unerring knife he cut into the upper part of her; then he cut the +blood-vessels, and caused the blood to be carried by the north wind to +the hidden places. And the gods saw his face, they rejoiced, they gave +themselves up to gladness, and sent him a present, a tribute of peace; +then he recovered his calm, he contemplated the corpse, raised it and +wrought marvels. + +[Illustration: 010.jpg A KUFA LADEN WITH STONES, AND MANNED BY A CREW OF +FOUR MEN.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a bas-relief at Koyunjik. + Behind the _kufa_ may be seen a fisherman seated astride on + an inflated skin with his fish-basket attached to his neck. + +He split it in two as one does a fish for drying; then he hung up one of +the halves on high, which became the heavens; the other half he spread +out under his feet to form the earth, and made the universe such as +men have since known it. As in Egypt, the world was a kind of enclosed +chamber balanced on the bosom of the eternal waters.* The earth, which +forms the lower part of it, or floor, is something like an overturned +boat in appearance, and hollow underneath, not like one of the narrow +skiffs in use among other races, but a kufa, or kind of semicircular +boat such as the tribes of the Lower Euphrates have made use of from +earliest antiquity down to our own times. + + * The description of the Egyptian world will be found in + vol. i. p. 21 of the present work. So far the only + systematic attempt to reconstruct the Chaldaean world, since + Lenormant, has been made by Jensen, who, after examining all + the elements which went to compose it, one after another, + sums up in a few pages, and reproduces in a plate, the + principal results of his inquiry. It will be seen at a + glance how much I have taken from his work, and in what + respects the drawing here reproduced differs from his. + +[Illustration: 012.jpg THE WORLD AS CONCEIVED BY THE CHALDAEANS] + +The earth rises gradually from the extremities to the centre, like a +great mountain, of which the snow-region, where the Euphrates finds its +source, approximately marks the summit. It was at first supposed to be +divided into seven zones, placed one on the top of the other along its +sides, like the stories of a temple; later on it was divided into four +“houses,” each of which, like the “houses” of Egypt, corresponded with +one of the four cardinal points, and was under the rule of particular +gods. Near the foot of the mountain, the edges of the so-called boat +curve abruptly outwards, and surround the earth with a continuous wall +of uniform height having no opening. The waters accumulated in the +hollow thus formed, as in a ditch; it was a narrow and mysterious sea, +an ocean stream, which no living man might cross save with permission +from on high, and whose waves rigorously separated the domain of men +from the regions reserved to the gods. The heavens rose above the +“mountain of the world” like a boldly formed dome, the circumference +of which rested on the top of the wall in the same way as the upper +structures of a house rest on its foundations. Merodach wrought it out +of a hard resisting metal which shone brilliantly during the day in +the rays of the sun, and at night appeared only as a dark blue surface, +strewn irregularly with luminous stars. He left it quite solid in the +southern regions, but tunnelled it in the north, by contriving within +it a huge cavern which communicated with external space by means of two +doors placed at the east and the west.* The sun came forth each morning +by the first of these doors; he mounted to the zenith, following the +internal base of the cupola from east to south; then he slowly descended +again to the western door, and re-entered the tunnel in the firmament, +where he spent the night,** Merodach regulated the course of the whole +universe on the movements of the sun. He instituted the year and divided +it into twelve months. To each month he assigned three decans, each of +whom exercised his influence successively for a period of ten days; he +then placed the procession of the days under the authority of Nibiru, +in order that none of them should wander from his track and be lost. “He +lighted the moon that she might rule the night, and made her a star of +night that she might indicate the days:*** ‘From month to month, without +ceasing, shape thy disk,**** and at the beginning of the month kindle +thyself in the evening, lighting up thy horns so as to make the heavens +distinguishable; on the seventh day, show to me thy disk; and on the +fifteenth, let thy two halves be full from month to month.’” He cleared +a path for the planets, and four of them he entrusted to four gods; the +fifth, our Jupiter, he reserved for himself, and appointed him to be +shepherd of this celestial flock; in order that all the gods might have +their image visible in the sky, he mapped out on the vault of heaven +groups of stars which he allotted to them, and which seemed to men like +representations of real or fabulous beings, fishes with the heads of +rams, lions, bulls, goats and scorpions. + + * Jensen has made a collection of the texts which speak of + the interior of the heavens (Kirib shami) and of their + aspect. The expressions which have induced many + Assyriologists to conclude that the heavens were divided + into different parts subject to different gods may be + explained without necessarily having recourse to this + hypothesis; the “heaven of Ami,” for instance, is an + expression which merely affirms Anu’s sovereignty in the + heavens, and is only a more elegant way of designating the + heavens by the name of the god who rules them. The gates of + heaven are mentioned in the account of the Creation. + + ** It is generally admitted that the Chaldaeans believed that + the sun passed over the world in the daytime, and underneath + it during the night. The general resemblance of their theory + of the universe to the Egyptian theory leads me to believe + that they, no less than the Egyptians (cf. vol. i. pp. 24, + 25, of the present work), for along time believed that the + sun and moon revolved round the earth in a horizontal plane. + + *** This obscure phrase seems to be explained, if we + remember that the Chaldaean, like the Egyptian day, dated + from the rising of one moon to the rising of the following + moon; for instance, from six o’clock one evening to about + six o’clock the next evening. The moon, the star of night, + thus marks the appearance of each day and “indicates the + days.” + + **** The word here translated by “disk” is literally the + royal cap, decorated with horns, “Agu,” which Sin, the moon- + god, wears on his head. + +The heavens having been put in order,* he set about peopling the earth, +and the gods, who had so far passively and perhaps powerlessly watched +him at his work, at length made up their minds to assist him. They +covered the soil with verdure, and all collectively “made living beings +of many kinds. The cattle of the fields, the wild beasts of the fields, +the reptiles of the fields, they fashioned them and made of them +creatures of life.” ** According to one legend, these first animals +had hardly left the hands of their creators, when, not being able to +withstand the glare of the light, they fell dead one after the other. +Then Merodach, seeing that the earth was again becoming desolate, and +that its fertility was of no use to any one, begged his father Ea to cut +off his head and mix clay with the blood which welled from the trunk, +then from this clay to fashion new beasts and men, to whom the virtues +of this divine blood would give the necessary strength to enable them +to resist the air and light. At first they led a somewhat wretched +existence, and “lived without rule after the manner of beasts. But, +in the first year, appeared a monster endowed with human reason named +Oannes, who rose from out of the Erythraean sea, at the point where it +borders Babylonia. He had the whole body of a fish, but above his fish’s +head he had another head which was that of a man, and human feet emerged +from beneath his fish’s tail; he had a human voice, and his image is +preserved to this day. He passed the day in the midst of men without +taking any food; he taught them the use of letters, sciences and arts of +all kinds, the rules for the founding of cities, and the construction of +temples, the principles of law and of surveying; he showed them how to +sow and reap; he gave them all that contributes to the comforts of life. +Since that time nothing excellent has been invented. At sunset this +monster Oannes plunged back into the sea, and remained all night beneath +the waves, for he was amphibious. He wrote a book on the origin of +things and of civilization, which he gave to men.” These are a few of +the fables which were current among the races of the Lower Euphrates +with regard to the first beginnings of the universe. That they possessed +many other legends of which we now know nothing is certain, but either +they have perished for ever, or the works in which they were recorded +still await discovery, it may be under the ruins of a palace or in the +cupboards of some museum. + +* The arrangement of the heavens by Merodach is described at the end +of the fourth and beginning of the fifth tablets. The text, originally +somewhat obscure, is so mutilated in places that it is not always +possible to make out the sense with certainty. + +** The creation of the animals and then of man is related on the seventh +tablet, and on a tablet the place of which, in the series, is still +undetermined. I have been obliged to translate the text rather freely, +so as to make the meaning clear to the modern reader. + +[Illustration: 017.jpg A GOD-FISH] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from an Assyrian bas-relief from + Nimrud. + +They do not seem to have conceived the possibility of an absolute +creation, by means of which the gods, or one of them, should have +evolved out of nothing all that exists: the creation was for them merely +the setting in motion of pre-existing elements, and the creator only an +organizer of the various materials floating in chaos. Popular fancy +in different towns varied the names of the creators and the methods +employed by them; as centuries passed on, a pile of vague, confused, and +contradictory traditions were amassed, no one of which was held to be +quite satisfactory, though all found partisans to support them. Just as +in Egypt, the theologians of local priesthoods endeavoured to classify +them and bring them into a kind of harmony: many they rejected and +others they recast in order to better reconcile their statements: they +arranged them in systems, from which they undertook to unravel, under +inspiration from on high, the true history of the universe. That which I +have tried to set forth above is very ancient, if, as is said to be the +case, it was in existence two or even three thousand years before our +era; but the versions of it which we possess were drawn up much later, +perhaps not till about the VIIth century B.C.* It had been accepted by +the inhabitants of Babylon because it flattered their religious vanity +by attributing the credit of having evolved order out of chaos to +Merodach, the protector of their city.** He it was whom the Assyrian +scribes had raised to a position of honour at the court of the last +kings of Nineveh:*** it was Merodach’s name which Berossus inscribed at +the beginning of his book, when he set about relating to the Greeks +the origin of the world according to the Chaldeans, and the dawn of +Babylonian civilization. + + * The question as to whether the text was originally written + in Sumerian or in the Semitic tongue has frequently been + discussed; the form in which we have it at present is not + very old, and does not date much further back than the reign + of Assurbanipal, if it is not even contemporary with that + monarch. According to Sayce, the first version would date + back beyond the XXth century, to the reign of Khammurabi; + according to Jensen, beyond the XXXth century before our + era. + + ** Sayce thinks that the myth originated at Eridu, on the + shores of the Persian Gulf, and afterwards received its + present form at Babylon, where the local schools of theology + adapted it to the god Merodach. + + *** The tablets in which it is preserved for us come partly + from the library of Assurbanipal at Nineveh, partly from + that of the temple of Nebo at Borsippa; these latter are + more recent than the others, and seem to have been written + during the period of the Persian supremacy. + +Like the Egyptian civilization, it had had its birth between the sea and +the dry land on a low, marshy, alluvial soil, flooded annually by the +rivers which traverse it, devastated at long intervals by tidal waves of +extraordinary violence. The Euphrates and the Tigris cannot be regarded +as mysterious streams like the Nile, whose source so long defied +exploration that people were tempted to place it beyond the regions +inhabited by man. The former rise in Armenia, on the slopes of the +Niphates, one of the chains of mountains which lie between the Black Sea +and Mesopotamia, and the only range which at certain points reaches the +line of eternal snow. At first they flow parallel to one another, the +Euphrates from east to west as far as Malatiyeh, the Tigris from the +west towards the east in the direction of Assyria. Beyond Malatiyeh, the +Euphrates bends abruptly to the south-west, and makes its way across the +Taurus as though desirous of reaching the Mediterranean by the shortest +route, but it soon alters its intention, and makes for the south-east +in search of the Persian Gulf. The Tigris runs in an oblique direction +towards the south from the point where the mountains open out, and +gradually approaches the Euphrates. Near Bagdad the two rivers are only +a few leagues apart. However, they do not yet blend their waters; after +proceeding side by side for some twenty or thirty miles, they again +separate and only finally; unite at a point some eighty leagues lower +down. At the beginning of our geological period their course was not +such a long one. The sea then penetrated as far as lat. 33 deg., and was +only arrested by the last undulations of the great plateau of secondary +formation, which descend from the mountain group of Armenia: the two +rivers entered the sea at a distance of about twenty leagues apart, +falling into a gulf bounded on the east by the last spurs of the +mountains of Iran, on the west by the sandy heights which border the +margin of the Arabian Desert.* They filled up this gulf with their +alluvial deposit, aided by the Adhem, the Diyaleh, the Kerkha, the +Karun, and other rivers, which at the end of long independent courses +became tributaries of the Tigris. The present beds of the two rivers, +connected by numerous canals, at length meet near the village of Kornah +and form one single river, the Shatt-el-Arab, which carries their waters +to the sea. The mud with which they are charged is deposited when it +reaches their mouth, and accumulates rapidly; it is said that the coast +advances about a mile every seventy years.** In its upper reaches the +Euphrates collects a number of small affluents, the most important of +which, the Kara-Su, has often been confounded with it. Near the middle +of its course, the Sadjur on the right bank carries into it the waters +of the Taurus and the Amanus, on the left bank the Balikh and the Khabur +contribute those of the Karadja-Dagh; from the mouth of the Khabur to +the sea the Euphrates receives no further affluent. The Tigris is fed on +the left by the Bitlis-Khai, the two Zabs, the Adhem, and the Diyaleh. +The Euphrates is navigable from Sumeisat, the Tigris from Mossul, both +of them almost as soon as they leave the mountains. They are subject +to annual floods, which occur when the winter snow melts on the higher +ranges of Armenia. The Tigris, which rises from the southern slope of +the Niphates and has the more direct course, is the first to overflow +its banks, which it does at the beginning of March, and reaches its +greatest height about the 10th or 12th of May. The Euphrates rises in +the middle of March, and does not attain its highest level till the +close of May. From June onwards it falls with increasing rapidity; by +September all the water which has not been absorbed by the soil has +returned to the river-bed. The inundation does not possess the same +importance for the regions covered by it, that the rise of the Nile +does for Egypt. In fact, it does more harm than good, and the river-side +population have always worked hard to protect themselves from it and to +keep it away from their lands rather than facilitate its access to +them; they regard it as a sort of necessary evil to which they resign +themselves, while trying to minimize its effects.*** + + * This fact has been established by Ross and Lynch in two + articles in the _Journal of the Royal Geographical Society_, + vol. ix. pp. 446, 472. The Chaldaeans and Assyrians called + the gulf into which the two rivers debouched, Nar Marratum, + or “salt river,” a name which they extended to the Chaldaean + Sea, i.e. to the whole Persian Gulf. + + ** Loftus estimated, about the middle of the last century, + the progress of alluvial deposit at about one English mile + in every seventy years; H. Rawlinson considers that the + progress must have been more considerable in ancient times, + and estimates it at an English mile in thirty years. Kiepert + thinks, taking the above estimate as a basis, that in the + sixth century before our era the fore-shore came from about + ten to twelve German miles (47 to 56 English) higher up than + the present fore-shore. G. Rawlinson estimates on his part + that between the thirtieth and twentieth centuries B.C., a + period in which he places the establishment of the first + Chaldaean Empire, the fore-shore was more than 120 miles + above the mouth of Shatt-el-Arab, to the north of the + present village of Kornah. + + *** Fr. Lenormant has energetically defended this hypothesis + in the majority of his works: it is set forth at some length + in his work on _La Langue primitive de la Chaldee_. Hommel, + on the other hand, maintains and strives to demonstrate + scientifically the relationship of the non-Semitic tongue + with Turkish. + +The traveller Olivier noticed this, and writes as follows: “The land +there is rather less fertile [than in Egypt], because it does not +receive the alluvial deposits of the rivers with the same regularity as +that of the Delta. It is necessary to irrigate it in order to render it +productive, and to protect it sedulously from the inundations which are +too destructive in their action and too irregular.” + +The first races to colonize this country of rivers, or at any rate +the first of which we can find traces, seem to have belonged to three +different types. The most important were the Semites, who spoke a +dialect akin to Aramaic, Hebrew, and Phoenician. It was for a long +time supposed that they came down from the north, and traces of their +occupation have been pointed out in Armenia in the vicinity of Ararat, +or halfway down the course of the Tigris, at the foot of the Gordysean +mountains. It has recently been suggested that we ought rather to seek +for their place of origin in Southern Arabia, and this view is gaining +ground among the learned. Side by side with these Semites, the monuments +give evidence of a race of ill-defined character, which some have +sought, without much success, to connect with the tribes of the Urall or +Altai; these people are for the present provisionally called Sumerians.* +They came, it would appear, from some northern country; they brought +with them from their original home a curious system of writing, which, +modified, transformed, and adopted by ten different nations, has +preserved for us all that we know in regard to the majority of the +empires which rose and fell in Western Asia before the Persian conquest. +Semite or Sumerian, it is still doubtful which preceded the other at the +mouths of the Euphrates. The Sumerians, who were for a time all-powerful +in the centuries before the dawn of history, had already mingled closely +with the Semites when we first hear of them. Their language gave way to +the Semitic, and tended gradually to become a language of ceremony and +ritual, which was at last learnt less for everyday use, than for the +drawing up of certain royal inscriptions, or for the interpretation of +very ancient texts of a legal or sacred character. Their religion became +assimilated to the religion, and their gods identified with the gods, of +the Semites. The process of fusion commenced at such an early date, that +nothing has really come down to us from the time when the two races were +strangers to each other. We are, therefore, unable to say with certainty +how much each borrowed from the other, what each gave, or relinquished +of its individual instincts and customs. We must take and judge them as +they come before us, as forming one single nation, imbued with the +same ideas, influenced in all their acts by the same civilization, and +possessed of such strongly marked characteristics that only in the last +days of their existence do we find any appreciable change. In the course +of the ages they had to submit to the invasions and domination of some +dozen different races, of whom some--Assyrians and Chaldaeans--were +descended from a Semitic stock, while the others--Elamites, Cossaaans, +Persians, Macedonians, and Parthians--either were not connected with +them by any tie of blood, or traced their origin in some distant manner +to the Sumerian branch. They got quickly rid of a portion of these +superfluous elements, and absorbed or assimilated the rest; like +the Egyptians, they seem to have been one of those races which, once +established, were incapable of ever undergoing modification, and +remained unchanged from one end of their existence to the other. + +* The name _Accadian_ proposed by H. Rawlinson and by Hincks, and +adopted by Sayce, seems to have given way to _Sumerian_, the title put +forward by Oppert. The existence of the Sumerian or Sumero-Accadian +has been contested by Halevy in a number of noteworthy works. M. Halevy +wishes to recognize in the so-called Sumerian documents the Semitic +tongue of the ordinary inscriptions, but written in a priestly syllabic +character subject to certain rules; this would be practically a +_cryptogram_, or rather an _allogram_. M. Halevy won over Messrs. Guyard +and Pognon in France, Delitzsch and a part of the Delitzsch school +in Germany, to his view of the facts. The controversy, which has been +carried on on both sides with a somewhat unnecessary vehemence, still +rages; it has been simplified quite recently by Delitzcsh’s return to +the Sumerian theory. Without reviewing the arguments in detail, and +while doing full justice to the profound learning displayed by M. +Halevy, I feel forced to declare with Tiele that his criticisms “oblige +scholars to carefully reconsider all that has been taken as proved in +these matters, but that they do not warrant us in rejecting as untenable +the hypothesis, still a very probable one, according to which the +difference in the graphic systems corresponds to a real difference in. +idiom.” + +Their country must have presented at the beginning very much the same +aspect of disorder and neglect which it offers to modern eyes. It was +a flat interminable moorland stretching away to the horizon, there to +begin again seemingly more limitless than ever, with, no rise or fall in +the ground to break the dull monotony; clumps of palm trees and slender +mimosas, intersected by lines of water gleaming in the distance, then +long patches of wormwood and mallow, endless vistas of burnt-up plain, +more palms and more mimosas, make up the picture of the land, whose +uniform soil consists of rich, stiff, heavy clay, split up by the heat +of the sun into a network of deep narrow fissures, from which the +shrubs and wild herbs shoot forth each year in spring-time. By an almost +imperceptible slope it falls gently away from north to south towards +the Persian Gulf, from east to west towards the Arabian plateau. The +Euphrates flows through it with unstable and changing course, between +shifting banks which it shapes and re-shapes from season to season. + +[Illustration: 025.jpg GIGANTIC CHALDAEAN REEDS] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from an Assyrian bas-relief of the + palace of Nimrud. + +The slightest impulse of its current encroaches on them, breaks through +them, and makes openings for streamlets, the majority of which are +clogged up and obliterated by the washing away of their margins, almost +as rapidly as they are formed. Others grow wider and longer, and, +sending out branches, are transformed into permanent canals or regular +rivers, navigable at certain seasons. They meet on the left bank +detached offshoots of the Tigris, and after wandering capriciously in +the space between the two rivers, at last rejoin their parent stream: +such are the Shatt-el-Hai and the Shatt-en-Nil. The overflowing waters +on the right bank, owing to the fall of the land, run towards the +low limestone hills which shut in the basin of the Euphrates in the +direction of the desert; they are arrested at the foot of these hills, +and are diverted on to the low-lying ground, where they lose themselves +in the morasses, or hollow out a series of lakes along its borders, +the largest of which, Bahr-i-Nedjif, is shut in on three sides by steep +cliffs, and rises or falls periodically with the floods. A broad canal, +which takes its origin in the direction of Hit at the beginning of the +alluvial plain, bears with it the overflow, and, skirting the lowest +terraces of the Arabian chain, runs almost parallel to the Euphrates. In +proportion as the canal proceeds southward the ground sinks still lower, +and becomes saturated with the overflowing waters, until, the banks +gradually disappearing, the whole neighbourhood is converted into a +morass. The Euphrates and its branches do not at all times succeed in +reaching the sea: they are lost for the most part in vast lagoons to +which the tide comes up, and in its ebb bears their waters away with +it. Reeds grow there luxuriantly in enormous beds, and reach sometimes +a height of from thirteen to sixteen feet; banks of black and putrid mud +emerge amidst the green growth, and give off deadly emanations. Winter +is scarcely felt here: snow is unknown, hoar-frost is rarely seen, +but sometimes in the morning a thin film of ice covers the marshes, to +disappear under the first rays of the sun.* + + * Loftus attributes the lowering of the temperature during + the winter to the wind blowing over a soil impregnated with + saltpetre. “We were,” he says, “in a kind of immense + freezing chamber.” + +[Illustration: 027.jpg THE MARSHES ABOUT THE CONFLUENCE OF THE KERKHA +AND TIGRIS.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a sketch by J. Dieulafoy. +For six weeks in November and December there is much rain: after this +period there are only occasional showers, occurring at longer and longer +intervals until May, when they entirely cease, and the summer sets in, +to last until the following November. There are almost six continuous +months of depressing and moist heat, which overcomes both men and +animals and makes them incapable of any constant effort.* Sometimes +a south or east wind suddenly arises, and bearing with it across the +fields and canals whirlwinds of sand, burns up in its passage the little +verdure which the sun had spared. Swarms of locusts follow in its train, +and complete the work of devastation. A sound as of distant rain is at +first heard, increasing in intensity as the creatures approach. Soon +their thickly concentrated battalions fill the heavens on all sides, +flying with slow and uniform motion at a great height. They at length +alight, cover everything, devour everything, and, propagating their +species, die within a few days: nothing, not a blade of vegetation, +remains on the region where they alighted. + + * Loftus says that he himself had witnessed in the + neighbourhood of Bagdad during the daytime birds perched on + the palm trees in an exhausted condition, and panting with + open beaks. The inhabitants of Bagdad during the summer pass + their nights on the housetops, and the hours of day in + passages within, expressly constructed to protect them from + the heat. + +Notwithstanding these drawbacks, the country was not lacking in +resources. The soil was almost as fertile as the loam of Egypt, and, +like the latter, rewarded a hundredfold the labour of the inhabitants.* +Among the wild herbage which spreads over the country in the spring, +and clothes it for a brief season with flowers, it was found that some +plants, with a little culture, could be rendered useful to men and +beasts. There were ten or twelve different species of pulse to choose +from--beans, ‘lentils, chick-peas, vetches, kidney beans, onions, +cucumbers, egg-plants, “gombo,” and pumpkins. From the seed of the +sesame an oil was expressed which served for food, while the castor-oil +plant furnished that required for lighting. The safflower and henna +supplied the women with dyes for the stuffs which they manufactured from +hemp and flax. Aquatic plants were more numerous than on the banks +of the Nile, but they did not occupy such an important place among +food-stuffs. The “lily bread” of the Pharaohs would have seemed meagre +fare to people accustomed from early times to wheaten bread. Wheat and +barley are considered to be indigenous on the plains of the Euphrates; +it was supposed to be here that they were first cultivated in Western +Asia, and that they spread from hence to Syria, Egypt, and the whole +of Europe.** “The soil there is so favourable to the growth of cereals, +that it yields usually two hundredfold, and in places of exceptional +fertility three hundredfold. The leaves of the wheat and barley have a +width of four digits. As for the millet and sesame, which in altitude +are as great as trees, I will not state their height, although I know +it from experience, being convinced that those who have not lived in +Babylonia would regard my statement with incredulity.” Herodotus in his +enthusiasm exaggerated the matter, or perhaps, as a general rule, he +selected as examples the exceptional instances which had been mentioned +to him: at present wheat and barley give a yield to the husbandman of +some thirty or forty fold. + + * Olivier, who was a physician and naturalist, and had + visited Egypt as well as Mesopotamia, thought that Babylonia + was somewhat less fertile than Egypt. Loftus, who was + neither, and had not visited Egypt, declares, on the + contrary, that the banks of the Euphrates are no less + productive than those of the Nile. + + ** Native traditions collected by Berossus confirm this, and + the testimony of Olivier is usually cited as falling in with + that of the Chaldaean writer. Olivier is considered, indeed, + to have discovered wild cereals in Mesopotamia. Pie only + says, however, that on the banks of the Euphrates above Anah + he had met with “wheat, barley, and spelt in a kind of + ravine;” from the context it clearly follows that these were + plants which had reverted to a wild state--instances of + which have been observed several times in Mesopotamia. A. de + Oandolle admitted the Mesopotamian origin of the various + species of wheat and barley. + +[Illustration: 030.jpg THE GATHERING OF THE SPATHES OF THE MALE PALM +TREE] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a cylinder in the Museum at the + Hague. The original measures almost an inch in height. + +“The date palm meets all the other needs of the population; they make +from it a kind of bread, wine, vinegar, honey, cakes, and numerous kinds +of stuffs; the smiths use the stones of its fruit for charcoal; these +same stones, broken and macerated, are given as a fattening food to +cattle and sheep.” Such a useful tree was tended with a loving care, +the vicissitudes in its growth were observed, and its reproduction was +facilitated by the process of shaking the flowers of the male palm over +those of the female: the gods themselves had taught this artifice to +men, and they were frequently represented with a bunch of flowers in +their right hand, in the attitude assumed by a peasant in fertilizing +a palm tree. Fruit trees were everywhere mingled with ornamental +trees--the fig, apple, almond, walnut, apricot, pistachio, vine, with +the plane tree, cypress, tamarisk, and acacia; in the prosperous period +of the country the plain of the Euphrates was a great orchard which +extended uninterruptedly from the plateau of Mesopotamia to the shores +of the Persian Gulf. + +The flora would not have been so abundant if the fauna had been +sufficient for the supply of a large population. A considerable +proportion of the tribes on the Lower Euphrates lived for a long time +on fish only. They consumed them either fresh, salted, or smoked: they +dried them in the sun, crushed them in a mortar, strained the pulp +through linen, and worked it up into a kind of bread or into cakes. The +barbel and carp attained a great size in these sluggish waters, and if +the Chalaeans, like the Arabs who have succeeded them in these regions, +clearly preferred these fish above others, they did not despise at the +same time such less delicate species as the eel, murena, silurus, and +even that singular gurnard whose habits are an object of wonder to our +naturalists. This fish spends its existence usually in the water, but +a life in the open air has no terrors for it: it leaps out on the bank, +climbs trees without much difficulty, finds a congenial habitat on the +banks of mud exposed by the falling tide, and basks there in the sun, +prepared to vanish in the ooze in the twinkling of an eye if some +approaching bird should catch sight of it. Pelicans, herons, cranes, +storks, cormorants, hundreds of varieties of seagulls, ducks, swans, +wild geese, secure in the possession of an inexhaustible supply of food, +sport and prosper among the reeds. The ostrich, greater bustard, the +common and red-legged partridge and quail, find their habitat on the +borders of the desert; while the thrush, blackbird, ortolan, pigeon, +and turtle-dove abound on every side, in spite of daily onslaughts from +eagles, hawks, and other birds of prey. + +[Illustration: 032.jpg A WINGED GENIUS HOLDING IN HIS HAND THE SPATHE OF +THE MALE DATE-PALM.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a bas-relief from Nimrud, in + the British Museum. + +[Illustration: 033.jpg THE HEAVILY MANED LION WOUNDED BY AN ARROW AND +VOMITING BLOOD.] + +Snakes are found here and there, but they are for the most part of +innocuous species: three poisonous varieties only are known, and their +bite does not produce such terrible consequences as that of the horned +viper or Egyptian uraeus. There are two kinds of lion--one without mane, +and the other hooded, with a heavy mass of black and tangled hair: the +proper signification of the old Chaldaean name was “the great ‘dog,” and +they have, indeed, a greater resemblance to large dogs than to the +red lions of Africa.* They fly at the approach of man; they betake +themselves in the daytime to retreats among the marshes or in the +thickets which border the rivers, sallying forth at night, like +the jackal, to scour the country. Driven to bay, they turn upon the +assailant and fight desperately. The Chaldaean kings, like the Pharaohs, +did not shrink from entering into a close conflict with them, +and boasted of having rendered a service to their subjects by the +destruction of many of these beasts. + +* The Sumerian name of the lion is ur-malch “the great dog.” The best +description of the first-mentioned species is still that of Olivier, who +saw in the house oL the Pasha of Bagdad five of them in captivity; cf. +Layard, Nineveh and Babylon, p. 487. Father Scheil tells me the lions +have disappeared completely since the last twenty years. + +[Illustration: 034.jpg THE URUS IN ACT OF CHARGING] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from an Assyrian bas-relief from + Nimrud (Layard, Monuments of Nineveh, 1st series, pi. 11). + +[Illustration: 035.jpg a herd of onagers pursued by dogs and wounded by +arrows.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a bas-relief in the British + Museum. + +The elephant seems to have roamed for some time over the steppes of +the middle Euphrates;* there is no indication of its presence after the +XIIIth century before our era, and from that time forward it was merely +an object of curiosity brought at great expense from distant countries. +This is not the only instance of animals which have disappeared in +the course of centuries; the rulers of Nineveh were so addicted to the +pursuit of the urus that they ended by exterminating it. Several sorts +of panthers and smaller felidae had their lairs in the thickets of +Mesopotamia. The wild ass and onager roamed in small herds between the +Balikh and the Tigris. Attempts were made, it would seem, at a very +early period to tame them and make use of them to draw chariots; but +this attempt either did not succeed at all, or issued in such uncertain +results, that it was given up as soon as other less refractory animals +were made the subjects of successful experiment. + + * The existence of the elephant in Mesopotamia and Northern + Syria is well established by the Egyptian inscription of + Amenemhabi in the XVth century before our era. + +[Illustration: 036.jpg THE CHIEF DOMESTIC ANIMALS OP THE REGIONS OF THE +EUPHRATES.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from an Assyrian bas-relief from + Kouyunjik. + +The wild boar, and his relative, the domestic hog, inhabited the +morasses. Assyrian sculptors amused themselves sometimes by representing +long gaunt sows making their way through the cane-brakes, followed by +their interminable offspring. The hog remained here, as in Egypt, in +a semi-tamed condition, and the people were possessed of only a small +number of domesticated animals besides the dog--namely, the ass, ox, +goat, and sheep; the horse and camel were at first unknown, and were +introduced at a later period.* + +[Illustration: 037.jpg THE SOW AND HER LITTER MAKING THEIR WAY THROUGH A +BED OF REEDS.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a bas-relief from Kouyunjik. + + * The horse is denoted in the Assyrian texts by a group of + signs which mean “the ass of the East,” and the camel by + other signs in which the character for “ass” also appears. + The methods of rendering these two names show that the + subjects of them were unknown in the earliest times; the + epoch of their introduction is uncertain. A chariot drawn by + horses appears on the “Stele of the Vultures.” Camels are + mentioned among the booty obtained from the Bedouin of the + desert. + +We know nothing of the efforts which the first inhabitants--Sumerians +and Semites--had to make in order to control the waters and to bring the +land under culture: the most ancient monuments exhibit them as already +possessors of the soil, and in a forward state of civilization.* Their +chief cities were divided into two groups: one in the south, in the +neighbourhood of the sea; the other in a northern direction, in the +region where the Euphrates and Tigris are separated from each other by +merely a narrow strip of land. The southern group consisted of seven, of +which Eridu lay nearest to the coast. This town stood on the left bank +of the Euphrates, at a point which is now called Abu-Shahrein. A little +to the west, on the opposite bank, but at some distance from the stream, +the mound of Mugheir marks the site of Uru, the most important, if not +the oldest, of the southern cities. Lagash occupied the site of the +modern Telloh to the north of Eridu, not far from the Shatt-el-Hai; +Nisin and Mar, Larsam and Uruk, occupied positions at short distances +from each other on the marshy ground which extends between the Euphrates +and the Shatt-en-Nil. The inscriptions mention here and there other +less important places, of which the ruins have not yet been +discovered--Zirlab and Shurippak, places of embarkation at the mouth +of the Euphrates for the passage of the Persian Gulf; and the island of +Dilmun, situated some forty leagues to the south in the centre of the +Salt Sea,--“Nar-Marratum.” The northern group comprised Nipur, the +“incomparable;” Barsip, on the branch which flows parallel to the +Euphrates and falls into the Bahr-i-Nedjif; Babylon, the “gate of the +god,” the “residence of life,” the only metropolis of the Euphrates +region of which posterity never lost a reminiscence; Kishu, Kuta, +Agade;** and lastly the two Sipparas, that of Shamash and that of +Anunit. The earliest Chaldaean civilization was confined almost entirely +to the two banks of the Lower Euphrates: except at its northern +boundary, it did not reach the Tigris, and did not cross this river. +Separated from the rest of the world--on the east by the marshes which +border the river in its lower course, on the north by the badly watered +and sparsely inhabited table-land of Mesopotamia, on the west by the +Arabian desert--it was able to develop its civilization, as Egypt had +done, in an isolated area, and to follow out its destiny in peace. The +only point from which it might anticipate serious danger was on the +east, whence the Kashshi and the Elamites, organized into military +states, incessantly harassed it year after year by their attacks. The +Kashshi were scarcely better than half-civilized mountain hordes, but +the Elamites were advanced in civilization, and their capital, Susa, +vied with the richest cities of the Euphrates, Uru and Babylon, in +antiquity and magnificence. + + * For an ideal picture of what may have been the beginnings + of that civilization, see Delitzsch, Die Entstehung des + altesten Schriflssystems, p. 214, et seq. I will not enter + into the question as to whether it did or did not come by + sea to the mouths of the Euphrates and Tigris. The legend of + the fish-god Oannes (Berossus, frag. 1), which seems to + conceal some indication on the subject, is merely a + mythological tradition, from which it would be wrong to + deduce historical conclusions. + + ** Agade, or Agane, has been identified with one of the two + towns of which Sippara is made up, more especially with that + which was called Anunit Sippara; the reading Agadi, Agacle, + was especially assumed to lead to its identification with + the Accad of _Genesis x. 10_, and with the Akkad of native + tradition. This opinion has been generally abandoned by + Assyriologists, and Agane has not yet found a site. Was it + only a name for Babylon? + +[Illustration: 040.jpg MAP OF CHALDAEA] + +There was nothing serious to fear from the Guti, on the branch of the +Tigris to the north-east, or from the Shuti to the north of these; they +were merely marauding tribes, and, however troublesome they might be +to their neighbours in their devastating incursions, they could not +compromise the existence of the country, or bring it into subjection. +It would appear that the Chaldseans had already begun to encroach upon +these tribes and to establish colonies among them--El-Ashshur on the +banks of the Tigris, Harran on the furthest point of the Mesopotamian +plain, towards the sources of the Balikh. Beyond these were vague and +unknown regions--Tidanum, Martu, the sea of the setting sun, the vast +territories of Milukhkha and Magan.* Egypt, from the time they were +acquainted with its existence, was a semi-fabulous country at the ends +of the earth. + + * The question concerning Milukhkha and Magan has exercised + Assyriologists for twenty years. The prevailing opinion + appears to be that which identifies Magan with the Sinaitic + Peninsula, and Milukhkha with the country to the north of + Magan as far as the Wady Arish and the Mediterranean; others + maintain, not the theory of Delitzsch, according to whom + Magan and Milukhkha are synonyms for Shumir and Akkad, and + consequently two of the great divisions of Babylonia, but an + analogous hypothesis, in which they are regarded as + districts to the west of the Euphrates, either in Chaldaean + regions or on the margin of the desert, or even in the + desert itself towards the Sinaitic Peninsula. What we know + of the texts induces me, in common with H. Rawlinson, to + place these countries on the shores of the Persian Gulf, + between the mouth of the Euphrates and the Bahrein islands; + possibly the Makse and the Melangitso of classical + historians and geographers were the descendants of the + people of Magan (Makan) and Milukhkha (Melugga), who had + been driven towards the entrance to the Persian Gulf by some + such event as the increase in these regions of the Kashdi + (Chaldaeans). The names, emigrated to the western parts of + Arabia and to the Sinaitic Peninsula in after-times, as the + name of India passed to America in the XVIth century of our + era. + +How long did it take to bring this people out of savagery, and to +build up so many flourishing cities? The learned did not readily resign +themselves to a confession of ignorance on the subject. As they +had depicted the primordial chaos, the birth of the gods, and their +struggles over the creation, so they related unhesitatingly everything +which had happened since the creation of mankind, and they laid claim to +being able to calculate the number of centuries which lay between their +own day and the origin of things. The tradition to which most credence +was attached in the Greek period at Babylon, that which has been +preserved for us in the histories of Berossue, asserts that there was +a somewhat long interval between the manifestation of Oannes and +the foundation of a dynasty. The first king was Aloros of Babylon, a +Chaldaean of whom nothing is related except that he was chosen by the +divinity himself to be a shepherd of the people. He reigned for ten +sari, amounting in all to 36,000 years; for the saros is 3600 years, the +ner 600 years, and the soss 60 years. + +[Illustration: 041.jpg TWO FISH-LIKE DEITIES OF THE CHALDAEANS.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from an intaglio in the British Museum. + +After the death of Aloros, his son Alaparos ruled for three sari, after +which Amillaros, of the city of Pantibibla, reigned thirteen sari. It +was under him that there issued from the Bed Sea a second Annedotos, +resembling Oannes in his semi-divine shape, half man and half fish. +After him Ammenon, also from Pantibibla, a Chaldaean, ruled for a term +of twelve sari; under him, they say, the mysterious Oannes appeared. +Afterwards Amelagaros of Pantibibla governed for eighteen sari; then +Davos, the shepherd from Pantibibla, reigned ten sari: under him there +issued from the Red Sea a fourth Annedotos, who had a form similar to +the others, being made up of man and fish. After him Bvedoranchos of +Pantibibla reigned for eighteen sari; in his time there issued yet +another monster, named Anodaphos, from the sea. These various monsters +developed carefully and in detail that which Oannes had set forth in a +brief way. Then Amempsinos of Larancha, a Chalaean, reigned ten sari; and +Obartes, also a Chaldaean, of Larancha, eight sari. Finally, on the death +of Obartes, his son Xisuthros held the sceptre for eighteen sari. It +was under him that the great deluge took place. Thus ten kings are to +be reckoned in all, and the duration of their combined reigns amounts +to one hundred and twenty sari. From the beginning of the world to the +Deluge they reckoned 691,200 years, of which 259,200 had passed +before the coming of Aloros, and the remaining 432,000 were generously +distributed between this prince and his immediate successors: the Greek +and Latin writers had certainly a fine occasion for amusement over these +fabulous numbers of years which the Chaldaeans assigned to the lives and +reigns of their first kings. + +Men in the mean time became wicked; they lost the habit of offering +sacrifices to the gods, and the gods, justly indignant at this +negligence, resolved to be avenged.* Now, Shamashnapishtim I was +reigning at this time in Shurippak, the “town of the ship:” he and +all his family were saved, and he related afterwards to one of his +descendants how Ea had snatched him from the disaster which fell upon +his people.** “Shurippak, the city which thou thyself knowest, is +situated on the bank of the Euphrates; it was already an ancient town +when the hearts of the gods who resided in it impelled them to bring the +deluge upon it--the great gods as many as they are; their father Anu, +their counsellor Bel the warrior, their throne-bearer Ninib, their +prince Innugi. The master of wisdom, Ea, took his seat with them,*** +and, moved with pity, was anxious to warn Shamashnapishtim, his servant, +of the peril which threatened him;” but it was a very serious affair to +betray to a mortal a secret of heaven, and as he did not venture to do +so in a direct manner, his inventive mind suggested to him an artifice. + + * The account of Bcrossus implies this as a cause of the + Deluge, since he mentions the injunction imposed upon the + survivors by a mysterious voice to be henceforward + respectful towards the gods, [Greek word]. The Chalaean + account considers the Deluge to have been sent as a + punishment upon men for their sins against the gods, since + it represents towards the end (cf. p. 52 of this History) Ea + as reproaching Bel for having confounded the innocent and + the guilty in one punishment. + + ** The name of this individual has been read in various + ways: Shamashnapishtim, “sun of life,” Sitnapishtim, “the + saved,” and Pirnapishtim. In one passage at least we find, + in place of Shamashnapishtim, the name or epithet of + Aclrakhasis, or by inversion Khasisadra, which appears to + signify “the very shrewd,” and is explained by the skill + with which he interpreted the oracle of Ea. Khasisadra is + most probably the form which the Greeks have transcribed by + Xisuthros, Sisuthros, Sisithes. + + *** The account of the Deluge covers the eleventh tablet of + the poem of Gilgames. The hero, threatened with death, + proceeds to rejoin his ancestor Shamashnapishtim to demand + from him the secret of immortality, and the latter tells him + the manner in which he escaped from the waters: he had saved + his life only at the expense of the destruction of men. The + text of it was published by Smith and by Haupt, fragment by + fragment, and then restored consecutively. The studies of + which it is the object would make a complete library. The + principal translations are those of Smith, of Oppert, of + Lenor-mant, of Haupt, of Jensen, of A. Jeremias, of + Sauveplane, and of Zimmern. + +[Illustration: 045.jpg Page with ONE OF THE TABLETS OF THE DELUGE +SERIES.] + + Facsimile by Faucher-Gudin, from the photograph published by + G. Smith, Chaldaean Account of the Deluge from terra-cotta + tablets found at Nineveh. + +He confided to a hedge of reeds the resolution that had been adopted:* +“Hedge, hedge, wall, wall! Hearken, hedge, and understand well, wall! +Man of Shurippak, son of Ubaratutu, construct a wooden house, build a +ship, abandon thy goods, seek life; throw away thy possessions, save thy +life, and place in the vessel all the seed of life. The ship which thou +shalt build, let its proportions be exactly measured, let its dimensions +and shape be well arranged, then launch it in the sea.” Shamashnapishtim +heard the address to the field of reeds, or perhaps the reeds repeated +it to him. “I understood it, and I said to my master Ea ‘The command, +O my master, which thou hast thus enunciated, I myself will respect it, +and I will execute it: but what shall I say to the town, the people and +the elders?’” Ea opened his mouth and spake; he said to his servant: +“Answer thus and say to them: ‘Because Bel hates me, I will no longer +dwell in your town, and upon the land of Bel I will no longer lay my +head, but I will go upon the sea, and will dwell with Ea my master. Now +Bel will make rain to fall upon you, upon the swarm of birds and the +multitude of fishes, upon all the animals of the field, and upon all +the crops; but Ea will give you a sign: the god who rules the rain will +cause to fall upon you, on a certain evening, an abundant rain. When the +dawn of the next day appears, the deluge will begin, which will cover +the earth and drown all living things.’” Shamashnapishtim repeated the +warning to the people, but the people refused to believe it, and turned +him into ridicule. The work went rapidly forward: the hull was a hundred +and forty cubits long, the deck one hundred and forty broad; all the +joints were caulked with pitch and bitumen. A solemn festival was +observed at its completion, and the embarkation began.** “All that I +possessed I filled the ship with it all that I had of silver, I filled +it with it; all that I had of gold I filled it with it, all that I had +of the seed of life of every kind I filled it with it; I caused all +my family and my servants to go up into it; beasts of the field, wild +beasts of the field, I caused them to go up all together. Shamash had +given me a sign: ‘When the god who rules the rain, in the evening shall +cause an abundant rain to fall, enter into the ship and close thy door.’ +The sign was revealed: the god who rules the rain caused to fall one +night an abundant rain. The day, I feared its dawning; I feared to see +the daylight; I entered into the ship and I shut the door; that the ship +might be guided, I handed over to Buzur-Bel, the pilot, the great ark +and its fortunes.” + + * The sense of this passage is far from being certain; I + have followed the interpretation proposed, with some + variations, by Pinches, by Haupt, and by Jensen. The + stratagem at once recalls the history of King Midas, and the + talking reeds which knew the secret of his ass’s ears. In + the version of Berossus, it is Kronos who plays the part + here assigned to Ea in regard to Xisuthros. + + ** The text is mutilated, and does not furnish enough + information to follow in every detail the building of the + ark. From what we can understand, the vessel of + Shamashnapishtim was a kind of immense kelek, decked, but + without masts or rigging of any sort. The text identifies + the festival celebrated by the hero before the embarkation + with the festival Akitu of Merodach, at Babylon, during + which “Nebo, the powerful son, sailed from Borsippa to + Babylon in the bark of the river Asmu, of beauty.” The + embarkation of Nebo and his voyage on the stream had + probably inspired the information according to which the + embarkation of Shamashnapishtim was made the occasion of a + festival Akitu, celebrated at Shurippak; the time of the + Babylonian festival was probably thought to coincide with + the anniversary of the Deluge. + +“As soon as the morning became clear, a black cloud arose from the +foundations of heaven. Bamman growled in its bosom; Nebo and Marduk +ran before it--ran like two throne-bearers over hill and dale. Nera +the Great tore up the stake to which the ark was moored. Ninib came up +quickly; he began the attack; the Anunnaki raised their torches and made +the earth to tremble at their brilliancy; the tempest of Ramman scaled +the heaven, changed all the light to darkness, flooded the earth like a +lake.* For a whole day the hurricane raged, and blew violently over the +mountains and over the country; the tempest rushed upon men like the +shock of an army, brother no longer beheld brother, men recognized each +other no more. + + * The progress of the tempest is described as the attack of + the gods, who had resolved on the destruction of men. Ramman + is the thunder which growls in the cloud; Nebo, Merodach, + Nera the Great (Nergal), and Ninib, denote the different + phases of the hurricane from the moment when the wind gets + up until it is at its height; the Anunnaki represent the + lightning which flashes carelessly across the heaven. + +[Illustration: 048.jpg SHAMASHNAPISHTIM SHUT INTO THE ARK.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a Chalaean intaglio. + +In heaven, the gods were afraid of the deluge;* they betook themselves +to flight, they clambered to the firmament of Anu; the gods, howling +like dogs, cowered upon the parapet.** Ishtar wailed like a woman +in travail; she cried out, “the lady of life, the goddess with the +beautiful voice: ‘The past returns to clay, because I have prophesied +evil before the gods! Prophesying evil before the gods, I have +counselled the attack to bring my men to nothing; and these to whom I +myself have given birth, where are they? Like the spawn of fish they +encumber the sea! ‘The gods wept with her over the affair of the +Anunnaki;’ the gods, in the place where they sat weeping, their lips +were closed.” It was not pity only which made their tears to flow: +there were mixed up with it feelings of regret and fears for the future. +Mankind once destroyed, who would then make the accustomed offerings? +The inconsiderate anger of Bel, while punishing the impiety of their +creatures, had inflicted injury upon themselves. “Six days and nights +the wind continued, the deluge and the tempest raged. The seventh day at +daybreak the storm abated; the deluge, which had carried on warfare like +an army, ceased, the sea became calm and the hurricane disappeared, the +deluge ceased. I surveyed the sea with my eyes, raising my voice; but +all mankind had returned to clay, neither fields nor woods could be +distinguished.*** I opened the hatchway and the light fell upon my face; +I sank down, I cowered, I wept, and my tears ran down my cheeks when I +beheld the world all terror and all sea. At the end of twelve days, a +point of land stood up from the waters, the ship touched the land of +Nisir:**** the mountain of Nisir stopped the ship and permitted it to +float no longer. One day, two days, the mountain of Nisir stopped the +ship and permitted it to float no longer. + + * The gods enumerated above alone took part in the drama of + the Deluge: they were the confederates and emissaries of + Bel. The others were present as spectators of the disaster, + and were terrified. + + ** The upper part of the mountain wall is here referred to, + upon which the heaven is supported. There was a narrow space + between the escarpment and the place upon which the vault of + the firmament rested: the Babylonian poet represented the + gods as crowded like a pack of hounds upon this parapet, and + beholding from it the outburst of the tempest and the + waters. + + ***The translation is uncertain: the text refers to a legend + which has not come down to us, in which Ishtar is related to + have counselled the destruction of men. + + **** The Anunnaki represent here the evil genii whom the + gods that produced the deluge had let loose, and whom + Ramman, Nebo, Merodach, Nergal, and Ninib, all the followers + of Bel, had led to the attack upon men: the other deities + shared the fears and grief of Ishtar in regard to the + ravages which these Anunnaki had brought about (cf. below, + pp. 141-143 of this History). + + + +Three days, four days, the mountain of Nisir* stopped the ship and +permitted it to float no longer. Five days, six days, the mountain of +Nisir stopped the ship and permitted it to float no longer. The seventh +day, at dawn, I took out a dove and let it go: the dove went, turned +about, and as there was no place to alight upon, came back. I took out a +swallow and let it go: the swallow went, turned about, and as there was +no place to alight upon, came back. I took out a raven and let it go: +the raven went, and saw that the water had abated, and came near the +ship flapping its wings, croaking, and returned no more.” + Shamashnapishtim escaped from the deluge, but he did not know whether +the divine wrath was appeased, or what would be done with him when it +became known that he still lived.** He resolved to conciliate the +gods by expiatory ceremonies. “I sent forth the inhabitants of the ark +towards the four winds, I made an offering, I poured out a propitiatory +libation on the summit of the mountain. I set up seven and seven +vessels, and I placed there some sweet-smelling rushes, some cedar-wood, +and storax.” He thereupon re-entered the ship to await there the effect +of his sacrifice. + + * I have adopted, in the translation of this difficult + passage, the meaning suggested by Haupt, according to which + it ought to be translated, “The field makes nothing more + than one with the mountain;” that is to say, “mountains and + fields are no longer distinguishable one from another.” I + have merely substituted for mountain the version wood, piece + of land covered with trees, which Jensen has suggested. + + ** The mountain of Nisir is replaced in the version of + Berossus by the Gordyaean mountains of classical geography; a + passage of Assur-nazir-pal informs us that it was situated + between the Tigris and the Great Zab, according to Delitzsch + between 35 deg. and 36 deg. N. latitude. The Assyrian-speaking + people interpreted the name as _Salvation_, and a play upon + words probably decided the placing upon its slopes the + locality where those _saved_ from the deluge landed on the + abating of the waters. Fr. Lenormant proposes to identify it + with the peak Rowandiz. + +The gods, who no longer hoped for such a wind-fall, accepted the +sacrifice with a wondering joy. “The gods sniffed up the odour, the gods +sniffed up the excellent odour, the gods gathered like flies above the +offering. “When Ishtar, the mistress of life, came in her turn, she held +up the great amulet which Anu had made for her.” * She was still furious +against those who had determined upon the destruction of mankind, +especially against Bel: “These gods, I swear it on the necklace of my +neck! I will not forget them; these days I will remember, and will not +forget them for ever. Let the other gods come quickly to take part in +the offering. Bel shall have no part in the offering, for he was not +wise: but he has caused the deluge, and he has devoted my people to +destruction.” Bel himself had not recovered his temper: “When he arrived +in his turn and saw the ship, he remained immovable before it, and his +heart was filled with rage against the gods of heaven. ‘Who is he who +has come out of it living? No man must survive the destruction!’” The +gods had everything to fear from his anger: Ninib was eager to exculpate +himself, and to put the blame upon the right person. Ea did not disavow +his acts: “he opened his mouth and spake; he said to Bel the warrior: +‘Thou, the wisest among the gods, O warrior, why wert thou not wise, and +didst cause the deluge? The sinner, make him responsible for his sin; +the criminal, make him responsible for his crime: but be calm, and do +not cut off all; be patient, and do not drown all. What was the good of +causing the deluge? A lion had only to come to decimate the people. +What was the good of causing the deluge? A leopard had only to come to +decimate the people. What was the good of causing the deluge? Famine +had only to present itself to desolate the country. What was the good +of causing the deluge? Nera the Plague had only to come to destroy the +people. As for me, I did, not reveal the judgment of the gods: I caused +Khasisadra to dream a dream, and he became aware of the judgment of the +gods, and then he made his resolve.’” Bel was pacified at the words of +Ea: “he went up into the interior of the ship; he took hold of my hand +and made me go up, even me; he made my wife go up, and he pushed her to +my side; he turned our faces towards him, he placed himself between +us, and blessed us: ‘Up to this time Shamashnapishtim was a man: +henceforward let Shamashnapishtim and his wife be reverenced like us, +the gods, and let Shamashnapishtim dwell afar off, at the mouth of the +seas, and he carried us away and placed us afar off, at the mouth of the +seas.’” Another form of the legend relates that by an order of the god, +Xisuthros, before embarking, had buried in the town of Sippara all the +books in which his ancestors had set forth the sacred sciences--books +of oracles and omens, “in which were recorded the beginning, the middle, +and the end. When he had disappeared, those of his companions who +remained on board, seeing that he did not return, went out and set off +in search of him, calling him by name. He did not show himself to them, +but a voice from heaven enjoined upon them to be devout towards the +gods, to return to Babylon and dig up the books in order that they might +be handed down to future generations; the voice also informed them that +the country in which they were was Armenia. They offered sacrifice in +turn, they regained their country on foot, they dug up the books of +Sippara and wrote many more; afterwards they refounded Babylon.” It was +even maintained in the time of the Seleucido, that a portion of the ark +existed on one of the summits of the Gordyaean mountains.** Pilgrimages +were made to it, and the faithful scraped off the bitumen which covered +it, to make out of it amulets of sovereign virtue against evil spells. + +[Illustration: 051.jpg THE JUDI MOUNTAINS SOMETIMES IDENTIFIED WITH TUB +NTSIB MOUNTAINS.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a sketch by G. Smith, _Assyrian + Discoveries_, p. 108. + + * We are ignorant of the object which the goddess lifted up: + it may have been the sceptre surmounted by a radiating star, + such as we see on certain cylinders. Several Assyriologists + translate it arrows or lightning. Ishtar is, in fact, an + armed goddess who throws the arrow or lightning made by her + father Anu, the heaven. + + ** Bekossus, fragm. xv. The legend about the remains of the + ark has passed into Jewish tradition concerning the Deluge. + Nicholas of Damascus relates, like Berossus, that they were + still to be seen on the top of Mount Baris. From that time + they have been continuously seen, sometimes on one peak and + sometimes on another. In the last century they were pointed + out to Chardin, and the memory of them has not died out in + our own century. Discoveries of charcoal and bitumen, such + as those made at Gebel Judi, upon one of the mountains + identified with Nisir, probably explain many of these local + traditions. + +The chronicle of these fabulous times placed, soon after the abating of +the waters, the foundation of a new dynasty, as extraordinary or almost +as extraordinary in character as that before the flood. According to +Berossus it was of Chaldaean origin, and comprised eighty-six kings, who +bore rule during 34,080 years; the first two, Evechous and Khomasbelos, +reigned 2400 and 2700 years, while the later reigns did not exceed +the ordinary limits of human life. An attempt was afterwards made to +harmonize them with probability: the number of kings was reduced to +six, and their combined reigns to 225 years. This attempt arose from +a misapprehension of their true character; names and deeds, everything +connected with them belongs to myth and fiction only, and is irreducible +to history proper. They supplied to priests and poets material for +scores of different stories, of which several have come down to us in +fragments. Some are short, and serve as preambles to prayers or magical +formulas; others are of some length, and may pass for real epics. The +gods intervene in them, and along with kings play an important part. It +is Nera, for instance, the lord of the plague, who declares war against +mankind in order to punish them for having despised the authority of +Anu. He makes Babylon to feel his wrath first: “The children of Babel, +they were as birds, and the bird-catcher, thou wert he! thou takest them +in the net, thou enclosest them, thou decimatest them--hero Nera!” + One after the other he attacks the mother cities of the Euphrates and +obliges them to render homage to him--even Uruk, “the dwelling of Anu +and Ishtar--the town of the priestesses, of the _almehs_, and the sacred +courtesans; “then he turns upon the foreign nations and carries his +ravages as far as Phoenicia. In other fragments, the hero Etana makes an +attempt to raise himself to heaven, and the eagle, his companion, flies +away with him, without, however, being able to bring the enterprise to +a successful issue. Nimrod and his exploits are known to us from the +Bible.* “He was a mighty hunter before the Lord: wherefore it is said, +Even as Nimrod the mighty hunter before the Lord. And the beginning of +his kingdom was Babel, and Erech, and Accad, and Calneh, in the land of +Shinar.” Almost all the characteristics which are attributed by Hebrew +tradition to Nimrod we find in G-ilgames, King of Uruk and descendant of +the Shamashnapishtim who had witnessed the deluge.** + + * Genesis x. 9, 10. Among the Jews and Mussulmans a complete + cycle of legends have developed around Nimrod. He built the + Tower of Babel; he threw Abraham into a fiery furnace, and + he tried to mount to heaven on the back of an eagle. Sayce + and Grivel saw in Nimrod an heroic form of Merodach, the god + of Babylonia: the majority of living Assyriologists prefer + to follow Smith’s example, and identify him with the hero + Gilgames. + + ** The name of this hero is composed of three signs, which + Smith provisionally rendered Isdubar--a reading which, + modified into Gishdhubar, Gistubar, is still retained by + many Assyriologists. There have been proposed one after + another the renderings Dhubar, Namrudu, Anamarutu, Numarad, + Namrasit, all of which exhibit in the name of the hero that + of Nimrod. Pinches discovered, in 1890, what appears to be + the true signification of the three signs,Gilgamesh, + Gilgames; Sayce and Oppert have compared this name with that + of Gilgamos, a Babylonian hero, of whom. AElian has preserved + the memory. A. Jeremias continued to reject both the reading + and the identification. + +Several copies of a poem, in which an unknown scribe had celebrated his +exploits, existed about the middle of the VIIth century before our era +in the Royal Library at Nineveh; they had been transcribed by order of +Assur-banipal from a more ancient copy, and the fragments of them which +have come down to us, in spite of their lacunae, enable us to restore +the original text, if not in its entirety, at least in regard to +the succession of events. They were divided into twelve episodes +corresponding with the twelve divisions of the year, and the ancient +Babylonian author was guided in his choice of these divisions by +something more than mere chance. Gilgames, at first an ordinary mortal +under the patronage of the gods, had himself become a god and son of the +goddess Aruru: “he had seen the abyss, he had learned everything that +is kept secret and hidden, he had even made known to men what had taken +place before the deluge.” The sun, who had protected him in his human +condition, had placed him beside himself on the judgment-seat, and +delegated to him authority to pronounce decisions from which there was +no appeal: he was, as it were, a sun on a small scale, before whom the +kings, princes, and great ones of the earth humbly bowed their heads.* +The scribes had, therefore, some authority for treating the events of +his life after the model of the year, and for expressing them in twelve +chants, which answered to the annual course of the sun through the +twelve months. + + * The identity of Gilgames with the Accadian fire-god, or + rather with the sun, was recognized from the first by H. + Rawlinson, and has been accepted since by almost all + Assyriologists. A tablet brought back by G. Smith, called + attention to by Fr. Delitzsch, and published by Haupt, + contains the remains of a hymn addressed to Gilgames, “the + powerful king, the king of the Spirits of the Earth.” + +[Illustration: 057.jpg GILGAMES STRANGLES A LION.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from an Assyrian bas-relief from + Khorsabad, in the Museum of the Louvre + +The whole story is essentially an account of his struggles with Ishtar, +and the first pages reveal him as already at issue with the goddess. His +portrait, such as the monuments have preserved it for us, is singularly +unlike the ordinary type: one would be inclined to regard it as +representing an individual of a different race, a survival of some very +ancient nation which had held rule on the plains of the Euphrates before +the arrival of the Sumerian or Semitic* tribes. + + * Smith (The Chaldaean Account of Genesis, p. 194) remarked + the difference between the representations of Gilgames and + the typical Babylonian: he concluded from this that the hero + was of Ethiopian origin. Hommel declares that his features + have neither a Sumerian nor Semitic aspect, and that they + raise an insoluble question in ethnology. + +His figure is tall, broad, muscular to an astonishing degree, and +expresses at once vigour and activity; his head is massive, bony, almost +square, with a somewhat flattened face, a large nose, and prominent +cheek-bones, the whole framed by an abundance of hair, and a thick beard +symmetrically curled. All the young men of Uruk, the well-protected, +were captivated by the prodigious strength and beauty of the hero; the +elders of the city betook themselves to Ishtar to complain of the state +of neglect to which the young generation had relegated them. “He has no +longer a rival in their hearts, but thy subjects are led to battle, and +Gilgames does not send one child back to his father. Night and day they +cry after him: ‘It is he the shepherd of Uruk, the well-protected, he +is its shepherd and master, he the powerful, the perfect and the wise.’” + Even the women did not escape the general enthusiasm: “he leaves not a +single virgin to her mother, a single daughter to a warrior, a single +wife to her master. Ishtar heard their complaint, the gods heard it, and +cried with a loud voice to Aruru: ‘It is thou, Aruru, who hast given him +birth; create for him now his fellow, that he may be able to meet him on +a day when it pleaseth him, in order that they may fight with each other +and Uruk may be delivered.’When Aruru heard them, she created in her +heart a man of Anu. Aruru washed her hands, took a bit of clay, cast it +upon the earth, kneaded it and created Babani, the warrior, the exalted +scion, the man of Ninib, whose whole body is covered with hair, whose +tresses are as long as those of a woman; the locks of his hair bristle +on his head like those on the corn-god; he is clad in a vestment +like that of the god of the fields; he browses with the gazelles, he +quenches his thirst with the beasts of the field, he sports with the +beasts of the waters.” Frequent representations of Eabani are found upon +the monuments; he has the horns of a goat, the legs and tail of a bull.* +He possessed not only the strength of a brute, but his intelligence also +embraced all things, the past and the future: he would probably have +triumphed over Gilgames if Shamash had not succeeded in attaching them +to one another by an indissoluble tie of friendship. The difficulty was +to draw these two future friends together, and to bring them face to +face without their coming to blows; the god sent his courier Saidu, +the hunter, to study the habits of the monster, and to find out the +necessary means to persuade him to come down peaceably to Uruk. +“Saidu, the hunter, proceeded to meet Eabani near the entrance of the +watering-place. One day, two days, three days, Eabani met him at the +entrance of the watering-place. He perceived Saidu, and his countenance +darkened: he entered the enclosure, he became sad, he groaned, he cried +with a loud voice, his heart was heavy, his features were distorted, +sobs burst from his breast. The hunter saw from a distance that his face +was inflamed with anger,” and judging it more prudent not to persevere +farther in his enterprise, returned to impart to the god what he had +observed. + + * Smith was the first, I believe, to compare his form to + that of a satyr or faun; this comparison is rendered more + probable by the fact that the modern inhabitants of Chaldaea + believe in the existence of similar monsters. A. Jeremias + places Eabani alongside Priapus, who is generally a god of + the fields, and a clever soothsayer. Following out these + ideas, we might compare our Eabani with the Graico-Roman + Proteus, who pastures the flocks of the sea, and whom it was + necessary to pursue and seize by force or cunning words to + compel him to give oracular predictions. + +[Illustration: 060.jpg GILGAMES FIGHTS, ON THE LEFT WITH A BULL, ON THE +RIGHT WITH EABANI.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a Chaldaean intaglio in the + Museum at the Hague. The original measures about 1 7/10 inch + in height. + +“I was afraid,” said he, in finishing his narrative,* “and I did not +approach him. He had filled up the pit which I had dug to trap him, he +broke the nets which I had spread, he delivered from my hands the cattle +and the beasts of the field, he did not allow me to search the country +through.” Shamash thought that where the strongest man might fail by the +employment of force, a woman might possibly succeed by the attractions +of pleasure; he commanded Saidu to go quickly to Uruk and there to +choose from among the priestesses of Ishtar one of the most beautiful.** +The hunter presented himself before Grilgames, recounted to him his +adventures, and sought his permission to take away with him one of the +sacred courtesans. “‘Go, my hunter, take the priestess; when the beasts +come to the watering-place, let her display her beauty; he will see +her, he will approach her, and his beasts that troop around him will be +scattered.’”*** The hunter went, he took with him the priestess, he took +the straight road; the third day they arrived at the fatal plain. The +hunter and the priestess sat down to rest; one day, two days, they sat +at the entrance of the watering-place from whose waters Eabani drank +along with the animals, where he sported with the beasts of the water. + + * Haupt, Das Babylonische Nimrodepos, p. 9, 11. 42-50. The + beginning of each line is destroyed, and the translation of + the whole is only approximate. + + ** The priestesses of Ishtar were young and beautiful women, + devoted to the service of the goddess and her worshippers. + Besides the title _qadishtu,_ priestess, they bore various + names, _kizireti, ukhati, kharimati_; the priestess who + accompanied Saidu was an _ukhat_. + + *** As far as can be guessed from the narrative, interrupted + as it is by so many lacunae, the power of Eabani over the + beasts of the field seems to have depended on his + continence. From the moment in which he yields to his + passions the beasts fly from him as they would do from an + ordinary mortal; there is then no other resource for him but + to leave the solitudes to live among men in towns. This + explains the means devised by Shamash against him: cf. in + the _Arabian Nights_ the story of Shehabeddin. + +“When Eabani arrived, he who dwells in the mountains, and who browses +upon the grass like the gazelles, who drinks with the animals, who +sports with the beasts of the water, the priestess saw the satyr.” She +was afraid and blushed, but the hunter recalled her to her duty. “It is +he, priestess. Undo thy garment, show him thy form, that he may be +taken with thy beauty; be not ashamed, but deprive him of his soul. He +perceives thee, he is rushing towards thee, arrange thy garment; he is +coming upon thee, receive him with every art of woman; his beasts +which troop around him will be scattered, and he will press thee to his +breast.” The priestess did as she was commanded; she received him with +every art of woman, and he pressed her to his breast. Six days and seven +nights, Eabani remained near the priestess, his well-beloved. When he +got tired of pleasure he turned his face towards his cattle, and he saw +that the gazelles had turned aside and that the beasts of the field had +fled far from him. Eabani was alarmed, he fell into a swoon, his knees +became stiff because his cattle had fled from him. While he lay as if +dead, he heard the voice of the priestess: he recovered his senses, +he came to himself full of love; he seated himself at the feet of the +priestess, he looked into her face, and while the priestess spoke his +ears listened. For it was to him the priestess spoke--to him, Eabani. +“Thou who art superb, Eabani, as a god, why dost thou live among +the beasts of the field? Come, I will conduct thee to Uruk the +well-protected, to the glorious house, the dwelling of Anu and +Ishtar--to the place where is Gilgames, whose strength is supreme, and +who, like a Urus, excels the heroes in strength.” While she thus spoke +to him, he hung upon her words, he the wise of heart, he realized +by anticipation a friend. Eabani said to the priestess: “Let us go, +priestess; lead me to the glorious and holy abode of Anu and Ishtar--to +the place where is Gilgames, whose strength is supreme, and who, like +a Urus, prevails over the heroes by his strength. I will fight with him +and manifest to him my power; I will send forth a panther against Uruk, +and he must struggle with it.” * The priestess conducted her prisoner +to Uruk, but the city at that moment was celebrating the festival of +Tammuz, and Gilgames did not care to interrupt the solemnities in order +to face the tasks to which Eabani had invited him: what was the use of +such trials since the gods themselves had deigned to point out to him in +a dream the line of conduct he was to pursue, and had taken up the +cause of their children. Shamash, in fact, began the instruction of the +monster, and sketched an alluring picture of the life which awaited him +if he would agree not to return to his mountain home. Not only would +the priestess belong to him for ever, having none other than him for +husband, but Gilgames would shower upon him riches and honours. “He will +give thee wherein to sleep a great bed cunningly wrought; he will seat +thee on his divan, he will give thee a place on his left hand, and +the princes of the earth shall kiss thy feet, the people of Uruk +shall grovel on the ground before thee.” It was by such flatteries +and promises for the future that Gilgames gained the affection of his +servant Eabani, whom he loved for ever. + + * I have softened down a good deal the account of the + seduction, which is described with a sincerity and precision + truly primitive. + +Shamash had reasons for being urgent. Khumbaba, King of Elam, had +invaded the country of the Euphrates, destroyed the temples, and +substituted for the national worship the cult of foreign deities;* the +two heroes in concert could alone check his advance, and kill him. They +collected their troops, set out on the march, having learned from a +female magician that the enemy had concealed himself in a sacred grove. +They entered it in disguise, “and stopped in rapture for a moment before +the cedar trees; they contemplated the height of them, they contemplated +the thickness of them; the place where Khumbaba was accustomed to walk +up and down with rapid strides, alleys were made in it, paths kept up +with great care. They saw at length the hill of cedars, the abode of the +gods, the sanctuary of Irnini, and before the hill, a magnificent cedar, +and pleasant grateful shade.” They surprised Khumbaba at the moment when +he was about to take his outdoor exercise, cut off his head, and came +back in triumph to Uruk.** “Gilgames brightened his weapons, he polished +his weapons. He put aside his war-harness, he put on his white garments, +he adorned himself with the royal insignia, and bound on the diadem: +Gilgames put his tiara on his head, and bound on his diadem.” + + * Khumbaba contains the name of the Elamite god, Khumba, + whichenters into the composition of names of towns, like Ti- + Khumbi; or into those of princes, as Khumbanigash, + Khumbasundasa, Khumbasidh. The comparison between Khumbaba + and Combabos, the hero of a singular legend, current in the + second century of our era, does not seem to be admissible, + at least for the present. The names agree well in sound, + but, as Oppert has rightly said, no event in the history of + Combabos finds a counterpart in anything we know of that of + Khumbaba up to the present. + + ** G. Smith places at this juncture Gilgames’s accession to + the throne; this is not confirmed by the fragments of the + text known up to the present, and it is not even certain + that the poem relates anywhere the exaltation and coronation + of the hero. It would appear even that Gilgames is + recognized from the beginning as King of Uruk, the well- + protected. + +Ishtar saw him thus adorned, and the same passion consumed her which +inflames mortals.* “To the love of Gilgames she raised her eyes, the +mighty Ishtar, and she said, ‘Come, Gilgames, be my husband, thou! Thy +love, give it to me, as a gift to me, and thou shalt be my spouse, and +I shall be thy wife. I will place thee in a chariot of lapis and gold, +with golden wheels and mountings of onyx: thou shalt be drawn in it by +great lions, and thou shalt enter our house with the odorous incense of +cedar-wood. When thou shalt have entered our house, all the country by +the sea shall embrace thy feet, kings shall bow down before thee, the +nobles and the great ones, the gifts of the mountains and of the plain +they will bring to thee as tribute. Thy oxen shall prosper, thy sheep +shall be doubly fruitful, thy mules shall spontaneously come under the +yoke, thy chariot-horse shall be strong and shall galop, thy bull +under the yoke shall have no rival.’” Gilgames repels this unexpected +declaration with a mixed feeling of contempt and apprehension: he abuses +the goddess, and insolently questions her as to what has become of her +mortal husbands during her long divine life. “Tammuz, the spouse of thy +youth, thou hast condemned him to weep from year to year.** Nilala, the +spotted sparrow-hawk, thou lovedst him, afterward thou didst strike +him and break his wing: he continues in the wood and cries: ‘O, my +wings!’ *** Thou didst afterwards love a lion of mature strength, and +then didst cause him to be rent by blows, seven at a time.**** Thou +lovedst also a stallion magnificent in the battle; thou didst devote him +to death by the goad and whip: thou didst compel him to galop for ten +leagues, thou didst devote him to exhaustion and thirst, thou didst +devote to tears his mother Silili. + + * Ishtar’s declaration to Gilgames and the hero’s reply have + been frequently translated and summarized since the + discovery of the poem. Smith thought to connect this episode + with the “Descent of Ishtar to Hades,” which we shall meet + with further on in this History, but his opinion is no + longer accepted. The “Descent of Ishtar” in its present + condition is the beginning of a magical formula: it has + nothing to do with the acts of Gilgames. + + ** Tammuz-Adonis is the only one known to us among this long + list of the lovers of the goddess. The others must have been + fairly celebrated among the Chaldaeans, since the few words + devoted to each is sufficient to recall them to the memory + of the reader, but we have not as yet found anything + bearing upon their adventures in the table of the ancient + Chaldaeo-Assyrian classics, which had been copied out by a + Ninevite scribe for the use of Assur-bani-pal, the title of + the poems is wanting. + + *** The text gives _kappi_, and the legend evidently refers + to a bird whose cry resembles the word meaning “my + wings.” The spotted sparrow-hawk utters a cry which may be + strictly understood and interpreted in this way. + + **** This is evidently the origin of our fable of the + “Amorous Lion.” + +Thou didst also love the shepherd Tabulu, who lavished incessantly upon +thee the smoke of sacrifices, and daily slaughtered goats to thee; thou +didst strike him and turn him into a leopard; his own servants went in +pursuit of him, and his dogs followed his trail.* Thou didst love +Ishullanu, thy father’s gardener, who ceaselessly brought thee presents +of fruit, and decorated every day thy table. Thou raisedst thine eyes to +him, thou seizedst him: ‘My Ishullanu, we shall eat melons, then shalt +thou stretch forth thy hand and remove that which separates us.’ +Ishullanu said to thee: ‘I, what dost thou require from me? O my mother, +prepare no food for me, I myself will not eat: anything I should eat +would be for me a misfortune and a curse, and my body would be stricken +by a mortal coldness.’ Then thou didst hear him and didst become angry, +thou didst strike him, thou didst transform him into a dwarf, thou didst +set him up on the middle of a couch; he could not rise up, he could not +get down from where he was. Thou lovest me now, afterwards thou wilt +strike me as thou didst these.” ** + + * The changing of a lover, by the goddess or sorceress + who loves him, into a beast, occurs pretty frequently in + Oriental tales; as to the man changed by Ishtar into a + brute, which she caused to be torn by his own hounds, we may + compare the classic story of Artemis surprised at her bath + by Actseon. + + ** As to the misfortune of Ishullanu, we may compare the + story in the _Abrabian Nights_ of the Fisherman and the + Genie shut up in the leaden bottle. The king of the Black + Islands was transformed into a statue from the waist to the + feet by the sorceress, whom he had married and afterwards + offended; he remained lying on a bed, from which he could + not get down, and the unfaithful one came daily to whip him. + +“When Ishtar heard him, she fell into a fury, she ascended to heaven. +The mighty Ishtar presented herself before her father Anu, before her +mother Anatu she presented herself, and said: ‘My father, Grilgames +has despised me. Grilgames has enumerated my unfaithfulnesses, my +unfaithfulnesses and my ignominies.’ Anu opened his mouth and spake to +the mighty Ishtar: ‘Canst thou not remain quiet now that Gilgames +has enumerated to thee thy unfaithfulnesses, thy unfaithfulnesses and +ignominies?’” But she refused to allow the outrage to go unpunished. +She desired her father to make a celestial urus who would execute her +vengeance on the hero; and, as he hesitated, she threatened to destroy +every living thing in the entire universe by suspending the impulses of +desire, and the effect of love. Anu finally gives way to her rage: he +creates a frightful urus, whose ravages soon rendered uninhabitable the +neighbourhood of Uruk the well-protected. The two heroes, Gilgames and +Eabani, touched by the miseries and terror of the people, set out on the +chase, and hastened to rouse the beast from its lair on the banks of +the Euphrates in the marshes, to which it resorted after each murderous +onslaught. + +[Illustration: 068.jpg GILGAMES AND EABANI FIGHTING WITH MONSTERS.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a Chaldaean intaglio in the New + York Museum. The original is about an inch and a half in + height. + +A troop of three hundred valiant warriors penetrated into the thickets +in three lines to drive the animal towards the heroes. The beast with +head lowered charged them; but Eabani seized it with one hand by the +right horn, and with the other by the tail, and forced it to rear. +Gilgames at the same instant, seizing it by the leg, plunged his dagger +into its heart. The beast being despatched, they celebrated their +victory by a sacrifice of thanksgiving, and poured out a libation to +Sharnash, whose protection had not failed them in this last danger. +Ishtar, her projects of vengeance having been defeated, “ascended the +ramparts of Uruk the well-protected. She sent forth a loud cry, she +hurled forth a malediction: ‘Cursed be Gilgames, who has insulted me, +and who has killed the celestial urus.’ Eabani heard these words of +Ishtar, he tore a limb from the celestial urus and threw it in the face +of the goddess: ‘Thou also I will conquer, and I will treat thee like +him: I will fasten the curse upon thy sides.’ Ishtar assembled her +priestesses, her female votaries, her frenzied women, and together they +intoned a dirge over the limb of the celestial urus. Gilgames assembled +all the turners in ivory, and the workmen were astonished at the +enormous size of the horns; they were worth thirty _mimae_ of lapis, +their diameter was a half-cubit, and both of them could contain six +measures of oil.” He dedicated them to Shamash, and suspended them on +the corners of the altar; then he washed his hands in the Euphrates, +re-entered Uruk, and passed through the streets in triumph. A riotous +banquet ended the day, but on that very night Eabani felt himself +haunted by an inexplicable and baleful dream, and fortune abandoned the +two heroes. Gilgames had cried in the intoxication of success to the +women of Uruk: “Who shines forth among the valiant? Who is glorious +above all men? Gilgames shines forth among the valiant, Gilgames is +glorious above all men.” Ishtar made him feel her vengeance in the +destruction of that beauty of which he was so proud; she covered him +with leprosy from head to foot, and made him an object of horror to his +friends of the previous day. A life of pain and a frightful death--he +alone could escape them who dared to go to the confines of the world in +quest of the Fountain of Youth and the Tree of Life which were said to +be there hidden; but the road was rough, unknown, beset by dangers, and +no one of those who had ventured upon it had ever returned. Gilgames +resolved to brave every peril rather than submit to his fate, and +proposed this fresh adventure to his friend Eabani, who, notwithstanding +his sad forebodings, consented to accompany him. They killed a tiger +on the way, but Eabani was mortally wounded in a struggle in which they +engaged in the neighbourhood of Nipur, and breathed his last after an +agony of twelve days’ duration. + +“Gilgames wept bitterly over his friend Eabani, grovelling on the bare +earth.” The selfish fear of death struggled in his spirit with regret at +having lost so dear a companion, a tried friend in so many encounters. +“I do not wish to die like Eabani: sorrow has entered my heart, the fear +of death has taken possession of me, and I am overcome. But I will go +with rapid steps to the strong Shamashnapishtim, son of Ubaratutu, +to learn from him how to become immortal.” He leaves the plain of the +Euphrates, he plunges boldly into the desert, he loses himself for a +whole day amid frightful solitudes. “I reached at nightfall a ravine in +the mountain, I beheld lions and trembled, but I raised my face towards +the moon-god, and I prayed: my supplication ascended even to the father +of the gods, and he extended over me his protection.” A vision from on +high revealed to him the road he was to take. With axe and dagger +in hand, he reached the entrance of a dark passage leading into the +mountain of Mashu,* “whose gate is guarded day and night by supernatural +beings.” + + * The land of Mashu is the land to the west of the + Euphrates, coterminous on one part with the northern regions + of the Red Sea, on the other with the Persian Gulf; the name + appears to be preserved in that of the classic Mesene, and + possibly in the land of Massa of the Hebrews. + +[Illustration: 071.jpg THE SCORPION-MEN OF THE MOUNTAINS OF MASHU.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from an Assyrian intaglio. + +“The scorpion-men, of whom the stature extends upwards as far as the +supports of heaven, and of whom the breasts descend as low as Hades, +guard the door. The terror which they inspire strikes down like a +thunderbolt; their look kills, their splendour confounds and overturns +the mountains; they watch over the sun at his rising and setting. +Grilgames perceived them, and his features were distorted with fear and +horror; their savage appearance disturbed his mind. The scorpion-man +said to his wife: ‘He who comes towards us, his body is marked by the +gods.’* The scorpion-woman replied to him: ‘In his mind he is a god, in +his mortal covering he is a man.’ The scorpion-man spoke and said: +‘It is as the father of the gods, has commanded, he has travelled over +distant regions before joining us, thee and me.’” Gilgames learns +that the guardians are not evilly disposed towards him, and becomes +reassured, tell them his misfortunes and implores permission to pass +beyond them so as to reach “Sha-mashnapishtim, his father, who was +translated to the gods, and who has at his disposal both life and +death.” The scorpion-man in vain shows to him the perils before him, of +which the horrible darkness enveloping the Mashu mountains is not the +least: Gilgames proceeds through the depths of the darkness for long +hours, and afterwards comes out in the neighbourhood of a marvellous +forest upon the shore of the ocean which encircles the world. One tree +especially excites his wonder: “As soon as he sees it he runs towards +it. Its fruits are so many precious stones, its boughs are splendid +to look upon, for the branches are weighed down with lapis, and their +fruits are superb.” When his astonishment had calmed down, Gilgames +begins to grieve, and to curse the ocean which stays his steps. “Sabitu, +the virgin who is seated on the throne of the seas,” perceiving him +from a distance, retires at first to her castle, and barricades herself +within it. He calls out to her from the strand, implores and threatens +her in turn, adjures her to help him in his voyage. “If it can be done, +I will cross the sea; if it cannot be done, I will lay me down on the +land to die.” The goddess is at length touched by his tears. “Gilgames, +there has never been a passage hither, and no one from time immemorial +has been able to cross the sea. Shamash the valiant crossed the sea; +after Shamash, who can cross it? The crossing is troublesome, the way +difficult, perilous the Water of Death, which, like a bolt, is drawn +between thee and thy aim. Even if, Gilgames, thou didst cross the +sea, what wouldest thou do on arriving at the Water of Death?” Arad-Ea, +Shamashnapishtim’s mariner, can alone bring the enterprise to a happy +ending: “if it is possible, thou shalt cross the sea with him; if it is +not possible, thou shalt retrace thy steps.” + +* We must not forget that Gilgames is covered with leprosy; this is the +disease with which the Chaldaean gods mark their enemies when they wish +to punish them in a severe fashion. + +[Illustration: 073.jpg GILGAMES AND ARAD-EA NAVIGATING THEIR VESSEL.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a Chaldaean intaglio in the + British Museum. The original measures a little over an inch. + +Arad-Ea and the hero took ship: forty days’ tempestuous cruising brought +them to the Waters of Death, which with a supreme effort they passed. +Beyond these they rested on their oars and loosed their girdles: the +happy island rose up before them, and Shamashnapishtim stood upon the +shore, ready to answer the questions of his grandson. + +None but a god dare enter his mysterious paradise: the bark bearing +an ordinary mortal must stop at some distance from the shore, and the +conversation is carried on from on board. Gilgames narrated once +more the story of his life, and makes known the object of his visit; +Shamashnapishtim answers him stoically that death follows from an +inexorable law, to which it is better to submit with a good grace. +“However long the time we shall build houses, however long the time we +shall put our seal to contracts, however long the time brothers shall +quarrel with each other, however long the time there shall be hostility +between kings, however long the time rivers shall overflow their banks, +we shall not be able to portray any image of death. When the spirits +salute a man at his birth, then the genii of the earth, the great gods, +Mamitu the moulder of destinies, all of them together assign a fate to +him, they determine for him his life and death; but the day of his death +remains unknown to him.” Gilgames thinks, doubtless, that his forefather +is amusing himself at his expense in preaching resignation, seeing that +he himself had been able to escape this destiny. “I look upon thee, +Shamashnapishtim, and thy appearance has not changed: thou art like me +and not different, thou art like me and I am like thee. Thou wouldest +be strong enough of heart to enter upon a combat, to judge by thy +appearance; tell me, then, how thou hast obtained this existence among +the gods to which thou hast aspired?” Shamashnapishtim yields to his +wish, if only to show him how abnormal his own case was, and indicate +the merits which had marked him out for a destiny superior to that of +the common herd of humanity. He describes the deluge to him, and relates +how he was able to escape from it by the favour of Ea, and how by that +of Bel he was made while living a member of the army of the gods. “‘And +now,’ he adds, ‘as far as thou art concerned, which one of the Gods will +bestow upon thee the strength to obtain the life which thou seekest? +Come, go to sleep!’ Six days and seven nights he is as a man whose +strength appears suspended, for sleep has fallen upon him like a blast +of wind. Shamashnapishtim spoke to his wife: ‘Behold this man who asks +for life, and upon whom sleep has fallen like a blast of wind.’ The wife +answers Shamashnapishtim, the man of distant lands: ‘Cast a spell upon +him, this man, and he will eat of the magic broth; and the road by which +he has come, he will retrace it in health of body; and the great gate +through which he has come forth, he will return by it to his country.’ +Shamashnapishtim spoke to his wife: ‘The misfortunes of this man +distress thee: very well, cook the broth, and place it by his head.’ +And while Gilgames still slept on board his vessel, the material for the +broth was gathered; on the second day it was picked, on the third it was +steeped, on the fourth Shamashnapishtim prepared his pot, on the fifth +he put into it ‘Senility,’ on the sixth the broth was cooked, on the +seventh he cast his spell suddenly on his man, and the latter consumed +the broth. Then Gilgames spoke to Shamashnapishtim, the inhabitant of +distant lands: ‘I hesitated, slumber laid hold of me; thou hast cast a +spell upon me, thou hast given me the broth.’” The effect would not have +been lasting, if other ceremonies had not followed in addition to this +spell from the sorcerer’s kitchen: Gilgames after this preparation could +now land upon the shore of the happy island and purify himself there. +Shamashnapishtim confided this business to his mariner Arad-Ea: “‘The +man whom thou hast brought, his body is covered with ulcers, the leprous +scabs have spoiled the beauty of his body. Take him, Arad-Ea, lead him +to the place of purification, let him wash his ulcers white as snow in +the water, let him get rid of his scabs, and let the sea bear them away +so that at length his body may appear healthy. He will then change +the fillet which binds his brows, and the loin-cloth which hides his +nakedness: until he returns to his country, until he reaches the end of +his journey, let him by no means put off the loin-cloth, however ragged; +then only shall he have always a clean one.’ Then Arad-Ea took him and +conducted him to the place of purification: he washed his ulcers white +as snow in the water, he got rid of his scabs, and the sea carried them +away, so that at length his body appeared healthy. He changed the fillet +which bound his brows, the loincloth which hid his nakedness: until +he should reach the end of his journey, he was not to put off the +loin-cloth, however ragged; then alone was he to have a clean one.” The +cure effected, Gilgames goes again on board his bark, and returns to the +place where Shamashnapishtim was awaiting him. + +Shamashnapishtim would not send his descendant back to the land of the +living without making him a princely present. “His wife spoke to him, +to him Shamashnapishtim, the inhabitant of distant lands: ‘Gilgames has +come, he is comforted, he is cured; what wilt thou give to him, now that +he is about to return to his country?’ He took the oars, Gilgames, he +brought the bark near the shore, and Shamashnapishtim spoke to him, to +Gilgames: ‘Gilgames, thou art going from here comforted; what shall I +give thee, now that thou art about to return to thy country? I am about +to reveal to thee, Gilgames, a secret, and the judgment of the gods I am +about to tell it thee. There is a plant similar to the hawthorn in its +flower, and whose thorns prick like the viper. If thy hand can lay hold +of that plant without being torn, break from it a branch, and bear it +with thee; it will secure for thee an eternal youth.’Gilgames gathers +the branch, and in his joy plans with Arad-Ea future enterprises: +‘Arad-Ea, this plant is the plant of renovation, by which a man +obtains life; I will bear it with me to Uruk the well-protected, I will +cultivate a bush from it, I will cut some of it, and its name shall +be, “the old man becomes young by it;” I will eat of it, and I shall +repossess the vigour of my youth.’” He reckoned without the gods, whose +jealous minds will not allow men to participate in their privileges. +The first place on which they set foot on shore, “he perceived a well of +fresh water, went down to it, and whilst he was drawing water, a serpent +came out of it, and snatched from him the plant, yea--the serpent rushed +out and bore away the plant, and while escaping uttered a malediction. +That day Gilgames sat down, he wept, and his tears streamed down his +cheeks he said to the mariner Arad-Ba: ‘What is the use, Arad-Ea, of my +renewed strength; what is the use of my heart’s rejoicing in my return +to life? It is not myself I have served; it is this earthly lion I have +served. Hardly twenty leagues on the road, and he for himself alone has +already taken possession of the plant. As I opened the well, the plant +was lost to me, and the genius of the fountain took possession of it: +who am I that I should tear it from him?’” He re-embarks in sadness, +he re-enters Uruk the well-protected, and at length begins to think of +celebrating the funeral solemnities of Eabani, to whom he was not able +to show respect at the time of his death. He supervises them, fulfils +the rites, intones the final chant: “The temples, thou shalt enter them +no more; the white vestments, thou shalt no longer put them on; the +sweet-smelling ointments, thou shalt no longer anoint thyself with them +to envelop thee with their perfume. Thou shalt no longer press thy +bow to the ground to bend it, but those that the bow has wounded shall +surround thee; thou no longer holdest thy sceptre in thy hand, but +spectres fascinate thee; thou no longer adornest thy feet with wings, +thou no longer givest forth a sound upon the earth. Thy wife whom thou +lovedst thou embracest her no more; thy wife whom thou hatedst thou +beatest her no more. Thy daughter whom thou lovedst thou embracest her +no more; thy daughter whom thou hatedst, thou beatest her no more. The +resounding earth lies heavy upon thee, she who is dark, she who is +dark, Tjinazu the mother, she who is dark, whose side is-not veiled with +splendid vestments, whose bosom, like a new-born animal, is not covered. +Eabani has descended from the earth to Hades; it is not the messenger +of Nergal the implacable who has snatched him away, it is not the plague +which has carried him off, it is not consumption that has carried him +off, it is the earth which has carried him off; it is not the field of +battle which has carried him off, it is the earth which has carried him +off!” Gilgames dragged himself along from temple to temple, repeating +his complaint before Bel and before Sin, and at length threw himself +at the feet of the god of the Dead, Nergal: “‘Burst open the sepulchral +cavern, open the ground, that the spirit of Eabani may issue from the +soil like a blast of wind.’ As soon as Nergal the valiant heard him, +he burst open the sepulchral vault, he opened the earth, he caused the +spirit of Eabani to issue from the earth like a blast of wind.” Gilgames +interrogates him, and asks him with anxiety what the state of the dead +may be: “‘Tell, my friend, tell, my friend, open the earth and what thou +seest tell it.’--‘I cannot tell it thee, my friend, I cannot tell it +thee; if I should open the earth before thee, if I were to tell to thee +that which I have seen, terror would overthrow thee, thou wouldest faint +away, thou wouldest weep.’--‘Terror will overthrow me, I shall faint +away, I shall weep, but tell it to me.’” And the ghost depicts for him +the sorrows of the abode and the miseries of the shades. Those only +enjoy some happiness who have fallen with arms in their hands, and who +have been solemnly buried after the fight; the manes neglected by their +relatives succumb to hunger and thirst.* “On a sleeping couch he lies, +drinking pure water, he who has been killed in battle. ‘Thou hast seen +him?’--‘I have seen him; his father and his mother support his head, and +his wife bends over him wailing.’ ‘But he whose body remains forgotten +in the fields,--thou hast seen him?’--‘I have seen him; his soul has no +rest at all in the earth.’ ‘He whose soul no one cares for,--thou hast +seen him?’--‘I have seen him; the dregs of the cup, the remains of a +repast, that which is thrown among the refuse of the street, that is +what he has to nourish him.’” This poem did not proceed in its entirety, +or at one time, from the imagination of a single individual. Each +episode of it answers to some separate legend concerning Gilgames, or +the origin of Uruk the well-protected: the greater part preserves under +a later form an air of extreme antiquity, and, if the events dealt with +have not a precise bearing on the life of a king, they paint in a lively +way the vicissitudes of the life of the people.** These lions, leopards, +or gigantic uruses with which Grilgames and his faithful Eabani carry +on so fierce a warfare, are not, as is sometimes said, mythological +animals. + + * Cf. vol. i. pp. 160, 161 of this History for analogous + ideas among the Egyptians as to the condition of the dead + who were neglected by their relatives: the Egyptian double + had to live on the same refuse as the Chaldaean soul. + + ** G. Smith, identifying Gilgames with Nimrod, believes, on + the other hand, that Nimrod was a real king, who reigned in + Mesopotamia about 2250 B.C.; the poem contains, according to + him, episodes, more or less embellished, in the life of the + sovereign. + +Similar monsters, it was believed, appeared from time to time in the +marshes of Chaldaea, and gave proof of their existence to the inhabitants +of neighbouring villages by such ravages as real lions and tigers commit +in India or the Sahara. It was the duty of chiefs on the border lands of +the Euphrates, as on the banks of the Nile, as among all peoples still +sunk in semi-barbarism, to go forth to the attack of these beasts +single-handed, and to sacrifice themselves one after the other, until +one of them more fortunate or stronger than the rest should triumph +over these mischievous brutes. The kings of Babylon and Nineveh in later +times converted into a pleasure that which had been an official duty of +their early predecessors: Gilgames had not yet arrived at that stage, +and the seriousness, not to speak of the fear, with which he entered +on the fight with such beasts, is an evidence of the early date of the +portions of his history which are concerned with his hunting exploits. +The scenes are represented on the seals of princes who reigned prior to +the year 3000 B.C., and the work of the ancient engraver harmonizes so +perfectly with the description of the comparatively modern scribe that +it seems like an anticipated illustration of the latter; the engravings +represent so persistently and with so little variation the images of +the monsters, and those of Gilgames and his faithful Eabani, that the +corresponding episodes in the poem must have already existed as we know +them, if not in form, at least in their main drift. Other portions of +the poem are more recent, and it would seem that the expedition against +Khumbaba contains allusions to the Elamite* invasions from which Chaldaea +had suffered so much towards the XXth century before our era. The +traditions which we possess of the times following the Deluge, embody, +like the adventures of Gilganes, very ancient elements, which the +scribes or narrators wove together in a more or less skilful manner +around the name of some king or divinity. + + * Smith thought he could restore from the poem a part of + Chaldaean history: he supposed Izdubar-Nimrod to have been, + about 2250, the liberator of Babylon, oppressed by Elam, and + the date of the foundation of a great Babylonian empire to + have coincided with his victory over the Elamites. The + annals of Assurbanipal show us, in fact, that an Elamite + king, Kudurnankhundi, had pillaged Uruk about 2280 B.C., and + had transported to Susa a statue of the goddess Ishtar. + +[Illustration: 082.jpg GILGAMES STRUGGLES WITH A LION] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a Chaldaean intaglio in the + British Museum. The original measures about 1 2/5 inch in + height. + +The fabulous chronicle of the cities of the Euphrates existed, +therefore, in a piecemeal condition--in the memory of the people or in +the books of the priests--before even their primitive history began; +the learned who collected it later on had only to select some of the +materials with which it furnished them, in order to form out of them a +connected narrative, in which the earliest ages were distinguished from +the most recent only in the assumption of more frequent and more direct +interpositions of the powers of heaven in the affairs of men. Every city +had naturally its own version, in which its own protecting deities, its +heroes and princes, played the most important parts. That of Babylon +threw all the rest into the shade; not that it was superior to them, +but because this city had speedily become strong enough to assert its +political supremacy over the whole region of the Euphrates. Its scribes +were accustomed to see their master treat the lords of other towns as +subjects or vassals. They fancied that this must have always been +the case, and that from its origin Babylon had been recognized as the +queen-city to which its contemporaries rendered homage. They made its +individual annals the framework for the history of the entire country, +and from the succession of its princely families on the throne, diverse +as they were in origin, they constructed a complete canon of the kings +of Chaldaea. + +But the manner of grouping the names and of dividing the dynasties +varied according to the period in which the lists were drawn up, and at +the present time we are in possession of at least two systems which the +Babylonian historians attempted to construct. Berossus, who communicated +one of them to the Greeks about the beginning of the IInd century B.C., +would not admit more than eight dynasties in the period of thirty-six +thousand years between the Deluge and the Persian invasion. The lists, +which he had copied from originals in the cuneiform character, have +suffered severely at the hands of his abbreviators, who omitted the +majority of the names which seemed to them very barbarous in form, while +those who copied these abbreviated lists have made such further havoc +with them that they are now for the most part unintelligible. Modern +criticism has frequently attempted to restore them, with varying +results; the reconstruction here given, which passes for the most +probable, is not equally certain in all its parts:--* + +[Illustration: 084.jpg CHRONOLOGIC TABLE] + +It was not without reason that Berossus and his authorities had put the +sum total of reigns at thirty-six thousand years; this number falls in +with a certain astrological period, during which the gods had granted to +the Chaldaeans glory, prosperity, and independence, and whose termination +coincided with the capture of Babylon by Cyrus.** Others before them had +employed the same artifice, but they reckoned ten dynasties in the place +of the eight accepted by Berossus:-- + + * After the example of G. B. Niebuhr, Gutschmid admitted + here, as Oppert did, 45 Assyrians; he based his view on + Herodotus, in which it is said that the Assyrians held sway + in Asia for 520 years, until its conquest by the Medes. Upon + the improbability of this opinion, see Schrader’s + demonstration. + + ** The existence of this astronomical or astrological scheme + on which Berossus founded his chronology, was pointed out by + Brandis, afterwards by Gutschmid; it is now generally + accepted. + +[Illustration: 085.jpg TABLE] + +Attempts have been made to bring the two lists* into harmony, with +varying results; in my opinion, a waste of time and labour. For even +comparatively recent periods of their history, the Chaldaeans, like +the Egyptians, had to depend upon a collection of certain abbreviated, +incoherent, and often contradictory documents, from which they found it +difficult to make a choice: they could not, therefore, always come to an +agreement when they wished to determine how many dynasties had succeeded +each other during these doubtful epochs, how many kings were included in +each dynasty, and what length of reign was to be assigned to each king. +We do not know the motives which influenced Berossus in his preference +of one tradition over others; perhaps he had no choice in the matter, +and that of which he constituted himself the interpreter was the only +one which was then known. In any case, the tradition he followed forms a +system which we cannot, modify without misinterpreting the intention of +those who drew it up or who have handed it down to us. We must accept +or reject it just as it is, in its entirety and without alteration: +to attempt to adapt it to the testimony of the monuments would be +equivalent to the creation of a new system, and not to the correction +simply of the old one. The right course is to put it aside for the +moment, and confine ourselves to the original lists whose fragments have +come down to us: they do not furnish us, it is true, with a history of +Chaldaea such as it unfolded itself from age to age, but they teach us +what the later Chaldaeans knew, or thought they knew, of that history. +Still it is wise to treat them with some reserve, and not to forget that +if they agree with each other in the main, they differ frequently in +details. Thus the small dynasties, which are called the VIth and VIIth, +include the same number of kings on both the tablets which establish +their existence, but the number of years assigned to the names of +the kings and the total years of each dynasty vary a little from one +another:-- + + * The first document having claim to the title of Royal + Canon was found among the tablets of the British Museum, and + was published by G. Smith. The others were successively + discovered by Pinches; some erroneous readings in them have + been corrected by Fr. Delitzsch, and an exact edition has + been published by Knudtzon. Smith’s list is the fragment of + a chronicle in which the VIth, VIIth, and VIIIth dynasties + only are almost complete. One of Pinches’s lists consists + merely of a number of royal names not arranged in any + consistent order, and containing their non-Semitic as well + as their Semitic forms. The other two lists are actual + canons, giving the names of the kings and the years of their + reigns; unfortunately they are much mutilated, and the + lacunae in them cannot yet be filled up. All of them have + been translated by Sayce. + +[Illustration: 080.jpg TABLE] + +[Illustration: 081.jpg TABLE] + +Is the difference in the calculations the fault of the scribes, who, +in mechanically copying and recopying, ended by fatally altering the +figures? Or is it to be explained by some circumstance of which we are +ignorant--an association on the throne, of which the duration is at one +time neglected with regard to one of the co-regents, and at another time +with regard to the other; or was it owing to a question of legitimacy, +by which, according to the decision arrived at, a reign was prolonged or +abbreviated? Cotemporaneous monuments will some day, perhaps, enable +us to solve the problem which the later Chaldaeans did not succeed in +clearing up. While awaiting the means to restore a rigorously exact +chronology, we must be content with the approximate information +furnished by the tablets as to the succession of the Babylonian kings. + +Actual history occupied but a small space in the lists--barely twenty +centuries out of a whole of three hundred and sixty: beyond the historic +period the imagination was given a free rein, and the few facts which +were known disappeared almost completely under the accumulation of +mythical narratives and popular stories. It was not that the documents +were entirely wanting, for the Chaldaeans took a great interest in their +past history, and made a diligent search for any memorials of it. Each +time they succeeded in disinterring an inscription from the ruins of a +town, they were accustomed to make-several copies of it, and to deposit +them among the archives, where they would be open to the examination +of their archaeologists.* When a prince undertook the rebuilding of +a temple, he always made excavations under the first courses of the +ancient structure in order to recover the documents which preserved the +memory of its foundation: if he discovered them, he recorded on the new +cylinders, in which he boasted of his own work, the name of the first +builder, and sometimes the number of years which had elapsed since its +erection.** + + * We have a considerable number of examples of copies of + ancient texts made in this manner. For instance, the + dedication of a temple at Uruk by King Singashid, copied by + the scribe Nabubalatsuikbi, son of Mizirai (“the Egyptian + “), for the temple of Ezida; the legendary history of King + Sargon of Agade, copied from the inscription on the base of + his statue, of which there will be further mention (pp. 91- + 93 of this History); a dedication of the King Khammurabi; + the inscription of Agumkakrimi, which came from the library + of Assurbanipal. + + ** Nabonidos, for instance, the last king of Babylon before + the Persian conquest, has left us a memorial of his + excavations. He found in this manner the cylinders of + Shagashaltiburiash at Sippara, those of Khammurabi, and + those of Naramsin. + +We act in a similar way to-day, and our excavations, like those of the +Chaldaeans, end in singularly disconnected results: the materials which +the earth yields for the reconstruction of the first centuries consist +almost entirely of mutilated records of local dynasties, isolated +names of sovereigns, dedications of temples to gods, on sites no longer +identifiable, of whose nature we know nothing, and too brief allusions +to conquests or victories over vaguely designated nations.* The +population was dense and life active in the plains of the Lower +Euphrates. The cities in this region formed at their origin so many +individual and, for the most part, petty states, whose kings and patron +gods claimed to be independent of all the neighbouring kings and gods: +one city, one god, one lord--this was the rule here as in the ancient +feudal districts from which the nomes of Egypt arose. The strongest +of these principalities imposed its laws upon the weakest: formed into +unions of two or three under a single ruler, they came to constitute a +dozen kingdoms of almost equal strength on the banks of the Euphrates. +On the north we are acquainted with those of Agade, Babylon, Kuta, +Kharsag-Kalama, and that of Kishu, which comprised a part of Mesopotamia +and possibly the distant fortress of Harran: petty as these States were, +their rulers attempted to conceal their weakness by assuming such titles +as “Kings of the Four Houses of the World,” “Kings of the Universe,” + “Kings of Shumir and Akkad.” Northern Babylonia seems to have possessed +a supremacy amongst them. We are probably wise in not giving too much +credit to the fragmentary tablet which assigns to it a dynasty of +kings, of which we have no confirmatory information from other +sources--Amilgula, Shamashnazir, Amilsin, and several others: this list, +however, places among these phantom rulers one individual at least, +Shargina-Sharrukin, who has left us material evidences of his existence. +This Sargon the Elder, whose complete name is Shargani-shar-ali, was +the son of a certain Ittibel, who does not appear to have been king. +At first his possessions were confined to the city of Agade and some +undetermined portions of the environs of Babylon, but he soon succeeded +in annexing Babylon itself, Sippara, Kishu, Uruk, Kuta, and Nipur: the +contemporary records attest his conquest of Elam, Guti, and even of the +far-off land of Syria, which was already known to him under the name of +Amuru. His activity as a builder was in no way behind his warlike zeal. +He built Ekur, the sanctuary of Bel in Nipur, and the great temple +Eulbar in Agade, in honour of Anunit, the goddess presiding over the +morning star. He erected in Babylon a palace which afterwards became a +royal burying-place. He founded a new capital, a city which he peopled +with families brought from Kishu and Babylon: for a long time after his +day it bore the name which he bestowed upon it, Dur-Sharrukin. This +sums up all the positive knowledge we have about him, and the later +Chaldseans seem not to have been much better informed than ourselves. + + * The earliest Assyriologists, H. Rawlinson, Oppert, + considered the local kings as having been, for the most + part, kings of all Chaldaea, and placed them in succession + one after the other in the framework of the most ancient + dynasties of Berossus. The merit of having established the + existence of series of local dynasties, and of having given + to Chaldaean history its modern form, belongs to G. Smith. + Smith’s idea was adopted by Menant, by Delitzsch-Murdter, by + Tiele, by Winckler, and by all Assyriologists, with + modifications suggested by the progress of decipherment. + +They filled up the lacunae of his history with legends. As he seemed +to them to have appeared suddenly on the scene, without any apparent +connection with the king who preceded him, they assumed that he was a +usurper of unknown origin, irregularly introduced by the favour of the +gods into the lawful series of kings. An inscription engraved, it was +said, on one of his statues, and afterwards, about the VIIth century +B.C., copied and deposited in the library of Nineveh, related at length +the circumstances of his mysterious birth. “Sharrukin, the mighty king, +the king of Agade, am I. My mother was a princess; my father, I did not +know him; the brother of my father lived in the mountains. My town was +Azupirani, which is situated on the bank of the Euphrates. My mother, +the princess, conceived me, and secretly gave birth to me: she placed +me in a basket of reeds, she shut up the mouth of it with bitumen, she +abandoned me to the river, which did not overwhelm me. The river bore +me; it brought me to Akki, the drawer of water. Akki, the drawer of +water, received me in the goodness of his heart; Akki, the drawer of +water, made me a gardener. As gardener, the goddess Ishtar loved me, and +during forty-four years I held royal sway; I commanded the Black Heads,* +and ruled them.” This is no unusual origin for the founders of empires +and dynasties; witness the cases of Cyrus and Bomulus.* Sargon, like +Moses, and many other heroes of history or fable, is exposed to the +waters: he owes his safety to a poor fellah who works his shadouf on the +banks of the Euphrates to water the fields, and he passes his infancy in +obscurity, if not in misery. Having reached the age of manhood, Ishtar +falls in love with him as she did with his fellow-craftsman, the +gardener Ishullanu, and he becomes king, we know not by what means. + + * The phrase “Black Heads,” _nishi salmat hahhadi_, has been + taken in an ethnological sense as designating one of the + races of Chaldaea, the Semitic; other Assyriologists consider + it as denoting mankind in general. The latter meaning seems + the more probable. + + ** Smith had already compared the infancy of Sargon with + that of Moses; the comparison with Cyrus, Bacchus, and + Romulus was made by Talbot. Traditions of the same kind are + frequent in history or folk-tales. + +The same inscription which reveals the romance of his youth, recounts +the successes of his manhood, and boasts of the uniformly victorious +issue of his warlike exploits. Owing to lacunae, the end of the account +is in the main wanting, and we are thus prevented from following the +development of his career, but other documents come to the rescue and +claim to furnish its most important vicissitudes. He had reduced the +cities of the Lower Euphrates, the island of Dilmun, Durilu, Elam, the +country of Kazalla: he had invaded Syria, conquered Phoenicia, crossed +the arm of the sea which separates Cyprus from the coast, and only +returned to his palace after an absence of three years, and after having +erected his statues on the Syrian coast. He had hardly settled down to +rest when a rebellion broke out suddenly; the chiefs of Chaldaea formed +a league against him, and blockaded him in Agade: Ishtar, exceptionally +faithful to the end, obtains for him the victory, and he comes out of a +crisis, in which he might have been utterly ruined, with a more secure +position than ever. All these events are regarded as having occurred +sometime about 3800 B.C., at a period when the VIth dynasty was +flourishing in Egypt. Some of them have been proved to be true by recent +discoveries, and the rest are not at all improbable in themselves, +though the work in which they are recorded is a later astrological +treatise. The writer was anxious to prove, by examples drawn from the +chronicles, the use of portents of victory or defeat, of civic peace +or rebellion--portents which he deduced from the configuration of the +heavens on the various days of the month: by going back as far as Sargon +of Agade for his instances, he must have at once increased the respect +for himself on account of his knowledge of antiquity, and the difficulty +which the common herd must have felt in verifying his assertions. His +zeal in collecting examples was probably stimulated by the fact that +some of the exploits which he attributes to the ancient Sargon had been +recently accomplished by a king of the same name: the brilliant career +of Sargon of Agade would seem to have been in his estimation something +like an anticipation of the still more glorious life of the Sargon of +Nineveh.* What better proof of the high veneration in which the learned +men of Assyria held the memory of the ancient Chaldaean conqueror? +Naramsin, who succeeded Sargon about 3750 B.C.** inherited his +authority, and to some extent his renown. + + * Hommel (Gescamede, p. 307) believes that the life of our + Sargon was modelled, not on the Assyrian Sargon, but on a + second Sargon, whom he places about 2000 B.C. Tiele refuses + to accept the hypothesis, but his objections are not + weighty, in my opinion; Hilprecht and Sayce accepted the + authenticity of the facts in their details, and the recent + discoveries have shown that they were right in so doing. + There is a distant resemblance between the life of the + legendary Sargon and the account of the victories of Ramses + II. ending in a conspiracy on his return. + + + ** The date of Naramsin is given us by the cylinder of + Nabonidos, who is cited lower down. It was discovered by + Pinches. Its authenticity is maintained by Oppert, by + Latrille, by Tiele, by Hommel, who felt at first some + hesitation, by Delitzsch-Murdter; it has been called in + question, with hesitation, by Ed. Meyer, and more boldly by + Winckler. There is at present no serious reason to question + its accuracy, at least relatively, except the instinctive + repugnance of modern critics to consider as legitimate, + dates which carry them back further into the past than they + are accustomed to go. + +The astrological tablets assert that he attacked the city of Apirak, on +the borders of Elam, killed the Sing, Rish-ramman, and led the people +away into slavery. He conquered at least part, if not the whole of Elam, +and one of the few monuments which have come down to us was raised at +Sippara in commemoration of his prowess against the mountaineers of the +Zagros. He is represented on it overpowering their chief: his warriors +follow after him and charge up the hill, carrying everything before +their steady onslaught. Another of his warlike expeditions is said to +have had as its field of operations a district of Magan, which, in the +view of the writer, undoubtedly represented the Sinaitic Peninsula and +perhaps Egypt. This expedition against Magan no doubt took place, and +one of the few monuments of Naramsin which have reached us refers to it. +Other inscriptions tell us incidentally that Naramsin reigned over the +“four Houses of the world,” Babylon, Sippara, Nipur, and Lagash. Like +his father, he had worked at the building of the Ekur of Nipur and the +Bulbar of Agade; he erected, moreover, at his own cost, the temple +of the Sun at Sippara.* The latter passed through many and varied +vicissitudes. Restored, enlarged, ruined on several occasions, the date +of its construction and the name of its founder were lost in the course +of ages. + + * The text giving us this information is that in which + Nabonidos affirms that Naramsin, son of Sargon of Agado, had + founded the temple of the Sun at Sippara, 3200 years before + himself, which would give us 3750 B.C. for the reign of + Naramsin. + +The last independent King of Babylon, Nabonaid [Nabonidos], at length +discovered the cylinders in which Naramsin, son of Sargon, had signified +to posterity all that he had done towards the erection of a temple +worthy of the deity to the god of Sippara: “for three thousand two +hundred years not one of the kings had been able to find them.” We +have no means of judging what these edifices were like for which +the Chaldaeans themselves showed such veneration; they have entirely +disappeared, or, if anything remains of them, the excavations hitherto +carried out have not revealed it. Many small objects, however, which +have accidentally escaped destruction give us a fair idea of the artists +who lived in Babylon at this time, and of their skill in handling the +graving-tool and chisel. An alabaster vase with the name of +Naramsin, and a mace-head of exquisitely veined marble, dedicated by +Shargani-shar-ali to the sun-god of Sippara, are valued only on account +of the beauty of the material and the rarity of the inscription; but a +porphyry cylinder, which belonged to Ibnishar, scribe of the above-named +Shargani, must be ranked among the masterpieces of Oriental engraving. +It represents the hero Gilgames, kneeling and holding with both hands +a spherically shaped vase, from which flow two copious jets forming a +stream running through the country; an ox, armed with a pair of gigantic +crescent-shaped horns, throws back its head to catch one of the jets +as it falls. Everything in this little specimen is equally worthy of +admiration--the purity of outline, the skilful and delicate cutting of +the intaglio, the fidelity of the action, and the accuracy of form. +A fragment of a bas-relief of the reign of Naramsin shows that the +sculptors were not a bit behind the engravers of gems. This consists now +only of a single figure, a god, who is standing on the right, wearing a +conical head-dress and clothed in a hairy garment which leaves his right +arm free. The legs are wanting, the left arm and the hair are for +the most part broken away, while the features have also suffered; its +distinguishing characteristic is a sublety of workmanship which is +lacking in the artistic products of a later age. The outline stands out +from the background with a rare delicacy, the details of the muscles +being in no sense exaggerated: were it not for the costume and pointed +beard, one would fancy it a specimen of Egyptian work of the best +Memphite period. + +[Illustration 096.jpg THE SEAL OF SHARGANI-SHAR-ALI: GILGAMES WATERS THE +CELESTIAL OX.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from Menant. + +One is almost tempted to believe in the truth of the tradition which +ascribes to Naramsin the conquest of Egypt, or of the neighbouring +countries. + +[Illustration: 096a.jpg Painting in Color of Charioteer] + + Drawn by Boudier, from a photograph published by Father + Schiel. + +[Illustration: 097.jpg Page image] + +Did Sargon and Naramsin live at so early a date as that assigned to +them by Nabonidos? The scribes who assisted the kings of the second +Babylonian empire in their archaeological researches had perhaps +insufficient reasons for placing the date of these kings so far back in +the misty past: should evidence of a serious character A constrain us to +attribute to them a later origin, we ought not to be surprised. In the +mean time our best course is to accept the opinion of the Chaldaeans, +and to leave Sargon and Naramsin in the century assigned to them by +Nabonidos, although from this point they look down as from a high +eminence upon all the rest of Chaldaean antiquity. Excavations have +brought to light several personages of a similar date, whether a +little earlier, or a little later: Bingani-sharali, Man-ish-turba, +and especially Alusharshid, who lived at Kishu and Nipur, and gained +victories over Elam. + +[Illustration: 098.jpg Page image: the arms op the city and kings of +Lagash] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a bas-relief from Lagash, now + in the Louvre + +After this glimpse of light on these shadowy kings darkness once more +closes in upon us, and conceals from us the majority of the sovereigns +who ruled afterwards in Babylon. The facts and names which can be +referred with certainty to the following centuries belong not to +Babylon, but to the southern States, Lagash, Uruk, Uru, Nishin, and +Larsam. The national writers had neglected these principalities; +we possess neither a resume of their chronicles nor a list of their +dynasties, and the inscriptions which speak of their the arms of the +city gods and princes are still very rare and kings of Lagash. Lagash, +as far as our evidence goes, was, perhaps, the most illustrious of +all these cities.* It occupied the heart of the country, and its site +covered both sides of the Shatt-el-Hai; the Tigris separated it on the +east from Anshan, the westernmost of the Elamite districts, with which +it carried on a perpetual frontier war. + + * We are indebted almost exclusively to the researches of M. + de Sarzec, and his discoveries at Telloh, for what we know + of it. The results of his excavations, acquired by the + French government, are now in the Louvre. The description of + the ruins, the text of the inscriptions, and an account of + the statues and other objects found in the course of the + work, have been published by Heuzey-Sakzec, _Decouvertes en + Chaldee_. The name of the ancient town has been read + Sirpurla, Zirgulla, etc. + +All parts of the country were not equally fertile: the fruitful and +well-cultivated district in the neighbourhood of the Shatt-el-Hai gave +place to impoverished lands ending to the eastward, finally in swampy +marshes, which with great difficulty furnished means of sustenance to a +poor and thinly scattered population of fisher-folk. + +[Illustration: 099.jpg FRAGMENT OF BAS-RELIEF BY URNINA, KING OF +LAGASH.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a stone in the Louvre. + +The capital, built on the left bank of the river, stretched out to the +north-east and south-west a distance of some five miles. It was not so +much a city as an agglomeration of large villages, each grouped around a +temple or palace--Uruazagga, Gishgalla, G-irsu, Nina, and Lagash, +which latter imposed its name upon the whole. A branch of the river +Shatt-el-Hai protected it on the south, and supplied the village of +Nina with water; no trace of an inclosing wall has been found, and the +temples and palaces seem to have served as refuges in case of attack. +It had as its arms, or totem, a double-headed eagle standing on a lion +passant, or on two demi-lions placed back to back. Its chief god was +called Ningirsu, that is, the lord of Girsu, where his temple stood: his +companion Bau, and his associates Ninagal, Innanna and Ninsia, were +the deities of the other divisions of the city. The princes were first +called kings, but afterwards vicegerents--_patesi_--when they came under +the suzerainty of a more powerful king, the King of Uruk or of Babylon. + +The earlier history of this remarkable town is made up of the +scanty memoirs of its rulers, together with those of the princes of +Gishban--“the land of the Bow,” of which Ishin seems to have been the +principal town. A very ancient document states, that, at the instigation +of Inlil, the god of Nipur, the local deities, Ningirsu and Kirsig, set +up a boundary between the two cities. In the course of time, Meshilim, +a king of Kishu, which, before the rise of Agade, was the chief town in +those parts, extended his dominion over Lagash and erected his stele at +its border; Ush, vicegerent of Gishban, however, removed it, and had to +suffer defeat before he would recognize the new order of things. After +the lapse of some years, of which we possess no records, we find the +mention of a certain Urukagina, who assumes the title of king: he +restored or enlarged several temples, and dug the canal which supplied +the town of Nina with water. A few generations later we find the ruling +authority in the hands of a certain Urnina, whose father Ninigaldun and +grandfather Gurshar received no titles--a fact which proves that they +could not have been reigning sovereigns. Urnina appears to have been of +a peaceful and devout disposition, as the inscriptions contain frequent +references to the edifices he had erected in honour of the gods, the +sacred objects he had dedicated to them, and the timber for building +purposes which he had brought from Magan, but there is no mention in +them of any war. His son Akurgal was also a builder of temples, but +his grandson Idingiranagin, who succeeded Akurgal, was a warlike and +combative prince. + +[Illustration: 101.jpg IDINGIRANAGIN HOLDING THE TOTEM OF LAGASH.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from the bas-relief F2 in the + Louvre. + +It seems probable that, about that time, the kingdom of Gishban had +become a really powerful state. It had triumphed not only over +Babylonia proper, but over Kish, Uru, Uruk, and Larsam, while one of its +sovereigns had actually established his rule in some parts of Northern +Syria. Idingiranagin vanquished the troops of Gishban, and there is now +in the Louvre a trophy which he dedicated in the temple of Ninglrsu on +his return from the campaign. + + * Hilpeecht, Bab. Expcd. of the Univ. of Pennsylvania, vol. + i., 2nd part, p. 47 sqq. + +[Illustration: 102.jpg IDINGIRANAGIN IN HIS CHARIOT LEADING HIS TROOPS.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a bas-relief in the Louvre. The + attendant standing behind the king has been obliterated, but + we see clearly the contour of his shoulder, and his hands + holding the reins. It is a large stele of close-grained + white limestone, rounded at the top, and covered with scenes + and inscriptions on both its faces. One of these faces + treats only of religious subjects. Two warlike goddesses, + crowned with plumed head-dresses and crescent-shaped horns, + are placed before a heap of weapons and various other + objects, which probably represent some of the booty + collected in the campaign. It would appear that they + accompany a tall figure of a god or king, possibly that of + the deity Ningirsu, patron of Lagash and its kings. Ningirsu + raises in one hand an ensign, of which the staff bears at + the top the royal totem, the eagle with outspread wings + laying hold by his talons of two half-lions back to back; + with the other hand he brings a, club down heavily upon a + group of prisoners, who struggle at his feet in the meshes + of a large net. + + +[Illustration: 103.jpg Page image. VULTURES FEEDING UPON THE DEAD.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from the fragment of a bas-relief in + the Louvre. This is the human sacrifice after the victory, + such as we find it in Egypt--the offering to the national + god of a tenth of the captives, who struggle in vain to + escape from fate. On the other stele the battle is at its + height. Idingiranagin, standing upright in his chariot, + which is guided by an attendant, charges the enemy at the + head of his troops, and the plain is covered with corpses + cut down by his fierce blows: a flock of vultures accompany + him, and peck at each other in their struggles over the + arms, legs, and decapitated heads of the vanquished. Victory + once secured, he retraces his steps to bestow funeral + honours upon the dead. + + +[Illustration: 104.jpg PILING UP THE MOUND OF THE DEAD AFTER THE +BATTLE.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from the fragment of a bas-relief in + the Louvre. The bodies raised regularly in layers form an + enormous heap: priests or soldiers wearing loin-cloths mount + to its top, where they pile the offerings and the earth + which are to form the funerary mound. The sovereign, + moreover, has, in honour of the dead, consigned to execution + some of the prisoners, and deigns to kill with his own hand + one of the principal chiefs of the enemy. + +The design and execution of these scenes are singularly rude; men and +beasts--indeed, all the figures--have exaggerated proportions, uncouth +forms, awkward positions, and an uncertain and heavy gait. The war ended +in a treaty concluded with Enakalli, vicegerent of Grishban, by which +Lagash obtained considerable advantages. Idingiranagin replaced the +stele of Meshilim, overthrown by one of Enakalli’s predecessors, and +dug a ditch from the Euphrates to the provinces of Guedln to serve +henceforth as a boundary. He further levied a tribute of corn for the +benefit of the goddess Nina and her consort Ningirsu, and applied +the spoils of the campaign to the building of new sanctuaries for the +patron-gods of his city. + +[Illustration: 105.jpg KING URNINA AND HIS FAMILY.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a bas-relief in the Louvre. Cf. + another bas-relief of the same king, p. 244; and for the + probable explanation of these pierced plaques, see p. 258 of + the present work. + +His reign was, on the whole, a glorious and successful one. He conquered +the mountain district of Elam, rescued Uruk and Uru, which had both +fallen into the hands of the people of Gishban, organized an expedition +against the town of Az and killed its vicegerent, in addition to which +he burnt Arsua, and devastated the district of Mishime. He next directed +an attack against Zuran, king of Udban, and, by vanquishing this Prince +on the field of battle, he extended his dominion over nearly the whole +of Babylonia. + +The prosperity of his dynasty was subjected to numerous and strange +vicissitudes. Whether it was that its resources were too feeble to +stand the exigencies and strain of war for any length of time, or that +intestine strife had been the chief cause of its decline, we cannot +say. Its kings married many wives and became surrounded with a numerous +progeny: Urnina had at least four sons. They often entrusted to their +children or their sons-in-law the government of the small towns which +together made up the city: these represented so many temporary fiefs, of +which the holders were distinguished by the title of “vicegerents.” This +dismemberment of the supreme authority in the interest of princes, who +believed for the most part that they had stronger claims to the throne +than its occupant, was attended with dangers to peace and to the +permanence of the dynasty. The texts furnish us with evidence of the +existence of at least half a dozen descendants of Akurgal--Inannatuma +I., Intemena, his grandson Inannatuma II, all of whom seem to have been +vigorous rulers who energetically maintained the supremacy of their city +over the neighbouring estates. Inannatuma I., however, proved no match +in the end against Urlamma, the vicegerent of Gishban, and lost part, at +least, of the territory acquired by Idingiranagin, but his son Intemena +defeated Urlamma on the banks of the Lumasirta Canal, and, having killed +or deposed him, gave the vicegerency of Gishban to a certain Hi, priest +of Ninab, who remained his loyal vassal to the end of his days. With +his aid Intemena restored the stelae and walls which had been destroyed +during the war; he also cleared out the old canals and dug new ones, the +most important of which was apparently an arm of the Shatt-el-Hai, and +ran from the Euphrates to the Tigris, through the very centre of the +domains of Ghirsu. + +Other kings and vicegerents of doubtful sequence were followed lastly by +Urbau and his son Gudea. These were all piously devoted to Ningirsu in +general, and in particular to the patron of their choice from among +the divinities of the country--Papsukal, Dunziranna, and Ninagal. They +restored and enriched the temples of these gods: they dedicated to +them statues or oblation vases for the welfare of themselves and their +families. It would seem, if we are to trust the accounts which they give +of themselves, that their lives were passed in profound peace, without +other care than that of fulfilling their duties to heaven and its +ministers. Their actual condition, if we could examine it, would +doubtless appear less agreeable and especially less equable; revolutions +in the palace would not be wanting, nor struggles with the other peoples +of Chaldaea, with Susiana and even more distant nations. When Agade rose +into power in Northern Babylonia, they fell under its rule, and one of +them, Lugal-ushum-gal, acknowledged himself a dependant of Sargon. On +the decline of Agade, and when that city was superseded by Uru in the +hegemony of Babylonia proper, the vicegerents of Lagash were transferred +with the other great towns to the jurisdiction of Uru, and flourished +under the supremacy of the new dynasty. + +Grudea, son of Urbau, who, if not the most powerful of its princes, +is at least the sovereign of whom we possess the greatest number of +monuments, captured the town of Anshan in Elam, and this is probably not +the only campaign in which he took part, for he speaks of his success +in an incidental manner, and as if he were in a hurry to pass to more +interesting subjects. + +[Illustration: 108.jpg THE SACRIFICE] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a stone in the Louvre. + +That which seemed to him important in his reign, and which especially +called forth the recognition of posterity, was the number of his pious +foundations, distinguished as they were by beauty and magnificence. The +gods themselves had inspired him in his devout undertakings, and had +even revealed to him the plans which he was to carry out. An old man of +venerable aspect appeared to him in a vision, and commanded him to build +a temple: as he did not know with whom he had to do, Nina his mother +informed him that it was his brother, the god Ningirsu. This having been +made clear, a young woman furnished with style and writing tablet was +presented to him--Nisaba, the sister of Nina; she made a drawing in his +presence, and put before him the complete model of a building. He set +to work on it _con amore_, and sent for materials to the most distant +countries--to Magan, Amanus, the Lebanon, and into the mountains which +separate the valley of the Upper Tigris from that of the Euphrates. + +[Illustration: 109.jpg SITTING STATUE OF GUDEA] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin + +The sanctuaries which he decorated, and of which he felt so proud, are +to-day mere heaps of bricks, now returned to their original clay; but +many of the objects which he placed in them, and especially the statues, +have traversed the centuries without serious damage before finding a +resting-place in the Louvre. The sculptors of Lagash, after the time of +Idingi-ranagin, had been instructed in a good school, and had learned +their business. Their bas-reliefs are not so good as those of Naramsin; +the execution of them is not so refined, the drawing less delicate, and +the modelling of the parts not so well thought out. A good illustration +of their work is the fragment of a square stele which represents a scene +of offering or sacrifice. We see in the lower part of the picture a +female singer, who is accompanied by a musician, playing on a lyre +ornamented with the head of an ox, and a bull in the act of walking. +In the upper part an individual advances, clad in a fringed mantle, and +bearing in his right hand a kind of round paten, and in his left a short +staff. An acolyte follows him, his arms brought up to his breast, while +another individual marks, by clapping his hands, the rhythm of the ode +which a singer like the one below is reciting. The fragment is much +abraded, and its details, not being clearly exhibited, have rather to +be guessed at; but the defaced aspect which time has produced is of some +service to it, since it conceals in some respect the rudeness of +its workmanship. The statues, on the other hand, bear evidence of a +precision of chiselling and a skill beyond question. Not that there are +no faults to be found in the work. They are squat, thick, and heavy +in form, and seem oppressed by the weight of the woollen covering with +which the Chaldeans enveloped themselves; when viewed closely, they +excite at once the wonder and repulsion of an eye accustomed to the +delicate grace, and at times somewhat slender form, which usually +characterized the good statues of the ancient and middle empire of +Egypt. But when we have got over the effect of first impressions, we can +but admire the audacity with which the artists attacked their material. +This is of hard dolerite, offering great resistance to the tool--harder, +perhaps, than the diorite out of which the Memphite sculptor had to +cut his Khephren: they succeeded in mastering it, and in handling it as +freely as if it were a block of limestone or marble. + +[Illustration: 111.jpg Plan of the Ruins of Mughier] + +The surface of the breast and back, the muscular development of the +shoulders and arms, the details of the hands and feet, all the nude +portions, are treated at once with a boldness and attention to minutiae +rarely met with in similar works. The pose is lacking in variety; the +individual, whether male or female, is sometimes represented standing +and sometimes sitting on a low seat, the legs brought together, the bust +rising squarely from the hips, the hands crossed upon the breast, in a +posture of submission or respectful adoration. The mantle passes over +the left shoulder, leaving the right free, and is fastened on the right +breast, the drapery displaying awkward and inartistic folds: the latter +widens in the form of a funnel from top to bottom, being bell-shaped +around the lower part of the body, and barely leaves the ankles exposed. + +[Illustration: 112.jpg STATUES FROM TELLOH. and HEAD OF ONE OF THE +STATUE OF GUDEA.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from Heuzey-Sarzec. + +All the large statues to be seen at the Louvre have lost their heads; +fortunately we possess a few separate heads. Some are completely shaven, +others wear a kind of turban affording shade to the forehead and eyes; +among them all we see the same qualities and defects which we find in +the bodies: a hardness of expression, heaviness, absence of vivacity, +and yet withal a vigour of reproduction and an accurate knowledge of +human anatomy. These are instances of what could be accomplished in a +city of secondary rank; better things were doubtless produced in the +great cities, such as Uru and Babylon. Chaldaean art, as we are able +to catch a glimpse of it in the monuments of Lagash, had neither the +litheness, nor animation, nor elegance of the Egyptian, but it was +nevertheless not lacking in force, breadth, and originality. Urningirsu +succeeded his father Gudea, to be followed rapidly by several successive +vicegerents, ending, it would appear, in Gala-lama. Their inscriptions +are short and insignificant, and show that they did not enjoy the same +resources or the same favour which enabled Gudea to reign gloriously. +The prosperity of Lagash decreased steadily under their administration, +and they were all the humble vassals of the King of Uru, Dungi, son of +Urbau; a fact which tends to make us regard Urbau as having been the +suzerain upon whom Gudea himself was dependent. Uru, the only city among +those of Lower Chaldaea which stands on the right bank of the Euphrates, +was a small but strong place, and favourably situated for becoming one +of the commercial and industrial centres in these distant ages. The +Wady Eummein, not far distant, brought to it the riches of Central and +Southern Arabia, gold, precious stones, gums, and odoriferous resins for +the exigencies of worship. Another route, marked out by wells, traversed +the desert to the land of the semi-fabulous Mashu, and from thence +perhaps penetrated as far as Southern Syria and the Sinaitic +Peninsula--Magan and Milukhkha on the shores of the Red Sea: this was +not the easiest but it was the most direct route for those bound for +Africa, and products of Egypt were no doubt carried along it in order +to reach in the shortest time the markets of Uru. The Euphrates now +runs nearly five miles to the north of the town, but from the regions +bordering the Black Sea. + +[Illustration: 114.jpg Plan of the Ruins of Abu-Shahreyn] + +In ancient times it was not so distant, but passed almost by its +gates. The cedars, cypresses, and pines of Amamis and the Lebanon,the +limestones, marbles, and hard stones of Upper Syria, were brought down +to it by boat; and probably also metals--iron, copper and lead. + +The Shatt-el-Hai, moreover, poured its waters into the Euphrates almost +opposite the city, and opened up to it commercial relations with the +Upper and Middle Tigris. And this was not all; whilst some of its +boatmen used its canals and rivers as highways, another section made +their way to the waters of the Persian Gulf and traded with the ports on +its coast. Eridu, the only city which could have barred their access +to the sea, was a town given up to religion, and existed only for its +temples and its gods. It was not long before it fell under the influence +of its powerful neighbour, becoming the first port of call for vessels +proceeding up the Euphrates. + +[Illustration: 115.jpg AN ARAB CROSSING THE TIGRIS IN A “KUFA.”] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a sketch by Chesney. + +In the time of the Greeks and Romans the Chaldaeans were accustomed +to navigate the Tigris either in round flat-bottomed boats, of little +draught--“kufas,” in fact--or on rafts placed upon inflated skins, +exactly similar in appearance and construction to the “keleks” of our +own day. These keleks were as much at home on the sea as upon the river, +and they may still be found in the Persian Gulf engaged in the coasting +trade. Doubtless many of these were included among the vessels of Uru +mentioned in the texts, but there were also among the latter those +long large rowing-boats with curved stem and stern, Egyptian in their +appearance, which are to be found roughly incised on some ancient +cylinders. These primitive fleets were not disposed to risk the +navigation of the open sea. They preferred to proceed slowly along the +shore, hugging it in all cases, except when it was necessary to reach +some group of neighbouring islands; many days of navigation were thus +required to make a passage which one of our smallest sail-boats would +effect in a few hours, and at the end of their longest voyages they +were not very distant from their point of departure. It would be a great +mistake to suppose them capable of sailing round Arabia and of fetching +blocks of stone by sea from the Sinaitic Peninsula; such an expedition, +which would have been dangerous even for Greek or Roman Galleys, would +have been simply impossible for them. If they ever crossed the Strait +of Ormuzd, it was an exceptional thing, their ordinary voyages being +confined within the limits of the gulf. The merchants of Uru were +accustomed to visit regularly the island of Dilmun, the land of Magan, +the countries of Milukhkha and Gubin; from these places they brought +cargoes of diorite for their sculptors, building-timber for their +architects, perfumes and metals transported from Yemen by land, and +possibly pearls from the Bahrein Islands. They encountered serious +rivalry from the sailors of Dilmun and Magan, whose maritime tribes were +then as now accustomed to scour the seas. The risk was great for those +who set out on such expeditions, perhaps never to return, but the profit +was considerable. + +[Illustration: 117.jpg AN ASSYRIAN KELEK LADEN WITH BUILDING-STONE.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a bas-relief from “Kouyunjik” + (Layard, _The Monuments of Nineveh_, 2nd series, pi. 13; cf. + Place, _Ninive et l’Assyrie_, pl. 43, No. 1.) + +Uru, enriched by its commerce, was soon in a position to subjugate +the petty neighbouring states--Uruk, Larsam, Lagash, and Nipur. Its +territory formed a fairly extended sovereignty, whose lords entitled +themselves kings of Shumir and Akkad, and ruled over all Southern +Chaldaea for many centuries. + +Several of these kings, the Lugalkigubnidudu and the Lugalkisalsi, of +whom some monuments have been preserved to us, seem to have extended +their influence beyond these limits prior to the time of Sargon the +Elder; and we can date the earliest of them with tolerable probability. +Urbau reigned some time about 2900 B.C. He was an energetic builder, and +material traces of his activity are to be found everywhere throughout +the country. The temple of the Sun at Larsam, the temple of Nina in +Uruk, and the temples of Inlilla and Ninlilla in Nipur were indebted +to him for their origin or restoration: he decorated or repaired +all structures which were not of his own erection: in Uru itself +the sanctuary of the moon-god owes its foundation to him, and the +fortifications of the city were his work. Dungi, his son, was an +indefatigable bricklayer, like his father: he completed the sanctuary +of the moon-god, and constructed buildings in Uruk, Lagash, and Kutha. +There is no indication in the inscriptions of his having been engaged +in any civil struggle or in war with a foreign nation; we should make a +serious mistake, however, if we concluded from this silence that peace +was not disturbed in his time. The tie which bound together the petty +states of which Uru was composed was of the slightest. The sovereign +could barely claim as his own more than the capital and the district +surrounding it; the other cities recognized his authority, paid him +tribute, did homage to him in religious matters, and doubtless rendered +him military service also, but each one of them nevertheless maintained +its particular constitution and obeyed its hereditary lords. These +lords, it is true, lost their title of king, which now belonged +exclusively to their suzerain, and each one had to be content in his +district with the simple designation of “vicegerent;” but having once +fulfilled their feudal obligations, they had absolute power over +their ancient domains, and were able to transmit to their progeny the +inheritance they had received from their fathers. Gudea probably, and +most certainly his successors, ruled in this way over Lagash, as a fief +depending on the crown of Uru. After the manner of the Egyptian barons, +the vassals of the kings of Chaldaea submitted to the control of their +suzerain without resenting his authority as long as they felt the +curbing influence of a strong hand: but on the least sign of feebleness +in their master they reasserted themselves, and endeavoured to recover +their independence. A reign of any length was sure to be disturbed by +rebellions sometimes difficult to repress: if we are ignorant of any +such, it is owing to the fact that inscriptions hitherto discovered are +found upon objects upon which an account of a battle would hardly find +a fitting place, such as bricks from a temple, votive cones or cylinders +of terra-cotta, amulets or private seals. We are still in ignorance as +to Dungi’s successors, and the number of years during which this first +dynasty was able to prolong its existence. We can but guess that its +empire broke up by disintegration after a period of no long duration. +Its cities for the most part became emancipated, and their rulers +proclaimed themselves kings once more. We see that the kingdom of +Amnanu, for instance, was established on the left bank of the Euphrates, +with Uruk as its capital, and that three successive sovereigns at +least--of whom Singashid seems to have been the most active--were able +to hold their own there. Uru had still, however, sufficient prestige and +wealth to make it the actual metropolis of the entire country. No one +could become the legitimate lord of Shumir and Accad before he had +been solemnly enthroned in the temple at Uru. For many centuries every +ambitious kinglet in turn contended for its possession and made it +his residence. The first of these, about 2500 B.C., were the lords +of Nishin, Libitanunit, Gamiladar, Inedin, Bursin I., and Ismidagan: +afterwards, about 2400 B.C., Gungunum of Nipur made himself master of +it. The descendants of Gungunum, amongst others Bursin II., Gimilsin, +Inesin, reigned gloriously for a few years. Their records show that +they conquered not only a part of Elam, but part of Syria. They were +dispossessed in their turn by a family belonging to Larsam, whose two +chief representatives, as far as we know, were Nurramman and his son +Sinidinnam (about 2300 B.C.). Naturally enough, Sinidinnam was a builder +or repairer of temples, but he added to such work the clearing of the +Shatt-el-Hai and the excavation of a new canal giving a more direct +communication between the Shatt and the Tigris, and in thus controlling +the water-system of the country became worthy of being considered one of +the benefactors of Chaldaea. + +We have here the mere dust of history, rather than history itself: here +an isolated individual makes his appearance in the record of his name, +to vanish when we attempt to lay hold of him; there, the stem of a +dynasty which breaks abruptly off, pompous preambles, devout formulas, +dedications of objects or buildings, here and there the account of some +battle, or the indication of some foreign country with which relations +of friendship or commerce were maintained--these are the scanty +materials out of which to construct a connected narrative. Egypt has not +much more to offer us in regard to many of her Pharaohs, but we have in +her case at least the ascertained framework of her dynasties, in +which each fact and each new name falls eventually, and after some +uncertainty, into its proper place. The main outlines of the picture are +drawn with sufficient exactitude to require no readjustment, the groups +are for the most part in their fitting positions, the blank spaces or +positions not properly occupied are gradually restricted, and filled in +from day to day; the expected moment is in sight when, the arrangement +of the whole being accomplished, it will be necessary only to fill in +the details. In the case of Chaldaea the framework itself is wanting, +and expedients must be resorted to in order to classify the elements +entering into its composition. Naramsin is in his proper place, or +nearly so; but as for Gudea, what interval separates him from Naramsin, +and at what distance from Gudea are we to place the kings of Uru? The +beginnings of Chaldaea have merely a provisional history: the facts in +it are certain, but the connection of the facts with one another is too +often a matter of speculation. The arrangement which is put forward at +present can be regarded only as probable, but it would be difficult +to propose a better until the excavations have furnished us with fresh +material; it must be accepted merely as an attempt, without pledging to +it our confidence on the one hand, or regarding it with scepticism on +the other. + + + + +CHAPTER II--THE TEMPLES AND THE GODS OF CHALDAEA + +_THE CONSTRUCTION AND REVENUES OF THE TEMPLES--THE POPULAR GODS AND THE +THEOLOGICAL TRIADS----THE DEAD AND HADES_. + +_Chaldaean cities: the resemblance of their ruins to natural mounds +caused by their exclusive use of brick as a building material--Their +city walls: the temples and local gods; reconstruction of their history +by means of the stamped bricks of which they were built--The two types +of ziggurat: the arrangement of the temple of Nannar at Uru. + +The tribes of the Chaldaean gods--Genii hostile to men, their monstrous +shapes; the south-west wind; friendly genii--The Seven, and their +attacks on the moon-god; Gibil, the fire-god, overcomes them and their +snares--The Sumerian gods; Ningirsu: the difficulty of defining them and +of understanding the nature of them; they become merged in the Semitic +deities. + +Characteristics and dispositions of the Chaldaean gods--the goddesses, +like women of the harem, are practically nonentities; Mylitta and +her meretricious rites--The divine aristocracy and its principal +representatives: their relations to the earth, oracles, speaking +statues, household gods--The gods of each city do not exclude those +of neighbouring cities: their alliances and their borrowings from one +another--The sky-gods and the earth-gods, the sidereal gods: the moon +and the sun. + +The feudal gods: several among them unite to govern the world; the two +triads of Eridu--The supreme triad: Anu the heaven; Bel the earth and +his fusion with the Babylonian Merodach; Ea, the god of the waters--The +second triad: Sin the moon and Shamash the sun; substitution of Bamman +for Ishtar in this triad; the winds and the legend of Adapa, the +attributes of Ramman--The addition of goddesses to these two triads; +the insignificant position which they occupy. + +The assembly of the gods governs the world: the bird Zu steals the +tablets of destiny--Destinies are written in the heavens and determined +by the movements of the stars; comets and their presiding deities, Nebo +and Ishtai--The numerical value of the gods--The arrangement of the +temples, the local priesthood, festivals, revenues of the gods and gifts +made to them--Sacrifices, the expiation of crimes--Death and the future +of the soul--Tombs and the cremation of the dead; the royal sepulchres +and funerary rites--Hades and its sovereigns: Nergal, Allat, the +descent of Ishtar into the infernal regions, and the possibility of a +resurrection The invocation of the dead--The ascension of Etana._ + + +[Illustration: 124.jpg Chapter II] + + + + +CHAPTER II--THE TEMPLES AND THE GODS OF CHALDAEA + +_The construction and revenues of the temples--Popular gods and +theological triads--The dead and Hades_. + + +The cities of the Euphrates attract no attention, like those of the +Nile, by the magnificence of their ruins, which are witnesses, +even after centuries of neglect, to the activity of a powerful and +industrious people: on the contrary, they are merely heaps of rubbish in +which no architectural outline can be distinguished--mounds of stiff +and greyish clay, cracked by the sun, washed into deep crevasses by the +rain, and bearing no apparent traces of the handiwork of man. + +[Illustration: 126.jpg PLAN OF THE RUINS OF WAKKA] + +In the estimation of the Chaldaean architects, stone was a material of +secondary consideration: as it was necessary to bring it from a great +distance and at considerable expense, they used it very sparingly, and +then merely for lintels, uprights, thresholds, for hinges on which to +hang their doors, for dressings in some of their state apartments, in +cornices or sculptured friezes on the external walls of their buildings; +and even then its employment suggested rather that of a band of +embroidery carefully disposed on some garment to relieve the plainness +of the material. Crude brick, burnt brick, enamelled brick, but always +and everywhere brick was the principal element in their construction. +The soil of the marshes or of the plains, separated from the pebbles +and foreign substances which it contained, mixed with grass or chopped +straw, moistened with water, and assiduously trodden underfoot, +furnished the ancient builders with materials of incredible tenacity. +This was moulded into thin square bricks, eight inches to a foot across, +and three to four inches thick, but rarely larger: they were stamped on +the flat side, by means of an incised wooden block, with the name of +the reigning sovereign, and were then dried in the sun.* A layer of +fine mortar or of bitumen was sometimes spread between the courses, or +handfuls of reeds would be strewn at intervals between the brickwork to +increase the cohesion: more frequently the crude bricks were piled one +upon another, and their natural softness and moisture brought about +their rapid agglutination.** As the building proceeded, the weight +of the courses served to increase still further the adherence of the +layers: the walls soon became consolidated into a compact mass, in which +the horizontal strata were distinguishable only by the varied tints of +the clay used to make the different relays of bricks. + + * The making of bricks for the Assyrian monuments of the + time of the Sargonids has been minutely described by Place, + _Ninive et l’Assyrie_, vol. i. pp. 211-214. The methods of + procedure were exactly the same as those used under the + earliest king known, as has been proved by the examination + of the bricks taken from the monuments of Uru and Lagash. + + ** This method of building was noticed by classical writers. + The word “Bowarieh,” borne by several ancient mounds in + Chaldoa, signifies, properly speaking, a mat of reeds; it is + applied only to such buildings as are apparently constructed + with alternate layers of brick and dried reeds. The + proportion of these layers differs in certain localities: in + the ruins of the ancient temple of Belos at Babylon, now + called the “Mujelibeh,” the lines of straw and reeds run + uninterruptedly between each course of bricks; in the ruins + of Akkerkuf, they only occur at wider intervals--according + to Niebuhr and Ives, every seventh or eighth course; + according to Raymond, every seventh course, or sometimes + every fifth or sixth course, but in these cases the layer of + reeds becomes 3 1/2 to 3 3/4 inches wide. H. Rawlin-son + thinks, on the other hand, that all the monuments in which + we find layers of straw and reeds between the brick courses + belong to the Parthian period. + +[Illustration: 128.jpg A CHALDAEAN STAMPED BRICK.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a brick preserved in the + Louvre. The bricks bearing historical inscriptions, which + are sometimes met with, appear to have been mostly ex-voto + offerings placed somewhere prominently, and not building + materials hidden in the masonry. + + +Monuments constructed of such a plastic material required constant +attention and frequent repairs, to keep them in good condition: after a +few years of neglect they became quite disfigured, the houses suffered +a partial dissolution in every storm, the streets were covered with +a coating of fine mud, and the general outline of the buildings and +habitations grew blurred and defaced. Whilst in Egypt the main features +of the towns are still traceable above ground, and are so well preserved +in places that, while excavating them, we are carried away from +the present into the world of the past, the Chaldaean cities, on the +contrary, are so overthrown and seem to have returned so thoroughly to +the dust from which their founders raised them, that the most patient +research and the most enlightened imagination can only imperfectly +reconstitute their arrangement. + +The towns were not enclosed within those square or rectangular +enclosures with which the engineers of the Pharaohs fortified their +strongholds. The ground-plan of Uru was an oval, that of Larsam formed +almost a circle upon the soil, while Uruk and Eridu resembled in shape +a sort of irregular trapezium. The curtain of the citadel looked down on +the plain from a great height, so that the defenders were almost out +of reach of the arrows or slings of the besiegers: the remains of the +ramparts at Uruk at the present day are still forty to fifty feet +high, and twenty or more feet in thickness at the top. Narrow turrets +projected at intervals of every fifty feet along the face of the wall: +the excavations have not been sufficiently pursued to permit of our +seeing what system of defence was applied to the entrances. The area +described by these cities was often very large, but the population +in them was distributed very unequally; the temples in the different +quarters formed centres around which were clustered the dwellings of the +inhabitants, sometimes densely packed, and elsewhere thinly scattered. +The largest and richest of these temples was usually reserved for the +principal deity, whose edifices were being continually decorated by +the ruling princes, and the extent of whose ruins still attracts the +traveller. The walls, constructed and repaired with bricks stamped +with the names of lords of the locality, contain in themselves alone an +almost complete history. Did Urbau, we may ask, found the ziggurat of +Nannar in Uru? We meet with his bricks at the base of the most ancient +portions of the building, and we moreover learn, from cylinders +unearthed not far from it, that “for Nannar, the powerful bull of Anu, +the son of Bel, his King, Urbau, the brave hero, King of Uru, had built +E-Timila, his favourite temple.” The bricks of his son Dungi are found +mixed with his own, while here and there other bricks belonging to +subsequent kings, with cylinders, cones, and minor objects, strewn +between the courses, mark restorations at various later periods. What +is true of one Chaldaean city is equally true of all of them, and the +dynasties of Uruk and of Lagash, like those of Uru, can be reconstructed +from the revelations of their brickwork. The lords of heaven promised +to the lords of the earth, as a reward of their piety, both glory and +wealth in this life, and an eternal fame after death: they have, indeed, +kept their word. The majority of the earliest Chaldaean heroes would be +unknown to us, were it not for the witness of the ruined sanctuaries +which they built, and that which they did in the service of their +heavenly patrons has alone preserved their names from oblivion. Their +most extravagant devotion, however, cost them less money and effort than +that of the Pharaohs their contemporaries. While the latter had to +bring from a distance, even from the remotest parts of the desert, the +different kinds of stone which they considered worthy to form part of +the decoration of the houses of their gods, the Chaldaean kings gathered +up outside their very doors the principal material for their buildings: +should they require any other accessories, they could obtain, at +the worst, hard stone for their statues and thresholds in Magan and +Milukhkha, and beams of cedar and cypress in the forests of the Amanus +and the Upper Tigris. Under these conditions a temple was soon erected, +and its construction did not demand centuries of continuous labour, like +the great limestone and granite sanctuaries of Egypt: the same ruler who +laid the first brick, almost always placed the final one, and succeeding +generations had only to keep the building in ordinary repair, without +altering its original plan. The work of construction was in almost +every case carried out all at one time, designed and finished from +the drawings of one architect, and bears traces but rarely of those +deviations from the earlier plans which sometimes make the comprehension +of the Theban temples so difficult a matter: if the state of decay of +certain parts, or more often inadequate excavation, frequently prevent +us from appreciating their details, we can at least reinstate their +general outline with tolerable accuracy. + +While the Egyptian temple was spread superficially over a large area, +the Chalaean temple strove to attain as high an elevation as possible. +The “ziggurats,” whose angular profile is a special characteristic of +the landscapes of the Euphrates, were composed of several immense cubes, +piled up on one another, and diminishing in size up to the small shrine +by which they were crowned and wherein the god himself was supposed to +dwell. There are two principal types of these ziggurats. In the first, +for which the builders of Lower Chaldaea showed a marked preference, +the vertical axis, common to all the superimposed stories, did not pass +through the centre of the rectangle which served as the base of the +whole building; it was carried back and placed near to one of the narrow +ends of the base, so that the back elevation of the temple rose abruptly +in steep narrow ledges above the plain, while the terraces of the front +broadened out into wide platforms. The stories are composed of solid +blocks of crude brick; up to the present, at least, no traces of +internal chambers have been found.* The chapel on the summit could not +contain more than one apartment: an altar stood before the door, and +access to it was obtained by a straight external staircase, interrupted +at each terrace by a more or less spacious landing.** The second type +of temple frequently found in Northern Chaldaea was represented by a +building on a square base with seven stories, all of equal height, +connected by one or two lateral staircases, having on the summit, the +pavilion of the god; this is the “terraced tower” which excited the +admiration of the Greeks at Babylon, and of which the temple of Bel was +the most remarkable example. The ruins of it still exist, but it has +been so frequently and so completely restored in the course of ages, +that it is impossible to say how much now remains of the original +construction. We know of several examples, however, of the other type +of ziggurat--one at Uru, another at Bridu, a third at Uruk, without +mentioning those which have not as yet been methodically explored. None +of them rises directly from the surface of the ground, but they are all +built on a raised platform, which consequently places the foundations of +the temple nearly on a level with the roofs of the surrounding houses. +The raised platform of the temple of Nannar at Uru still measures 20 +feet in height, and its four angles are orientated exactly to the four +cardinal points. Its facade was approached by an inclined plane, or by +a flight of low steps, and the summit, which was surrounded by a low +balustrade, was paved with enormous burnt bricks. On this terrace, +processions at solemn festivals would have ample space to perform their +evolutions. The lower story of the temple occupies a parallelogram of +198 feet in length by 173 feet in width, and rises about 27 feet in +height. + + * Perrot-Ohipiez admit that between the first and second + story there was a sort of plinth seven feet in height which + corresponded to the foundation platform below the first + story. It appears to me, as it did to Loftus, that the slope + which now separates the two vertical masses of brickwork “is + accidental, and owes its existence to the destruction of the + upper portion of the second story.” Taylor mentions only two + stories, and evidently considers the slope in question to be + a bank of rubbish. + + ** Perrot-Chipiez place the staircase leading from the + ground-level to the terrace inside the building--“an + arrangement which would have the advantage of not + interfering with the outline of this immense platform, and + would not detract from the strength and solidity of its + appearance;” Reber proposes a different combination. At Uru, + the whole staircase projects in front of the platform and + “loads up to the edge of the basement of the second story,” + then continues as an inclined plane from the edge of the + first story to the terrace of the second, forming one single + staircase, perhaps of the same width as this second story, + leading from the base to the summit of the building. + +[Illustration: 134.jpg THE TEMPLE OF NANNAR AT URU, APPROXIMATELY +RESTORED.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin. The restoration differs from that + proposed by Perrot-Chipiez. I have made it by working out + the description taken down on the spot by Taylor. + +The central mass of crude brick has preserved its casing of red tiles, +cemented with bitumen, almost intact up to the top; it is +strengthened by buttresses--nine on the longer and six on the shorter +sides--projecting about a foot, which relieve its rather bare surface. +The second story rises to the height of only 20 feet above, the first, +and when intact could not have been more than 26 to 30 feet high.* Many +bricks bearing the stamp of Dungi are found among the materials used in +the latest restoration, which took place about the VIth century before +our era; they have a smooth surface, are broken here and there by +air-holes, and their very simplicity seems to bear witness to the fact +that Nabonidos confined himself to the task of merely restoring things +to the state in which the earlier kings of Uru had left them.** + +[Illustration: 135.jpg THE TEMPLE OF URU IN ITS PRESENT STATE, ACCORDING +TO TAYLOR] + + Facsimile, by Faucher-Gudin, of the drawing published by + Taylor. + + + * At the present time 14 feet high, plus 5 feet of rubbish, + 119 feet long, 75 feet wide (Loftus, _Travels and Researches + in Olialdsea and Susiana_, p. 129). + + ** The cylinders of Nabonidos describing the restoration of + the temple were found at the four angles of the second story + by Taylor. + +Till within the last century, traces of a third story to this temple +might have been distinguished; unlike the lower ones, it was not of +solid brickwork, but contained at least one chamber: this was the Holy +of Holies, the sanctuary of Nannar. The external walls were covered with +pale blue enamelled tiles, having a polished surface. The interior +was panelled with cedar or cypress--rare woods procured as articles +of commerce from the peoples of the North and West; this woodwork was +inlaid in parts with thin leaves of gold, alternating with panels of +mosaics composed of small pieces of white marble, alabaster, onyx, and +agate, cut and polished. + +[Illustration: 136.jpg FURTHER VIEW OF THE TEMPLE OF URU] + + In Its Present State, According To Loftus. Drawn by + Bouchier, from Loftus. + +Here stood the statue of Nannar, one of those stiff and conventionalized +figures in the traditional pose handed down from generation to +generation, and which lingered even in the Chaldaean statues of Greek +times. The spirit of the god dwelt within it in the same way as the +double resided in the Egyptian idols, and from thence he watched over +the restless movements of the people below, the noise of whose turmoil +scarcely reached him at that elevation. The gods of the Euphrates, like +those of the Nile, constituted a countless multitude of visible and +invisible beings, distributed into tribes and empires throughout all the +regions of the universe. A particular function or occupation formed, +so to speak, the principality of each one, in which he worked with an +indefatigable zeal, under the orders of his respective prince or king; +but, whereas in Egypt they were on the whole friendly to man, or at the +best indifferent in regard to him, in Chaldaea they for the most part +pursued him with an implacable hatred, and only seemed to exist in order +to destroy him. These monsters of alarming aspect, armed with knives and +lances, whom the theologians of Heliopolis and Thebes confined within +the caverns of Hades in the depths of eternal darkness, were believed +by the Chaldaeans to be let loose in broad daylight over the earth,--such +were the “gallu” and the “mas-kim,” the “alu” and the “utukku,” besides +a score of other demoniacal tribes bearing curious and mysterious names. + +[Illustration: 137.jpg Lion-headed genius.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a small terra-cotta figure of + the Assyrian period, and now in the Louvre. It was one of + the figures buried under the threshold of one of the gates + of the town at Khorsabad, to keep off baleful influences. + +Some floated in the air and presided over the unhealthy winds. The +South-West Wind, the most cruel of them all, stalked over the solitudes +of Arabia, whence he suddenly issued during the most oppressive months +of the year: he collected round him as he passed the malarial vapours +given off by the marshes under the heat of the sun, and he spread them +over the country, striking down in his violence not only man and beast, +but destroying harvests, pasturage, and even trees. + +[Illustration: 138.jpg THE SOUTH-WEST WIND] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from the bronze original now in the + Louvre. The latter museum and the British Museum possess + several other figures of the same demon. + +The genii of fevers and madness crept in silently everywhere, insidious +and traitorous as they were. The plague alternately slumbered or made +furious onslaughts among crowded populations. Imps haunted the houses, +goblins wandered about the water’s edge, ghouls lay in wait for +travellers in unfrequented places, and the dead quitting their tombs in +the night stole stealthily among the living to satiate themselves with +their blood. The material shapes attributed to these murderous beings +were supposed to convey to the eye their perverse and ferocious +characters. They were represented as composite creatures in whom the +body of a man would be joined grotesquely to the limbs of animals in the +most unexpected combinations. They worked in as best they could, birds’ +claws, fishes’ scales, a bull’s tail, several pairs of wings, the head +of a lion, vulture, hyaena, or wolf; when they left the creature a human +head, they made it as hideous and distorted as possible. The South-West +Wind was distinguished from all the rest by the multiplicity of the +incongruous elements of which his person was composed. His dog-like body +was supported upon two legs terminating in eagle’s claws; in addition to +his arms, which were furnished with sharp talons, he had four outspread +wings, two of which fell behind him, while the other two rose up and +surrounded his head; he had a scorpion’s tail, a human face with large +goggle-eyes, bushy eyebrows, fleshless cheeks, and retreating lips, +showing a formidable row of threatening teeth, while from his flattened +skull protruded the horns of a goat: the entire combination was so +hideous, that it even alarmed the god and put him to flight, when he was +unexpectedly confronted with his own portrait. There was no lack of +good genii to combat this deformed and vicious band. They too +were represented as monsters, but monsters of a fine and noble +bearing,--griffins, winged lions, lion-headed men, and more especially +those splendid human-headed bulls, those “lamassi” crowned with mitres, +whose gigantic statues kept watch before the palace and temple gates. +Between these two races hostility was constantly displayed: restrained +at one point, it broke out afresh at another, and the evil genii, +invariably beaten, as invariably refused to accept their defeat. Man, +less securely armed against them than were the gods, was ever meeting +with them. “Up there, they are howling, here they lie in wait,--they are +great worms let loose by heaven--powerful ones whose clamour rises above +the city--who pour water in torrents from heaven, sons who have come +out of the bosom of the earth.--They twine around the high rafters, +the great rafters, like a crown;--they take their way from house to +house,--for the door cannot stop them, nor bar the way, nor repulse +them,--for they creep like a serpent under the door--they insinuate +themselves like the air between the folding doors,--they separate the +bride from the embraces of the bridegroom,--they snatch the child from +between the knees of the man,--they entice the unwary from out of his +fruitful house,--they are the threatening voice which pursues him from +behind.” Their malice extended even to animals: “They force the raven +to fly away on the wing,--and they make the swallow to escape from its +nest;--they cause the bull to flee, they cause the lamb to flee--they, +the bad demons who lay snares.” + +The most audacious among them did not fear at times to attack the gods +of light; on one occasion, in the infancy of the world, they had sought +to dispossess them and reign in their stead. Without any warning they +had climbed the heavens, and fallen upon Sin, the moon-god; they had +repulsed Shamash, the Sun, and Eamman, both of whom had come to the +rescue; they had driven Ishtar and Anu from their thrones: the whole +firmament would have become a prey to them, had not Bel and Nusku, Ea +and Merodach, intervened at the eleventh hour, and succeeded in hurling +them down to the earth, after a terrible battle. They never completely +recovered from this reverse, and the gods raised up as rivals to them a +class of friendly genii--the “Igigi,” who were governed by five heavenly +Anunnas. + +[Illustration: 141.jpg SIN DELIVERED BY MERODACH FROM THE ASSAULT OF THE +SEVEN EVIL SPIRITS.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from an Assyrian intaglio published + by Layard. + +The earthly Anunnas, the Anunnaki, had as their chiefs seven sons +of Bel, with bodies of lions, tigers, and serpents: “the sixth was a +tempestuous wind which obeyed neither god nor king,--the seventh, a +whirlwind, a desolating storm which destroys everything,”--“Seven, +seven,--in the depth of the abyss of waters they are seven,--and +destroyers of heaven they are seven.--They have grown up in the depths +of the abyss, in the palace;--males they are not, females they are +not,--they are storms which pass quickly.--They take no wife, they give +birth to no child,--they know neither compassion nor kindness,--they +listen to no prayer nor supplication.--As wild horses they are born in +the mountains,--they are the enemies of Ba,--they are the agents of the +gods;--they are evil, they are evil--and they are seven, they are seven, +they are twice seven.” Man, if reduced to his own resources, could have +no chance of success in struggling against beings who had almost reduced +the gods to submission. He invoked in his defence the help of the whole +universe, the spirits of heaven and earth, the spirit of Bel and of +Belit, that of Ninib and of Nebo, those of Sin, of Ishtar, and of +Bamman; but Gibir or Gibil, the Lord of Fire, was the most powerful +auxiliary in this incessant warfare. The offspring of night and of dark +waters, the Anunnaki had no greater enemy than fire; whether kindled +on the household hearth or upon the altars, its appearance put them to +flight and dispelled their power. + +[Illustration: 142.jpg STRUGGLE BETWEEN A GOOD AND AN EVIL GENIUS.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from Layard. + +“Gibil, renowned hero in the land,--valiant, son of the Abyss, exalted +in the land,--Gibil, thy clear flame, breaking forth,--when it lightens +up the darkness,--assigns to all that bears a name its own destiny. +--The copper and tin, it is thou who dost mix them,--gold and silver, +it is thou who meltest them,--thou art the companion of the goddess +Ninkasi--thou art he who exposes his breast to the nightly enemy!--Cause +then the limbs of man, son of his god, to shine,--make him to be bright +like the sky,--may he shine like the earth,--may he be bright like the +interior of the heavens,--may the evil word be kept far from him,” and +with it the malignant spirits. The very insistence with which help is +claimed against the Anunnaki shows how much their power was dreaded. +The Chaldean felt them everywhere about him, and could not move without +incurring the danger of coming into contact with them. He did not fear +them so much during the day, as the presence of the luminary deities in +the heavens reassured him; but the night belonged to them, and he was +open to their attacks. If he lingered in the country at dusk, they were +there, under the hedges, behind walls and trunks of trees, ready to +rush out upon him at every turn. If he ventured after sundown into the +streets of his village or town, he again met with them quarrelling with +dogs over the offal on a rubbish heap, crouched in the shelter of a +doorway, lying hidden in corners where the shadows were darkest. Even +when barricaded within his house, under the immediate protection of +his domestic idols, these genii still threatened him and left him not a +moment’s repose.* The number of them was so great that he was unable to +protect himself adequately from all of them: when he had disarmed the +greater portion of them, there were always several remaining against +whom he had forgotten to take necessary precautions. What must have +been the total of the subordinate genii, when, towards the IXth century +before our era, the official census of the invisible beings stated +the number of the great gods in heaven and earth to be sixty-five +thousand!** + + * The presence of the evil spirits everywhere is shown, + among other magical formulas, by the incantation in + Rawlinson, _Cun, Ins. W. As._, vol. ii. pi. 18, where we + find enumerated at length the places from which they are to + be kept out. The magician closes the house to them, the + hedge which surrounds the house, the yoke laid upon the + oxen, the tomb, the prison, the well, the furnace, the + shade, the vase for libation, the ravines, the valleys, the + mountains, the door. + + ** Assurnazirpal, King of Assyria, speaks in one of his + inscriptions of these sixty-five thousand great gods of + heaven and earth. + +We are often much puzzled to say what these various divinities, whose +names we decipher on the monuments, could possibly have represented. The +sovereigns of Lagash addressed their prayers to Ningirsu, the valiant +champion of Inlil; to Ninursag, the lady of the terrestrial mountain: +to Ninsia, the lord of fate; to the King Ninagal; to Inzu, of whose real +name no one has an idea; to Inanna, the queen of battles; to Pasag, to +Galalim, to Dunshagana, to Ninmar, to Ningishzida. Gudea raised temples +to them in all the cities over which his authority extended, and he +devoted to these pious foundations a yearly income out of his domain +land or from the spoils of his wars. “Gudea, the ‘vicegerent’ of +Lagash, after having built the temple Ininnu for Ningirsu, constructed a +treasury; a house decorated with sculptures, such as no ‘vicegerent’ +had ever before constructed for Ningirsu; he constructed it for him, +he wrote his name in it, he made in it all that was needful, and he +executed faithfully all the words from the mouth of Ningirsu.” The +dedication of these edifices was accompanied with solemn festivals, in +which the whole population took an active part. “During seven years no +grain was ground, and the maidservant was the equal of her mistress, the +slave walked beside his master, and in my town the weak rested by +the side of the strong.” Henceforward Gudea watched scrupulously lest +anything impure should enter and mar the sanctity of the place. + +[Illustration: 145.jpg THE GOD NINGIBSU, PATRON OF LAGASH.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from Heuzey-Sarzec. The attribution + of this figure to Ningirsu is very probable, but not wholly + certain. + +Those we have enumerated were the ancient Sumerian divinities, but the +characteristics of most of them would have been lost to us, had we +not learned, by means of other documents, to what gods the Semites +assimilated them, gods who are better known and who are represented +under a less barbarous aspect. Ningirsu, the lord of the division of +Lagash which was called Girsu, was identified with Ninib; Inlil is Bel, +Ninursag is Beltis, Inzu is Sin, Inanna is Ishtar, and so on with the +rest. The cultus of each, too, was not a local cultus, confined to some +obscure corner of the country; they all were rulers over the whole of +Chaldaea, in the north as in the south, at Uruk, at Urn, at Larsam, at +Nipur, even in Babylon itself. Inlil was the ruler of the earth and of +Hades, Babbar was the sun, Inzu the moon, Inanna-Antmit the morning and +evening star and the goddess or love, at a time when two distinct +religious and two rival groups of gods existed side by side on the banks +of the Euphrates. The Sumerian language is for us, at the present day, +but a collection of strange names, of whose meaning and pronunciation we +are often ignorant. We may well ask what beings and beliefs were +originally hidden under these barbaric combinations of syllables which +are constantly recurring in the inscriptions of the oldest dynasties, +such as Pasag, Dunshagana, Dumuzi-. Zuaba, and a score of others. The +priests of subsequent times claimed to define exactly the attributes of +each of them, and probably their statements are, in the main, correct. +But it is impossible for us to gauge the motives which determined the +assimilation of some of these divinities, the fashion in which it was +carried out, the mutual concessions which Semite and Sumerian must have +made before they could arrive at an understanding, and before the +primitive characteristics of each deity were softened down or entirely +effaced in the process. Many of these divine personages, such as Ea, +Merodach, Ishtar, are so completely transformed, that we may well ask to +which of the two peoples they owed their origin. The Semites finally +gained the ascendency over their rivals, and the Sumerian gods from +thenceforward preserved an independent existence only in connection with +magic, divination, and the science of foretelling events, and also in +the formulas of exorcists and physicians, to which the harshness of +their names lent a greater weight. Elsewhere it was Bel and Sin, Shamash +and Eamman, who were universally worshipped, but a Bel, a Sin, a +Shamash, who still betrayed traces of their former connection with the +Sumerian Inlil and Inzu, with Babbar and Mermer. In whatever language, +however, they were addressed, by whatever name they were called upon, +they did not fail to hear and grant a favourable reply to the appeals of +the faithful. + +Whether Sumerian or Semitic, the gods, like those of Egypt, were not +abstract personages, guiding in a metaphysical fashion the forces of +nature. Each of them contained in himself one of the principal elements +of which our universe is composed,--earth, water, sky, sun, moon, and +the stars which moved around the terrestrial mountain. The succession of +natural phenomena with them was not the result of unalterable laws; it +was due entirely to a series of voluntary acts, accomplished by beings +of different grades of intelligence and power. Every part of the great +whole is represented by a god, a god who is a man, a Chaldaean, who, +although of a finer and more lasting nature than other Chaldaeans, +possesses nevertheless the same instincts and is swayed by the same +passions. He is, as a rule, wanting in that somewhat lithe grace of +form, and in that rather easy-going good-nature, which were the primary +characteristics of the Egyptian gods: the Chaldaean divinity has the +broad shoulders, the thick-set figure and projecting muscles of the +people over whom he rules; he has their hasty and violent temperament, +their coarse sensuality, their cruel and warlike propensities, their +boldness in conceiving undertakings, and their obstinate tenacity in +carrying them out. Their goddesses are modelled on the tyra of the +Chaldaen women, or, more properly speaking, on that of their queens. The +majority of them do not quit the harem, and have no other ambition than +to become speedily the mother of a numerous offspring. Those who openly +reject the rigid constraints of such a life, and who seek to share the +rank of the gods, seem to lose all self-restraint when they put off +the veil: like Ishtar, they exchange a life of severe chastity for +the lowest debauchery, and they subject their followers to the same +irregular life which they themselves have led. “Every woman born in the +country must enter once during her lifetime the enclosure of the temple +of Aphrodite, must there sit down and unite herself to a stranger. Many +who are wealthy are too proud to mix with the rest, and repair thither +in closed chariots, followed by a considerable train of slaves. The +greater number seat themselves on the sacred pavement, with a cord +twisted about their heads,--and there is always a great crowd there, +coming and going; the women being divided by ropes into long lanes, down +which strangers pass to make their choice. A woman who has once taken +her place here cannot return home until a stranger has thrown into her +lap a silver coin, and has led her away with him beyond the limits of +the sacred enclosure. As he throws the money he pronounces these words: +‘May the goddess Mylitta make thee happy! ‘--Now, among the Assyrians, +Aphrodite is called Mylitta. The silver coin may be of any value, but +none may refuse it, that is forbidden by the law, for, once thrown, it +is sacred. The woman follows the first man who throws her the money, and +repels no one. When once she has accompanied him, and has thus satisfied +the goddess, she returns to her home, and from thenceforth, however +large the sum offered to her, she will yield to no one. The women who +are tall or beautiful soon return to their homes, but those who are ugly +remain a long time before they are able to comply with the law; some +of them are obliged to wait three or four years within the enclosure.” * +This custom still existed in the Vth century before our era, and the +Greeks who visited Babylon about that time found it still in full force. + + * Herodotus, i. 199: of. Stabo, xvi. p. 1058, who probably + has merely quoted this passage from Herodotus, or some + writer who copied from Herodotus. We meet with a direct + allusion to this same custom in the Bible, in the _Book of + Barueh_; “The women also, with cords about them, sitting in + the ways, burn bran for perfume; but if any of them, drawn + by some that passeth by, lie with him, she reproacheth her + fellow, that she was not thought as worthy as herself, nor + her cord broken.” + +The gods, who had begun by being the actual material of the element +which was their attribute, became successively the spirit of it, then +its ruler.* They continued at first to reside in it, but in the course +of time they were separated from it, and each was allowed to enter the +domain of another, dwell in it, and even command it, as they could +have done in their own, till finally the greater number of them were +identified with the firmament. + + * Pk. Lbnoemant, _La Magie chez les Chaldeens_, p. 144, et + seq., where the author shows how Anu, after having at + first been the Heaven itself, the starry vault stretched + above the earth, became successively the Spirit of Heaven + (_Zi-ana_), and finally the supreme ruler of the world: + according to Lenormant, it was the Semites in particular who + transformed the primitive spirit into an actual god-king. + +Bel, the lord of the earth, and Ea, the ruler of the waters, passed info +the heavens, which did not belong to them, and took their places beside +Ami: the pathways were pointed out which they had made for themselves +across the celestial vault, in order to inspect their kingdoms from the +exalted heights to which they had been raised; that of Bel was in the +Tropic of Cancer, that of Ea in the Tropic of Capricorn. They gathered +around them all the divinities who could easily be abstracted from the +function or object to which they were united, and they thus constituted +a kind of divine aristocracy, comprising all the most powerful +beings who guided the fortunes of the world. The number of them was +considerable, for they reckoned seven supreme and magnificent gods, +fifty great gods of heaven and earth, three hundred celestial +spirits, and six hundred terrestrial spirits. Each of them deputed +representatives here below, who received the homage of mankind for him, +and signified to them his will. The god revealed himself in dreams to +his seers and imparted to them the course of coming events,* or, in +some cases, inspired them suddenly and spoke by their mouth: their +utterances, taken down and commented on by their assistants, were +regarded as infallible oracles. But the number of mortal men possessing +adequate powers, and gifted with sufficiently acute senses to bear +without danger the near presence of a god, was necessarily limited; +communications were, therefore, more often established by means of +various objects, whose grosser substance lessened for human intelligence +and flesh and blood the dangers of direct contact with an immortal. The +statues hidden in the recesses of the temples or erected on the summits +of the “ziggurats” became imbued, by virtue of their consecration, with +the actual body of the god whom they represented, and whose name was +written either on the base or garment of the statue.** The sovereign +who dedicated them, summoned them to speak in the days to come, and from +thenceforth they spoke: when they were interrogated according to the +rite instituted specially for each one, that part of the celestial soul, +which by means of the prayers had been attracted to and held captive +by the statue, could not refuse to reply.** Were there for this purpose +special images, as in Egypt, which were cleverly contrived so as to +emit sounds by the pulling of a string by the hidden prophet? Voices +resounded at night in the darkness of the sanctuaries, and particularly +when a king came there to prostrate himself for the purpose of learning +the future: his rank alone, which raised him halfway to heaven, prepared +him to receive the word from on high by the mouth of the image. + + * A prophetic dream is mentioned upon, one of the statues of + Telloh. In the records of Assurbanipal we find mention of + several “seers”--_shabru_--one of whom predicts the + general triumph of the king over his enemies, and of whom + another announces in the name of Ishtar the victory over the + Elamites and encourages the Assyrian army to cross a torrent + swollen by rains, while a third sees in a dream the defeat + and death of the King of Elam. These “seers” are mentioned in + the texts of Gudea with the prophetesses “who tell the + message” of the gods. + + ** In a formula drawn up against evil spirits, for the + purpose of making talismanic figures for the protection of + houses, it is said of Merodach that he “inhabits the image” + --_ashibu salam_--which has been made of him by the magician. + + ** This is what Gudea says, when, describing his own statue + which he had placed in the temple of Telloh, he adds that + “he gave the order to the statue: ‘To the statue of my king, + speak!’” The statue of the king, inspired by that of the + god, would thenceforth speak when interrogated according to + the formularies. Cf. what is said of the divine or royal + statues dedicated in the temples of Egypt, vol. i. pp. 169, + 170. A number of oracles regularly obtained in the time of + Asarhaddon and Assurbanabal have been published by Knudtzon. + +[Illustration: 152.jpg THE ADORATION OF THE MACE AND THE WHIP.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from the Chaldaean intaglio + reproduced in Heuzey-Sarzec, _Decouvertes en Chaldee_, pl. + 30bis, No. 13b. + +More frequently a priest, accustomed from childhood to the office, +possessed the privilege of asking the desired questions and of +interpreting to the faithful the various signs by means of which the +divine will was made known. The spirit of the god inspired, moreover, +whatever seemed good to him, and frequently entered into objects +where we should least have expected to find it. It animated stones, +particularly such as fell from heaven; also trees, as, for example, the +tree of Eridu which pronounced oracles; and, besides the battle-mace, +with a granite head fixed on a wooden handle, the axe of Ramman, lances +made on the model of Gilgames’ fairy javelin, which came and went at its +master’s orders, without needing to be touched. Such objects, when it +was once ascertained that they were imbued with the divine spirit, were +placed upon the altar and worshipped with as much veneration as were the +statues themselves. + +[Illustration: 153.jpg A protecting amulet.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from the terra-cotta figurine of + Assyrian date now in the Louvre. + +Animals never became objects of habitual worship as in Egypt: some of +them, however, such as the bull and lion, were closely allied to the +gods, and birds unconsciously betrayed by their flight or cries the +secrets of futurity.* In addition to all these, each family possessed +its household gods, to whom its members recited prayers and poured +libations night and morning, and whose statues set up over the domestic +hearth defended it from the snares of the evil ones.** The State +religion, which all the inhabitants of the same city, from the king down +to the lowest slave, were solemnly bound to observe, really represented +to the Chaldaeans but a tithe of their religious life: it included some +dozen gods, no doubt the most important, but it more or less left out of +account all the others, whose anger, if aroused by neglect, might become +dangerous. The private devotion of individuals supplemented the State +religion by furnishing worshippers for most of the neglected divinities, +and thus compensated for what was lacking in the official public worship +of the community. + + * Animal forms are almost always restricted either to the + genii, the constellations, or the secondary forms of the + greater divinities: Ea, however, is represented by a man + with a fish’s tail, or as a man clothed with a fish-skin, + which would appear to indicate that at the outset he was + considered to be an actual fish. + + ** The images of these gods acted as amulets, and the fact + of their presence alone repelled the evil spirits. At + Khorsabad they were found buried under the threshold of the + city gates. A bilingual tablet in the British Museum has + preserved for us the formula of consecration which was + supposed to invest these protecting statuettes with divine + powers. + +If the idea of uniting all these divine beings into a single supreme +one, who would combine within himself all their elements and the whole +of their powers, ever for a moment crossed the mind of some Chaldaean +theologian, it never spread to the people as a whole. Among all the +thousands of tablets or inscribed stones on which we find recorded +prayers and magical formulas, we have as yet discovered no document +treating of the existence of a supreme god, or even containing the +faintest allusion to a divine unity. We meet indeed with many passages +in which this or that divinity boasts of his power, eloquently +depreciating that of his rivals, and ending his discourse with the +injunction to worship him alone: “Man who shall come after, trust +in Nebo, trust in no other god!” The very expressions which are used, +commanding future races to abandon the rest of the immortals in +favour of Nebo, prove that even those who prided themselves on being +worshippers of one god realized how far they were from believing in the +unity of God. They strenuously asserted that the idol of their choice +was far superior to many others, but it never occurred to them to +proclaim that he had absorbed them all into himself, and that he +remained alone in his glory, contemplating the world, his creature. Side +by side with those who expressed this belief in Nebo, an inhabitant +of Babylon would say as much and more of Merodach, the patron of +his birthplace, without, however, ceasing to believe in the actual +independence and royalty of Nebo. “When thy power manifests itself, who +can withdraw himself from it?--Thy word is a powerful net which thou +spreadest in heaven and over the earth:--it falls upon the sea, and +the sea retires,--it falls upon the plain, and the fields make great +mourning,--it falls upon the upper waters of the Euphrates, and the word +of Merodach stirs up the flood in them.--O Lord, thou art sovereign, +who can resist thee?--Merodach, among the gods who bear a name, thou art +sovereign.” Merodach is for his worshippers the king of the gods, he is +not the sole god. Each of the chief divinities received in a similar +manner the assurance of his omnipotence, but, for all that, his most +zealous followers never regarded them as the only God, beside whom there +was none other, and whose existence and rule precluded those of any +other. The simultaneous elevation of certain divinities to the supreme +rank had a reactionary influence on the ideas held with regard to the +nature of each. Anu, Bel, and Ea, not to mention others, had enjoyed +at the outset but a limited and incomplete personality, confined to a +single concept, and were regarded as possessing only such attributes as +were indispensable to the exercise of their power within a prescribed +sphere, whether in heaven, or on the earth, or in the waters; as each in +his turn gained the ascendency over his rivals, he became invested with +the qualities which were exercised by the others in their own domain. +His personality became enlarged, and instead of remaining merely a +god of heaven or earth or of the waters, he became god of all three +simultaneously. Anu reigned in the province of Bel or of Ea as he ruled +in his own; Bel joined to his own authority that of Anu and Ea; Ea +treated Anu and Bel with the same absence of ceremony which they had +shown to him, and added their supremacy to his own. The personality +of each god was thenceforward composed of many divers elements: each +preserved a nucleus of his original being, but superadded to this were +the peculiar characteristics of all the gods above whom he had been +successively raised. Anu took to himself somewhat of the temperaments +of Bel and of Ea, and the latter in exchange borrowed from him +many personal traits. The same work of levelling which altered the +characteristics of the Egyptian divinities, and transformed them +little by little into local variants of Osiris and the Sun, went on as +vigorously among the Chaldaean gods: those who were incarnations of +the earth, the waters, the stars, or the heavens, became thenceforth +so nearly allied to each other that we are tempted to consider them +as being doubles of a single god, worshipped under different names +in different localities. Their primitive forms can only be clearly +distinguished when they are stripped of the uniform in which they are +all clothed. + +The sky-gods and the earth-gods had been more numerous at the outset +than they were subsequently. We recognize as such Anu, the immovable +firmament, and the ancient Bel, the lord of men and of the soil on which +they live, and into whose bosom they return after, death; but there +were others, who in historic times had partially or entirely lost their +primitive character,--such as Nergal, Ninib, Dumuzi; or, among the +goddesses, Damkina, Esharra, and even Ishtar herself, who, at the +beginning of their existence, had represented only the earth, or one +of its most striking aspects. For instance, Nergal and Ninib were the +patrons of agriculture and protectors of the soil, Dumuzi was the +ground in spring whose garment withered at the first approach of summer, +Damkina was the leafy mould in union with fertilizing moisture, Esharra +was the field whence sprang the crops, Ishtar was the clod which again +grew green after the heat of the dog days and the winter frosts. All +these beings had been forced to submit in a greater or less degree to +the fate which among most primitive races awaits those older earth-gods, +whose manifestations are usually too vague and shadowy to admit of their +being grasped or represented by any precise imagery without limiting and +curtailing their spheres. New deities had arisen of a more definite and +tangible kind, and hence more easily understood, and having a real or +supposed province which could be more easily realized, such as the sun, +the moon, and the fixed or wandering stars. The moon is the measure of +time; it determines the months, leads the course of the years, and the +entire life of mankind and of great cities depends upon the regularity +of its movements: the Chaldaeans, therefore, made it, or rather the +spirit which animated it, the father and king of the gods; but +its suzerainty was everywhere a conventional rather than an actual +superiority, and the sun, which in theory was its vassal, attracted more +worshippers than the pale and frigid luminary. Some adored the sun under +its ordinary title of Shamash, corresponding to the Egyptian Ra; others +designated it as Merodach, Ninib, Nergal, Dumuzi, not to mention other +less usual appellations. Nergal in the beginning had nothing in common +with Ninib, and Merodach differed alike from Shamash, Ninib, Nergal, +and Dumuzi; but the same movement which instigated the fusion of so many +Egyptian divinities of diverse nature, led the gods of the Chaldaeans to +divest themselves little by little of their individuality and to lose +themselves in the sun. Each one at first became a complete sun, and +united in himself all the innate virtues of the sun--its brilliancy +and its dominion over the world, its gentle and beneficent heat, its +fertilizing warmth, its goodness and justice, its emblematic character +of truth and peace; besides the incontestable vices which darken certain +phases of its being--the fierceness of its rays at midday and in summer, +the inexorable strength of its will, its combative temperament, its +irresistible harshness and cruelty. By degrees they lost this uniform +character, and distributed the various attributes among themselves. If +Shamash continued to be the sun in general, Ninib restricted himself, +after the example of the Egyptian Harmakhis, to being merely the rising +and setting sun, the sun on the two horizons. Nergal became the feverish +and destructive summer sun.* Merodach was transformed into the youthful +sun of spring and early morning;** Dumuzi, like Merodach, became the sun +before the summer. Their moral qualities naturally were affected by the +process of restriction which had been applied to their physical being, +and the external aspect now assigned to each in accordance with their +several functions differed considerably from that formerly attributed +to the unique type from which they had sprung. Ninib was represented as +valiant, bold, and combative; he was a soldier who dreamed but of +battle and great feats of arms. Nergal united a crafty fierceness to +his bravery: not content with being lord of battles, he became the +pestilence which breaks out unexpectedly in a country, the death which +comes like a thief, and carries off his prey before there is time +to take up arms against him. Merodach united wisdom with courage and +strength: he attacked the wicked, protected the good, and used his power +in the cause of order and justice. A very ancient legend, which was +subsequently fully developed among the Canaanites, related the story of +the unhappy passion of Ishtar for Dumuzi. The goddess broke out yearly +into a fresh frenzy, but the tragic death of the hero finally moderated +the ardour of her devotion. She wept distractedly for him, went to beg +the lords of the infernal regions for his return, and brought him back +triumphantly to the earth: every year there was a repetition of the same +passionate infatuation, suddenly interrupted by the same mourning. The +earth was united to the young sun with every recurring spring, and under +the influence of his caresses became covered with verdure; then followed +autumn and winter, and the sun, grown old, sank into the tomb, from +whence his mistress had to call him up, in order to plunge afresh with +him by a common impulse into the joys and sorrows of another year. + + * The solar character of Nergal, at least in later times, is + admitted, but with restrictions, by all Assyriologists. The + evident connection between him and Ninib, of which we have + proofs, was the ground of Delitzsch’s theory that he was + likewise the burning and destructive sun, and also of + Jensen’s analogous concept of a midday and summer sun. + + ** Pr. Lenormant seems to have been the first to distinguish + in Merodach, besides the god of the planet Jupiter, a solar + personage. This notion, which has been generally admitted by + most Assyriologists, has been defined with greater + exactitude by Jensen, who is inclined to see in Merodach + both the morning sun and the spring sun; and this is the + opinion held at present. + +The differences between the gods were all the more accentuated, for the +reason that many who had a common origin were often separated from one +another by, relatively speaking, considerable distances. Having divided +the earth’s surface between them, they formed, as in Egypt, a complete +feudal system, whose chiefs severally took up their residence in a +particular city. Anu was worshipped in Uruk, Enlil-Bel reigned in Nipur, +Eridu belonged to Ea, the lord of the waters. The moon-god, Sin, alone +governed two large fiefs, Uru in the extreme south, and Harran towards +the extreme north-west; Shamash had Larsam and one of the Sipparas for +his dominion, and the other sun-gods were not less well provided for, +Nergal possessing Kutha, Zamama having Kish, Ninib side by side with Bel +reigning in Nipur, while Merodach ruled at Babylon. Each was absolute +master in his own territory, and it is quite exceptional to find two of +them co-regnant in one locality, as were Ninib and Bel at Nipur, or Ea +and Ishtar in Uruk; not that they raised any opposition on principle +to the presence of a stranger divinity in their dominions, but they +welcomed them only under the titles of allies or subjects. Each, +moreover, had fair play, and Nebo or Shamash, after having filled +the _role_ of sovereign at Borsippa or at Larsam, did not consider it +derogatory to his dignity to accept a lower rank in Babylon or at Uru. +Hence all the feudal gods played a double part, and had, as it were, +a double civil portion--that of suzerain in one or two localities, and +that of vassals everywhere else--and this dual condition was the surest +guarantee not only of their prosperity, but of their existence. Sin +would have run great risk of sinking into oblivion if his resources had +been confined to the subventions from his domain temples of Harran and +Uru. Their impoverishment would in such case have brought about his +complete failure: after having enjoyed an existence amid riches and +splendour in the beginning of history, he would have ended his life in a +condition of misery and obscurity. But the sanctuaries erected to him in +the majority of the other cities, the honours which these bestowed upon +him, and the offerings which they made to him, compensated him for the +poverty and neglect which he experienced in his own domains; and he was +thus able to maintain his divine dignity on a suitable footing. All +the gods were, therefore, worshipped by the Chaldeans, and the only +difference among them in this respect arose from the fact that some +exalted one special deity above the others. The gods of the richest and +most ancient principalities naturally enjoyed the greatest popularity. +The greatness of Uru had been the source of Sin’s prestige, and Merodach +owed his prosperity to the supremacy which Babylon had acquired over the +districts of the north. Merodach was regarded as the son of Ba, as the +star which had risen from the abyss to illuminate the world, and to +confer upon mankind the decrees of eternal wisdom. He was proclaimed as +lord--“bilu”--_par excellence_, in comparison with whom all other lords +sank into insignificance, and this title soon procured for him a second, +which was no less widely recognized than the first: he was spoken of +everywhere as the Bel of Babylon, Bel-Merodach--before whom Bel of Nipur +was gradually thrown into the shade. The relations between these feudal +deities were not always pacific: jealousies arose among them like those +which disturbed the cities over which they ruled; they conspired against +each other, and on occasions broke out into open warfare. Instead of +forming a coalition against the evil genii who threatened their rule, +and as a consequence tended to bring everything into jeopardy, they +sometimes made alliances with these malign powers and mutually betrayed +each other. Their history, if we could recover it in its entirety, would +be marked by as violent deeds as those which distinguished the princes +and kings who worshipped them. Attempts were made, however, and that too +from an early date, to establish among them a hierarchy like that which +existed among the great ones of the earth. The faithful, who, instead of +praying to each one separately, preferred to address them all, invoked +them always in the same order: they began with Anu, the heaven, and +followed with Bel, Ea, Sin, Shamash, and Bamman. They divided these six +into two groups of three, one trio consisting of Anu, Bel, and Ea, the +other of Sin, Shamash, and Bamman. All these deities were associated +with Southern Chaldoa, and the system which grouped them must have taken +its rise in this region, probably at Uruk, whose patron Anu V occupied +the first rank among them. The theologians who classified them in this +manner seem never to have dreamt of explaining, like the authors of +the Heliopolitan Ennead, the successive steps in their creation: these +triads were not, moreover, copies of the human family, consisting of +a father and mother whose marriage brings into the world a new being. +Others had already given an account of the origin of things, and of +Merodach’s struggles with chaos; these theologians accepted the universe +as it was, already made, and contented themselves with summing up its +elements by enumerating the gods which actuated them.* They assigned the +first place to those elements which make the most forcible impression +upon man--beginning with Anu, for the heaven was the god of their city; +following with Bel of Nipur, the earth which from all antiquity has +been associated with the heaven; and concluding with Ea of Eridu, the +terrestrial waters and primordial Ocean whence Anu and Bel, together +with all living creatures, had sprung--Ea being a god whom, had they +not been guided by local vanity, they would have made sovereign lord +of all. Anu owed his supremacy to an historical accident rather than a +religious conception: he held his high position, not by his own merits, +but because the prevailing theology of an early period had been the work +of his priesthood. + + * I know of Sayce only who has endeavoured to explain the + historical formation of the triads. They are considered by + him as of Accadian origin, and probably began in an + astronomical triad, composed of the moon-god, the sun-god, + and the evening star, Sin, Shamash, and Ishtar; alongside + this elementary trinity, “the only authentic one to be found + in the religious faith of primitive Chaldaea,” the Semites + may have placed the cosmogonical trinity of Anu, Bel, and + Ea, formed by the reunion of the gods of Uruk, Nipur, and + Eridu. + +The characters of the three personages who formed the supreme triad can +be readily deduced from the nature of the elements which they represent. +Anu is the heaven itself--“ana”--the immense vault which spreads itself +above our heads, clear during the day when glorified by the sun, obscure +and strewn with innumerable star clusters during the night. Afterwards +it becomes the spirit which animates the firmament, or the god which +rules it: he resides in the north towards the pole, and the ordinary +route chosen by him when inspecting his domain is that marked out by our +ecliptic. He occupies the high regions of the universe, sheltered from +winds and tempests, in an atmosphere always serene, and a light always +brilliant. The terrestrial gods and those of middle-space take refuge in +this “heaven of Anu,” when they are threatened by any great danger, but +they dare not penetrate its depths, and stop, shortly after passing its +boundary, on the ledge which supports the vault, where they loll and +howl like dogs. It is but rarely that it may be entered, and then +only by the highly privileged--kings whose destiny marked them out for +admittance, and heroes who have fallen valiantly on the field of +battle. In his remote position on unapproachable summits Anu seems to +participate in the calm and immobility of his dwelling. If he is quick +in forming an opinion and coming to a conclusion, he himself never puts +into execution the plans which he has matured or the judgments which +he has pronounced: he relieves himself of the trouble of acting, by +assigning the duty to Bel-Merodach, Ea, or Eamman, and he often employs +inferior genii to execute his will. “They are seven, the messengers of +Anu their king; it is they who from town to town raise the stormy wind; +they are the south wind which drives mightily in the heavens; they are +the destroying clouds which overturn the heavens; they are the rapid +tempests which bring darkness in the midst of clear day, they roam here +and there with the wicked wind and the ill-omened hurricane.” Anu sends +forth all the gods as he pleases, recalls them again, and then, to make +them his pliant instruments, enfeebles their personality, reducing it to +nothing by absorbing it into his own. He blends himself with them, and +their designations seem to be nothing more than doublets of his own: he +is Anu the Lakhmu who appeared on the first days of creation; Ahu Urash +or Ninib is the sun-warrior of Nipur; and Anu is also the eagle Alala +whom Ishtar enfeebled by her caresses. Anu regarded in this light ceases +to be the god _par excellence_: he becomes the only chief god, and the +idea of authority is so closely attached to his name that the latter +alone is sufficient in common speech to render the idea of God. Bel +would have been entirely thrown into the shade by him, as the earth-gods +generally are by the sky-gods, if it had not been that he was confounded +with his namesake Bel-Merodach of Babylon: to this alliance he owed +to the end the safety of his life, in presence of Anu. Ea was the +most active and energetic member of the triad.* As he represented the +bottomless abyss, the dark waters which had filled the universe until +the day of the creation, there had been attributed to him a complete +knowledge of the past, present, and future, whose germs had lain within +him, as in a womb. The attribute of supreme wisdom was revered in Ea, +the lord of spells and charms, to which gods and men were alike subject: +no strength could prevail against his strength, no voice against his +voice: when once he opened his mouth to give a decision, his will became +law, and no one might gainsay it. If a peril should arise against +which the other gods found themselves impotent, they resorted to +him immediately for help, which was never refused. He had saved +Shamashnapishtirn from the Deluge; every day he freed his votaries from +sickness and the thousand demons which were the causes of it. He was +a potter, and had modelled men out of the clay of the plains. From him +smiths and workers in gold obtained the art of rendering malleable +and of fashioning the metals. Weavers and stone-cutters, gardeners, +husbandmen, and sailors hailed him as their teacher and patron. From his +incomparable knowledge the scribes derived theirs, and physicians and +wizards invoked spirits in his name alone by the virtue of prayers which +he had condescended to teach them. + + * The name of this god was read “Nisrok” by Oppert, + “Nouah” by Hincks and Lenormant. The true reading is Ia, Ea, + usually translated “house,” “water-house”; this is a popular + interpretation which appears to have occurred to the + Chaldaeans from the values of the signs entering into the + name of the god. From the outset H. Rawlinson recognized in + Ea, which he read Hea, Hoa, the divinity presiding over the + abyss of waters; he compared him with the serpent of Holy + Scripture, in its relation to the Tree of Knowledge and the + Tree of Life, and deduced therefrom his character of lord of + wisdom. His position as lord of the primordial waters, from + which all things proceeded, clearly denned by Lenormant, is + now fully recognized. His name was transcribed Aos by + Damascius, a form which is not easily explained; the most + probable hypothesis is that of Hommel who considers Aos as a + shortened form of Iaos = Ia, Ea. + +Subordinate to these limitless and vague beings, the theologians placed +their second triad, made up of gods of restricted power and invariable +form. They recognized in the unswerving regularity with which the moon +waxed and waned, or with which the sun rose and set every day, a +proof of their subjection to the control of a superior will, and they +signalized this dependence by making them sons of one or other of the +three great gods. Sin was the offspring of Bel, Shamash of Sin, +Kamman of Anu. Sin was indebted for this primacy among the subordinate +divinities to the preponderating influence which Uru exercised over +Southern Chaldaea. Mar, where Ramman was the chief deity, never emerged +from its obscurity, and Larsam acquired supremacy only many centuries +after its neighbour, and did not succeed in maintaining it for any +length of time. The god of the suzerain city necessarily took precedence +of those of the vassal towns, and when once his superiority was admitted +by the people, he was able to maintain his place in spite of all +political revolutions. Sin was called in Uru, “Uruki,” or “Nannar the +glorious,” and his priests sometimes succeeded in identifying him +with Anu. “Lord, prince of the gods, who alone in heaven and earth is +exalted,--father Nannar, lord of the hosts of heaven, prince of the +gods,--father Nannar, lord, great Anu, prince of the gods,--father +Nannar, lord, moon-god, prince of the gods,--father Nannar, lord of Uni, +prince of the gods....--Lord, thy deity fills the far-off heavens, +like the vast sea, with reverential fear! Master of the earth, thou who +fixest there the boundaries [of the towns] and assignest to them their +names,--father, begetter of gods and men, who establishest for them +dwellings and institutest for them that which is good, who proclaimest +royalty and bestowest the exalted sceptre on those whose destiny was +determined from distant times,--chief, mighty, whose heart is great, god +whom no one can name, whose limbs are steadfast, whose knees never bend, +who preparest the paths of thy brothers the gods....--In heaven, who is +supreme? As for thee, it is thou alone who art supreme! As for thee, thy +decree is made known in heaven, and the Igigi bow their faces!--As for +thee, thy decree is made known upon earth, and the spirits of the abyss +kiss the dust!--As for thee, thy decree blows above like the wind, +and stall and pasture become fertile!--As for thee, thy decree is +accomplished upon earth below, and the grass and green things grow!--As +for thee, thy degree is seen in the cattle-folds and in the lairs of the +wild beasts, and it multiplies living things!--As for thee, thy +decree has called into being equity and justice, and the peoples have +promulgated thy law!--As for thee, thy decree, neither in the far-off +heaven, nor in the hidden depths of the earth, can any one recognize +it!--As for thee, thy decree, who can learn it, who can try conclusions +with it?--O Lord, mighty in heaven, sovereign upon earth, among the gods +thy brothers, thou hast no rival.” Outside Uru and Harran, Sin did not +obtain this rank of creator and ruler of things; he was simply the +moon-god, and was represented in human form, usually accompanied by a +thin crescent, upon which he sometimes stands upright, sometimes appears +with the bust only rising out of it, in royal costume and pose. + +[Illustration: 169.jpg THE GOD SUN RECEIVES THE HOMAGE OF TWO +WORSHIPPERS.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a heliogravure by Menant. + +His mitre is so closely associated with him that it takes his place on +the astrological tablets; the name he bears--“agu”--often indicates +the moon regarded simply as a celestial body and without connotation +of deity. Babbar-Shamash, “the light of the gods, his fathers,” “the +illustrious scion of Sin,” passed the night in the depths of the north, +behind the polished metal walls which shut in the part of the firmament +visible to human eyes. + +[Illustration: 170.jpg SHAMASH SETS OUT, IN THE MORNING, FROM THE +INTERIOR OF THE HEAVEN BY THE EASTERN GATE.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a Chaldaean intaglio of green + jasper in the Louvre. The original measures about 1 3/10 + inch in height. + +As soon as the dawn had opened the gates for him, he rose in the east +all aflame, his club in his hand, and he set forth on his headlong +course over the chain of mountains which surrounds the world;* six hours +later he had attained the limit of his journey towards the south, he +then continued his journey to the west, gradually lessening his heat, +and at length re-entered his accustomed resting-place by the western +gate, there to remain until the succeeding morning. He accomplished his +journey round the earth in a chariot conducted by two charioteers, +and drawn by two vigorous onagers, “whose legs never grew weary;” the +flaming disk which was seen from earth was one of the wheels of his +chariot.** + + * His course along the embankment which runs round the + celestial vault was the origin of the title, _Line of Union + between Heaven and Earth_; he moved, in fact, where the + heavens and the earth come into contact, and appeared to + weld them into one by the circle of fire which he described. + Another expression of this idea occurs in the preamble of + Nergal and Ninib, who were called “the separators”; the + course of the sun might, in fact, be regarded as separating, + as well as uniting, the two parts of the universe. + + ** The disk has sometimes four, sometimes eight rays + inscribed on it, indicating wheels with four or eight spokes + respectively. Rawlinson supposed “that these two figures + indicate a distinction between the male and female power of + the deity, the disk with four rays symbolizing Shamash, the + orb with eight rays being the emblem of Ai, Gula, or + Anunit.” + +[Illustration: 171.jpg SHAMASH IN HIS SHRINE, HIS EMBLEM BEFORE HIM ON +THE ALTAR.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a photograph by Rassam. The + busts of the two deities on the front of the roof of the + shrine are the two charioteers of the sun; they uphold and + guide the rayed disk upon the altar. Cf. in the Assyrian + period the winged disk led with cords by two genii. + +As soon as he appeared he was hailed with the chanting of hymns: “O Sun, +thou appearest on the foundation of the heavens,--thou drawest back the +bolts which bar the scintillating heavens, thou openest the gate of +the heavens! O Sun, thou raisest thy head above the earth,--Sun, thou +extendest over the earth the brilliant vaults of the heavens.” + The powers of darkness fly at his approach or take refuge in their +mysterious caverns, for “he destroys the wicked, he scatters them, the +omens and gloomy portents, dreams, and wicked ghouls--he converts evil +to good, and he drives to their destruction the countries and men--who +devote themselves to black magic.” In addition to natural light, he sheds +upon the earth truth and justice abundantly; he is the “high judge” + before whom everything makes obeisance, his laws never waver, his +decrees are never set at naught. “O Sun, when thou goest to rest in the +middle of the heavens--may the bars of the bright heaven salute thee +in peace, and may the gate of heaven bless thee!--May Misharu, thy +well-beloved servant, guide aright thy progress, so that on Rbarra, +the seat of thy rule, thy greatness may rise, and that A, thy cherished +spouse, may receive thee joyfully! May thy glad heart find in her thy +rest!--May the food of thy divinity be brought to thee by her,--warrior, +hero, sun, and may she increase thy vigour;--lord of Ebarra, when +thou ap-proachest, mayest thou direct thy course aright!---0 Sun, urge +rightly thy way along the fixed road determined for thee,--O Sun, thou +who art the judge of the land, and the arbiter of its laws!” + +It would appear that the triad had begun by having in the third place a +goddess, Ishtar of Dilbat. Ishtar is the evening star which precedes the +appearance of the moon, and the morning star which heralds the approach +of the sun: the brilliance of its light justifies the choice which +made it an associate of the greater heavenly bodies. “In the days of +the past.... Ea charged Sin, Shamash, and Ishtar with the ruling of the +firmament of heaven; he distributed among them, with Anu, the command +of the army of heaven, and among these three gods, his children, +he apportioned the day and the night, and compelled them to work +ceaselessly.” + +[Illustration: 173.jpg ISHTAR HOLDING HER STAR BEFORE SIN.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from an intaglio at Rome. + +Ishtar was separated from her two companions, when the group of the +planets was definitely organized and claimed the adoration of the +devout; the theologians then put in her place an individual of a less +original aspect, Ramman. Ramman embraced within him the elements of many +very ancient genii, all of whom had been set over the atmosphere, and +the phenomena which are daily displayed in it--wind, rain, and thunder. +These genii occupied an important place in the popular religion which +had been cleverly formulated by the theologians of Uruk, and there have +come down to us many legends in which their incarnations play a part. +They are usually represented as enormous birds flocking on their swift +wings from below the horizon, and breathing flame or torrents of water +upon the countries over which they hovered. The most terrible of them +was Zu, who presided over tempests: he gathered the clouds together, +causing them to burst in torrents of rain or hail; he let loose the +winds and lightnings, and nothing remained standing where he had passed. +He had a numerous family: among them cross-breeds of extraordinary +species which would puzzle a modern naturalist, but were matters of +course to the ancient priests. His mother Siris, lady of the rain and +clouds, was a bird like himself; but Zu had as son a vigorous bull, +which, pasturing in the meadows, scattered abundance and fertility +around him. The caprices of these strange beings, their malice, and +their crafty attacks, often brought upon them vexatious misfortunes. +Shutu, the south wind, one day beheld Adapa, one of the numerous +offspring of Ea, fishing in order to provide food for his family. In +spite of his exalted origin, Adapa was no god; he did not possess the +gift of immortality, and he was not at liberty to appear in the presence +of Anu in heaven. He enjoyed, nevertheless, certain privileges, thanks +to his familiar intercourse with his father Ea, and owing to his birth +he was strong enough to repel the assaults of more than one deity. When, +therefore, Shutu, falling upon him unexpectedly, had overthrown him, his +anger knew no bounds: “‘Shutu, thou hast overwhelmed me with thy hatred, +great as it is,--I will break thy wings! ‘Having thus spoken with his +mouth unto Shutu, Adapa broke his wings. For seven days,--Shutu breathed +no longer upon the earth.” Anu, being disturbed at this quiet, which +seemed to him not very consonant with the meddling temperament of the +wind, made inquiries as to its cause through his messenger Ilabrat. “His +messenger Ilabrat answered him: ‘My master,--Adapa, the son of Ea, +has broken Shutu’s wings.’--Anu, when he heard these words, cried out: +‘Help!’” and he sent to Ea Barku, the genius of the lightning, with an +order to bring the guilty one before him. Adapa was not quite at his +ease, although he had right on his side; but Ea, the cleverest of the +immortals, prescribed a line of conduct for him. He was to put on at +once a garment of mourning, and to show himself along with the messenger +at the gates of heaven. Having arrived there, he would not fail to meet +the two divinities who guarded them,--Dumuzi and Gishzida: “‘In whose +honour this garb, in whose honour, Adapa, this garment of mourning?’ +‘On our earth two gods have disappeared--it is on this account I am as +I am.’ Dumuzi and Gishzida will look at each other,* they will begin +to lament, they will say a friendly word--to the god Anu for thee, they +will render clear the countenance of Anu,--in thy favour. When thou +shalt appear before the face of Anu, the food of death, it shall be +offered to thee, do not eat it. The drink of death, it shall be offered +to thee, drink it not. A garment, it shall be offered to the, put it on. +Oil, it shall be offered to thee, anoint thyself with it. The command I +have given thee observe it well.’” + + * Dumuzi and Gishzida are the two gods whom Adapa indicates + without naming them; insinuating that he has put on mourning + on their account, Adapa is secure of gaining their sympathy, + and of obtaining their intervention with the god Anu in his + favour. As to Dumuzi, see pp. 158, 159 of the present work; + the part played by Gishzida, as well as the event noted in + the text regarding him, is unknown. + +Everything takes place as Ea had foreseen. Dumuzi and Gishzida +welcome the poor wretch, speak in his favour, and present him: “as he +approached, Anu perceived him, and said to him: ‘Come, Adapa, why didst +thou break the wings of Shutu?’ Adapa answered Anu: ‘My lord,--for the +household of my lord Ea, in the middle of the sea,---I was fishing, +and the sea was all smooth.--Shutu breathed, he, he overthrew me, and +I plunged into the abode of fish. Hence the anger of my heart,--that he +might not begin again his acts of ill will,--I broke his wings.’” Whilst +he pleaded his cause the furious heart of Anu became calm. The presence +of a mortal in the halls of heaven was a kind of sacrilege, to be +severely punished unless the god should determine its expiation by +giving the philtre of immortality to the intruder. Anu decided on the +latter course, and addressed Adapa: “‘Why, then, did Ea allow an unclean +mortal to see--the interior of heaven and earth?’ He handed him a cup, +he himself reassured him.--‘We, what shall we give him? The food of +life--take some to him that he may eat.’ The food of life, some was +taken to him, but he did not eat of it. The water of life, some was +taken to him, but he drank not of it. A garment, it was taken to him, +and he put it on. Oil, some was taken to him, and he anointed himself +with it.” Anu looked upon him; he lamented over him: “‘Well, Adapa, why +hast thou not eaten--why hast thou not drunk? Thou shalt not now have +eternal life.’ Ea, my lord, has commanded me: thou shalt not eat, thou +shalt not drink.” Adapa thus lost, by remembering too well the commands +of his father, the opportunity which was offered to him of rising to +the rank of the immortals; Anu sent him back to his home just as he had +come, and Shutu had to put up with his broken wings. + +Bamman absorbed one after the other all these genii of tempest and +contention, and out of their combined characters his own personality of +a hundred diverse aspects was built up. + +[Illustration: 177.jpg THE BIRDS OF THE TEMPEST] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a Chaldaean cylinder in the + Museum of New York. Lenormant, in a long article, which he + published under the pseudonym of Mansell, fancied he + recognized here the encounter between Sabitum and Gilgames + on the shores of the Ocean. + +He was endowed with the capricious and changing disposition of the +element incarnate in him, and passed from tears to laughter, from anger +to calm, with a promptitude which made him one of the most disconcerting +deities. The tempest was his favourite role. Sometimes he would burst +suddenly on the heavens at the head of a troop of savage subordinates, +whose chiefs were known as Matu, the squall, and Barku, the lightning; +sometimes these were only the various manifestations of his own nature, +and it was he himself who was called Matu and Barku. He collected the +clouds, sent forth the thunder-bolt, shook the mountains, and “before +his rage and violence, his bellowings, his thunder, the gods of heaven +arose to the firmament--the gods of the earth sank into the earth” in +their terror. The monuments represent him as armed for battle with +club, axe, or the two-bladed flaming sword which was usually employed to +signify the thunderbolt. As he destroyed everything in his blind +rage, the kings of Chaldaea were accustomed to invoke him against their +enemies, and to implore him to “hurl the hurricane upon the rebel +peoples and the insubordinate nations.” When his wrath was appeased, and +he had returned to more gentle ways, his kindness knew no limits. From +having been the waterspout which overthrew the forests, he became the +gentle breeze which caresses and refreshes them: with his warm showers +he fertilizes the fields: he lightens the air and tempers the summer +heat. + +[Illustration: 178.jpg RAMMAN ARMED WITH AN AXE.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a sketch by Loftus. The + original, a small stele of terra-cotta, is in the British + Museum. The date of this representation is uncertain. Ramman + stands upon the mountain which supports the heaven. + +He causes the rivers to swell and overflow their banks; he pours out the +waters over the fields, he makes channels for them, he directs them to +every place where the need of water is felt. + +But his fiery temperament is stirred up by the slightest provocation, +and then “his flaming sword scatters pestilence over the land: he +destroys the harvest, brings the ingathering to nothing, tears up trees, +and beats down and roots up the corn.” + +[Illustration: 179.jpg RAMMAN, THE GOD OF TEMPESTS AND THUNDER.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from Layard. Properly speaking, this + is a Susian deity brought by the soldiers of Assurbanipal + into Assyria, but it carries the usual insignia of Ramman. + +In a word, the second triad formed a more homogeneous whole when Ishtar +still belonged to it, and it is entirely owing to the presence of this +goddess in it that we are able to understand its plan and purpose; it +was essentially astrological, and it was intended that none should be +enrolled in it but the manifest leaders of the constellations. Ramman, +on the contrary, had nothing to commend him for a position alongside the +moon and sun; he was not a celestial body, he had no definitely shaped +form, but resembled an aggregation of gods rather than a single deity. +By the addition of Ramman to the triad, the void occasioned by the +removal of Ishtar was filled up in a blundering way. We must, however, +admit that the theologians must have found it difficult to find any one +better fitted for the purpose: when Venus was once set along with the +rest of the planets, there was nothing left in the heavens which +was sufficiently brilliant to replace her worthily. The priests were +compelled to take the most powerful deity they knew after the other +five--the lord of the atmosphere and the thunder.* + + * Their embarrassment is shown in the way in which they have + classed this god. In the original triad, Ishtar, being the + smallest of the three heavenly bodies, naturally took the + third place. Ramman, on the contrary, had natural affinities + with the elemental group, and belonged to Anu, Bel, Ea, + rather than to Sin and Shamash. So we find him sometimes in + the third place, sometimes in the first of the second triad, + and this post of eminence is so natural to him, that + Assyriologists have preserved it from the beginning, and + describe the triad as composed, not of Sin, Shamash, and + Ramman, but of Ramman, Sin, and Shamash, or even of Sin, + Ramman, and Shamash. + +The gods of the triads were married, but their goddesses for the most +part had neither the liberty nor the important functions of the Egyptian +goddesses.* They were content, in their modesty, to be eclipsed behind +the personages of their husbands, and to spend their lives in the shade, +as the women of Asiatic countries still do. It would appear, moreover, +that there was no trouble taken about them until it was too late--when +it was desired, for instance, to explain the affiliation of the +immortals. Anu and Bel were bachelors to start with. When it was +determined to assign to them female companions, recourse was had to the +procedure adopted by the Egyptians in a similar case: there was added to +their names the distinctive suffix of the feminine gender, and in this +manner two grammatical goddesses were formed, Anat and Belit, whose +dispositions give some indications of this accidental birth. There was +always a vague uncertainty about the parts they had to play, and their +existence itself was hardly more than a seeming one. Anat sometimes +represented a feminine heaven, and differed from Anu only in her sex. +At times she was regarded as the antithesis of Anu, i.e. as the earth in +contradistinction to the heaven. Belit, as far as we can distinguish her +from other persons to whom the title “lady” was attributed, shared with +Bel the rule over the earth and the regions of darkness where the dead +were confined. The wife of Ea was distinguished by a name which was not +derived from that of her husband, but she was not animated by a more +intense vitality than Anat or Belit: she was called Damkina, the lady +of the soil, and she personified in an almost passive manner the earth +united to the water which fertilized it. The goddesses of the second +triad were perhaps rather less artificial in their functions. Ningal, +doubtless, who ruled along with Sin at Uru, was little more than an +incarnate epithet. Her name means “the great lady,” “the queen,” and her +person is the double of that of her husband; as he is the man-moon, she +is the woman-moon, his beloved, and the mother of his children Shamash +and Ishtar. But A or Sirrida enjoyed an indisputable authority alongside +Shamash: she never lost sight of the fact that she had been a sun like +Shamash, a disk-god before she was transformed into a goddess. Shamash, +moreover, was surrounded by an actual harem, of which Sirrida was the +acknowledged queen, as he himself was its king, and among its members +Gula, the great, and Anunit, the daughter of Sin, the morning star, +found a place. Shala, the compassionate, was also included among them; +she was subsequently bestowed upon Ramman. They were all goddesses of +ancient lineage, and each had been previously worshipped on her own +account when the Sumerian people held sway in Chaldaea: as soon as the +Semites gained the upper hand, the powers of these female deities became +enfeebled, and they were distributed among the gods. There was but one +of them, Nana, the doublet of Ishtar, who had succeeded in preserving +her liberty: when her companions had been reduced to comparative +insignificance, she was still acknowledged as queen and mistress in her +city of Eridu. The others, notwithstanding the enervating influence +to which they were usually subject in the harem, experienced at times +inclinations to break into rebellion, and more than one of them, shaking +off the yoke of her lord, had proclaimed her independence: Anunit, for +instance, tearing herself away from the arms of Shamash, had vindicated, +as his sister and his equal, her claim to the half of his dominion. +Sippara was a double city, or rather there were two neighbouring +Sipparas, one distinguished as the city of the Sun, “Sippara sha +Shamash,” while the other gave lustre to Anunit in assuming the +designation of “Sippara sha Anunitum.” Rightly interpreted, these family +arrangements of the gods had but one reason for their existence--the +necessity of explaining without coarseness those parental connections +which the theological classification found it needful to establish +between the deities constituting the two triads. In Chaldaea as in Egypt +there was no inclination to represent the divine families as propagating +their species otherwise than by the procedure observed in human +families: the union of the goddesses with the gods thus legitimated +their offspring. + + * The passive and almost impersonal character of the + majority of the Babylonian and Assyrian goddesses is well + known. The majority must have been independent at the + outset, in the Sumerian period, and were married later on, + under the influence of Semitic ideas. + +The triads were, therefore, nothing more than theological fictions. Each +of them was really composed of six members, and it was thus really a +council of twelve divinities which the priests of Uruk had instituted to +attend to the affairs of the universe; with this qualification, that the +feminine half of the assembly rarely asserted itself, and contributed +but an insignificant part to the common work. When once the great +divisions had been arranged, and the principal functionaries designated, +it was still necessary to work out the details, and to select v agents +to preserve an order among them. Nothing happens by chance in this +world, and the most insignificant events are determined by previsional +arrangements, and decisions arrived at a long time previously. The gods +assembled every morning in a hall, situated near the gates of the sun in +the east, and there deliberated on the events of the day. The sagacious +Ea submitted to them the fates which are about to be fulfilled, and +caused a record of them to be made in the chamber of destiny on tablets +which Shamash or Merodach carried with them to scatter everywhere on his +way; but he who should be lucky enough to snatch these tablets from him +would make himself master of the world for that day. This misfortune had +arisen only once, at the beginning of the ages. Zu, the storm-bird, who +lives with his wife and children on Mount Sabu under the protection of +Bel, and who from this elevation pounces down upon the country to ravage +it, once took it into his head to make himself equal to the supreme +gods. He forced his way at an early hour into the chamber of destiny +before the sun had risen: he perceived within it the royal insignia of +Bel, “the mitre of his power, the garment of his divinity,--the fatal +tablets of his divinity, Zu perceived them. He perceived the father +of the gods, the god who is the tie between heaven and earth,--and the +desire of ruling took possession of his heart;--yea, Zu perceived +the father of the gods, the god who is the tie between heaven and +earth,--and the desire of ruling took possession of his heart,--‘I will +take the fatal tablets of the gods, I myself,--and the oracles of all +the gods, it is I who will give them forth;--I will install myself on +the throne, I will send forth decrees,--I will manage the whole of the +Igigi.’--And his heart plotted warfare;--lying in wait on the threshold +of the hall, he watched for the dawn.--When Bel had poured out the +shining waters,--had installed himself on the throne, and donned the +crown, Zu took away the fatal tablets from his hand,--he seized power, +and the authority to give forth decrees,--the god Zu, he flew away and +concealed himself in the mountains.” Bel immediately cried out, he was +inflamed with anger, and ravaged the world with the fire of his +wrath. “Anu opened his mouth, he spake,--he said to the gods his +offspring:--‘Who will conquer the god Zu?--He will make his name great +in every land.’--Bamman, the supreme, the son of Anu, was called, and +Anu himself gave to him his orders;--yea, Bamman, the supreme, the son +of Anu, was called, and Anu himself gave to him his orders.--‘Go, my son +Kamman, the valiant, since nothing resists thy attack;--conquer Zu by +thine arm, and thy name shall be great among the great gods,--among the +gods, thy brothers, thou shalt have no equal: sanctuaries shall be built +to thee, and if thou buildest for thyself thy cities in the “four houses +of the world,” * --thy cities shall extend over all the terrestrial +mountain! ‘Be valiant, then, in the sight of the gods, and may thy +name be strong.’ Bamman answers, he addresses this bpeech to Anu his +father:--‘Father, who will go to the inaccessible mountains? Who is the +equal of Zu among the gods, thy offspring? He has carried off in his +hand the fatal tablets,--he has seized power and authority to give forth +decrees,--Zu thereupon flew away and hid himself in his mountain.--Now, +the word of his mouth is like that of the god who unites heaven and +earth;---my power is no more than clay,--and all the gods must bow +before him.’” Anu sent for the god Bara, the son of Ishtar, to help him, +and exhorted him in the same language he had addressed to Ramman: Bara +refused to attempt the enterprise. Shamash, called in his turn, at +length consented to set out for Mount Sabu: he triumphed over the +storm-bird, tore the fatal tablets from him, and brought him before Ea +as a prisoner. + + * Literally, “Construct thy cities in the four regions of + the world (cf. pp. 12, 13 of the present work), and thy + cities will extend to the mountain of the earth.” Anu would + appear to have promised to Ramman a monopoly; if he wished + to build cities which would recognize him as their patron, + these cities will cover the entire earth. + +[Illustration: 186.jpg SHAMASH FIGHTS WITH ZU AND THE STORM BIRDS.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from Layard. + +[Illustration: 186a.jpg The Plenisphere taken from the Temple of +Tentyra] + +[Illustration: 186b.jpg Text of The Plenisphere] + +The sun of the complete day, the sun in the full possession of his +strength, could alone win back the attributes of power which the morning +sun had allowed himself to be despoiled of. From that time forth the +privilege of delivering immortal decrees to mortals was never taken out +of the hands of the gods of light. + +Destinies once fixed on the earth became a law--“mamit”--a good or bad +fate, from which no one could escape, but of which any one might learn +the disposition beforehand if he were capable of interpreting the +formulas of it inscribed on the book of the sky. The stars, even those +which were most distant from the earth, were not unconcerned in the +events which took place upon it. They were so many living beings endowed +with various characteristics, and their rays as they passed across the +celestial spaces exercised from above an active control on everything +they touched. Their influences became modified, increased or weakened +according to the intensity with which they shed them, according to the +respective places they occupied in the firmament, and according to the +hour of the night and the month of the year in which they rose or +set. Each division of time, each portion of space, each category of +existences--and in each category each individual--was placed under their +rule and was subject to their implacable tyranny. The infant was born +their slave, and continued in this condition of slavery until his life’s +end: the star which was in the ascendent at the instant of his birth +became his star, and ruled his destiny. The Chaldaeans, like the +Egyptians, fancied they discerned in the points of light which +illuminate the nightly sky, the outline of a great number of various +figures--men, animals, monsters, real and imaginary objects, a lance, a +bow, a fish, a scorpion, ears of wheat, a bull, and a lion. The majority +of these were spread out above their heads on the surface of the +celestial vault; but twelve of these figures, distinguishable by their +brilliancy, were arranged along the celestial horizon in the pathway of +the sun, and watched over his daily course along the walls of the world. +These divided this part of the sky into as many domains or “houses,” in +which they exercised absolute authority, and across which the god could +not go without having previously obtained their consent, or having +brought them into subjection beforehand. This arrangement is a +reminiscence of the wars by which Bel-Merodach, the divine bull, the +god of Babylon, had succeeded in bringing order out of chaos: he had not +only killed Tiamat, but he had overthrown and subjugated the monsters +which led the armies of darkness. He meets afresh, every year and every +day, on the confines of heaven and earth, the scorpion-men of his ancient +enemy, the fish with heads of men or goats, and many more. The twelve +constellations were combined into a zodiac, whose twelve signs, +transmitted to the Greeks and modified by them, may still be read on +our astronomical charts. The constellations, immovable, or actuated by a +slow motion, in longitude only, contain the problems of the future, +but they are not sufficient of themselves alone to furnish man with the +solution of these problems. The heavenly bodies capable of explaining +them, the real interpreters of destiny, were at first the two divinities +who rule the empires of night and day--the moon and the sun; afterwards +there took part in this work of explanation the five planets which we +call Jupiter, Venus, Saturn, Mars, and Mercury, or rather the five gods +who actuate them, and who have controlled their course from the moment +of creation--Merodach, Ishtar, Ninib, Nergal, and Nebo. The planets +seemed to traverse the heavens in every direction, to cross their own +and each other’s paths, and to approach the fixed stars or recede from +them; and the species of rhythmical dance in which they are carried +unceasingly across the celestial spaces revealed to men, if they +examined it attentively, the irresistible march of their own destinies, +as surely as if they had made themselves master of the fatal tablets of +Shamash, and could spell them out line by line. + +The Chaldaens were disposed to regard the planets as perverse sheep who +had escaped from the fold of the stars to wander wilfully in search of +pasture.* At first they were considered to be so many sovereign deities, +without other function than that of running through the heavens and +furnishing there predictions of the future; afterwards two of them +descended to the earth, and received upon it the homage of men* --Ishtar +from the inhabitants of the city of Dilbat, and Nebo* from those of +Borsippa. Nebo assumed the _role_ of a soothsayer and a prophet. He +knew and foresaw everything, and was ready to give his advice upon any +subject: he was the inventor of the method of making clay tablets, +and of writing upon them. Ishtar was a combination of contradictory +characteristics.**** + + * Their generic name, read as “lubat,” in Sumero-Accadian, + “bibbu” in Semitic speech (Fr. Lenormant, _Essai de + Commentaire de Berose_, pp. 370, 371), denoted a quadruped, + the species of which Lenormant was not able to define; + Jensen (_Die Kosmologie_, pp. 95-99) identified it with the + sheep and the ram. At the end of the account of the + creation, Merodach-Jupiter is compared with a shepherd who + feeds the flock of the gods on the pastures of heaven (cf. + p. 15 of the present work). + + ** The site of Dilbat is unknown: it has been sought in the + neighbourhood of Kishu and Babylon (Delitzsch, _Wo lag das + Paradies?_ p. 219); it is probable that it was in the + suburbs of Sippara. The name given to the goddess was + transcribed AeXckit (Hesychius, _sub voce_), and signifies + the herald, the messenger of the day. + + *** The role of Nebo was determined by the early + Assyriologists (Rawlin-son, _On the Religion of the + Babylonians and Assyrians_, pp. 523-52G; Oppeet, _Expedition + en Mesopotamie_, vol. ii. p. 257; Lenormant, _Essai de + Commentaire de Berose_, pp. 114-116). He owed his functions + partly to his alliance with other gods (Sayce, _Religion of + the Ancient Babylonians_, pp. 118, 119). + + **** See the chapter devoted by Sayce to the consideration + of Ishtar in his Religion of the Ancient Babylonians (IV. + Tammuz and Ishtar, p. 221, et seq.), and the observations + made by Jeremias on the subject in the sequel of his + Izdubar-Nimrod (Ishtar-Astarte im Izdubar-Epos), pp. 56-66. + +[Illustration: 190.jpg ISHTAR AS A WARRIOR-GODDESS] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a heliogravure in Menant’s + _Recherches sur la Glyptique orientale_. + +In Southern Chaldaea she was worshipped under the name of Nana, +the supreme mistress.* The identity of this lady of the gods, +“Belit-ilanit,” the Evening Star, with Anunit, the Morning Star, was +at first ignored, and hence two distinct goddesses were formed from the +twofold manifestation of a single deity: having at length discovered +their error, the Chaldaeans merged these two beings in one, and their +names became merely two different designations for the same star under a +twofold aspect. The double character, however, which had been attributed +to them continued to be attached to the single personality. + + * With regard to Nana, consult, with reserve, Fk. Lenormant, + Essai de Commentaire de Berose, pp. 100-103, 378, 379, where + the identity of Ishtar and Nana is still unrecognized. + +[Illustration: 191.jpg NEBO] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from an Assyrian statue in alabaster + in the British Museum. + +The Evening Star had symbolized the goddess of love, who attracted +the sexes towards one another, and bound them together by the chain +of desire; the Morning Star, on the other hand, was regarded as the +cold-blooded and cruel warrior who despised the pleasures of love and +rejoiced in warfare: Ishtar thus combined in her person chastity and +lasciviousness, kindness and ferocity, and a peaceful and warlike +disposition, but this incongruity in her characteristics did not seem +to disconcert the devotion of her worshippers. The three other planets +would have had a wretched part to play in comparison with Nebo and +Ishtar, if they had not been placed under new patronage. The secondary +solar gods, Merodach, Ninib, and Nergal, led, if we examine their role +carefully, but an incomplete existence: they were merely portions of the +sun, while Shamash represented the entire orb. What became of them apart +from the moment in the day and year in which they were actively engaged +in their career? Where did they spend their nights, the hours during +which Shamash had retired into the firmament, and lay hidden behind the +mountains of the north? As in Egypt the Horuses identified at first with +the sun became at length the rulers of the planets, so in Chaldaea +the three suns of Ninib, Merodach, and Nergal became respectively +assimilated to Saturn, Jupiter, and Mars;* and this identification was +all the more easy in the case of Saturn, as he had been considered from +the beginning as a bull belonging to Shamash. Henceforward, therefore, +there was a group of five powerful gods--distributed among the stars +of heaven, and having abodes also in the cities of the earth--whose +function it was to announce the destinies of the universe. Some, +deceived by the size and brilliancy of Jupiter, gave the chief command +to Merodach, and this opinion naturally found a welcome reception at +Babylon, of which he was the feudal deity. Others, taking into account +only the preponderating influence exercised by the planets over the +fortunes of men, accorded the primacy to Ninib, placing Merodach next, +followed respectively by Ishtar, Nergal, and Nebo. The five planets, +like the six triads, were not long before they took to themselves +consorts, if indeed they had not already been married before they were +brought together in a collective whole. Ninib chose for wife, in the +first place, Bau, the daughter of Anu, the mistress of Uru, highly +venerated from the most remote times; afterwards Gula, the queen of +physicians, whose wisdom alleviated the ills of humanity, and who was +one of the goddesses sometimes placed in the harem of Shamash himself. +Merodach associated with him Zirbanit, the fruitful, who secures from +generation to generation the permanence and increase of living beings. +Nergal distributed his favours sometimes to Laz, and sometimes to +Esharra, who was, like himself, warlike and always victorious in battle. +Nebo provided himself with a mate in Tashmit, the great bride, or +even in Ishtar herself. But Ishtar could not be content with a single +husband: after she had lost Dumuzi-Tammuz, the spouse of her youth, she +gave herself freely to the impulses of her passions, distributing her +favours to men as well as gods, and was sometimes subject to be repelled +with contempt by the heroes upon whom she was inclined to bestow her +love. The five planets came thus to be actually ten, and advantage was +taken of these alliances to weave fresh schemes of affiliation: Nebo was +proclaimed to be the son of Merodach and Zirbanit, Merodach the son of +Ba, and Ninib the offspring of Bel and Esharra. + + * Ishtar, Nebo, Sin, and Shamash being heavenly bodies, to + begin with, and the other great gods, Anu, Bel, Ea, and + Ramman having their stars in the heavens, the Chaldaeans + were led by analogy to ascribe to the gods which represented + the phases of the sun, Merodach, Ninib, and Nergal, three + stars befitting their importance, i.e. three planets. + +There were two councils, one consisting of twelve members, the other +of ten; the former was composed of the most popular gods of Southern +Chaldaea, representing the essential elements of the world, while +the latter consisted of the great deities of Northern Chaldaea, whose +function it was to regulate or make known the destinies of men. The +authors of this system, who belonged to Southern Chaldaea, naturally +gave the position to their patron gods, and placed the twelve above +the ten. It is well known that Orientals display a great respect for +numbers, and attribute to them an almost irresistible power; we can +thus understand how it was that the Chaldaeans applied them to designate +their divine masters, and we may calculate from these numbers the +estimation in which each of these masters was held. The goddesses had +no value assigned to them in this celestial arithmetic, Ishtar excepted, +who was not a mere duplication, more or less ingenious, of a previously +existing deity, but possessed from the beginning an independent life, +and could thus claim to be called goddess in her own right. The members +of the two triads were arranged on a descending scale, Anu taking the +highest place: the scale was considered to consist of a soss of sixty +units in length, and each of the deities who followed Anu was placed ten +of these units below his predecessor, Bel at 50 units, Ea at 40, Sin at +30, Shamash at 20, Ramman at 10 or 6. The gods of the planets were not +arranged in a regular series like those of the triads, but the numbers +attached to them expressed their proportionate influence on terrestrial +affairs: to Ninib was assigned the same number as had been given to Bel, +50, to Merodach perhaps 25, to Ishtar 15, to Nergal 12, and to Nebo +10. The various spirits were also fractionally estimated, but this as a +class, and not as individuals: the priests would not have known how to +have solved the problem if they had been obliged to ascribe values +to the infinity of existences.* As the Heliopolitans were obliged to +eliminate from the Ennead many feudal divinities, so the Chaldaeans +had left out of account many of their sovereign deities, especially +goddesses, Bau of Uru, Nana of Uruk, and Allat; or if they did introduce +them into their calculations, it was by a subterfuge, by identifying +them with other goddesses, to whom places had been already assigned; +Bau being thus coupled with Ohila, Nana with Ishtar, and Allat with +Ninhl-Beltis. If figures had been assigned to the latter proportionate +to the importance of the parts they played, and the number of their +votaries, how comes it that they were excluded from the cycle of the +great gods? They were actually placed alongside rather than below the +two councils, and without insistence upon the rank which they enjoyed +in the hierarchy. But the confusion which soon arose among divinities +of identical or analogous nature opened the way for inserting all the +neglected personalities in the framework already prepared for them. A +sky-god, like Dagan, would mingle naturally with Anu, and enjoy like +honours with him. The gods of all ranks associated with the sun or fire, +Nusku, Gibil, and Dumuzi, who had not been at first received among the +privileged group, obtained a place there by virtue of their assimilation +to Shamash, and his secondary forms, Bel-Merodach, Ninib, and Nergal. +Ishtar absorbed all her companions, and her name put in the plural, +Ishtarati, “the Ishtars,” embraced all goddesses in general, just as the +name Hani took in all the gods. Thanks to this compromise, the system +flourished, and was widely accepted: local vanity was always able to +find a means for placing in a prominent place within it the feudal +deity, and for reconciling his pretensions to the highest rank with the +order of precedence laid down by the theologians of Uruk. The local +god was always the king of the gods, the father of the gods, he who +was worshipped above the others in everyday life, and whose public cult +constituted the religion of the State or city. + + * As far as we can at present determine, the most ancient + series established was that of the planetary gods, whose + values, following each other irregularly, are not calculated + on a scheme of mathematical progression, but according to + the empirical importance, which a study of predictions had + ascribed to each planet. The regular series, that of the + great gods, bears in its regularity the stamp of its later + introduction: it was instituted after the example of the + former, but with corrections of what seemed capricious, and + fixing the interval between the gods always at the same + figure. + +The temples were miniature reproductions of the arrangement of the +universe. The “ziggurat” represented in its form the mountain of the +world, and the halls ranged at its feet resembled approximately +the accessory parts of the world: the temple of Merodach at Babylon +comprised them all up to the chambers of fate, where the sun received +every morning the tablets of destiny. The name often indicated the +nature of the patron deity or one of his attributes: the temple of +Shamash at Larsam, for instance was called E-Babbara, “the house of +the sun,” and that of Nebo at Borsippa, E-Zida, “the eternal house.” No +matter where the sanctuary of a specific god might be placed, it always +bore the same name; Shamash, for example, dwelt at Sippara as at Larsam +in an E-Babbara. In Chaldaea, as in Egypt, the king or chief of the +State was the priest _par excellence_, and the title of “vicegerent,” + so frequent in the early period, shows that the chief was regarded as +representing the divinity among his own people; but a priestly body, +partly hereditary, partly selected, fulfilled for him his daily +sacerdotal functions, and secured the regularity of the services. A +chief priest--“ishshakku”--was at their head, and his principal duty was +the pouring out of the libation. Each temple had its “ishshakku,” but he +who presided over the worship of the feudal deity took precedence of +all the others in the city, as in the case of the chief priests of +Bel-Merodach at Babylon, of Sin at Uru, and of Shamash at Larsam or +Sippara. He presided over various categories of priests and priestesses +whose titles and positions in the hierarchy are not well known. The +“sangutu” appear to have occupied after him the most important place, as +chamberlains attached to the house of the god, and as his liegemen. +To some of these was entrusted the management of the harem of the god, +while others were overseers of the remaining departments of his +palace. The “kipu” and the “shatammu” were especially charged with the +management of his financial interests, while the “pashishu” anointed +with holy and perfumed oil his statues of stone, metal, or wood, the +votive stelae set up in the chapels, and the objects used in worship +and sacrifice, such as the great basins, the “seas” of copper which +contained the water employed in the ritual ablutions, and the victims +led to the altar. After these came a host of officials, butchers and +their assistants, soothsayers, augurs, prophets,--in fact, all the +attendants that the complicated rites, as numerous in Chaldaea as in +Egypt, required, not to speak of the bands of women and men who honoured +the god in meretricious rites. Occupation for this motley crowd was +never lacking. Every day and almost every hour a fresh ceremony required +the services of one or other member of the staff, from the monarch +himself, or his deputy in the temple, down to the lowest sacristan. The +12th of the month Blul was set apart at Babylon for the worship of Bel +and Beltis: the sovereign made a donation to them according as he was +disposed, and then celebrated before them the customary sacrifices, and +if he raised his hand to plead for any favour, he obtained it without +fail. The 13th was dedicated to the moon, the supreme god; the 14th to +Beltis and Nergal; the 15th to Shamash; the 16th was a fast in honour +of Merodach and Zirbanit; the 17th was the annual festival of Nebo and +Tashmit; the 18th was devoted to the laudation of Sin and Shamash; while +the 19th was a “white day” for the great goddess Gula. The whole year +was taken up in a way similar to this casual specimen from the calendar. +The kings, in founding a temple, not only bestowed upon it the objects +and furniture required for present exigencies, such as lambs and oxen, +birds, fish, bread, liquors, incense, and odoriferous essences; +they assigned to it an annual income from the treasury, slaves, and +cultivated lands; and their royal successors were accustomed to renew +these gifts or increase them on every opportunity. Every victorious +campaign brought him his share in the spoils and captives; every +fortunate or unfortunate event which occurred in connection with the +State or royal family meant an increase in the gifts to the god, as +an act of thanksgiving on the one hand for the divine favour, or as an +offering on the other to appease the wrath of the god. Gold, silver, +copper, lapis-lazuli, gems and precious woods, accumulated in the sacred +treasury; fields were added to fields, flocks to flocks, slaves to +slaves; and the result of such increase would in a few generations +have made the possessions of the god equal to those of the reigning +sovereign, if the attacks of neighbouring peoples had not from time to +time issued in the loss of a part of it, or if the king himself had not, +under financial pressure, replenished his treasury at the expense of the +priests. To prevent such usurpations as far as possible, maledictions +were hurled at every one who should dare to lay a sacrilegious hand on +the least object belonging to the divine domain; it was predicted of +such “that he would be killed like an ox in the midst of his prosperity, +and slaughtered like a wild urus in the fulness of his strength!... May +his name be effaced from his stelae in the temple of his god! May his +god see pitilessly the disaster of his country, may the god ravage his +land with the waters of heaven, ravage it with the waters of the +earth. May he be pursued as a nameless wretch, and his seed fall under +servitude! May this man, like every one who acts adversely to his +master, find nowhere a refuge, afar off, under the vault of the skies or +in any abode of man whatsoever.” These threats, terrible as they were, +did not succeed in deterring the daring, and the mighty men of the +time were willing to brave them, when their interests promoted them. +Gulkishar, Lord of the “land of the sea,” had vowed a wheat-field to +Nina, his lady, near the town of Deri, on the Tigris. Seven hundred +years later, in the reign of Belnadinabal, Ekarrakais, governor of +Bitsinmagir, took possession of it, and added it to the provincial +possessions, contrary to all equity. The priest of the goddess appealed +to the king, and prostrating himself before the throne with many prayers +and mystic formulas, begged for the restitution of the alienated land. +Belnadinabal acceded to the request, and renewed the imprecations which +had been inserted on the original deed of gift: “If ever, in the +course of days, the man of law, or the governor of a suzerain who will +superintend the town of Bitsinmagir, fears the vengeance of the god +Zikum or the goddess Nina, may then Zikum and Nina, the mistress of the +goddesses, come to him with the benediction of the prince of the gods; +may they grant to him the destiny of a happy life, and may they accord +to him days of old age, and years of uprightness! But as for thee, who +hast a mind to change this, step not across its limits, do not covet +the land: hate evil and love justice.” If all sovereigns were not so +accommodating in their benevolence as Belnadinabal, the piety of private +individuals, stimulated by fear, would be enough to repair the loss, +and frequent legacies would soon make up for the detriment caused to +the temple possessions by the enemy’s sword or the rapacity of an +unscrupulous lord. The residue, after the vicissitudes of revolutions, +was increased and diminished from time to time, to form at length in the +city an indestructible fief whose administration was a function of the +chief priest for life, and whose revenue furnished means in abundance +for the personal exigencies of the gods as well as the support of his +ministers. + +This was nothing more than justice would prescribe. A loyal and +universal faith would not only acknowledge the whole world to be the +creation of the gods, but also their inalienable domain. It belonged to +them at the beginning; every one in the State of which the god was +the sovereign lord, all those, whether nobles or serfs, vicegerents +or kings, who claimed to have any possession in it, were but ephemeral +lease-holders of portions of which they fancied themselves the owners. +Donations to the temples were, therefore, nothing more than voluntary +restitutions, which the gods consented to accept graciously, deigning +to be well pleased with the givers, when, after all-, they might have +considered the gifts as merely displays of strict honesty, which merited +neither recognition nor thanks. They allowed, however, the best part of +their patrimony to remain in the hands of strangers, and they contented +themselves with what the pretended generosity of the faithful might see +fit to assign to them. Of their lands, some were directly cultivated by +the priests themselves; others were leased to lay people of every rank, +who took off the shoulders of the priesthood all the burden of managing +them, while rendering at the same time the profit that accrued from +them; others were let at a fixed rent according to contract. The +tribute of dates, corn, and fruit, which was rendered to the temples to +celebrate certain commemorative ceremonies in the honour of this or that +deity, were fixed charges upon certain lands, which at length usually +fell entirely into the hands of the priesthood as mortmain possessions. +These were the sources of the fixed revenues of the gods, by means of +which they and their people were able to live, if not luxuriously, at +least in a manner befitting their dignity. The offerings and sacrifices +were a kind of windfall, of which the quantity varied strangely with the +seasons; at certain times few were received, while at other times there +was a superabundance. The greatest portion of them was consumed on +the spot by the officials of the sanctuary; the part which could be +preserved without injury was added to the produce of the domain, and +constituted a kind of reserve for a rainy day, or was used to produce +more of its kind. The priests made great profit out of corn and metals, +and the skill with which they conducted commercial operations in silver +was so notorious that no private person hesitated to entrust them with +the management of his capital: they were the intermediaries between +lenders and borrowers, and the commissions which they obtained in these +transactions was not the smallest or the least certain of their profits. +They maintained troops of slaves, labourers, gardeners, workmen, and +even women-singers and sacred courtesans of which mention has been made +above, all of whom either worked directly for them in their several +trades, or were let out to those who needed their services. The god was +not only the greatest cultivator in the State after the king, sometimes +even excelling him in this respect, but he was also the most active +manufacturer, and many of the utensils in daily use, as well as articles +of luxury, proceeded from his workshops. His possessions secured for him +a paramount authority in the city, and also an influence in the councils +of the king: the priests who represented him on earth thus became mixed +up in State affairs, and exercised authority on his behalf in the same +measure as the officers of the crown. + +[Illustration: 203.jpg A VOTARY LED TO THE GOD TO RECEIVE THE REWARD OF +THE SACRIFICE] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a Chaldaean intaglio in the + Berlin Museum. + +He, had, indeed, as much need of riches and renown as the least of his +clients. As he was subject to all human failings, and experienced all +the appetites of mankind, he had to be nourished, clothed, and amused, +and this could be done only at great expense. The stone or wooden +statues erected to him in the sanctuaries furnished him with bodies, +which he animated with his breath, and accredited to his clients as the +receivers of all things needful to him in his mysterious kingdom. The +images of the gods were clothed in vestments, they were anointed with +odoriferous oils, covered with jewels, served with food and drink; and +during these operations the divinities themselves, above in the heaven, +or down in the abyss, or in the bosom of the earth, were arrayed in +garments, their bodies were perfumed with unguents, and their appetites +fully satisfied: all that was further required for this purpose was the +offering of sacrifices together with prayers and prescribed rites. The +priest began by solemnly inviting the gods to the feast: as soon as they +sniffed from afar the smell of the good cheer that awaited them, they +ran “like a swarm of flies” and prepared themselves to partake of it. + +[Illustration: 204.jpg THE SACRIFICE: A GOAT PRESENTED TO ISHTAR.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from an Assyrian intaglio + illustrated in A. Rich, _Narrative of a Journey to the Site + of Babylon in 1811_. The sacrifice of the goat, or rather + its presentation to the god, is not infrequently represented + on the Assyrian bas-reliefs. + +The supplications having been heard, water was brought to the gods for +the necessary ablutions before a repast. “Wash thy hands, cleanse thy +hands,--may the gods thy brothers wash their hands!--From a clean dish +eat a pure repast,--from a clean cup drink pure water.” The statue, from +the rigidity of the material out of which it was carved, was at a loss +how to profit by the exquisite things which had been lavished upon it: +the difficulty was removed by the opening of its mouth at the moment +of consecration, thus enabling it to partake of the good fare to its +satisfaction.* The banquet lasted a long time, and consisted of every +delicacy which the culinary skill of the time could prepare: the courses +consisted of dates, wheaten flour, honey, butter, various kinds of +wines, and fruits, together with roast and boiled meats. + + * This operation, which was also resorted to in Egypt in the + case of the statues of the gods and deceased persons, is + clearly indicated in a text of the second Chaldaean empire + published in _W. A. Insc_, vol. iv. pi. 25. The priest who + consecrates an image makes clear in the first place that + “its mouth not being open it can partake of no refreshment: + it neither eats food nor drinks water.” Thereupon he performs + certain rites, which he declares were celebrated, if not at + that moment, at least for the first time by Ea himself: “Ea + has brought thee to thy glorious place,--to thy glorious + place he has brought thee,--brought thee with his splendid + hand,--brought also butter and honey;--_he has poured + consecrated water into thy mouth--and by magic has opened + thy mouth._” Henceforward the statue can eat and drink like + an ordinary living being the meat and beverages offered to + it during the sacrifice. + +[Illustration: 205.jpg THE GOD SHAMASH SEIZES WITH HIS LEFT HAND THE +SMOKE OF THE SACRIFICE.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a Chaldaean intaglio pointed out + by Heuzey-Sarzcc; the original is in the Louvre. The scene + depicted behind Shamash deals with a legend still unknown. A + goddess, pursued by a genius with a double face, has taken + refuge under a tree, which bows down to protect her; while + the monster endeavours to break down the obstacle branch by + branch, a god rises from the stem and hands to the goddess a + stone-headed mace to protect her against her enemy. + +In the most ancient times it would appear that even human sacrifices +were offered, but this custom was obsolete except on rare occasions, and +lambs, oxen, sometimes swine’s flesh, formed the usual elements of +the sacrifice. The gods seized as it arose from the altar the unctuous +smoke, and fed on it with delight. When they had finished their repast, +the supplication of a favour was adroitly added, to which they gave a +favourable hearing. Services were frequent in the temples: there was one +in the morning and another in the evening on ordinary days, in addition +to those which private individuals might require at any hour of the day. +The festivals assigned to the local god and his colleagues, together +with the acts of praise in which the whole nation joined, such as that +of the New Year, required an abundance of extravagant sacrifices, in +which the blood of the victims flowed like water. Days of sorrow and +mourning alternated with these days of joy, during which the people and +the magnates gave themselves up to severe fasting and acts of penitence. +The Chaldeans had a lively sense of human frailty, and of the risks +entailed upon the sinner by disobedience to the gods. The dread of +sinning haunted them during their whole life; they continually +subjected the motives of their actions to a strict scrutiny, and once +self-examination had revealed to them the shadow of an evil intent, they +were accustomed to implore pardon for it in a humble manner. “Lord, my +sins are many, great are my misdeeds!--O my god, my sins are many, great +my misdeeds!--O my goddess, my sins are many, great my misdeeds!--I have +committed faults and I knew them not; I have committed sin and I knew +it not; I have fed upon misdeeds and I knew them not; I have walked in +omissions and I knew them not.--The lord, in the anger of his heart, +he has stricken me,--the god, in the wrath of his heart, has abandoned +me,--Ishtar is enraged against me, and has treated me harshly!--I make +an effort, and no one offers me a hand,--I weep, and no one comes to +me,--I cry aloud, and no one hears me:--I sink under affliction, I am +overwhelmed, I can no longer raise up my head,--I turn to my merciful +god to call upon him, and I groan!... Lord reject not thy servant,--and +if he is hurled into the roaring waters, stretch to him thy hand;--the +sins I have committed, have mercy upon them,--the misdeeds I have +committed, scatter them to the winds--and my numerous faults, tear them +to pieces like a garment.” Sin in the eyes of the Chaldaean was not, as +with us, an infirmity of the soul; it assaulted the body like an actual +virus, and the fear of physical suffering or death engendered by it, +inspired these complaints with a note of sincerity which cannot be +mistaken. + +Every individual is placed, from the moment of his birth, under the +protection of a god and goddess, of whom he is the servant, or rather +the son, and whom he never addresses otherwise than as his god and +his goddess. These deities accompany him night and day, not so much to +protect him from visible dangers, as to guard him from the invisible +beings which ceaselessly hover round him, and attack him on every side. +If he is devout, piously disposed towards his divine patrons and the +deities of his country, if he observes the prescribed rites, recites the +prayers, performs the sacrifices--in a word, if he acts rightly--their +aid is never lacking; they bestow upon him a numerous posterity, a +happy old age, prolonged to the term fixed by fate, when he must resign +himself to close his eyes for ever to the light of day. If, on the +contrary, he is wicked, violent, one whose word cannot be trusted, “his +god cuts him down like a reed,” extirpates his race, shortens his days, +delivers him over to demons who possess themselves of his body and +afflict it with sicknesses before finally despatching him. Penitence +is of avail against the evil of sin, and serves to re-establish a right +course of life, but its efficacy is not permanent, and the moment at +last arrives in which death, getting the upper hand, carries its victim +away. The Chaldaeans had not such clear ideas as to what awaited them in +the other world as the Egyptians possessed: whilst the tomb, the mummy, +the perpetuity of the funeral revenues, and the safety of the double, +were the engrossing subjects in Egypt, the Chaldaean texts are almost +entirely silent as to the condition of the soul, and the living seem to +have had no further concern about the dead than to get rid of them +as quickly and as completely as possible. They did not believe that +everything was over at the last breath, but they did not on that account +think that the fate of that which survived was indissolubly associated +with the perishable part, and that the disembodied soul was either +annihilated or survived, according as the flesh in which it was +sustained was annihilated or survived in the tomb. The soul was +doubtless not utterly unconcerned about the fate of the _larva_ it had +quitted: its pains were intensified on being despoiled of its earthly +case if the latter were mutilated, or left without sepulture, a prey +to the fowls, of the air. This feeling, however, was not sufficiently +developed to create a desire for escape from corruption entirely, and to +cause a resort to the mummifying process of the Egyptians. + +[Illustration: 208.jpg DECORATED WRAPPINGS FROM A MUMMY (Color)] + +The Chaldaeans did not subject the body, therefore, to those injections, +to those prolonged baths in preserving fluids, to that laborious +swaddling which rendered it indestructible; whilst the family wept and +lamented, old women who exercised the sad function of mourners washed +the dead body, perfumed it, clad it in its best apparel, painted its +cheeks, blackened its eyelids, placed a collar on its neck, rings on its +fingers, arranged its arms upon its breast, and stretched it on a bed, +setting up at its head a little altar for the customary offerings of +water, incense, and cakes. + +[Illustration: 209.jpg Chaldaean coffin in the form of a jar] + +[Illustration: 209a.jpg A VAULTED TOMB IN URU] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a sketch by Taylor. + +[Illustration: 210.jpg CHALDAEAN TOMB WITH DOMED ROOF.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a sketch by Taylor. + +Evil spirits, prowled incessantly around the dead bodies of the +Chaldaeans, either to feed upon them, or to use them in their sorcery: +should they succeed in slipping into a corpse, from that moment it could +be metamorphosed into a vampire, and return to the world to suck the +blood of the living. The Chaldaeans were, therefore, accustomed to invite +by prayers beneficent genii and gods to watch over the dead. Two of +these would take their invisible places at the head and foot of the bed, +and wave their hands in the act of blessing: these were the vassals +of Ea, and, like their master, were usually clad in fish-skins. Others +placed themselves in the sepulchral chamber, and stood ready to strike +any one who dared to enter: these had human figures, or lions’ heads +joined to the bodies of men. Others, moreover, hovered over the house in +order to drive off the spectres who might endeavour to enter through the +roof. During the last hours in which the dead body remained among its +kindred, it reposed under the protection of a legion of gods. + +We must not expect to find on the plains of the Euphrates the rock-cut +tombs, the mastabas or pyramids, of Egypt. No mountain chain ran on +either side of the river, formed of rock soft enough to be cut and +hollowed easily into chambers or sepulchral halls, and at the same time +sufficiently hard to prevent the tunnels once cut from falling in. + +[Illustration: 111.jpg CHALDEAN TOMB WITH FLAT ROOF.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a sketch by Taylor. + +The alluvial soil upon which the Chaldaean cities were built, far from, +preserving the dead body, rapidly decomposed it under the influence of +heat and moisture: vaults constructed in it would soon be invaded by +water in spite of masonry; paintings and sculpture would soon be +eaten away by nitre, and the funereal furniture and the coffin quickly +destroyed. The dwelling-house of the Chaldaean dead could not, therefore, +properly be called, as those of Egypt, an “eternal house.” It was +constructed of dried or burnt brick, and its form varied much from +the most ancient times. Sometimes it was a great vaulted chamber, the +courses forming the roof being arranged corbel-wise, and contained the +remains of one or two bodies walled up within it.* At other times +it consisted merely of an earthen jar, in which the corpse had +been inserted in a bent-up posture, or was composed of two enormous +cylindrical jars, which, when united and cemented with bitumen, formed a +kind of barrel around the body. Other tombs are represented by wretched +structures, sometimes oval and sometimes round in shape, placed upon a +brick base and covered by a flat or domed roof. The interior was not of +large dimensions, and to enter it was necessary to stoop to a creeping +posture. The occupant of the smallest chambers was content to have with +him his linen, his ornaments, some bronze arrowheads, and metal or clay +vessels. Others contained furniture which, though not as complete as +that found in Egyptian sepulchres, must have ministered to all the +needs of the spirit. The body was stretched, fully clothed, upon a +mat impregnated with bitumen, the head supported by a cushion or flat +brick,** the arms laid across the breast, and the shroud adjusted by +bands to the loins and legs. Sometimes the corpse was placed on its left +side, with the legs slightly bent, and the right hand, extending +over the left shoulder, was inserted into a vase, as if to convey the +contents to the mouth. + + * Vaulted chambers are confined chiefly to the ancient + cemeteries of Uru at Mugheir; they are rather over six to + seven feet long, with a breadth of five and a half feet. The + walls are not quite perpendicular, but are somewhat splayed + up to two-thirds of their height, where they begin to narrow + into the vaulted roof. + + ** The object placed under the head of the skeleton is the + dried brick mentioned in the text; the vessel to which the + hand is stretched out was of copper; the other vessels were + of earthenware, and contained water, or dates, of which the + stones were found. The small cylinders on the side were of + stone; the two large cylinders, between the copper vessel + and those of earthenware, were pieces of bamboo, of whose + use we are ignorant. + +[Illustration: 213.jpg THE INTERIOR OF THE TOMB] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a sketch by Taylor + +Clay jars and dishes, arranged around the body, contained the food and +drink required for the dead man’s daily fare--his favourite wine, +dates, fish, fowl, game, occasionally also a boar’s head--and even stone +representations of provisions, which, like those of Egypt, were lasting +substitutes for the reality. The dead man required weapons also to +enable him to protect his food-store, and his lance, javelins and baton +of office were placed alongside him, together with a cylinder bearing +his name, which he had employed as his seal in his lifetime. Beside +the body of a woman or young girl was arranged an abundance of spare +ornaments, flowers, scent-bottles, combs, cosmetic pencils, and cakes +of the black paste with which they were accustomed to paint the eyebrows +and the edges of the eyelids. + +Cremation seems in many cases to have been preferred to burial in a +tomb. The funeral pile was constructed at some distance from the town, +on a specially reserved area in the middle of the marshes. The body, +wrapped up in coarse matting, was placed upon a heap of reeds and rushes +saturated with bitumen: a brick wall, coated with moist clay, was built +around this to circumscribe the action of the flames, and, the customary +prayers having been recited, the pile was set on fire, masses of fresh +material, together with the funerary furniture and usual viaticum, +being added to the pyre. When the work of cremation was considered to +be complete, the fire was extinguished, and an examination made of the +residue. It frequently happened that only the most accessible and most +easily destroyed parts of the body had been attacked by the flames, and +that there remained a black and disfigured mass which the fire had +not consumed. The previously prepared coating of mud was then made to +furnish a clay covering for the body, so as to conceal the sickening +spectacle from the view of the relatives and spectators. Sometimes, +however, the furnace accomplished its work satisfactorily, and there was +nothing to be seen at the end but greasy ashes and scraps of calcined +bones. The remains were frequently left where they were, and the funeral +pile became their tomb. They were, however, often collected and disposed +of in a manner which varied with their more or less complete combustion. +Bodies insufficiently burnt were interred in graves, or in public +chapels; while the ashes of those fully cremated, together with the +scraps of bones and the _debris_ of the offerings, were placed in long +urns. The heat had contorted the weapons and half melted the vessels +of copper; and the deceased was thus obliged to be content with the +fragments only of the things provided for him. These were, however, +sufficient for the purpose, and his possessions, once put to the test +of the flames, now accompanied him whither he went: water alone was +lacking, but provision was made for this by the construction on the +spot of cisterns to collect it. For this purpose several cylinders of +pottery, some twenty inches broad, were inserted in the ground one +above the other from a depth of from ten to twelve feet, and the last +cylinder, reaching the level of the ground, was provided with a narrow +neck, through which the rainwater or infiltrations from the river flowed +into this novel cistern. Many examples of these are found in one and the +same chamber,* thus giving the soul an opportunity of finding water in +one or other of them. The tombs at Uruk, arranged closely together +with coterminous walls, and gradually covered by the sand or by the +accumulation and _debris_ of new tombs, came at length to form an actual +mound. In cities where space was less valuable, and where they were free +to extend, the tombs quickly disappeared without leaving any vestiges +above the surface, and it would now be necessary to turn up a great +deal of rubbish before discovering their remains. The Chaldaea of to-day +presents the singular aspect of a country almost without cemeteries, and +one would be inclined to think that its ancient inhabitants had taken +pains to hide them.** The sepulture of royal personages alone furnishes +us with monuments of which we can determine the site. At Babylon these +were found in the ancient palaces in which the living were no longer +inclined to dwell: that of Shargina, for instance, furnished a +burying-place for kings more than two thousand years after the death +of its founder. The chronicles devoutly indicate the spot where each +monarch, when his earthly reign was over, found a last resting-place; +and where, as the subject of a ceremonial worship similar to that of +Egypt, his memory was preserved from the oblivion which had overtaken +most of his illustrious subjects. + + * The German expedition of 1886-87 found four of these + reservoirs in a single chamber, and nine distributed in the + chambers of a house entirely devoted to the burial of the + dead. + + ** Various explanations have been offered to account for + this absence of tombs, Without mentioning the desperate + attempt to get rid of the difficulty by the assumption that + the dead bodies were cast into the river, Loftus thinks that + the Chaldaeans and Assyrians were accustomed to send them to + some sanctuary in Southern Chaldaea, especially to Uru and + Uruk, whose vast cemeteries, he contends, would have + absorbed during the centuries the greater part of the + Euphratean population; his opinion has been adopted by some + historians, and, as far only as the later period is + concerned, by Hommel. + +The dead man, or rather that part of him which survived--his +“ekimmu”--dwelt in the tomb, and it was for his comfort that there were +provided, at the time of sepulture or cremation, the provisions and +clothing, the ornaments and weapons, of which he was considered to stand +in need. Furnished with these necessities by his children and heirs, he +preserved for the donors the same affection which he had felt for them +in his lifetime, and gave evidence of it in every way he could, watching +over their welfare, and protecting them from malign influences. If +they abandoned or forgot him, he avenged himself for their neglect by +returning to torment them in their homes, by letting sickness attack +them, and by ruining them with his imprecations: he became thus no +less hurtful than the “luminous ghost” of the Egyptians, and if he were +accidentally deprived of sepulture, he would not be merely a plague +to his relations, but a danger to the entire city. The dead, who were +unable to earn an honest living, showed little pity to those who were +in the same position as themselves: when a new-comer arrived among them +without prayers, libations, or offerings, they declined to receive him, +and would not give him so much as a piece of bread out of their meagre +store. The spirit of the unburied dead man, having neither place of +repose nor means of subsistence, wandered through the town and country, +occupied with no other thought than that of attacking and robbing the +living. He it was who, gliding into the house during the night, revealed +himself to its inhabitants with such a frightful visage as to drive them +distracted with terror. Always on the watch, no sooner does he surprise +one of his victims than he falls upon him, “his head against his +victim’s head, his hand against his hand, his foot against his foot.” + He who has been thus attacked, whether man or beast, would undoubtedly +perish if magic were not able to furnish its all-powerful defence +against this deadly embrace.* This human survival, who is so forcibly +represented both in his good and evil aspects, was nevertheless nothing +more than a sort of vague and fluid existence--a double, in fact, +analogous in appearance to that of the Egyptians. + + * The majority of the spells employed against sickness + contain references to the spirits against which they + contend--“the wicked ekimmu who oppresses men during the + night,” or simply “the wicked ekimmu,” the ghost. + +With the faculty of roaming at will through space, and of going forth +from and returning to his abode, it was impossible to regard him as +condemned always to dwell in the case of terra-cotta in which his body +lay mouldering: he was transferred, therefore, or rather he +transferred himself, into the dark land--the Aralu--situated very far +away--according to some, beneath the surface of the earth; according to +others, in the eastern or northern extremities of the universe. A river +which opens into this region and separates it from the sunlit earth, +finds its source in the primordial waters into whose bosom this world +of ours is plunged. This dark country is surrounded by seven high walls, +and is approached through seven gates, each of which is guarded by a +pitiless warder. Two deities rule within it--Nergal, “the lord of the +great city,” and Beltis-Allat, “the lady of the great land,” whither +everything which has breathed in this world descends after death. A +legend relates that Allat, called in Sumerian Erishkigal, reigned alone +in Hades, and was invited by the gods to a feast which they had prepared +in heaven. Owing to her hatred of the light, she sent a refusal by her +messenger Narntar, who acquitted himself on this mission with such a +bad grace, that Ann and Ea were incensed against his mistress, and +commissioned Nergal to descend and chastise her; he went, and finding +the gates of hell open, dragged the queen by her hair from the throne, +and was about to decapitate her, but she mollified him by her prayers, +and saved her life by becoming his wife. The nature of Nergal fitted +him well to play the part of a prince of the departed: for he was the +destroying sun of summer, and the genius of pestilence and battle. His +functions, however, in heaven and earth took up so much of his time +that he had little leisure to visit his nether kingdom, and he was +consequently obliged to content himself with the _role_ of providing +subjects for it by despatching thither the thousands of recruits which +he gathered daily from the abodes of men or from the field of battle. +Allat was the actual sovereign of the country. She was represented with +the body of a woman, ill-formed and shaggy, the grinning muzzle of a +lion, and the claws of a bird of prey. She brandished in each hand a +large serpent--a real animated javelin, whose poisonous bite inflicted +a fatal wound upon the enemy. Her children were two lions, which she is +represented as suckling, and she passed through her empire, not seated +in the saddle, but standing upright or kneeling on the back of a +horse, which seems oppressed by her weight. Sometimes she set out on +an expedition upon the river which communicates with the countries +of light, in order to meet the procession of newly arrived souls +ceaselessly despatched to her: she embarked in this case upon an +enchanted vessel, which made its way without sail or oars, its prow +projecting like the beak of a bird, and its stern terminating in the +head of an ox. She overcomes all resistance, and nothing can escape from +her: the gods themselves can pass into her empire only on the condition +of submitting to death like mortals, and of humbly avowing themselves +her slaves. + +[Illustration: 220.jpg THE GODDESS ALLAT PASSES THROUGH THE NETHER +REGIONS IN HER BARK.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a bronze plaque of which an + engraving was published by Clermont-Ganneau. The original, + which belonged to M. Peretie, is now in the collection of M. + de Clercq + +[Illustration: 221.jpg NERGAL, THE GOD OF HADES; BACK VIEW.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin. This is the back of the bronze plate + represented on the preceding page; the animal-head of the + god appears in relief at the top of the illustration. + +The warders at the gates despoiled the new-comers of everything which +they had brought with them, and conducted them in a naked condition +before Allat, who pronounced sentence upon them, and assigned to each +his place in the nether world. The good or evil committed on earth by +such souls was of little moment in determining the sentence: to secure +the favour of the judge, it was of far greater importance to have +exhibited devotion to the gods and to Allat herself, to have lavished +sacrifices and offerings upon them and to have enriched their temples. +The souls which could not justify themselves were subjected to horrible +punishment: leprosy consumed them to the end of time, and the most +painful maladies attacked them, to torture them ceaselessly without any +hope of release. Those who were fortunate enough to be spared from +her rage, dragged out a miserable and joyless existence. They were +continually suffering from the pangs of thirst and hunger, and found +nothing to satisfy their appetites but clay and dust. They shivered with +cold, and they obtained no other garment to protect them than mantles of +feathers--the great silent wings of the night-birds, invested with which +they fluttered about and filled the air with their screams. This gloomy +and cruel conception of ordinary life in this strange kingdom was still +worse than the idea formed of the existence in the tomb to which it +succeeded. In the cemetery the soul was, at least, alone with the dead +body; in the house of Allat, on the contrary, it was lost as it were +among spirits as much afflicted as itself, and among the genii born of +darkness. None of these genii had a simple form, or approached the +human figure in shape; each individual was a hideous medley of human +and animal parts, in which the most repellent features were artistically +combined. Lions’ heads stood out from the bodies of scorpion-tailed +jackals, whose feet were armed with eagles’ claws: and among such +monsters the genii of pestilence, fever, and the south-west wind took +the chief place. When once the dead had become naturalized among this +terrible population, they could not escape from their condition, +unless by the exceptional mandate of the gods above. They possessed +no recollection of what they had done upon earth. Domestic affection, +friendships, and the memory of good offices rendered to one +another,--all were effaced from their minds: nothing remained there but +an inexpressible regret at having been exiled from the world of light, +and an excruciating desire to reach it once more. The threshold of +Allat’s palace stood upon a spring which had the property of restoring +to life all who bathed in it or drank of its waters: they gushed forth +as soon as the stone was raised, but the earth-spirits guarded it with a +jealous care, and kept at a distance all who attempted to appropriate a +drop of it. They permitted access to it only by order of Ea himself, or +one of the supreme gods, and even then with a rebellious heart at seeing +their prey escape them. Ancient legends related how the shepherd Dumuzi, +son of Ea and Damkina, having excited the love of Ishtar while he was +pasturing his flocks under the mysterious tree of Eridu, which covers +the earth with its shade, was chosen by the goddess from among all +others to be the spouse of her youth, and how, being mortally wounded by +a wild boar, he was cast into the kingdom of Allat. One means remained +by which he might be restored to the light of day: his wounds must be +washed in the waters of the wonderful spring, and Ishtar resolved to +go in quest of this marvellous liquid. The undertaking was fraught with +danger, for no one might travel to the infernal regions without having +previously gone through the extreme terrors of death, and even the gods +themselves could not transgress this fatal law. “To the land without +return, to the land which thou knowest--Ishtar, the daughter of Sin, +turned her thoughts: she, the daughter of Sin, turned her thoughts--to +the house of darkness, the abode of Irkalla--to the house from which he +who enters can never emerge--to the path upon which he who goes shall +never come back--to the house into which he who enters bids farewell +to the light--the place where dust is nourishment and clay is food; the +light is not seen, darkness is the dwelling, where the garments are the +wings of birds--where dust accumulates on door and bolt.” Ishtar +arrives at the porch, she knocks at it, she addresses the guardian in an +imperious voice: “‘Guardian of the waters, open thy gate--open thy +gate that I may enter, even I.--If thou openest not the door that I may +enter, even I,--I will burst open the door, I will break the bars, I +will break the threshold, I will burst in the panels, I will excite the +dead that they may eat the living,--and the dead shall be more numerous +than the living.’--The guardian opened his mouth and spake, he announced +to the mighty Ishtar: ‘Stop, O lady, and do not overturn the door until +I go and apprise the Queen Allat of thy name.’ Allat hesitates, and then +gives him permission to receive the goddess: ‘Go, guardian, open the +gate to her--but treat her according to the ancient laws. Mortals +enter naked into the world, and naked must they leave it: and since +Ishtar has decided to accept their lot, she too must be prepared to +divest herself of her garments.’” The guardian went, he opened his mouth: +‘Enter, my lady, and may Kutha rejoice--may the palace and the land +without return exult in thy presence! ‘He causes her to pass through the +first gate, divests her, removes the great crown from her head:--‘Why, +guardian, dost thou remove the great crown from my head?’--‘Enter, my +lady, such is the law of Allat.’ The second gate, he causes her to pass +through it, he divests her--removes the rings from her ears:--‘Why, +guardian, dost thou remove the rings from my ears?’--‘Enter, my lady, +such is the law of Allat.’” And from gate to gate he removes some +ornament from the distressed lady--now her necklace with its attached +amulets, now the tunic which covers her bosom, now her enamelled girdle, +her bracelets, and the rings on her ankles: and at length, at the +seventh gate, takes from her her last covering. When she at length +arrives in the presence of Allat, she throws herself upon her in order +to wrest from her in a terrible struggle the life of Dumuzi; but Allat +sends for Namtar, her messenger of misfortune, to punish, the rebellious +Ishtar. “Strike her eyes with the affliction of the eyes--strike +her loins with the affliction of the loins--strike her feet with the +affliction of the feet--strike her heart with the affliction of the +heart--strike her head with the affliction of the head--strike violently +at her, at her whole body!” While Ishtar was suffering the torments of +the infernal regions, the world of the living was wearing mourning on +account of her death. In the absence of the goddess of love, the rites +of love could no longer be performed. The passions of animals and men +were suspended. If she did not return quickly to the daylight, the +races of men and animals would become extinct, the earth would become a +desert, and the gods would have neither votaries nor offerings. + +[Illustration: 226.jpg ISHTAR DESPOILED OF HER GARMENTS IN HADES] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a Chaldaean intaglio in the + Hague Museum. Salomon Reinach has demonstrated that the + naked figure is not the goddess herself, but a statue of the + goddess which was adored in one of the temples. + +“Papsukal, the servant of the great gods, tore his face before +Shamash--clothed in mourning, filled with sorrow. Shamash went--he +wept in the presence of Sin, his father,--and his tears flowed in the +presence of Ea, the king:--‘Ishtar has gone down into the earth, and +she has not come up again!--And ever since Ishtar has descended into +the land without return... [the passions of men and beasts have been +suspended]... the master goes to sleep while giving his command, the +servant goes to sleep on his duty.’” The resurrection of the goddess +is the only remedy for such ills, but this is dependent upon the +resurrection of Damuzi: Ishtar will never consent to reappear in the +world, if she cannot bring back her husband with her. Ea, the supreme +god, the infallible executor of the divine will--he who alone can modify +the laws imposed upon creation--at length decides to accord to her +what she desires. “Ea, in the wisdom of his heart, formed a male +being,--formed Uddushunamir, the servant of the gods:--‘Go then, +Uddushunamir, turn thy face towards the gate of the land without return; +--the seven gates of the land without return--may they become open at +thy presence--may Allat behold thee, and rejoice in thy presence! When +her heart shall be calm, and her wrath appeased, charm her in the name +of the great gods--turn thy thoughts to the spring’--‘May the spring, my +lady, give me of its waters that I may drink of them.’” Allat broke +out into a terrible rage, when she saw herself obliged to yield to her +rival; “she beat her sides, she gnawed her fingers,” she broke out into +curses against the messenger of misfortune. “‘Thou hast expressed to me +a wish which should not be made!--Fly, Uddushunamir, or I will shut thee +up in the great prison--the mud of the drains of the city shall be thy +food--the gutters of the town shall be thy drink--the shadow of +the walls shall be thy abode--the thresholds shall be thy +habitation--confinement and isolation shall weaken thy strength.’”* She +is obliged to obey, notwithstanding; she calls her messenger Namtar and +commands him to make all the preparations for resuscitating the goddess. +It was necessary to break the threshold of the palace in order to get at +the spring, and its waters would have their full effect only in presence +of the Anunnas. “Namtar went, he rent open the eternal palace,--he +twisted the uprights so that the stones of the threshold trembled;--he +made the Anunnaki come forth, and seated them on thrones of gold,--he +poured upon Ishtar the waters of life, and brought her away.” She +received again at each gate the articles of apparel she had abandoned +in her passage across the seven circles of hell: as soon as she saw the +daylight once more, it was revealed to her that the fate of her husband +was henceforward in her own hands. Every year she must bathe him in pure +water, and anoint him with the most precious perfumes, clothe him in a +robe of mourning, and play to him sad airs upon a crystal flute, whilst +her priestesses intoned their doleful chants, and tore their breasts +in sorrow: his heart would then take fresh life, and his youth flourish +once more, from springtime to springtime, as long as she should +celebrate on his behalf the ceremonies already prescribed by the deities +of the infernal world. + + * It follows from this passage that Ishtar could be + delivered only at the cost of another life: it was for this + reason, doubtless, that Ea, instead of sending the ordinary + messenger of the gods, created a special messenger. Allat, + furious at the insignificance of the victim sent to her, + contents herself with threatening Uddushanamir with an + ignominious treatment if he does not escape as quickly as + possible. + +Dumuzi was a god, the lover, moreover, of a goddess, and the deity +succeeded where mortals failed.* Ea, Nebo, Gula, Ishtar, and their +fellows possessed, no doubt, the faculty of recalling the dead to life, +but they rarely made use of it on behalf of their creatures, and their +most pious votaries pleaded in vain from temple to temple for the +resurrection of their dead friends; they could never obtain the favour +which had been granted by Allat to Dumuzi. + + * Merodach is called “the merciful one who takes pleasure in + raising the dead to life,” and “the lord of the pure + libation,” the “merciful one who has power to give life.” In + Jeremias may be found the list of the gods who up to the + present are known to have had the power to resuscitate the + dead; it is probable that this power belonged to all the + gods and goddesses of the first rank. + +[Illustration: 229.jpg DUMUZI REJUVENATED ON THE KNEES OF ISHTAR.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a Chaldaean intaglio. + +When the dead body was once placed in the tomb, it rose up no more, it +could no more be reinstated in the place in the household it had +lost, it never could begin once more a new earthly existence. The +necromancers, indeed, might snatch away death’s prey for a few moments. +The earth gaped at the words of their invocations, the soul burst forth +like a puff of wind and answered gloomily the questions proposed to it; +but when the charm was once broken, it had to retrace its steps to +the country without return, to be plunged once more in darkness. This +prospect of a dreary and joyless eternity was not so terrifying to the +Chaldaeans as it was to the Egyptians. The few years of their earthly +existence were of far more concern to them than the endless ages which +were to begin their monotonous course on the morrow of their funeral. +The sum of good and evil fortune assigned to them by destiny they +preferred to spend continuously in the light of day on the fair plains +of the Euphrates and Tigris: if they were to economize during this +period with the view of laying up a posthumous treasure of felicity, +their store would have no current value beyond the tomb, and would thus +become so much waste. The gods, therefore, whom they served faithfully +would recoup them, here in their native city, with present prosperity, +with health, riches, power, glory, and a numerous offspring, for the +offerings of their devotion; while, if they irritated the deities +by their shortcomings, they had nothing to expect but overwhelming +calamities and sufferings. The gods would “cut them down like a reed,” + and their “names would be annihilated, their seed destroyed;--they would +end their days in affliction and hunger,--their dead bodies would be at +the mercy of chance, and would receive no sepulture.” They were content +to resign themselves, therefore, to the dreary lot of eternal misery +which awaited them after death, provided they enjoyed in this world a +long and prosperous existence. Some of them felt and rebelled against +the injustice of the idea, which assigned one and the same fate, without +discrimination, to the coward and the hero killed on the battle-field, +to the tyrant and the mild ruler of his people, to the wicked and +the righteous. These therefore supposed that the gods would make +distinctions, that they would separate such heroes from the common herd, +welcome them in a fertile, sunlit island, separated from the abode of +men by the waters of death--the impassable river which leads to the +house of Allat. The tree of life flourished there, the spring of life +poured forth there its revivifying waters; thither Ea transferred +Xisuthros after the Deluge; Gilgames saw the shores of this island and +returned from it, strong and healthy as in the days of his youth. The +site of this region of delights was at first placed in the centre of +the marshes of the Euphrates, where this river flows into the sea; +afterwards when the country became better known, it was transferred +beyond the ocean. In proportion as the limits of the Chaldaean +horizon were thrust further and further away by mercantile or warlike +expeditions, this mysterious island was placed more and more to the +east, afterwards to the north, and at length at a distance so great that +it tended to vanish altogether. As a final resource, the gods of heaven +themselves became the hosts, and welcomed into their own kingdom the +purified souls of the heroes. + +These souls were not so securely isolated from humanity that the +inhabitants of the world were not at times tempted to rejoin them before +their last hour had come. Just as Gilgames had dared of old the +dangers of the desert and the ocean in order to discover the island of +Khasisadra, so Etana darted through the air in order to ascend to the +sky of Anu, to become incorporated while still living in the choir of +the blessed. The legend gives an account of his friendship with the +eagle of Shamash, and of the many favours he had obtained from and +rendered to the bird. It happened at last, that his wife could not bring +forth the son which lay in her womb; the hero, addressing himself to +the eagle, asked from her the plant which alleviates the birth-pangs +of women and facilitates their delivery. This was only to be found, +however, in the heaven of Anu, and how could any one run the risk of +mounting so high, without being destroyed on the way by the anger of the +gods? The eagle takes pity upon the sorrow of his comrade, and resolves +to attempt the enterprise with him. “‘Friend,’ she says, ‘banish the +cloud from thy face! Come, and I will carry thee to the heaven of the +god Anu. Place thy breast against my breast--place thy two hands upon +the pinions of my wings--place thy side against my side.’ He places his +breast against the breast of the eagle, he places his two hands upon the +pinions of the wings, he places his side against her side;--he adjusts +himself firmly, and his weight was great.” The Chaldaean artists have +more than once represented the departure of the hero. They exhibit him +closely attached to the body of his ally, and holding her in a strong +embrace. A first flight has already lifted them above the earth, and the +shepherds scattered over the country are stupefied at the unaccustomed +sight: one announces the prodigy to another, while their dogs seated at +their feet extend their muzzles as if in the act of howling with terror. +“For the space of a double hour the eagle bore him--then the eagle spake +to him, to him Etana: ‘Behold, my friend, the earth what it is; regard +the sea which the ocean contains! See, the earth is no more than a +mountain, and the sea is no more than a lake.’ The space of a second +double hour she bore him, then the eagle spake to him, to him Etana: +‘Behold, my friend, the earth what it is; the sea appears as the girdle +of the earth! ‘The space of a third double hour she bore him, then the +eagle spake to him, to him Etana: ‘See, my friend, the earth, what it +is:--the sea is no more than the rivulet made by a gardener.’” + +[Illustration: 233.jpg ETANA CARRIED TO HEAVEN BY AN EAGLE.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a Chaldaean intaglio. + +“They at length arrive at the heaven of Anu, and rest there for a +moment. Etana sees around him nothing but empty space--no living thing +within it--not even a bird: he is struck with terror, but the eagle +reassures him, and tells him to proceed on his way to the heaven of +Ishtar. “‘Come, my friend, let me bear thee to Ishtar,--and I will place +thee near Ishtar, the lady,--and at the feet of Ishtar, the lady, thou +shalt throw thyself.--Place thy side against my side, place thy hands +on the pinions of my wings.’ The space of a double hour she bore him: +‘Friend, behold the earth what it is.--The face of the earth stretches +out quite flat--and the sea is no greater than a mere.’ The space of +a second double hour she bore him: ‘Friend, behold the earth what it +is,--the earth is no more than a square plot in a garden, and the great +sea is not greater than a puddle of water.’” At the third hour Etana +lost courage, and cried, “Stop!” and the eagle immediately descended +again; but, Etana’s strength being exhausted, he let go his hold, and +was dashed to pieces on the ground. + +The eagle escaped unhurt this time, but she soon suffered a more painful +death than that of Etana. She was at war with the serpent, though the +records which we as yet possess do not vouchsafe the reason, when she +discovered in the roots of a tree the nest in which her enemy concealed +its brood. She immediately proposed to her young ones to pounce down +upon the growing snakes; one of her eaglets, wiser than the rest, +reminded her that they were under the protection of Shamash, the great +righter of wrongs, and cautioned her against any transgression of the +divine laws. The old eagle felt herself wiser than her son, and rebuked +him after the manner of wise mothers: she carried away the serpent’s +young, and gave them as food to her own brood. The hissing serpent +crawled as far as Shamash, crying for vengeance: “The evil she has done +me, Shamash--behold it! Come to my help, Shamash! thy net is as wide as +the earth--thy snares reach to the distant mountain--who can escape +thy net?--The criminal Zu, Zu who was the first to act wickedly, did he +escape it?” Shamash refused to interfere personally, but he pointed out +to the serpent an artifice by which he might satisfy his vengeance as +securely as if Shamash himself had accomplished it. “Set out upon the +way, ascend the mountain,--and conceal thyself in a dead bull;--make +an incision in his inside--tear open his belly,--take up thy +abode--establish thyself in his belly. All the birds of the air will +pounce upon it....--and the eagle herself will come with them, ignorant +that thou art within it;--she will wish to possess herself of the +flesh, she will come swiftly--she will think of nothing but the entrails +within. As soon as she begins to attack the inside, seize her by her +wings, beat down her wings, the pinions of her wings and her claws, tear +her and throw her into a ravine of the mountain, that she may die there +a death of hunger and thirst.” + +The serpent did as Shamash advised, and the birds of the air began to +flock round the carcase in which she was hidden. The eagle came with the +rest, and at first kept aloof, looking for what should happen. When she +saw that the birds flew away unharmed all fear left her. In vain did the +wise eaglet warn her of the danger that was lurking within the prey; she +mocked at him and his predictions, dug her beak into the carrion, and +the serpent leaping out seized her by the wing. Then “the eagle her +mouth opened, and spake unto the snake, ‘Have mercy upon me, and +according to thy pleasure a gift I will lavish upon thee!’ The snake +opened her mouth and spake unto the eagle, ‘Did I release thee, Shamash +would take part against me; and the doom would fall upon me, which now +I fulfil upon thee.’ She tore out her wings, her feathers, her pinions; +she tore her to pieces, she threw her into a cleft, and there she died a +death of hunger and of thirst.” + +The gods allowed no living being to penetrate with impunity into their +empire: he who was desirous of ascending thither, however brave he might +be, could do so only by death. The mass of humanity had no pretensions +to mount so high. Their religion gave them the choice between a +perpetual abode in the tomb, or confinement in the prison of Allat; if +at times they strove to escape from these alternatives, and to picture +otherwise their condition in the world beyond, their ideas as to the +other life continued to remain vague, and never approached the minute +precision of the Egyptian conception. The cares of the present life were +too absorbing to allow them leisure to speculate upon the conditions of +a future existence. + +[Illustration: 230.jpg Endplate] + + + + +CHAPTER III--CHALDAEAN CIVILIZATION + + +_CHALDAEAN CIVILIZATION--ROYALTY--THE CONSTITUTION OF THE FAMILY AND ITS +PROPERTY--CHALMAN COMMERCE AND INDUSTRY._ + +_The kings not gods, but the vicegerents of the gods: their sacerdotal +character--The queens and the women of the royal family: the sons and +the order of succession to the throne--The royal palaces: description +of the palace of Gudea at Lagash, the facades, the zigurat, the private +apartments, the furniture, the external decoration--Costume of the +men and women: the employees of the palace and the method of royal +administration; the military and the great lords._ + +_The scribe and the clay books.--Cuneiform writing: its hieroglyphic +origin; the Protean character of the sounds which may be assigned to the +ideograms, grammatical tablets, and dictionaries--Their contracts, and +their numerous copies of them: the finger-nail mark, the seal._ + +_The constitution of the family: the position held by the +wife--Marriage, the contract, the religious ceremonies--Divorce: +the rights of wealthy women; woman and marriage among the lower +classes--Adopted children, their position in the family; ordinary +motives for adoption--Slaves, their condition, their enfranchisement._ + +_The Chaldaean towns: the aspect and distribution of the houses, domestic +life--The family patrimony: division of the inheritance--Lending +on usury, the rate of interest, commercial intercourse by land and +sea--Trade corporations: brick-making, industrial implements in stone +and metal, goldsmiths, engravers of cylinders, weavers; the state of the +working classes._ + +_Farming and cultivation of the ground: landmarks, slaves, +and agricultural labourers--Scenes of pastoral life: fishing, +hunting--Archaic literature; positive sciences: arithmetic and geometry, +astronomy and astrology, the science of foretelling the future--The +physician; magic and its influence on neighbouring countries._ + +[Illustration: 239.jpg CHAPTER III.] + + Drawn by Boudier, from the sketch by Loftus. The initial + vignette, which is by Faucher-Gudin, represents a royal + figure kneeling and holding a large nail in both hands. The + nail serves to keep the figure fixed firmly in the earth. It + is a reproduction of the bronze figurine in the Louvre, + already published by Heuzey-Sakzeo, _Decouvertes en + Chaldee_, pl. 28, No. 4. + + + + +CHAPTER III--CHALDAEAN CIVILIZATION + + +_Royalty--The constitution of the family and its property--Chaldaean +commerce and industry_. + + +The Chaldaean kings, unlike their contemporaries the Pharaohs, rarely +put forward any pretensions to divinity. They contented themselves with +occupying an intermediate position between their subjects and the gods, +and for the purpose of mediation they believed themselves to be endowed +with powers not possessed by ordinary mortals. They sometimes designated +themselves the sons of Ea, or of Ninsun, or some other deity, but +this involved no belief in a divine parentage, and was merely pious +hyperbole: they entertained no illusions with regard to any descent from +a god or even from one of his doubles, but they desired to be recognized +as his vicegerents here below, as his prophets, his well-beloved, +his pastors, elected by him to rule his human flocks, or as priests +devotedly attached to his service. While, however, the ordinary priest +chose for himself a single master to whom he devoted himself, the +priest-king exercised universal sacerdotal functions and claimed to be +pontiff of all the national religions. His choice naturally was directed +by preference to the patrons of his city, those who had raised his +ancestors from the dust, and had exalted him to the supreme rank, but +there were other divinities who claimed their share of his homage +and expected of him a devotion suited to their importance. If he had +attempted to carry out these duties personally in detail, he would have +had to spend his whole life at the foot of the altar; even when he had +delegated as many of them as he could to the regular clergy, there still +remained sufficient to occupy a large part of his time. Every month, +every day, brought its inevitable round of sacrifices, prayers, and +processions. On the 1st of the second Elul, the King of Babylon had to +present a gazelle without blemish to Sin; he then made an offering of +his own choosing to Shamash, and cut the throats of his victims +before the god. These ceremonies were repeated on the 2nd without any +alteration, but from the 3rd to the 12th they took place during the +night, before the statues of Merodach and Ishtar, in turn with those +of Nebo and Tashmit, of Mullil and Ninlil, of Eamman and of Zirbanit; +sometimes at the rising of a particular constellation--as, for instance, +that of the Great Bear, or that of the sons of Ishtar; sometimes at the +moment when the moon “raised above the earth her luminous crown.” On such +a date a penitential psalm or a litany was to be recited; at another +time it was forbidden to eat of meat either cooked or smoked, to change +the body-linen, to wear white garments, to drink medicine, to sacrifice, +to put forth an edict, or to drive out in a chariot. Not only at +Babylon, but everywhere else, obedience to the religious rites weighed +heavily on the local princes; at Uru, at Lagash, at Nipur, and in +the ruling cities of Upper and Lower Chaldaea. The king, as soon as he +succeeded to the throne, repaired to the temple to receive his solemn +investiture, which differed in form according to the gods he worshipped: +at Babylon, he addressed himself to the statue of Bel-Merodach in the +first days of the month Nisan which followed his accession, and he “took +him by the hands” to do homage to him. From thenceforth, he officiated +for Merodach here below, and the scrupulously minute devotions, which +daily occupied hours of his time, were so many acts of allegiance which +his fealty as a vassal constrained him to perform to his suzerain. They +were, in fact, analogous to the daily audiences demanded of a great +lord by his steward, for the purpose of rendering his accounts and of +informing him of current business: any interruption not justified by a +matter of supreme importance would be liable to be interpreted as a want +of respect or as revealing an inclination to rebel. By neglecting the +slightest ceremonial detail the king would arouse the suspicions of +the gods, and excite their anger against himself and his subjects: the +people had, therefore, a direct interest in his careful fulfilment of +the priestly functions, and his piety was not the least of his virtues +in their eyes. All other virtues--bravery, equity, justice--depended on +it, and were only valuable from the divine aid which piety obtained for +them. The gods and heroes of the earliest ages had taken upon themselves +the task of protecting the faithful from all their enemies, whether men +or beasts. If a lion decimated their flocks, or a urus of gigantic size +devastated their crops, it was the king’s duty to follow the example +of his fabulous predecessors and to set out and overcome them. The +enterprise demanded all the more courage and supernatural help, since +these beasts were believed to be no mere ordinary animals, but were +looked on as instruments of divine wrath the cause of which was often +unknown, and whoever assailed these monsters, provoked not only them but +the god who instigated them. Piety and confidence in the patron of the +city alone sustained the king when he set forth to drive the animal back +to its lair; he engaged in close combat with it, and no sooner had he +pierced it with his arrows or his lance, or felled it with axe and +dagger, than he hastened to pour a libation upon it, and to dedicate it +as a trophy in one of the temples. His exalted position entailed on him +no less perils in time of war: if he did not personally direct the first +attacking column, he placed himself at the head of the band composed of +the flower of the army, whose charge at an opportune moment was wont to +secure the victory. + +What would have been the use of his valour, if the dread of the gods had +not preceded his march, and if the light of their countenances had not +struck terror into the ranks of the enemy? As soon as he had triumphed +by their command, he sought before all else to reward them amply for the +assistance they had given him. He poured a tithe of the spoil into the +coffers of their treasury, he made over a part of the conquered country +to their domain, he granted them a tale of the prisoners to cultivate +their lands or to work at their buildings. Even the idols of the +vanquished shared the fate of their people: the king tore them from +the sanctuaries which had hitherto sheltered them, and took them as +prisoners in his train to form a court of captive gods about his patron +divinity. Shamash, the great judge of heaven, inspired him with justice, +and the prosperity which his good administration obtained for the people +was less the work of the sovereign than that of the immortals. + +We know too little of the inner family life of the kings, to attempt +to say how they were able to combine the strict sacerdotal obligations +incumbent on them with the routine of daily life. We merely observe that +on great days of festival or sacrifice, when they themselves officiated, +they laid aside all the insignia of royalty during the ceremony and were +clad as ordinary priests. We see them on such occasions represented +with short-cut hair and naked breast, the loin-cloth about their waist, +advancing foremost in the rank, carrying the heavily laden “kufa,” or +reed basket, as if they were ordinary slaves; and, as a fact, they +had for the moment put aside their sovereignty and were merely temple +servants, or slaves appearing before their divine master to do his +bidding, and disguising themselves for the nonce in the garb of +servitors. The wives of the sovereign do not seem to have been invested +with that semi-sacred character which led the Egyptian women to be +associated with the devotions of the man, and made them indispensable +auxiliaries in all religious ceremonies; they did not, moreover, occupy +that important position side by side with the man which the Egyptian +law assigned to the queens of the Pharaohs. Whereas the monuments on the +banks of the Nile reveal to us princesses sharing the throne of their +husbands whom they embrace with a gesture of frank affection, in Chaldaea +the wives of the prince, his mother, sisters, daughters, and even his +slaves, remain invisible to posterity. + +[Illustration: 244.jpg THE KING URNINA BEARING THE “KUFA.”] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from Heuzey Sarzec. + +The harem in which they were shut up by custom, rarely opened its doors: +the people seldom caught sight of them, their relatives spoke of them +as little as possible, those in power avoided associating them in any +public acts of worship or government, and we could count on our fingers +the number of those whom the inscriptions mention by name. Some of them +were drawn from the noble families of the capital, others came from the +kingdoms of Chaldaea or from foreign courts; a certain number never rose +above the condition of mere concubines, many assumed the title of queen, +while almost all served as living pledges of alliances made with rival +states, or had been given as hostages at the concluding of a peace on +the termination of a war.* As the kings, who put forward no pretensions +to a divine origin, were not constrained, after the fashion of the +Pharaohs, to marry their sisters in order to keep up the purity of their +race, it was rare to find one among their wives who possessed an equal +right to the crown with themselves: such a case could be found only in +troublous times, when an aspirant to the throne, of base extraction, +legitimated his usurpation by marrying a sister or daughter of his +predecessor. + + * Political marriage-alliances between Egypt and Chaldaea + were of frequent occurrence, according to the Tel el-Amarna + tablets, and at a later period between Chaldaea and Assyria; + among the few queens of the very earliest times, the wife of + Nammaghani is the daughter of Urbau, vicegerent of Lagash, + and consequently the cousin or niece of her husband, while + the wife of Rimsin appears to be the daughter of a nobleman + of the name of Rimnannar. + +The original status of the mother almost always determined that of her +children, and the sons of a princess were born princes, even if their +father were of obscure or unknown origin.* These princes exercised +important functions at court, or they received possessions which +they administered under the suzerainty of the head of the family; +the daughters were given to foreign kings, or to scions of the most +distinguished families. The sovereign was under no obligation to hand +down his crown to any particular member of his family; the eldest son +usually succeeded him, but the king could, if he preferred, select his +favourite child as his successor even if he happened to be the youngest, +or the only one born of a slave. As soon as the sovereign had made known +his will, the custom of primogeniture was set aside, and his word became +law. We can well imagine the secret intrigues formed both by mothers and +sons to curry favour with the father and bias his choice; we can picture +the jealousy with which they mutually watched each other, and the bitter +hatred which any preference shown to one would arouse in the breasts +of all the others. Often brothers who had been disappointed in their +expectations would combine secretly against the chosen or supposed heir; +a conspiracy would break out, and the people suddenly learn that their +ruler of yesterday had died by the hand of an assassin and that a new +one filled his place. + + * This fact is apparent from the introduction to the + inscription in which Sargon I. is supposed to give an + account of his life: “My father was unknown, my mother was a + princess;” and it was, indeed, from his mother that he + inherited his rights to the crown of Agade. + +Sometimes discontent spread beyond the confines of the palace, the army +became divided into two hostile camps, the citizens took the side of one +or other of the aspirants, and civil war raged for several years till +some decisive action brought it to a close. Meantime tributary vassals +took advantage of the consequent disorder to shake off the yoke, the +Blamites and various neighbouring cities joined in the dispute and +ranged themselves on the side of the party from which there was most +to be gained: the victorious faction always had to pay dearly for this +somewhat dubious help, and came out impoverished from the struggle. Such +an internecine war often caused the downfall of a dynasty--at times, +indeed, that of the entire state.* + + * The above is perfectly true of the later Assyrian and + Chalaean periods: it is scarcely needful to recall to the + reader the murders of Sargon II. and Sennacherib, or the + revolt of Assurdainpal against his father Shalmaneser III. + With regard to the earliest period we have merely + indications of what took place; the succession of King + Urnina of Lagash appears to have been accompanied by + troubles of this kind, and it is certain that his successor + Akurgal was not the eldest of his sons, but we do not at + present know to what events Akurgal owed his elevation. + +The palaces of the Chaldaean kings, like those of the Egyptians, +presented the appearance of an actual citadel: the walls had to be +sufficiently thick to withstand an army for an indefinite period, and +to protect the garrison from every emergency, except that of treason or +famine. One of the statues found at Telloh holds in its lap the plan +of one of these residences: the external outline alone is given, but by +means of it we can easily picture to ourselves a fortified place, with +its towers, its forts, and its gateways placed between two bastions. +It represents the ancient palace of Lagash, subsequently enlarged and +altered by Oudea or one of the vicegerents who succeeded him, in which +many a great lord of the place must have resided down to the time of the +Christian era. The site on which it was built in the Girsu quarter of. +the city was not entirely unoccupied at the time of its foundation. +Urbau had raised a ziggurat on that very spot some centuries previously, +and the walls which he had constructed were falling into ruin. + +[Illustration: 248.jpg THE PLAN OF A PALACE BUILT BY GUDEA.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from Heuzey-Sarzec. The plan is + traced upon the tablet held in the lap of Statue E in the + Louvre. Below the plan can be seen the ruler marked with the + divisions used by the architect for drawing his designs to + the desired scale; the scribe’s stylus is represented lying + on the left of the plan. [Prof. Petrie has shown that the + unit of measurement represented on this ruler is the cubit + of the Pyramid-builders of Egypt.--Te.] + +Gudea did not destroy the work of his remote predecessor, he merely +incorporated it into the substructures of the new building, thus +showing an indifference similar to that evinced by the Pharaohs for the +monuments of a former dynasty. The palaces, like the temples, never +rose directly from the soil, but were invariably built on the top of an +artificial mound of crude brick. At Lagash, this solid platform rises to +the height of 40 feet above the plain, and the only means of access +to the top is by a single narrow steep staircase, easily cut off or +defended. + +[Illustration: 249.jpg TERRA-COTTA BARREL-right] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from the facsimile by Place. + +The palace which surmounts this artificial eminence describes a sort of +irregular rectangle, 174 feet long by 69 feet wide, and had, contrary +to the custom in Egypt, the four angles orientated to the four cardinal +points. The two principal sides are not parallel, but swell out slightly +towards the middle, and the flexion of the lines almost follows the +contour of one of those little clay cones upon which the kings were wont +to inscribe their annals or dedications. This flexure was probably +not intentional on the part of the architect, but was owing to the +difficulty of keeping a wall of such considerable extent in a straight +line from one end to another; and all Eastern nations, whether Chaldaeans +or Egyptians, troubled themselves but little about correctness of +alignment, since defects of this kind were scarcely ever perceptible in +the actual edifice, and are only clearly revealed in the plan drawn out +to scale with modern precision.* + + * Mons. Heuzey thinks that the outward deflection of the + lines is owing “merely to a primitive method of obtaining + greater solidity of construction, and of giving a better + foundation to these long facades, which are placed upon + artificial terraces of crude brick always subject to cracks + and settlements.” I think that the explanation of the facts + which I have given in the text is simpler than that + ingeniously proposed by Mons. Heuzey: the masons, having + begun to build the wall at one end, were unable to carry it + on in a straight line until it reached the spot denoted on + the architect’s plan, and therefore altered the direction of + the wall when they detected their error; or, having begun to + build the wall from both ends simultaneously, were not + successful in making the two lines meet correctly, and they + have frankly patched up the junction by a mass of projecting + brickwork which conceals their unskilfulness. + +[Illustration: 250.jpg PLAN OF THE EXISTING BUILDINGS OF TELLOH.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from Heuzey-Sarzec. + +The facade of the building faces south-east, and is divided into three +blocks of unequal size. The centre of the middle block for a length +of 18 feet projects some 3 feet from the main front, and, by directly +facing the spectator, ingeniously masks the obtuse angle formed by the +meeting of the two walls. This projection is flanked right and left by +rectangular grooves, similar to those which ornament the facades of the +fortresses and brick houses of the Ancient Empire in Egypt: the regular +alternation of projections and hollows breaks the monotony of the facing +by the play of light and shade. Beyond these, again, the wall surface +is broken by semicircular pilasters some 17 inches in diameter, without +bases, capitals, or even a moulding, but placed side by side like so +many tree-trunks or posts forming a palisade. + +[Illustration: 251.jpg DECORATION OF COLOURED CONES ON THE FACADE AT URUK] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from the sketch by Loftus. + +Various schemes of decoration succeed each other in progressive +sequence, less ornate and at greater distances apart, the further +they recede from the central block and the nearer they approach to the +extremities of the facade. They stop short at the southern angle, and +the two sides of the edifice running from south to west, and again from +west to north, are flat, bare surfaces, unbroken by projection or groove +to relieve the poverty and monotony of their appearance. The decoration +reappears on the north-east front, where the arrangement of the +principal facade is partly reproduced. The grooved divisions here start +from the angles, and the engaged columns are wanting, or rather they +are transferred to the central projection, and from a distance have the +effect of a row of gigantic organ-pipes. We may well ask if this squat +and heavy mass of building, which must have attracted the eye from all +parts of the town, had nothing to relieve the dull and dismal colour of +its component bricks. + +[Illustration: 252.jpg PILASTERS OF THE FACADE OF GUDEA’S PALACE] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from Heuzey-Sarzec + +The idea might not have occurred to us had we not found elsewhere an +attempt to lessen the gloomy appearance of the architecture by coloured +plastering. At Uruk, the walls of the palace are decorated by means of +terra-cotta cones, fixed deep into the solid plaster and painted red, +black, or yellow, forming interlaced or diaper patterns of chevrons, +spirals, lozenges, and triangles, with a very fair result: this mosaic +of coloured plaster covered all the surfaces, both flat and curved, +giving to the building a cheerful aspect entirely wanting in that of +Lagash. + +A long narrow trough of yellowish limestone stood in front of the +palace, and was raised on two steps: it was carved in relief on the +outside with figures of women standing with outstretched hands, passing +to each other vases from which gushed forth two streams of water. This +trough formed a reservoir, which was filled every morning for the use of +the men and beasts, and those whom some business or a command brought to +the palace could refresh themselves there while waiting to be received +by the master. The gates which gave access to the interior were placed +at somewhat irregular intervals: two opened from the principal facade, +but on each of the other sides there was only one entrance. They were +arched and so low that admittance was not easily gained; they were +closed with two-leaved doors of cedar or cypress, provided with bronze +hinges, which turned upon two blackish stones firmly set in the masonry +on either side, and usually inscribed with the name of the founder or +that of the reigning sovereign. Two of the entrances possessed a sort +of covered way, in which the soldiers of the external watch could take +shelter from the heat of the sun by day, from the cold at night, and +from the dews at dawn. On crossing the threshold, a corridor, flanked +with two small rooms for porters or warders, led into a courtyard +surrounded with buildings of sufficient depth to take up nearly half +of the area enclosed within the walls. This court was moreover a +semi-public place, to which tradesmen, merchants, suppliants, and +functionaries of all ranks had easy access. A suite of three rooms shut +off in the north-east angle did duty for a magazine or arsenal. The +southern portion of the building was occupied by the State apartments, +the largest of which measures only 40 feet in length. In these rooms +Gudea and his successors gave audience to their nobles and administered +justice. The administrative officers and the staff who had charge of +them were probably located in the remaining part of the building. The +roof was flat, and ran all round the enclosing wall, forming a terrace, +access to it being gained by a staircase built between the principal +entrance and the arsenal. At the northern angle rose a ziggurat. Custom +demanded that the sovereign should possess a temple within his dwelling, +where he could fulfil his religious duties without going into the town +and mixing with the crowd. At Lagash the sacred tower was of older date +than the palace, and possibly formed part of the ancient building of +Urbau. It was originally composed of three stories, but the lower one +was altered by Gudea, and disappeared entirely in the thickness of the +basal platform. The second story thus became the bottom one; it was +enlarged, slightly raised above the neighbouring roofs, and was probably +crowned by a sanctuary dedicated to Ningirsu. It was, indeed, a monument +of modest proportions, and most of the public temples soared far above +it; but, small as it was, the whole town might be seen from the summit, +with its separate quarters and its belt of gardens; and beyond, the +open country intersected with streams, studded with isolated villages, +patches of wood, pools and weedy marshes left by the retiring +inundation, and in the far distance the lines of trees and bushes which +bordered the banks of the Euphrates and its confluents. Should a troop +of enemies venture within the range of sight, or should a suspicious +tumult arise within the city, the watchers posted on the highest terrace +would immediately give the alarm, and ‘through their warning the king +would have time to close his gates, and take measures to resist the +invading enemy or crush the revolt of his subjects. + +[Illustration: 255.jpg STONE SOCKET OF ONE OF THE DOORS IN THE PALACE OF +GUDEA.( right)] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from Heuzey-Sarzec. + +The northern apartments of the palace were appropriated to Gudea and his +family. They were placed with their back to the entrance court, and +were divided into two groups; the sovereign, his male children and their +attendants, inhabited the western one, while the women and their slaves +were cloistered, so to speak, in the northern set. The royal dwelling +had an external exit by means of a passage issuing on the north-west of +the enclosure, and it also communicated with the great courtyard by a +vaulted corridor which ran along one side of the base of the ziggurat: +the doors which, closed these two entrances opened wide enough to admit +only one person at a time, and to the right and left were recesses in +the wall which enabled the guards to examine all comers unobserved, and +stab them promptly if there were anything suspicious in their behaviour. +Eight chambers were lighted from the courtyard. In one of them were kept +all the provisions for the day, while another served as a kitchen: +the head, cook carried on his work at a sort of rectangular dresser of +moderate size, on which several fireplaces were marked out by little +dividing walls of burnt bricks, to accommodate as many pots or pans +of various sizes. A well sunk in the corner right down below the +substructure provided the water needed for culinary purposes. The king +and his belongings accommodated themselves in the remaining five or six +rooms as best they could. A corridor, guarded as carefully as the one +previously described, led to his private apartments and to those of his +wives: these comprised a yard, some half-dozen cells varying in size, +a kitchen, a well, and a door through which the servants could come and +go, without passing through the men’s quarters. The whole description in +no way corresponds with the marvellous ideal of an Oriental palace which +we form for ourselves: the apartments are mean and dismal, imperfectly +lighted by the door or by some small aperture timidly cut in the +ceiling, arranged so as to protect the inmates from the heat and +dust, but without a thought given to luxury or display. The walls were +entirely void of any cedar woodwork inlaid with gold, or panels of +mosaic such as we find in the temples, nor were they hung with dyed or +embroidered draperies such as we moderns love to imagine, and which we +spread about in profusion, when we attempt to reproduce the interior of +an ancient house or palace.* + + * Mons. de Sarzec expressly states that he was unable to + find anywhere in the palace of Gudea “the slightest trace of + any coating on the walls, either of colour or glazed brick. + The walls appear to have been left bare, without any + decoration except the regular joining of the courses of + brickwork.” The wood panelling was usually reserved for the + temples or sacred edifices: Mons. de Sarzec found the + remains of carbonized cedar panels in the ruins of a + sanctuary dedicated to Ningirsu. According to Mons. Heuzey, + the wall-hangings were probably covered with geometrical + designs, similar to those formed by the terra-cotta cones on + the walls of the palace at Uruk; the inscriptions, however, + which are full of minute details with regard to the + construction and ornamentation of the temples and palaces, + have hitherto contained nothing which would lead us to infer + that hangings were used for mural decoration in Chaldoa or + Assyria. + +The walls had to remain bare for the sake of coolness: at the most they +were only covered with a coat of white plaster, on which were painted, +in one or two colours, some scene of civil or religious life, or troops +of fantastic monsters struggling with one another, or men each with a +bird seated on his Wrist. The furniture was not less scanty than the +decoration; there were mats on the ground, coffers in which were kept +the linen and wearing apparel, low beds inlaid with ivory and metal and +provided with coverings and a thin mattress, copper or wooden stands to +support lamps or vases, square stools on four legs united by crossbars, +armchairs with lions’ claw feet, resembling the Egyptian armchairs +in outline, and making us ask if they were brought into Chaldaea by +caravans, or made from models which had come from some other country. +A few rare objects of artistic character might be found, which bore +witness to a certain taste for elegance and refinement; as, for +instance, a kind of circular trough of black stone, probably used to +support a vase. Three rows of imbricated scales surrounded the base of +this, while seven small sitting figures lean back against the upper +part with an air of satisfaction which is most cleverly rendered. +The decoration of the larger chambers used for public receptions and +official ceremonies, while never assuming the monumental character which +we observe in contemporary Egyptian buildings, afforded more scope for +richness and variety than was offered by the living-rooms. + +[Illustration: 258.jpg STAND OF BLACK STONE FROM THE PALACE OF TELLOH.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from Heuzey-Sarzec. + +Small tablets of brownish limestone, let into the wall or affixed to +its surface by terra-cotta pegs, and decorated with inscriptions, +represented in a more or less artless fashion the figure of the +sovereign officiating before some divinity, while his children and +servants took part in the ceremony by their chanting. Inscribed +bricks celebrating the king’s exploits were placed here and there in +conspicuous places. These were not embedded like the others in two +layers of bitumen or lime, but were placed in full view upon bronze +statues of divinities or priests, fixed into the ground or into some +part of the masonry as magical nails destined to preserve the bricks +from destruction, and consequently to keep the memory of the dedicator +continually before posterity. Stelaa engraved on both sides recalled the +wars of past times, the battle-field, the scenes of horror which took +place there, and the return of the victor and his triumph. Sitting +or standing figures of diorite, silicious sandstone or hard limestone, +bearing inscriptions on their robes or shoulders, perpetuated the +features of the founder or of members of his family, and commemorated +the pious donations which had obtained for him the favour of the gods: +the palace of Lagash contained dozens of such statues, several of which +have come down to us almost intact--one of the ancient Urbau, and nine +of Gudea. + +To judge by the space covered and the arrangement of the rooms, the +vicegerents of Lagash and the chiefs of towns of minor importance +must, as a rule, have been content with a comparatively small number of +servants; their court probably resembled that of the Egyptian barons who +lived much about the same period, such as Khnumhotpu of the nome of the +Gazelle, or Thothotpu of Hermopolis. In great cities such as Babylon +the palace occupied a much larger area, and the crowd of courtiers was +doubtless as great as that which thronged about the Pharaohs. No exact +enumeration of them has come down to us, but the titles which we come +across show with what minuteness they defined the offices about the +person of the sovereign. His costume alone required almost as many +persons as there were garments. The men wore the light loin-cloth or +short-sleeved tunic which scarcely covered the knees; after the fashion +of the Egyptians, they threw over the loin-cloth and the tunic a large +“abayah,” whose shape and material varied with the caprice of fashion. +They often chose for this purpose a sort of shawl of a plain material, +fringed or ornamented with a flat stripe round the edge; often they seem +to have preferred it ribbed, or artificially kilted from top to bottom.* + + * The relatively modern costume was described by Herodotus, + i. 114; it was almost identical with the ancient one, as + proved by the representations on the cylinders and monuments + of Telloh. The short-sleeved tunic is more rarely + represented, and the loin-cloth is usually hidden under the + abayah in the case of nobles and kings. We see the princes + of Lagash wearing the simple loin-cloth, on the monuments of + Urnina, for example. For the Egyptian abayah, and the manner + of representing it, cf. vol. i. pp. 69, 71. + +The favourite material in ancient times, however, seems to have been +a hairy, shaggy cloth or woollen stuff, whose close fleecy thread hung +sometimes straight, sometimes crimped or waved, in regular rows like +flounces one above another. This could be arranged squarely around the +neck, like a mantel, but was more often draped crosswise over the left +shoulder and brought under the right arm-pit, so as to leave the upper +part of the breast and the arm bare on that side. It made a convenient +and useful garment--an excellent protection in summer from the sun, and +from the icy north wind in the winter. The feet were shod with sandals, +a tight-fitting cap covered the head, and round it was rolled a thick +strip of linen, forming a sort of rudimentary turban, which completed +the costume.* + + *Cf. the head belonging to one of the statues of Telloh, + which is reproduced on p. 112 of this volume. We notice the + same head-dress on several intaglios and monuments, and also + on the terra-cotta plaque which will be found on p. 330 of + this volume, and which represents a herdsman wrestling with + a lion. Until we have further evidence, we cannot state, as + G. Raw-linson did, that this strip forming a turban was of + camel’s hair; the date of the introduction of the camel into + Chaldoa still remains uncertain. + +It is questionable whether, as in Egypt, wigs and false beards formed +part of the toilette. On some monuments we notice smooth faces and +close-cropped heads; on others the men appear with long hair, either +falling loose or twisted into a knot on the back of the neck.* While +the Egyptians delighted in garments of thin white linen, but slightly +plaited or crimped, the dwellers on the banks of the Euphrates preferred +thick and heavy stuffs patterned and striped with many colours. The +kings wore the same costume as their subjects, but composed of richer +and finer materials, dyed red or blue, decorated with floral, animal, +or geometrical designs;** a high tower-shaped tiara covered the +forehead,*** unless replaced by a diadem of Sin or some of the other +gods, which was a conical mitre supporting a double pair of horns, and +sometimes surmounted by a sort of diadem of feathers and mysterious +figures, embroidered or painted on the cap. Their arms were loaded with +massive bracelets and their fingers with rings; they wore necklaces and +earrings, and carried each a dagger in the belt. + + * Dignitaries went bareheaded and shaved the chin; see, for + example, the two bas-reliefs given on pp. 105 and 244 of + this volume; cf. the heads reproduced as tailpieces on pp. + 2, 124. The knot of hair behind on the central figure is + easily distinguished in the vignette on p. 266 of this + volume. + + ** The details of colour and ornamentation, not furnished by + the Chaldaean monuments, are given in the wall-painting at + Beni-Nasan representing the arrival of Asiatics in Egypt, + which belongs to a period contemporary with or slightly + anterior to the reign of Gudea. The resemblance of the + stuffs in which they are clothed to those of the Chaldaean + garments, and the identity of the patterns on them with the + geometrical decoration of painted cones on the palace at + Uruk, have been pointed out with justice by H. G. Tomkins + + *** The high tiara is represented among others on the head + of Mardukna-dinakhe, King of Babylon: cf. what is said of + the conical mitre, the headdress of Sin, on pp. 14, 169 of + this volume. + +[Illustration: 262.jpg FEMALE SERVANT BARE TO THE WAIST.(left)] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from the bronze figure in the + Louvre, published by Heuzey-Sarzec, _Decouvertes en + Chaldee_, pl. 14. + +The royal wardrobe, jewels, arms, and insignia formed so many distinct +departments, and each was further divided into minor sections for +body-linen, washing, or for this or that kind of headdress or sceptre. +The dress of the women, which was singularly like that of the men, +required no less a staff of attendants. The female servants, as well +as the male, went about bare to the waist, at all events while working +indoors. When they went out, they wore the same sort of tunic or +loin-cloth, but longer and more resembling a petticoat; they had the +same “abayah” drawn round the shoulders or rolled about the body like +a cloak, but with the women it nearly touched the ground; sometimes an +actual dress seems to have been substituted for the “abayah,” drawn in +to the figure by a belt and cut out of the same hairy material as that +of which the mantles were made. The boots were of soft leather, laced, +and without heels; the women’s ornaments were more numerous than those +of the men, and comprised necklaces, bracelets, ankle, finger, and ear +rings; their hair was separated into bands and kept in place on the +forehead by a fillet, falling in thick plaits or twisted into a coil on +the nape of the neck. + +[Illustration: 262.jpg COSTUME OF A CHALDAEN LADY (right)] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from the alabaster statuette in the + Louvre, published in Heuzey. She holds in her hand the jar + full of water, analogous to the streaming vase mentioned + above. + +A great deal of the work was performed by foreign or native slaves, +generally under the command of eunuchs, to whom the king and royal +princes entrusted most of the superintendence of their domestic +arrangements; they guarded and looked after the sleeping apartments, +they fanned and kept the flies from their master, and handed him his +food and drink. Eunuchs in Egypt were either unknown or but little +esteemed: they never seem to have been used, even in times when +relations with Asia were of daily occurrence, and when they might have +been supplied from the Babylonian slave-markets. + +All these various officials closely attached to the person of the +sovereign--heads of the wardrobe, chamberlains, cupbearers, bearers of +the royal sword or of the flabella, commanders of the eunuchs or of +the guards--had, by the nature of their duties, daily opportunities of +gaining a direct influence over their master and his government, +and from among them he often chose the generals of his army or the +administrators of his domains. Here, again, as far as the few +monuments and the obscurity of the texts permit of our judging, we find +indications of a civil and military organization analogous to that +of Egypt: the divergencies which contemporaries may have been able to +detect in the two national systems are effaced by the distance of +time, and we are struck merely by the resemblances. As all business +transactions were carried on by barter or by the exchange of merchandise +for weighed quantities of the precious metals, the taxes were +consequently paid in kind: the principal media being corn and other +cereals, dates, fruits, stuffs, live animals and slaves, as well as +gold, silver, lead, and copper, either in its native state or melted +into bars fashioned into implements or ornamented vases. Hence we +continually come across fiscal storehouses, both in town and country, +which demanded the services of a whole troop of functionaries and +workmen: administrators of corn, cattle, precious metals, wine and oil; +in fine, as many administrators as there were cultures or industries in +the country presided over the gathering of the products into the +central depots and regulated their redistribution. A certain portion +was reserved for the salaries of the employes and the pay of the workmen +engaged in executing public works: the surplus accumulated in the +treasury and formed a reserve, which was not drawn upon except in cases +of extreme necessity. Every palace, in addition to its living-rooms, +contained within its walls large store-chambers filled with provisions +and weapons, which made it more or less a fortress, furnished with +indispensable requisites for sustaining a prolonged siege either against +an enemy’s troops or the king’s own subjects in revolt. The king always +kept about him bodies of soldiers who perhaps were foreign mercenaries, +like the Mazaiu of the armies of the Pharaohs, and who formed his +permanent body-guard in times of peace. When a war was imminent, a +military levy was made upon his domains, but we are unable to find out +whether the recruits thus raised were drawn indiscriminately from the +population in general, or merely from a special class, analogous to that +of the warriors which we find in Egypt, who were paid in the same way by +grants of land. The equipment of these soldiers was of the rudest kind: +they had no cuirass, but carried a rectangular shield, and, in the case +of those of higher rank at all events, a conical metal helmet, probably +of beaten copper, provided with a piece to protect the back of the neck; +the heavy infantry were armed with a pike tipped with bronze ox-copper, +an axe or sharp adze, a stone-headed mace, and a dagger; the light +troops were provided only with the bow and sling. As early as the third +millennium b.c., the king went to battle in a chariot drawn by onagers, +or perhaps horses; he had his own peculiar weapon, which was a curved +baton probably terminating in a metal point, and resembling the sceptre +of the Pharaohs. Considerable quantities of all these arms were stored +in the arsenals, which contained depots for bows, maces, and pikes, and +even the stones needed for the slings had their special department for +storage. At the beginning of each campaign, a distribution of weapons +to the newly levied troops took place; but as soon as the war was at an +end, the men brought back their accoutrements, which were stored till +they were again required. The valour of the soldiers and their chiefs +was then rewarded; the share of the spoil for some consisted of cattle, +gold, corn, a female slave, and vessels of value; for others, lands or +towns in the conquered country, regulated by the rank of the recipients +or the extent of the services they had rendered. + +[Illustration: 266.jpg A SOLDIER BRINGING PRISONERS AND SPOIL.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from the Chaldaean intaglio in the + British. Museum. + +Property thus given was hereditary, and privileges were often added to +it which raised the holder to the rank of a petty prince: for instance, +no royal official was permitted to impose a tax upon such lands, or take +the cattle off them, or levy provisions upon them; no troop of soldiers +might enter them, not even for the purpose of arresting a fugitive. Most +of the noble families possessed domains of this kind, and constituted in +each kingdom a powerful and wealthy feudal aristocracy, whose relations +to their sovereign were probably much the same as those which bound +the nomarchs to the Pharaoh. The position of these nobles was not more +stable than that of the dynasties under which they lived: while some +among them gained power by marriages or by continued acquisitions of +land, others fell into disgrace and were ruined. As the soil belonged to +the gods, it is possible that these nobles were supposed, in theory, ‘to +depend upon the gods; but as the kings were the vicegerents of the gods +upon earth, it was to the king, as a matter of fact, that they owed +their elevation. Every state, therefore, comprised two parts, each +subject to a distinct regime: one being the personal domain of the +suzerain, which he managed himself, and from which he drew the revenues; +the other was composed of fiefs, whose lords paid tribute and owed +certain obligations to the king, the nature of which we are as yet +unable to define. + +The Chaldaean, like the Egyptian scribe, was the pivot on which the +machinery of this double royal and seignorial administration turned. +He does not appear to have enjoyed as much consideration as his +fellow-official in the Nile Valley: the Chaldaean princes, nobles, +priests, soldiers, and temple or royal officials, did not covet the +title of scribe, or pride themselves upon holding that office side +by side with their other dignities, as we see was the case with their +Egyptian contemporaries. The position of a scribe, nevertheless, was an +important one. We continually meet with it in all grades of society--in +the palace, in the temples, in the storehouses, in private dwellings; in +fine, the scribe was ubiquitous, at court, in the town, in the country, +in the army, managing affairs both small and great, and seeing that they +were carried on regularly. His education differed but little from that +given to the Egyptian scribe; he learned the routine of administrative +or judicial affairs, the formularies for correspondence either with +nobles or with ordinary people, the art of writing, of calculating +quickly, and of making out bills correctly. We may well ask whether he +ever employed papyrus or prepared skins for these purposes. It would, +indeed, seem strange that, after centuries of intercourse, no caravan +should have brought into Chaldaean any of those materials which were in +such constant use for literary purposes in Africa;* yet the same clay +which furnished the architect with such an abundant building material +appears to have been the only medium for transmitting the language which +the scribes possessed. They were always provided with slabs of a fine +plastic clay, carefully mixed and kept sufficiently moist to take easily +the impression of an object, but at the same time sufficiently firm to +prevent the marks once made from becoming either blurred or effaced. +When a scribe had a text to copy or a document to draw up, he chose out +one of his slabs, which he placed flat upon his left palm, and taking in +the right hand a triangular stylus of flint, copper, bronze, or bone,** +he at once set to work. The instrument, in early times, terminated in a +fine point, and the marks made by it when it was gently pressed upon +the clay were slender and of uniform thickness; in later times, the +extremity of the stylus was cut with a bevel, and the impression then +took the shape of a metal nail or a wedge. + + * On the Assyrian monuments we frequently see scribes taking + a list of the spoil, or writing letters on tablets and some + other soft material, either papyrus or prepared skin. Sayce + has given good reasons for believing that the Chaldaeanns of + the early dynasties knew of the papyrus, and either made it + themselves, or had it brought from Egypt. + + ** See the triangular stylus of copper or bronze reproduced + by the side of the measuring-rule, and the plan on the + tablet of Gudea, p. 248 of this volume. The Assyrian Museum + in the Louvre possesses several large, flat styli of bone, + cut to a point at one end, which appear to have belonged to + the Assyrian scribes. Taylor discovered in a tomb at Eridu a + flint tool, which may have served for the same purpose as + the metal or bone styli. + +[Illustration: 268.jpg MANUSCRIPT ON PAPYRUS IN HEIROGLYPHICS] + +They wrote from left to right along the upper part of the tablet, and +covered both sides of it with closely written lines, which sometimes ran +over on to the edges. When the writing was finished, the scribe sent his +work to the potter, who put it in the kiln and baked it, or the writer +may have had a small oven at his own disposition, as a clerk with us +would have his table or desk. The shape of these documents varied, and +sometimes strikes us as being peculiar: besides the tablets and the +bricks, we find small solid cones, or hollow cylinders of considerable +size, on which the kings related their exploits or recorded the history +of their wars or the dedication of their buildings. This method had a +few inconveniences, but many advantages. These clay books were heavy to +hold and clumsy to handle, while the characters did not stand out well +from the brown, yellow, and whitish background of the material; but, on +the other hand, a poem, baked and incorporated into the page itself, +ran less danger of destruction than if scribbled in ink on sheets of +papyrus. Fire could make no impression on it; it could withstand water +for a considerable length of time; even if broken, the pieces were still +of use: as long as it was not pulverized, the entire document could be +restored, with the exception, perhaps, of a few signs, or ‘some +scraps of a sentence. The inscriptions which have been saved from the +foundations of the most ancient temples, several of which date back +forty or fifty centuries, are for the most part as clear and legible +as when they left the hands of the writer who engraved them or of the +workmen who baked them. It is owing to the material to which they were +committed that we possess the principal works of Chaldaean literature +which have come down to us--poems, annals, hymns, magical incantations; +how few fragments of these would ever have reached us had their authors +confided them to parchment or paper, after the manner of the Egyptian +scribes! The greatest danger that they ran was that of being left +forgotten in the corner of the chamber in which they had been kept, +or buried under the rubbish of a building after a fire or some violent +catastrophe; even then the _debris_ were the means of preserving them, +by falling over them and covering them up. Protected under the ruins, +they would lie there for centuries, till the fortunate explorer should +bring them to light and deliver them over to the patient study of the +learned. + +The cuneiform character in itself is neither picturesque nor decorative. +It does not offer that delightful assemblage of birds and snakes, of men +and quadrupeds, of heads and limbs, of tools, weapons, stars, trees, +and boats, which succeed each other in perplexing order on the Egyptian +monuments, to give permanence to the glory of Pharaoh and the greatness +of his gods. Cuneiform writing is essentially composed of thin short +lines, placed in juxtaposition or crossing each other in a somewhat +clumsy fashion; it has the appearance of numbers of nails scattered +about at haphazard, and its angular configuration, and its stiff and +spiny appearance, gives the inscriptions a dull and forbidding aspect +which no artifice of the engraver can overcome. + +[Illustration: 271.jpg Page image] + +[Illustration: 272.jpg Page Image] + +Yet, in spite of their seemingly arbitrary character, this mass of +strokes had its source in actual hieroglyphs. As in the origin of the +Egyptian script the earliest writers had begun by drawing on stone or +clay the outline of the object of which they desired to convey the idea. +But, whereas in Egypt the artistic temperament of the race, and the +increasing skill of their sculptors, had by degrees brought the drawing +of each sign to such perfection that it became a miniature portrait of +the being or object to be reproduced, in Chaldaea, on the contrary, +the signs became degraded from their original forms on account of the +difficulty experienced in copying them with the stylus on the clay +tablets: they lost their original vertical position, and were placed +horizontally, retaining finally but the very faintest resemblance to the +original model. For instance, the Chaldaean conception of the sky was +that of a vault divided into eight segments by diameters running from +the four cardinal points and from their principal subdivisions [symbol] +the external circle was soon omitted, the transverse lines alone +remaining [symbol], which again was simplified into a kind of irregular +cross [symbol]. The figure of a man standing, indicated by the lines +resembling his contour, was placed on its side [symbol] and reduced +little by little till it came to be merely a series of ill-balanced +lines [symbol] [symbol]. We may still recognize in [symbol] the five +fingers and palm of a human hand [symbol]; but who would guess at the +first glance that [symbol] stands for the foot which the scribes strove +to place beside each character the special hieroglyph from which it had +been derived. Several fragments of these still exist, a study of which +seems to show that the Assyrian scribes of a more recent period were at +times as much puzzled as we are ourselves when they strove to get at the +principles of their own script: they had come to look on it as nothing +more than a system of arbitrary combinations, whose original form had +passed all the more readily into oblivion, because it had been borrowed +from a foreign race, who, as far as they were concerned, had ceased to +have a separate existence. The script had been invented by the Sumerians +in the very earliest times, and even they may have brought it in an +elemental condition from their distant fatherland. The first articulate +sounds which, being attached to the hieroglyphs, gave to each +an unalterable pronunciation, were words in the Sumerian tongue; +subsequently, when the natural progress of human thought led +thi Chaldaeans to replace, as in Egypt, the majority of the signs +representing ideas by those representing sounds, the syllabic values +which were developed side by side with the ideographic values were +purely Sumerian. The group [symbol] throughout all its forms, +designates in the first place the sky, then the god of the sky, and +finally the concept of divinity in general. In its first two senses it +is read ana, but in the last it becomes dingir, dimir; and though it +never lost its double force, it was soon separated from the ideas which +it evoked, to be used merely to denote the syllable an wherever it +occurred, even in cases where it had no connection with the sky or +heavenly things. The same process was applied to other signs with +similar results: after having merely denoted ideas, they came to stand +for the sounds corresponding to them, and then passed on to be mere +syllables--complex syllables in which several consonants may be +distinguished, or simple syllables composed of only one consonant and +one vowel, or vice versa. The Egyptians had carried this system still +further, and in many cases had kept only one part of the syllable, +namely, a mute consonant: they detached, for example, the final u from +pu and bu, and gave only the values b and p to the human leg J and the +mat Q. The peoples of the Euphrates stopped halfway, and admitted actual +letters for the vowel sounds a, i, and u only. Their system remained a +syllabary interspersed with ideograms, but excluded an alphabet. + +[Illustration: 274.jpg Page image] + +It was eminently wanting in simplicity, but, taken as a whole, it would +not have presented as many difficulties as the script of the Egyptians, +had it not been forced, at a very early period, to adapt itself to the +exigencies of a language for which it had not been made. When it came to +be appropriated by the Semites, the ideographs, which up till then had +been read in Sumerian, did not lose the sounds which they possessed in +that tongue, but borrowed others from the new language. For example, +“god” was called ilu, and “heaven” called shami: [symbol], when +encountered in inscriptions by the Semites, were read [symbol] when +the context showed the sense to be “god,” and shami when the character +evidently meant “heaven.” They added these two vocables to the preceding +ana, an, dingir, dimir; but they did not stop there: they confounded +the picture of the star [symbol] with that of the sky, and sometimes +attributed to [symbol], the pronunciation kakkabu, and the meaning of +star. The same process was applied to all the groups, and the Semitic +values being added to the Sumerian, the scribes soon found themselves in +possession of a double set of syllables both simple and compound. This +multiplicity of sounds, this polyphonous character attached to their +signs, became a cause of embarrassment even to them. For instance, +[symbol] when found in the body of a word, stood for the syllables hi +or hat, mid, mit, til, ziz; as an ideogram it was used for a score of +different concepts: that of lord or master, inu, bilu; that of blood, +damu; for a corpse, pagru, shalamtu; for the feeble or oppressed, kahtu, +nagpu; as the hollow and the spring, nakbu; for the state of old age, +labaru; of dying, matu; of killing, mitu; of opening, pitu; besides +other meanings. Several phonetic complements were added to it; it was +preceded by ideograms which determined the sense in which it was to be +read, but which, like the Egyptian determinatives, were not pronounced, +and in this manner they succeeded in limiting the number of mistakes +which it was possible to make. With a final [symbol] it would always +mean [symbol] bilu, the master, but with an initial [symbol] (thus +[symbol]) it denoted the gods Bel or Ea; with [symbol]. which indicates +a man [symbol], it would be the corpse, pagru and shalamtu; with +[symbol] prefixed, it meant [symbol]--mutanu, the plague or death and +so on. In spite of these restrictions and explanations, the obscurity of +the meaning was so great, that in many cases the scribes ran the risk of +being unable to make out certain words and understand certain passages; +many of the values occurred but rarely, and remained unknown to those +who did not take the trouble to make a careful study of the syllabary +and its history. It became necessary to draw up tables for their use, +in which all the signs were classified and arranged, with their meanings +and phonetic transcriptions. These signs occupied one column, and in +three or four corresponding columns would be found, first, the name +assigned to it; secondly, the spelling, in syllables, of the phonetic +values which the signs expressed, thirdly, the Sumerian and Assyrian +words which they served to render, and sometimes glosses which completed +the explanation. + +[Illustration: 276.jpg Tables] + +Even this is far from exhausting the matter. Several of these +dictionaries went back to a very early date, and tradition ascribes to +Sargon of Agade the merit of having them drawn up or of having collected +them in his palace. The number of them naturally increased in the course +of centuries; in the later times of the Assyrian empire they were so +numerous as to form nearly one-fourth of the works in the library at +Nineveh under Assurbanipal. Other tablets contained dictionaries of +archaic or obsolete terms, grammatical paradigms, extracts from laws +or ancient hymns analyzed sentence by sentence and often word by word, +interlinear glosses, collections of Sumerian formulas translated into +Semitic speech--a child’s guide, in fact, which the savants of those +times consulted with as much advantage as those of our own day have +done, and which must have saved them from many a blunder. + +When once accustomed to the difficulties and intricacies of their +calling, the scribes were never at a standstill. The stylus was plied +in Chaldaea no less assiduously than was the calamus in Egypt, and the +indestructible clay, which the Chaldaeans were as a rule content to use, +proved a better medium in the long run than the more refined material +employed by their rivals: the baked or merely dried clay tablets have +withstood the assaults of time in surprising quantities, while the +majority of papyri have disappeared without leaving a trace behind. +If at Babylon we rarely meet with those representations, which we find +everywhere in the tombs of Saqqara or Gizeh, of the people themselves +and their families, their occupations, amusements, and daily +intercourse, we possess, on the other hand, that of which the ruins of +Memphis have furnished us but scanty instances up to the present time, +namely, judicial documents, regulating the mutual relations of the +people and conferring a legal sanction on the various events of their +life. Whether it were a question of buying lands or contracting a +marriage, of a loan on interest, or the sale of slaves, the scribe was +called in with his soft tablets to engross the necessary agreement. In +this he would insert as many details as possible--the day of the month, +the year of the reigning sovereign, and at times, to be still more +precise, an allusion to some important event which had just taken place, +and a memorial of which was inserted in official annals, such as the +taking of a town, the defeat of a neighbouring king, the dedication of +a temple, the building of a wall or fortress, the opening of a canal, or +the ravages of an inundation: the names of the witnesses and magistrates +before whom the act was confirmed were also added to those of the +contracting parties. The method of sanctioning it was curious. An +indentation was made with the finger-nail on one of the sides of the +tablet, and this mark, followed or preceded by the mention of a name, +“Nail of Zabudamik,” “Nail of Abzii,” took the place of our more or less +complicated sign-manuals. In later times, only the buyer and witnesses +approved by a nail-mark, while the seller appended his seal; an +inscription incised above the impress indicating the position of the +signatory. Every one of any importance possessed a seal, which he wore +attached to his wrist or hung round his neck by a cord; he scarcely +ever allowed it to be separated from his person during his lifetime, and +after death it was placed with him in the tomb in order to prevent any +improper use being made of it. It was usually a cylinder, sometimes +a truncated cone with a convex base, either of marble, red or green +jasper, agate, cornelian, onyx or rock crystal, but rarely of metal. +Engraved upon it in intaglio was an emblem or subject chosen by +the owner, such as the single figure of a god or goddess, an act of +adoration, a sacrifice, or an episode in the story of Gilgames, followed +sometimes by the inscription of a name and title. The cylinder was +rolled, or, in the case of the cone, merely pressed on the clay, in the +space reserved for it. In several localities the contracting parties had +recourse to a very ingenious procedure to prevent the agreements being +altered or added to by unscrupulous persons. When the document had been +impressed on the tablet, it was enveloped in a second coating of clay, +upon which an exact copy of the original was made, the latter thus +becoming inaccessible to forgers: if by chance, in course of time, any +disagreement should take place, and an alteration of the visible text +should be suspected, the outer envelope was broken in the presence of +witnesses, and a comparison was made to see if the exterior corresponded +exactly with the interior version. Families thus had their private +archives, to which additions were rapidly made by every generation; +every household thus accumulated not only the evidences of its own +history, but to some extent that of other families with whom they had +formed alliances, or had business or friendly relations.* + + * The tablets of Tell-Sifr come from one of these family + collections. They all, in number about one hundred, rested + on three enormous bricks, and they had been covered with a + mat of which the half-decayed remains were still visible: + three other crude bricks covered the heap. The documents + contained in them relate for the most part to the families + of Sininana and Amililani, and form part of their archives. + +[Illustration: 279.jpg THE TABLET OF TELL-SIFR, BROKEN TO SHOW THE TWO +TEXTS.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from Loftus. + + +[Illustration: 280.jpg TABLET BEARING THE IMPRESS OF A SEAL] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a sketch by Layard. + +The constitution of the family was of a complex character. It would +appear that the people of each city were divided into clans, all of +whose members claimed to be descended from a common ancestor, who had +flourished at a more or less remote period. The members of each clan +were by no means all in the same social position, some having gone down +in the world, others having raised themselves; and amongst them we find +many different callings--from agricultural labourers to scribes, and +from merchants to artisans. No mutual tie existed among the majority +of these members except the remembrance of their common origin, perhaps +also a common religion, and eventual rights of succession or claims upon +what belonged to each one individually. The branches which had become +gradually separated from the parent stock, and which, taken all +together, formed the clan, possessed each, on the contrary, a very +strict organization. It is possible that, at the outset, the woman +occupied the more important position, but at an early date the man +became the head of the family,* and around him were ranged the wives, +children, servants, and slaves, all of whom had their various duties and +privileges. + + * The change in the condition of women would be due to the + influence of Semitic ideas and customs in Chaldaea. + +He offered the household worship to the gods of his race, in accordance +with special rites which had come down to him from his father; he made +at the tombs of his ancestors, at such times as were customary, the +offerings and prayers which assured their repose in the other world, and +his powers were as extensive in civil as in religious matters. He had +absolute authority over all the members of his household, and anything +undertaken by them without his consent was held invalid in the eyes of +the law; his sons could not marry unless he had duly authorized them +to do so. For this purpose he appeared before the magistrate with the +future couple, and the projected union could not be held as an actual +marriage, until he had affixed his seal or made his nail-mark on the +contract tablet. It amounted, in fact, to a formal deed of sale, and the +parents of the girl parted with her only in exchange for a proportionate +gift from the bridegroom. One girl would be valued at a silver shekel by +weight, while another was worth a mina, another much less;* the handing +over of the price was accompanied with a certain solemnity. When the +young man possessed no property as yet of his own, his family advanced +him the sum needed for the purchase. On her side, the maiden did not +enter upon her new life empty handed; her father, or, in the case of +his death, the head of the family at the time being, provided her with +a dowry suited to her social position, which was often augmented by +considerable presents from her grandmother, aunts, and cousins.** + + * Shamashnazir receives, as the price of his daughter, ten + shekels of silver, which appears to have been an average + price in the class of life to which he belonged. + + ** The nature of the dowry in ancient times is clear from + the Sumero-Assyrian tablets in which the old legal texts are + explained, and again from the contents of the contracts of + Tell-Sifr, and the documents on stone, such as the Micliaux + stone, in which we see women bringing their possessions into + the community by marriage, and yet retaining the entire + disposition of them. + +The dowry would consist of a carefully marked out field of corn, a grove +of date-palms, a house in the town, a trousseau, furniture, slaves, or +ready money; the whole would be committed to clay, of which there +would be three copies at least, two being given by the scribe to the +contracting parties, while the third would be deposited in the hands of +the magistrate. When the bride and bridegroom both belonged to the same +class, or were possessed of equal fortunes, the relatives of the woman +could exact an oath from the man that he would abstain from taking +a second wife during her lifetime; a special article of the marriage +agreement permitted the woman to go free should the husband break his +faith, and bound him to pay an indemnity as a compensation for the +insult he had offered her. This engagement on the part of the man, +however, did not affect his relations with his female servants. In +Chaldaea, as in Egypt, and indeed in the whole of the ancient world, +they were always completely at the mercy of their purchaser, and the +permission to treat them as he would had become so much of a custom +that the begetting of children by their master was desired rather than +otherwise: the complaints of the despised slave, who had not been taken +into her master’s favour, formed one of the themes of popular poetry at +a very early period. When the contract tablet was finally sealed, one +of the witnesses, who was required to be a free man, joined the hands +of the young couple; nothing then remained to be done but to invite the +blessing of the gods, and to end the day by a feast, which would unite +both families and their guests. The evil spirits, however, always in +quest of an easy prey, were liable to find their way into the nuptial +chamber, favoured by the confusion inseparable from all household +rejoicing: prudence demanded that their attempts should be frustrated, +and that the newly married couple should be protected from their +attacks. The companions of the bridegroom took possession of him, and, +hand to hand and foot to foot, formed as it were a rampart round him +with their bodies, and carried him off solemnly to his expectant bride. +He then again repeated the words which he had said in the morning: “I +am the son of a prince, gold and silver shall fill thy bosom; thou, even +thou, shalt be my wife, I myself will be thy husband;” and he continued: +“As the fruits borne by an orchard, so great shall be the abundance +which I shall pour out upon this woman.” * The priest then called down +upon him benedictions from on high: “Therefore, O ye (gods), all that is +bad and that is not good in this man, drive it far from him and give him +strength. As for thee, O man, exhibit thy manhood, that this woman may +be thy wife; thou, O woman, give that which makes thy womanhood, that +this man may be thy husband.” On the following morning, a thanksgiving +sacrifice celebrated the completion of the marriage, and by purifying +the new household drove from it the host of evil spirits.** + + * This part of the ceremony is described on a Sumero- + Assyrian tablet, of which two copies exist, discovered and + translated by Pinches. The interpretation appears to me to + result from the fact that mention is made, at the + commencement of the column, of impious beings without gods, + who might approach the man; in other places magical + exorcisms indicate how much those spirits were dreaded “who + deprived the bride of the embraces of the man.” As Pinches + remarks, the formula is also found in the part of the poem + of Gilgames, where Ishtar wishes to marry the hero, which + shows that the rite and its accompanying words belong to a + remote past. + + ** The text that describes these ceremonies was discovered + and published by Pinches. As far as I can judge, it + contained an exorcism against the “knotting of the tag,” and + the mention of this subject called up that of the marriage + rites. The ceremony commanded on the day following the + marriage was probably a purification: as late as the time of + Herodotus, the union of man and woman rendered both impure, + and they had to perform an ablution before recommencing + their occupations. + +The woman, once bound, could only escape from the sovereign power of her +husband by death or divorce; but divorce for her was rather a trial to +which she submitted than a right of which she could freely make use. Her +husband could repudiate her at will without any complicated ceremonies. +It was enough for him to say: “Thou art not my wife!” and to restore +to her a sum of money equalling in value the dowry he had received with +her;* he then sent her back to her father, with a letter informing +him of the dissolution of the conjugal tie.** But if in a moment of +weariness or anger she hurled the fatal formula at him: “Thou are not +my husband!” her fate was sealed: she was thrown into the river and +drowned.*** + + * The sum is fixed at half a mina by the text of the + Sumerian laws; but it was sometimes less, e.g. ten shekels, + and sometimes more, e.g. a whole mina. + + ** Repudiation of a wife, and the ceremonial connected with + it, are summarized, as far as ancient times are concerned, + by a passage in the Sumero-Assyrian tablet, published by + Rawlinson, and translated by Oppert-Menant. Bertin, on the + contrary, takes the same text to be a description of the + principal marriage-rites, and from it he draws the + conclusion that the possibility of divorce was not admitted + in Chaldaea between persons of noble family. Meissner very + rightly returns to Oppert’s interpretation, a few details in + which he corrects. + + *** This fact was evident from the text of the so-called + _Sumerian Laws concerning the Organization of the Family_, + according to the generally received interpretation: + according to that proposed by Oppert-Menant, it was the + woman who had the right of causing the husband who had + wronged her to be thrown into the river. The publication of + the contracts of Iltani and of Bashtum appear to have shown + conclusively the correctness of the ordinary translation: + uncertainty with regard to one word prevents us from knowing + whether the guilty wife were strangled before being thrown + into the water, or if she were committed to the river alive. + +The adulteress was also punished with death, but with death by the +sword: and when the use of iron became widespread, the blade was to be +of that metal. Another ancient custom only spared the criminal to devote +her to a life of infamy: the outraged husband stripped her of her fleecy +garments, giving her merely the loin-cloth in its place, which left her +half naked, and then turned-her out of the house into the street, where +she was at the mercy of the first passer-by. Women of noble or wealthy +families found in their fortune a certain protection from the abuse of +marital authority. The property which they brought with them by their +marriage contract, remained at their own disposal.* They had the entire +management of it, they farmed it out, they sold it, they spent the +income from it as they liked, without interference from any one: the man +enjoyed the comforts which it procured, but he could not touch it, and +his hold upon it was so slight that his creditors could not lay their +hands on it. + + * In the documents of the New Chaldaean Empire we find + instances of married women selling their property + themselves, and even of their being present, seated, at the + conclusion of the sale, or of their ceding to a married + daughter some property in their own possession, thus + renouncing the power of disposing of it, and keeping merely + the income from it; we have also instances of women + reclaiming valuables of gold which their husbands had given + away without their authorisation, and also obtaining an + indemnity for the wrong they had suffered; also of their + lending money to the mother-in-law of their brother; in + fine, empowered to deal with their own property in every + respect like an ordinary proprietor. + +If by his own act he divorced his wife, he not only lost all benefit +from her property, but he was obliged to make her an allowance or to pay +her an indemnity;* at his death, the widow succeeded to these, without +prejudice to what she was entitled to by her marriage contract or the +will of the deceased. The woman with a dowry, therefore, became more or +less emancipated by virtue of her money. As her departure deprived the +household of as much as, and sometimes more than, she had brought into +it, every care was taken that she should have no cause to retire from +it, and that no pretext should be given to her parents for her recall +to her old home; her wealth thus obtained for her the consideration and +fair treatment which the law had, at the outset, denied to her. + + * The restitution of the dowry after divorce is ascertained, + as far as later times are concerned, from documents similar + to that published by Kohler-Peiser, in which we see the + second husband of a divorced wife claiming the dowry from + the first husband. The indemnity was fixed beforehand at six + silver minae, in the marriage contract published by Oppert. + +When, however, the wife was poor, she had to bear without complaint the +whole burden of her inferior position. Her parents had no other resource +than to ask the highest possible price for her, according to the rank +in which they lived, or in virtue of the personal qualities she was +supposed to possess, and this amount, paid into their hands when they +delivered her over to the husband, formed, if not an actual dowry for +her, at least a provision for her in case of repudiation or widowhood: +she was not, however, any less the slave of her husband--a privileged +slave, it is true, and one whom he could not sell like his other +slaves,* but of whom he could easily rid himself when her first youth +was passed, or when she ceased to please him.** + + * It appears, however, in certain cases not clearly + specified, that the husband could sell his wife, if she were + a shrew, as a slave. + + ** This form of marriage, which was of frequent occurrence + in ancient times, fell into disuse among the upper classes, + at least of Babylonian society. A few examples, however, are + found in late times. It continued in use among the lower + classes, and Herodotus affirms that in his time marriage + markets were held regularly, as in our own time fairs are + held for hiring male and female servants. + +In many cases the fiction of purchase was set aside, and mutual consent +took the place of all other formalities, marriage then becoming merely +cohabitation, terminating at will. The consent of the father was not +required for this irregular union, and many a son contracted a marriage +after this fashion, unknown to his relatives, with some young girl +either in his own or in an inferior station: but the law refused to +allow her any title except that of concubine, and forced her to wear a +distinctive mark, perhaps that of servitude, namely, the representation +of an olive in some valuable stone or in terra-cotta, bearing her own +and her husband’s name, with the date of their union, which she kept +hung round her neck by a cord. Whether they were legitimate wives +or not, the women of the lower and middle classes enjoyed as much +independence as did the Egyptian women of a similar rank. As all the +household cares fell to their share, it was necessary that they should +be free to go about at all hours of the day: and they could be seen +in the streets and the markets, with bare feet, their head and face +uncovered, wearing their linen loin-cloth or their long draped garments +of hairy texture.* Their whole life was expended in a ceaseless toil for +their husbands and children: night and morning they went to fetch water +from the public well or the river, they bruised the corn, made the +bread, spun, wove, and clothed the entire household in spite of the +frequent demands of maternity.** The Chaldaean women of wealth or noble +birth, whose civil status gave them a higher position, did not enjoy so +much freedom. They were scarcely affected by the cares of daily life, +and if they did any work within their houses, it was more from a natural +instinct, a sense of duty, or to relieve the tedium of their existence, +than from constraint or necessity; but the exigencies of their rank +reduced them to the state of prisoners. All the luxuries and comforts +which money could procure were lavished on them, or they obtained them +for themselves, but all the while they were obliged to remain shut in +the harem within their own houses; when they went out, it was only to +visit their female friends or their relatives, to go to some temple +or festival, and on such occasions they were surrounded with servants, +eunuchs, and pages, whose serried ranks shut out the external world. + + * For the long garment of the women, see the statue + represented on p. 263 of the present work; for the loin- + cloth, which left the shoulders and bust exposed, see the + bronze figure on p. 262. The latter was no doubt the garment + worn at home by respectable women; we see by the punishment + inflicted on adulteresses that it was an outdoor garment for + courtesans, and also, doubtless, for slaves and women of the + lower classes. + + ** Women’s occupations are mentioned in several texts and on + several ancient monuments. On the seal, an impress of which + is given on p. 233 of this volume, we see above, on the + left, a woman kneeling and crushing the corn, and before her + a row of little disks, representing, no doubt, the loaves + prepared for baking. The length of time for suckling a child + is fixed at three years by the Sumero-Assyrian tablet + relating the history of the foundling; protracted suckling + was customary also in Egypt. + +There was no lack of children in these houses when the man had several +mistresses, either simultaneously or successively. Maternity was before +all things a woman’s first duty: should she delay in bearing children, +or should anything happen to them, she was considered as accursed or +possessed, and she was banished from the family lest her presence should +be a source of danger to it.* In spite of this many households remained +childless, either because a clause inserted in the contract prevented +the dismissal of the wife if barren, or because the children had died +when the father was stricken in years, and there was little hope of +further offspring. In such places adoption filled the gaps left by +nature, and furnished the family with desired heirs. For this purpose +some chance orphan might be brought into the household--one of those +poor little creatures consigned by their mothers to the river, as in +the case of Shargani, according to the ancient legend; or who had been +exposed at the cross-roads to excite the pity of passers-by,** like the +foundling whose story is given us in an old ballad. “He who had neither +father nor mother,--he who knew not his father or mother, but whose +earliest memory is of a well--whose entry into the world was in the +street,” his benefactor “snatched him from the jaws of dogs--and took +him from the beaks of ravens.--He seized the seal before witnesses--and +he marked him on the sole of the foot with the seal of the +witness,--then he entrusted him to a nurse,--and for three years he +provided the nurse with flour, oil, and clothing.” When the weaning was +accomplished, “he appointed him to be his child,--he brought him up +to be his child,--he inscribed him as his child,--and he gave him the +education of a scribe.” The rites of adoption in these cases did not +differ from those attendant upon birth. On both occasions the newly born +infant was shown to witnesses, and it was marked on the soles of its +feet to establish its identity; its registration in the family archives +did not take place until these precautions had been observed, and +children adopted in this manner were regarded thenceforward in the eyes +of the world as the legitimate heirs of the family. + + * Divorce for sterility was customary in very early times. + Complete sterility or miscarriage was thought to be + occasioned by evil spirits; a woman thus possessed with a + devil came to be looked on as a dangerous being whom it was + necessary to exorcise. + + + ** Many of these children were those of courtesans or women + who had been repudiated, as we learn from the Sumero- + Assyrian tablet of Rawlinson: “She will expose her child + alone in the street, where the serpents in the road may bite + it, and its father and mother will know it no more.” + +People desiring to adopt a child usually made inquiries among their +acquaintances, or poor friends, or cousins who might consent to give up +one of their sons, in the hope of securing a better future for him. When +he happened to be a minor, the real father and mother, or, in the case +of the death of one, the surviving parent, appeared before the scribe, +and relinquished all their rights in favour of the adopting parents; the +latter, in accepting this act of renunciation, promised henceforth to +treat the child as if he were of their own flesh and blood, and often +settled upon him, at the same time, a certain sum chargeable on their +own patrimony. When the adopted son was of age, his consent to the +agreement was required, in addition to that of his parents. The adoption +was sometimes prompted by an interested motive, and not merely by the +desire for posterity or its semblance. Labour was expensive, slaves were +scarce, and children, by working for their father, took the place of +hired servants, and were content, like them, with food and clothing. The +adoption of adults was, therefore, most frequent in ancient times. The +introduction of a person into a fresh household severed the ties which +bound him to the old one; he became a stranger to those who had borne +him; he had no filial obligations to discharge to them, nor had he +any right to whatever property they might possess, unless, indeed, any +unforeseen circumstance prevented the carrying out of the agreement, and +legally obliged him to return to the status of his birth. In return, he +undertook all the duties and enjoyed the privileges of his new position; +he owed to his adopted parents the same amount of work, obedience, and +respect that he would have given to his natural parents; he shared +in their condition, whether for good or ill, and he inherited their +possessions. Provision was made for him in case of his repudiation by +those who had adopted him, and they had to make him compensation: he +received the portion which would have accrued to him after their death, +and he then left them. Families appear to have been fairly united, in +spite of the elasticity of the laws which governed them, and of the +divers elements of which they were sometimes composed. No doubt polygamy +and frequently divorce exercised here as elsewhere a deleterious +influence; the harems of Babylon were constantly the scenes of endless +intrigues and quarrels among the women and children of varied condition +and different parentage who filled them. Among the people of the middle +classes, where restricted means necessarily prevented a man having +many wives, the course of family life appears to have been as calm +and affectionate as in Egypt, under the unquestioned supremacy of the +father: and in the event of his early death, the widow, and later the +son or son-in-law, took the direction of affairs. Should quarrels arise +and reach the point of bringing about a complete rupture between parents +and children, the law intervened, not to reconcile them, but to repress +any violence of which either side might be guilty towards the other. +It was reckoned as a misdemeanour for any father or mother to disown a +child, and they were punished by being kept shut up in their own house, +as long, doubtless, as they persisted in disowning it; but it was a +crime in a son, even if he were an adopted son, to renounce his parents, +and he was punished severely. If he had said to his father, “Thou art +not my father!” the latter marked him with a conspicuous sign and sold +him in the market. If he had said to his mother, “As for thee, thou art +not my mother!” he was similarly branded, and led through the streets or +along the roads, where with hue and cry he was driven from the town and +province.* + + * I have adopted the generally received meaning of this + document as a whole, but I am obliged to state that Oppert- + Menant admit quite a different interpretation. According to + them, it would appear to be a sweeping renunciation of + children by parents, and of parents by children, at the + close of a judicial condemnation. Oppert has upheld this + interpretation against Haupt, and still keeps to his + opinion. The documents published by Meissner show that the + text of the ancient Sumerian laws applied equally to adopted + children, but made no distinction between the insult offered + to the father and that offered to the mother: the same + penalty was applicable in both cases. + +The slaves were numerous, but distributed in unequal proportion among +the various classes of the population: whilst in the palace they might +be found literally in crowds, it was rare among the middle classes to +meet with any family possessing more than two or three at a time. They +were drawn partly from foreign races; prisoners who had been wounded and +carried from the field of battle, or fugitives who had fallen into the +hands of the victors after a defeat, or Elamites or Gutis who had been +surprised in their own villages during some expedition; not to mention +people of every category carried off by the Bedouin during their raids +in distant parts, such as Syria or Egypt, whom they were continually +bringing for sale to Babylon and Uru, and, indeed, to all those cities +to which they had easy access. The kings, the vicegerents, the temple +administration, and the feudal lords, provided employment for vast +numbers in the construction of their buildings or in the cultivation of +their domains; the work was hard and the mortality great, but gaps were +soon filled up by the influx of fresh gangs. The survivors intermarried, +and their children, brought up to speak the Chaldaean tongue and +conforming to the customs of the country, became assimilated to the +ruling race; they formed, beneath the superior native Semite and +Sumerian population,an inferior servile class, spread alike throughout +the towns and country, who were continually reinforced by individuals of +the native race, such as foundlings, women and children sold by husband +or father, debtors deprived by creditors of their liberty, and criminals +judicially condemned. The law took no individual account of them, +but counted them by heads, as so many cattle: they belonged to their +respective masters in the same fashion as did the beasts of his flock or +the trees of his garden, and their life or death was dependent upon +his will, though the exercise of his rights was naturally restrained +by interest and custom. He could use them as pledges or for payment of +debt, could exchange them or sell them in the market. The price of a +slave never rose very high: a woman might be bought for four and a half +shekels of silver by weight, and the value of a male adult fluctuated +between ten shekels and the third of a mina. The bill of sale was +inscribed on clay, and given to the purchaser at the time of payment: +the tablets which were the vouchers of the rights of the former +proprietor were then broken, and the transfer was completed. The +master seldom ill-treated his slaves, except in cases of reiterated +disobedience, rebellion, or flight; he could arrest his runaway slaves +wherever he could lay his hands on them; he could shackle their ankles, +fetter their wrists, and whip them mercilessly. As a rule, he permitted +them to marry and bring up a family; he apprenticed their children, +and as soon as they knew a trade, he set them up in business in his own +name, allowing them a share in the profits. The more intelligent among +them were trained to be clerks or stewards; they were taught to read, +write, and calculate, the essential accomplishments of a skilful scribe; +they were appointed as superintendents over their former comrades, or +overseers of the administration of property, and they ended by becoming +confidential servants in the household. The savings which they had +accumulated in their earlier years furnished them with the means of +procuring some few consolations: they could hire themselves out for +wages, and could even acquire slaves who would go out to work for them, +in the same way as they themselves had been a source of income to their +proprietors. If they followed a lucrative profession and were successful +in it, their savings sometimes permitted them to buy their own freedom, +and, if they were married, to pay the ransom of their wife and children. +At times, their master, desirous of rewarding long and faithful service, +liberated them of his own accord, without waiting till they had saved +up the necessary money or goods for their enfranchisement: in such cases +they remained his dependants, and continued in his service as freemen +to perform the services they had formerly rendered as slaves. They then +enjoyed the same rights and advantages as the old native race; they +could leave legacies, inherit property, claim legal rights, and acquire +and possess houses and lands. Their sons could make good matches among +the daughters of the middle classes, according to their education and +fortune; when they were intelligent, active, and industrious, there was +nothing to prevent them from rising to the highest offices about the +person of the sovereign. + +[Illustration: 294.jpg AN EGYPTIAN SLAVE MERCHANT] + +[Illustration: 294-text.jpg] + +If we knew more of the internal history of the great Chaldaean cities, we +should no doubt come to see what an important part the servile element +played in them; and could we trace it back for a few generations, we +should probably discover that there were few great families who did +not reckon a slave or a freedman among their ancestors. It would be +interesting to follow this people, made up of such complex elements, in +all their daily work and recreation, as we are able to do in the case +of contemporary Egyptians; but the monuments which might furnish us with +the necessary materials are scarce, and the positive information to be +gleaned from them amounts to but little. We are tolerably safe, however, +in supposing the more wealthy cities to have been, as a whole, very +similar in appearance to those existing at the present day in the +regions which as yet have been scarcely touched by the advent of +European civilization. Sinuous, narrow, muddy streets, littered with +domestic refuse and organic detritus, in which flocks of ravens and +wandering packs of dogs perform with more or less efficiency the duties +of sanitary officers; whole quarters of the town composed of huts made +of reeds and puddled clay, low houses of crude brick, surmounted perhaps +even in those times with the conical domes we find later on the Assyrian +bas-reliefs; crowded and noisy bazaars, where each trade is located in +its special lanes and blind alleys; silent and desolate spaces occupied +by palaces and gardens, in which the private life of the wealthy +was concealed from public gaze; and looking down upon this medley of +individual dwellings, the palaces and temples with their ziggurats +crowned with gilded and painted sanctuaries. In the ruins of Uru, +Eridu, and Uruk, the remains of houses belonging doubtless to well-to-do +families have been brought to light. They are built of fine bricks, +whose courses are cemented together with a thin layer of bitumen, but +they they are only lighted internally by small appertures pierced at +irregular distances in the upper part of the walls: the low arched +doorway, closed by a heavy two-leaved door, leads into a blind passage, +which opens as a rule on the courtyard in the centre of the building. + + +[Illustration: 208a.jpg Chaldean houses at Uru.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from the sketch by Taylor. + +[Illustration: 208b plans of houses excavated at Eridu and Ubu.] + + These plans were drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from sketches by + Taylor. The houses reproduced to the left of the plan were + those uncovered in the ruins of Uru; those on the right + belong to the ruins of Eridu. On the latter, the niches + mentioned in the text will be found indicated. + +In the interior may still be distinguished the small oblong rooms, +sometimes vaulted, sometimes roofed with a flat, ceiling supported by +trunks of palm trees;* the walls are often of a considerable thickness, +in which are found narrow niches here and there. The majority of the +rooms were merely store-chambers, and contained the family provisions +and treasures; others served as living-rooms, and were provided with +furniture. The latter, in the houses of the richer citizens no less +than in those of the people, was of a very simple kind, and was mostly +composed of chairs and stools, similar to those in the royal palaces; +the bedrooms contained the linen chests and the beds with their thin +mattresses, coverings, and cushions, and perhaps wooden head-rests, +resembling those found in Africa,** but the Chaldaeans slept mostly on +mats spread on the ground. + + * Taylor, _Notes on the Ruins of Mugeyer_, in the _Journ. of + the Royal As. Soc_, vol. xv. p. 266, found the remains of + the palm-tree beams which formed the terrace still existing. + He thinks (_Notes on Tel-el-Lahm_, etc., in the _Journ, of + the Royal As. Soc._, vol. xv. p. 411) with Loftus that some + of the chambers were vaulted. Cf. upon the custom of + vaulting in Chaldaean houses, Piereot-Cupiez, _Histoire de + l’Art_, vol. ii. p. 163, et seq. + + ** The dressing of the hair in coils and elaborate + erections, as seen in the various figures engraved upon + Chaldaean intaglios (cf. what is said of the different ways + of arranging the hair on p. 262 of this volume), appears to + have necessitated the use of these articles of furniture; + such complicated erections of hair must have lasted several + days at least, and would not have kept in condition so long + except for the use of the head-rest. + +An oven for baking occupied a corner of the courtyard, side by side with +the stones for grinding the corn; the ashes on the hearth were always +aglow, and if by chance the fire went out, the fire-stick was always +at hand to relight it, as in Egypt. The kitchen utensils and household +pottery comprised a few large copper pans and earthenware pots rounded +at the base, dishes, water and wine jars, and heavy plates of coarse +ware; metal had not as yet superseded stone, and in the same house we +meet with bronze axes and hammers side by side with the same implements +in cut flint, besides knives, scrapers, and mace-heads.* + + * Implements in flint and other kinds of stone have been + discovered by Taylor, and are now in the British Museum. The + bronze implements come partly from the tombs of Mugheir, and + partly from the ruins explored by Loftus at Tell-Sifr--that + is to say, the ancient cities of Uru and Larsam: the name of + Tell-Sifr, the “mound of copper,” comes from the quantity of + objects in copper which have been discovered there. + +[Illustration: 300.jpg CHALDAEAN HOUSEHOLD UTENSILS IN TERRA-COTTA] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from the sketch by G. Rawlinson, and + the heliogravure in Heuzey-Sarzec. + + +At the present day the women of the country of the Euphrates spend a +great part of their time on the roofs of their dwellings.* They install +themselves there in the morning, till they are driven away by the heat; +as soon as the sun gets low in the heavens, they return to their post, +and either pass the day on neighbouring roofs whilst they bake, cook, +wash and dry the linen; or, if they have slaves to attend to such menial +occupations, they sew and embroider in the open air. + + * Olivier, _Voyage dans l’Empire Othoman,_ vol. ii. pp. 356, + 357, 381, 382, 392, 393. + +They come down into the interior of the house during the hottest hours +of the day. In most of the wealthy houses, the coolest room is one below +the level of the courtyard, into which but little light can penetrate. +It is paved with plaques of polished gypsum, which resembles our finest +grey-and-white marble, and the walls are covered with a coat of delicate +plastering, smooth to the touch and agreeable to the eye. This is +watered several times during the day in hot weather, and the evaporation +from it cools the air. The few ruined habitations which have as yet been +explored seem to bear witness to a considerable similarity between the +requirements and customs of ancient times and those of to-day. Like the +modern women of Bagdad and Mosul, the Chaldaean women of old preferred +an existence in the open air, in spite of its publicity, to a seclusion +within stuffy rooms or narrow courts. The heat of the sun, cold, rain, +and illness obliged them at times to seek a refuge within four walls, +but as soon as they could conveniently escape from them, they climbed up +on to their roof to pass the greater part of their time there. + +Many families of the lower and middle classes owned the houses which +they occupied. They constituted a patrimony which the owners made every +effort to preserve intact through all reverses of fortune.* The head +of the family bequeathed it to his widow or his eldest son, or left it +undivided to his heirs, in the assurance, no doubt, that one of them +would buy up the rights of the others. + + * A house could be let for various lengths of time--for + three months, for a year, for five years, for an indefinite + term, but with a minimum of six months, since the rent is + payable at the beginning and in the middle of each year. + +The remainder of his goods, farms, gardens, corn-lands, slaves, +furniture, and jewels, were divided among the brothers or natural +descendants, “from the mouth to the gold;” that is to say, from the +moment of announcing the beginning of the business, to that when +each one received his share. In order to invest this act with greater +solemnity, it took place usually in the presence of a priest. Those +interested repaired to the temple, “to the gate of the god;” they placed +the whole of the inheritance in the hands of the chosen arbitrator, +and demanded of him to divide it justly; or the eldest brother perhaps +anticipated the apportionment, and the priest had merely to sanction +the result, or settle the differences which might arise among the lawful +recipients in the course of the operation. When this was accomplished, +the legatees had to declare themselves satisfied; and when no further +claims arose, they had to sign an engagement before the priestly +arbitrator that they would henceforth refrain from all quarrelling on +the subject, and that they would never make a complaint one against the +other. By dint of these continual redistributions from one generation +to another, the largest fortunes soon became dispersed: the individual +shares became smaller and smaller, and scarcely sufficed to keep a +family, so that the slightest reverse obliged the possessor to +have recourse to usurers. The Chaldaeans, like the Egyptians, were +unacquainted with the use of money, but from the earliest times the +employment of precious metals for purposes of exchange was practised +among them to an enormous extent. Though copper and gold were both used, +silver was the principal medium in these transactions, and formed the +standard value of all purchaseable objects. It was never cut into flat +rings or twists of wire, as was the case with the Egyptian “tabnu;” it +was melted into small unstamped ingots, which were passed from hand +to hand by weight, being tested in the scales at each transaction. +“To weigh” was in the ordinary language the equivalent for “payment in +metal,” whereas “to measure” denoted that the payment was in grain. +The ingots for exchange were, therefore, designated by the name of +the weights to which they corresponded. The lowest unit was a shekel, +weighing on an average nearly half an ounce, sixty shekels making a +mina, and sixty minas a talent. It is a question whether the Chaldaeanns +possessed in early times, as did the Assyrians of a later period, two +kinds of shekels and minas, one heavy and the other light. Whether the +loan were in metal, grain, or any other substance, the interest was very +high.* A very ancient law fixed it in certain cases at twelve drachmas +per mina, per annum--that is to say, at twenty per cent.--and more +recent texts show us that, when raised to twenty-five per cent., it did +not appear to them abnormal. + + * We find several different examples, during the Second + Chaldaeann Empire, of an exchange of corn for provisions and + liquids, or of beams for dates. As a fact, exchange has + never completely died out in these regions, and at the + present day, in Chaldaea, as in Egypt, corn is used in many + cases either to pay Government taxes or to discharge + commercial debts. + +The commerce of the chief cities was almost entirely concentrated in the +temples. The large quantities of metals and cereals constantly brought +to the god, either as part of the fixed temple revenue, or as daily +offerings, accumulated so rapidly, that they would have overflowed the +storehouses, had not a means been devised of utilizing them quickly: the +priests treated them as articles of commerce and made a profit out of +them.* Every bargain necessitated the calling in of a public scribe. The +bill, drawn up before witnesses on a clay tablet, enumerated the sums +paid out, the names of the parties, the rate per cent., the date +of repayment, and sometimes a penal clause in the event of fraud or +insolvency; the tablet remained in the possession of the creditor until +the debt had been completely discharged. The borrower often gave as a +pledge either slaves, a field, or a house, or certain of his friends +would pledge on his behalf their own personal fortune; at times he would +pay by the labour of his own hands the interest which he would otherwise +have been unable to meet, and the stipulation was previously made in the +contract of the number of days of corvee which he should periodically +fulfil for his creditor. If, in spite of all this, the debtor was unable +to procure the necessary funds to meet his engagements, the principal +became augmented by a fixed sum--for instance, one-third--and continued +to increase at this rate until the total value of the amount reached +that of the security:** the slave, the field, or the house then ceased +to belong to their former, master, subject to a right of redemption, of +which he was rarely able to avail himself for lack of means.*** + + * It was to the god himself--Shamash, for example--that the + loan was supposed to be made, and it is to him that the + contracts stipulate that the capital and interest shall be + paid. It is curious to lind among the most successful money- + lenders several princesses consecrated to the sun-god. + + ** It is easy to foresee, from the contracts of the New + Assyrian or Babylonian Empire, how in this manner the + original sum lent became doubled and trebled; generally the + interest accumulated till it was quadrupled, after which, no + doubt, the security was taken by the creditor. They probably + calculated that the capital and compound interest was by + then equal in value to the person or object given as a + security. + + *** The creditors protected themselves against this right of + redemption by a maledictory formula inserted at the end of + the contracts against those who should avail themselves of + it; it is generally inscribed on the boundary stones of the + First Chaldaean Empire. + +The small tradesman or free workman, who by some accident had become +involved in debt, seldom escaped this progressive impoverishment except +by strenuous efforts and incessant labour. Foreign commerce, it is true, +entailed considerable risk, but the chances of acquiring wealth were so +great that many individuals launched upon it in preference to more +sure but less lucrative undertakings. They would set off alone or in +companies for Elam or the northern regions, for Syria, or even for so +distant a country as Egypt, and they would bring back in their caravans +all that was accounted precious in those lands. Overland routes were not +free from dangers; not only were nomad tribes and professional bandits +constantly hovering round the traveller, and obliging him to exercise +ceaseless vigilance, but the inhabitants of the villages through which +he passed, the local lords and the kings of the countries which he +traversed, had no scruple in levying blackmail upon him in obliging him +to pay dearly for right of way through their marches or territory.** +There were less risks in choosing a sea route: the Euphrates on one +side, the Tigris, the Ulai, and the Uknu on the other, ran through a +country peopled with a rich industrial population, among whom Chaldaean +merchandise was easily and profitably sold or exchanged for commodities +which would command a good price at the end of the voyage. The vessels +generally were keleks or “kufas,” but the latter were of immense size. + + * We have no information from Babylonian sources relating to + the state of the roads, and the dangers which merchants + encountered in foreign lands; the Egyptian documents partly + supply what is here lacking. The “instructions” contained in + the _Sallier Papyrus,_ No. ii., show what were the miseries + of the traveller, and the _Adventures of Sinuhit_ allude to + the insecurity of the roads in Syria, by the very care with + which the hero relates all the precautions which he took for + his protection. These two documents are of the XIIth or + XIIIth dynasty--that is to say, contemporaneous with the + kings, of Uru and with Gudea. + +Several individuals, as a rule, would club together to hire one of these +boats and freight it with a suitable cargo.* The body of the boat +was very light, being made of osier or willow covered with skins sewn +together; a layer of straw was spread on the bottom, on which were piled +the bales or chests, which were again protected by a rough thatch of +straw. The crew was composed of two oarsmen at least, and sometimes a +few donkeys: the merchants then pursued their way up stream till they +had disposed of their cargo, and taken in a sufficient freight for their +return voyage. The dangers, though apparently not so great as those by +the land route, were not the less real. The boat was liable to sink +or run aground near the bank, the dwellers in the neighbourhood of the +river might intercept it and pillage its contents, a war might break out +between two contiguous kingdoms and suspend all commerce: the merchants’ +career continually vacillated between servitude, death, and fortune. + + * The payment demanded was something considerable: the only + contract which I know of existing for such a transaction is + of the time of Darius I., and exacts a silver shekel per day + for the hire of boat and crew. + +Business carried on at home in the towns was seldom the means of +enriching a man, and sometimes scarcely afforded him a means of +livelihood. Rent was high for those who had not a house of their own; +the least they could expect to pay was half a silver shekel per annum, +but the average price was a whole shekel. On taking possession they paid +a deposit which sometimes amounted to one-third of the whole sum, the +remainder being due at the end of the year. The leases lasted, as a +rule, merely a twelvemonth, though sometimes they were extended for +terms of greater length, such as two, three, or even eight years. The +cost of repairs and of keeping the house in good condition fell usually +upon the lessee, who was also allowed to build upon the land he had +leased, in which case it was declared free of all charges for a period +of about ten years, but the house, and, as a rule, all he had built, +then reverted to the landlord. Most possessors of shops made their own +goods for sale, assisted by slaves or free apprentices. Every workman +taught his own trade to his children, and these in their turn would +instruct theirs; families which had an hereditary profession, or from +generation to generation had gathered bands of workmen about them, +formed themselves into various guilds, or, to use the customary term, +into tribes, governed by chiefs and following specified customs. A +workman belonged to the tribe of the weavers, or of the blacksmiths, or +of the corn-merchants, and the description of an individual would not +have been considered as sufficiently exact, if the designation of his +tribe were not inserted after his name in addition to his paternal +affiliation. The organization was like that of Egypt, but more fully +developed. The various trades, moreover, were almost the same among the +two peoples, the exceptions being such as are readily accounted for by +the differences in the nature of the soil and physical constitution of +the respective countries. We do not meet on the banks of the Euphrates +with those corporations of stone-cutters and marble workers which were +so numerous in the valley of the Nile. The vast Chaldaean plain, in the +absence of mountains or accessible quarries, would have furnished no +occupation for them: the Chaldaeans had to go a long way in quest of +the small quantities of limestone, alabaster, or diorite which they +required, and which they reserved only for details of architectural +decoration for which a small number of artisans and sculptors were amply +sufficient. The manufacture of bricks, on the other hand, made great +progress; the crude bricks were larger than those of Egypt, and they +were more enduring, composed of finer clay and better executed; the +manufacture of burnt brick too was carried to a degree of perfection to +which Memphis or Thebes never attained. An ancient legend ascribes +the invention of the bricks, and consequently the construction of the +earliest cities, jointly to Sin, the eldest son of Bel, and Ninib his +brother: this event was said to have taken place in May-June, and from +that time forward the third month of the year, over which the twins +presided, was called, Murga in Sumerian, Simanu in the Semitic speech, +the month of brick. This was the season which was especially devoted to +the processes of their manufacture: the flood in the rivers, which was +very great in the preceding months, then began to subside, and the clay +which was deposited by the waters during the weeks of overflow, washed +and refined as it was, lent itself readily to the operation. The sun, +moreover, gave forth sufficient heat to dry the clay blocks in a uniform +and gradual manner: later, in July and August, they would crack under +the ardour of his rays, and become converted externally into a friable +mass, while their interior would remain too moist to allow them to be +prudently used in carefully built structures. The work of brick-making +was inaugurated with festivals and sacrifices to Sin, Merodach, Nebo, +and all the deities who were concerned in the art of building: further +religious ceremonies were observed at intervals during the month to +sanctify the progress of the work. The manufacture did not cease on the +last day of the month, but was continued with more or less activity, +according to the heat of the sun, and the importance of the orders +received, until the return of the inundation: but the bricks intended +for public buildings, temples, or palaces, could not be made outside a +prescribed limit of time. The shades of colour produced naturally in the +process of burning--red or yellow, grey or brown--were not pleasant to +the eye, and they were accustomed, therefore, to coat the bricks with an +attractive enamel which preserved them from the disintegrating effects +of sun and rain. The paste was laid on the edges or sides while +the brick was in a crude state, and was incorporated with it by +vitrification in the heat of the kiln. The process was known from an +early date in Egypt, but was rarely employed there in the decoration +of buildings, while in Chaldaea the use of such enamelled plaques was +common. The substructures of palaces and the exterior walls of temples +were left unadorned, but the shrines which crowned the “ziggurat,” + the reception-halls, and the headings of doors were covered with these +many-coloured tiles. Fragments of them are found to-day in the ruins of +the cities, and the analysis of these pieces shows the marvellous skill +of the ancient workers in enamel; the shades of colour are pure and +pleasant to the eye, while the material is so evenly put on and so +solid, that neither centuries of burial in a sodden soil, nor the wear +and tear of transport, nor the exposure to the damp of our museums, have +succeeded in diminishing their brilliance and freshness. + +To get a clear idea of the industrial operations of the country, it +would be necessary to see the various corporations at their work, as we +are able to do, in the case of Egypt in the scenes of the mastabas of +Saqqara, or of the rock-chambers of Beni-Hasan. The manufacture of stone +implements gave considerable employment, and the equipment of the dead +in the tombs of Uru would have been a matter of small moment, if we were +to exclude its flint implements, its knives, cleavers, scrapers, adzes, +axes, and hammers. The cutting of these objects is bold, and the final +touches show skill, but we rarely meet with that purity of contour and +intensity of polish which distinguish similar objects among Western +peoples. A few examples, it is true, are of fairly artistic shape, and +bear engraved inscriptions: one of these, a flint hammer of beautiful +form, belonged to a god, probably Eamman, and seems to have come from a +temple in which one of its owners had deposited it. + +[Illustration: 311a.jpg CHALDAEAN STONE IMPLEMENTS.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from the sketches published by + Taylor and by ‘G. Rawlinson. On the left a scraper and two + knives one above the other, an axe in the middle, on the + right an axe and a hammer. All these objects were found in + Taylor’s excavations, and are now in the British Museum. + +It is an exception, and a remarkable exception. Stone was the material +of the implements of the poor--implements which were coarse in shape, +and cost little: if much care were given to their execution, they would +come to be so costly that no one would buy them, or, if sold for a +moderate sum, the seller would obtain no profit from the transaction. +Beyond a certain price, it was more advantageous to purchase metal +implements, of copper in the early ages, afterwards of bronze, and +lastly of iron. Among the metal-founders and smiths all kinds of +examples of these were to be found--axes of an elegant and graceful +design, hammers and knives, as well as culinary and domestic utensils, +cups, cauldrons, dishes, mountings of doors and coffers, statuettes of +men, bulls, monsters, and gods--which could be turned to weapons of +all descriptions--arrow and lance heads, swords, daggers, and rounded +helmets with neck-piece or visor. + +[Illustration: 311b.jpg CHALDAEAN STONE HAMMER BEARING AN INSCRIPTION.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from the illustration published by + Fr. Lenormant. + +[Illustration: CHALDAEN IMPLEMENTS OF BRONZE] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from Rawlinson’s _Five Great + Monarchies_. On the right two axes, in the middle a hammer, + on the left a knife, and below the head of a lance. + +Some of the metal objects manufactured by the Chaldaeans attained large +dimensions; for instance, the “brazen seas” which were set up before +each sanctuary, either for the purpose of receiving the libations, or +for the prescribed rites of purification. As is often the case among +half-civilized peoples, the goldsmiths worked in the precious metals +with much facility and skill. We have not, succeeded up to the present +in finding any of those golden images which the kings were accustomed +to dedicate in the temples out of their own possessions, or the spoil +obtained from the enemy; but a silver vase dedicated to Ningirsu by +Entena, vicegerent of Lagash, gives us some idea of this department +of the temple furniture. It stands upright on a small square bronze +pedestal with four feet. A piously expressed inscription runs round +the neck, and the bowl of the vase is divided horizontally into two +divisions, framed above and below by twisted cord-work. Four two-headed +eagles, with outspread wings and tail, occupy the lower division; they +are in the act of seizing with their claws two animals, placed back +to back, represented in the act of walking: the intervals between the +eagles are filled up alternatively by two lions, two wild goats, and +two stags. Above, and close to the rise of the neck, are disposed seven +heifers lying down and all looking in the same direction: they are all +engraved upon the flat metal, and are without relief or incrustation. +The whole composition is harmoniously put together, the posture of the +animals and their general form are well conceived and boldly rendered, +but the details of the mane of the lions and the feathers of the eagles +are reproduced with a realism and attention to minutio which belong to +the infancy of art. This single example of ancient goldsmiths’work would +be sufficient to prove that the early Chaldaens were not a whit behind +the Egyptians in this handicraft, even if we had not the golden +ornaments, the bracelets, ear and finger rings to judge from, with which +the tombs have furnished us in considerable numbers. + +[Illustration: VASE OF SILVER. AND BULL OF COPPER.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from Heuzey-Sarzec + +Alongside the goldsmiths there must have been a whole army of lapidaries +and gem-cutters occupied in the engraving of cylinders. Numerous and +delicate operations were required to metamorphose a scrap of crude +rock, marble, granite, agate, onyx, green and red jasper, crystal or +lapis-lazuli, into one of those marvellous seals which are now found by +the hundred scattered throughout the museums of Europe. They had to be +rounded, reduced to the proper proportions, and polished, before the +subject or legend could be engraved upon them with the burin. To drill a +hole through them required great dexterity, and some of the lapidaries, +from a dread of breaking the cylinder, either did not pierce it at all, +or merely bored a shallow hole into each extremity to allow it to +roll freely in its metallic mounting. The tools used in engraving were +similar to those employed at the present day, but of a rougher kind. The +burin, which was often nothing more than a flint point, marked out the +area of the design, and sketched out the figures; the saw was largely +employed to cut away the depressions when these required no detailed +handling; and lastly, the drill, either worked with the hand or in +a kind of lathe, was made to indicate the joints and muscles of the +individual by a series of round holes. The object thus summarily dealt +with might be regarded as sufficiently worked for ordinary clients; but +those who were willing to pay for them could obtain cylinders from which +every mark of the tool had been adroitly removed, and where the beauty +of the workmanship vied with the costliness of the material. + +[Illustration: 315.jpg CHALDAEAN CYLINDER EXHIBITING TRACES OF THE +DIFFERENT TOOLS USED BY THE ENGRAVER] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a heliogravure in Menant’s + _Catalogue de la collection de M. de Clercq_ + + +The seal of Shargani, King of Agade, that of Bingani-shar-ali, and many +others which have been picked up by chance in the excavations, are +true bas-reliefs, reduced and condensed, so to speak, to the space of +something like a square inch of surface, but conceived with an artistic +ingenuity and executed with a boldness which modern engravers have +rarely equalled and never surpassed. There are traces on them, it is +true, of some of the defects which disfigured the latter work of the +Assyrians--heaviness of form, exaggerated prominence of muscles +and hardness of outline--but there are also all the qualities which +distinguish an original and forcible art. + +The countries of the Euphrates were renowned in classic times for the +beauty of the embroidered and painted stuffs which they manufactured.* +Nothing has come down to us of these Babylonian tissues of which the +Greek and Latin writers extolled the magnificence, but we may form some +idea, from the statues and the figures engraved on cylinders, of what +the weavers and embroiderers of this ancient time were capable. The loom +which they made use of differed but slightly from the horizontal loom +commonly employed in the Nile Valley, and everything tends to show that +their plain linen cloths were of the kind represented in the swathings +and fragments of clothing still to be found in the sepulchral chambers +of Memphis and Thebes. The manufacture of fleecy woollen garments so +much affected by men and women alike indicates a great dexterity. When +once the threads of the woof had been stretched, those of the warp +were attached to them by knots in as many parallel lines--at regular +intervals--as there were rows of fringe to be displayed on the surface +of the cloth, the loops thus formed being allowed to hang down in their +respective places: sometimes these loops were retained just as they +stood, sometimes they were cut and the ends frayed out so as to give the +appearance of a shaggy texture. + + * Most modern writers understand by tapestry what the + ancients were accustomed to call needle embroidery or + painting on stuffs: I can find no indication on the most + ancient monuments of Chaldaean or Egypt of the manufacturing + of real tapestry. + +[Illustration: 316.jpg Egyptian Manuscript] + + Part of an Egyptian Manuscript found in the Swathing of a + Mummy + +[Illustration: 316-text.jpg Egyptian Manuscript] + + +Most of these stuffs preserved their original white or creamy +colour--especially those woven at home by the women for the requirements +of their own toilet, and for the ordinary uses of the household. The +Chaldaeans, however, like many other Asiatic peoples, had a strong +preference for lively colours, and the outdoor garments and gala attire +of the rich were distinguished by a profusion of blue patterns on a red +ground, or red upon blue, arranged in stripes, zigzags, checks, and +dots or circles. There must, therefore, have been as much occupation +for dyers as there was for weavers; and it is possible that the two +operations were carried out by the same hands. We know nothing of the +bakers, butchers, carriers, masons, and other artisans who supplied the +necessities of the cities: they were doubtless able to make two ends +meet and nothing more, and if we should succeed some day in obtaining +information about them, we shall probably find that their condition was +as miserable as that of their Egyptian contemporaries. The course +of their lives was monotonous enough, except when it was broken at +prescribed intervals by the ordinary festivals in honour of the gods +of the city, or by the casual suspensions of work occasioned by the +triumphant return of the king from some warlike expedition, or by his +inauguration of a new temple. + +The gaiety of the people on such occasions was the more exuberant in +proportion to the undisturbed monotony or misery of the days which +preceded them. As soon, for instance, as Gudea had brought to completion +Ininnu, the house of his patron Ningirsu, “he felt relieved from the +strain and washed his hands. For seven days, no grain was bruised in the +quern, the maid was the equal of her mistress, the servant walked in the +same rank as his master, the strong and the weak rested side by side in +the city.” The world seemed topsy-turvy as during the Roman Saturnalia; +the classes mingled together, and the inferiors were probably accustomed +to abuse the unusual licence which they momentarily enjoyed: when the +festival was over, social distinctions reasserted themselves, and each +one fell back into his accustomed position. Life was not so pleasant +in Chaldaea as in Egypt. The innumerable promissory notes, the receipted +accounts, the contracts of sale and purchase--these cunningly drawn up +deeds which have been deciphered by the hundred--reveal to us a people +greedy of gain, exacting, litigious, of artisans in Egypt. This is taken +from a source belonging to the XIIth or possibly the XIIIth dynasty. We +may assume, from the fact that the two civilizations were about on +the same level, that the information supplied in this respect by the +Egyptian monuments is generally applicable to the condition of Chaldaean +workmen of the same period. + +(Unreadable) and almost exclusively absorbed by material concerns. +The climate, too, variable and oppressive in summer and winter alike, +imposed upon the Chaldaean painful exactions, and obliged him to work +with an energy of which the majority of Egyptians would not have felt +themselves capable. The Chaldaean, suffering greater and more prolonged +hardships, earned more doubtless, but was not on this account the +happier. However lucrative his calling might be, it was not sufficiently +so to supply him always with domestic necessities, and both tradespeople +and operatives were obliged to run into debt to supplement their +straitened means. When they had once fallen into the hands of the +usurer, the exorbitant interest which they had to pay kept them a long +time in his power. If when the bill fell due there was nothing to meet +it, it had to be renewed under still more disastrous conditions; as the +pledge given was usually the homestead, or the slave who assisted in the +trade, or the garden which supplied food for the family, the mortgagor +was reduced to the extreme of misery if he could not satisfy his +creditors, This plague of usury was not, moreover, confined to the +towns; it raged with equal violence in the country, and the farmers also +became its victims. + +If, theoretically, the earth belonged to the gods, and under them to +the kings, the latter had made, and continued daily to make, such large +concessions of it to their vassals, that the greater part of their +domains were always in the hands of the nobles or private individuals. +These could dispose of their landed property at pleasure, farm it out, +sell it or distribute it among their heirs and friends. + +They paid on account of it a tax which varied at different epochs, but +which was always burthensome; but when they had once satisfied this +exaction, and paid the dues which the temples might claim on behalf +of the gods, neither the State nor any individual had the right to +interfere in their administration of it, or put any restrictions upon +them. Some proprietors cultivated their lands themselves--the poor by +their own labour, the rich by the aid of some trustworthy slave whom +they interested in the success of his farming by assigning him a certain +percentage on the net return. Sometimes the lands were leased out in +whole or in part to free peasants who relieved the proprietors of all +the worry and risks of managing it themselves. A survey of the area of +each state had been made at an early age, and the lots into which it had +been divided were registered on clay tablets containing the name of +the proprietor as well as those of his neighbours, together with such +indications of the features of the land, dykes, canals, rivers, +and buildings as would serve to define its boundaries: rough plans +accompanied the description, and in the most complicated instances +interpreted it to the eye. This survey was frequently repeated, and +enabled the sovereign to arrange his scheme of taxation on a solid +basis, and to calculate the product of it without material error. +Gardens and groves of date-palms, together with large regions devoted +to rough attempts at vegetable culture, were often to be met with, +especially in the neighbourhood of towns; these paid their contributions +to the State, as well as the owners’rent, in kind--in fruit, vegetables, +and fresh or dried dates. The best soil was reserved, for the growth of +wheat and other cereals, and its extent was measured in terms of corn; +corn was also the standard in which the revenue was reckoned both in +public and private contracts. Such and such a field required about fifty +litres of seed to the arura. Another needed sixty-two or seventy-five +according to the fertility of the land and its locality. Landed property +was placed under the guardianship of the gods, and its transfer or +cession was accompanied by formalities of a half-religious, half-magical +character: the party giving delivery of it called down upon the head +of any one who would dare in the future to dispute the validity of the +deed, imprecations of which the text was inserted on a portion of the +surface of an egg-shaped nodule of flint, basalt, or other hard stone. +These little monuments display on their cone-shaped end a series +of figures, sometimes arranged in two parallel divisions, sometimes +scattered over the surface, which represent the deities invoked to watch +over the sanctity of the contract. It was a kind of representation in +miniature of the aspect which the heavens presented to the Chaldaeans. +The disks of the sun and moon, together with Venus-Ashtar, are the +prominent elements in the scene: the zodiacal figures, or the symbols +employed to represent them, are arranged in an apparent orbit around +these--such as the Scorpion, the Bird, the Dog, the Thunderbolt of +Ramman, the mace, the horned monsters, half hidden by the temples they +guard, and the enormous Dragon who embraces in his folds half the entire +firmament. “If ever, in the course of days, any one of the brothers, +children, family, men or women, slaves or servants of the house, or any +governor or functionary whatsoever, arises and intends to steal this +field, and remove this landmark, either to make a gift of it to a god, +or to assign it to a competitor, or to appropriate it to himself; if he +modifies the area of it, the limits and the landmark; if he divides it +into portions, and if he says: ‘The field has no owner, since there has +been no donation of it; ‘--if, from dread of the terrible imprecations +which protect this stele and this field, he sends a fool, a deaf or +blind person, a wicked wretch, an idiot, a stranger, or an ignorant one, +and should cause this stele to be taken away,* and should throw it +into the water, cover it with dust, mutilate it by scratching it with a +stone, burn it in the fire and destroy it, or write anything else upon +it, or carry,it away to a place where it will be no longer seen,--this +man, may Anu, Bel, Ea, the exalted lady, the great gods, cast upon him +looks of wrath, may they destroy his strength, may they exterminate his +race.” All the immortals are associated in this excommunication, and +each one promises in his turn the aid of his power. + + * All the people enumerated in this passage might, in + ignorance of what they were doing, be induced to tear up the + stone, and unconsciously commit a sacrilege from which every + Chaldaean in his senses would have shrunk back. The formula + provides for such cases, and it secures that the curse shall + fall not only on the irresponsible instruments, but reach + the instigator of the crime, even when he had taken no + actual part in the deed. + +[Illustration: 322.jpg THE MICHAUX STONE (left)] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin. The original is in the medal cabinet + of the Bibliotheque Nationale. + +[Illustration: 323.jpg THE OTHER SIDE OF THE MICHAUX STONE (right)] + +Merodach, by whose spells the sick are re stored, will inflict upon the +guilty one a dropsy which no incantation can cure. Shamas, the supreme +judge, will send forth against him one of his inexorable judgments. Sin, +the inhabitant of the brilliant heavens, will cover him with leprosy as +with a garment. Adar, the warrior, will break his weapons; and Zamama, +the king of strifes, will not stand by him on the field of battle. +Eamman will let loose his tempest upon his fields, and will overwhelm +them. The whole band of the invisibles hold themselves ready to defend +the rights of the proprietor against all attacks. In no part of the +ancient world was the sacred character of property so forcibly laid +down, or the possession of the soil more firmly secured by religion. + +In instruments of agriculture and modes of cultivation Chaldaea was no +better off than Egypt. The rapidity with which the river rose in the +spring, and its variable subsidence from year to year, furnished little +inducement to the Chaldaeans to entrust to it the work of watering their +lands; on the contrary, they were compelled to protect themselves from +it, and to keep at a distance the volume of waters it brought down. +Each property, whether of square, triangular, or any other shape, was +surrounded with a continuous earth-built barrier which bounded it +on every side, and served at the same time as a rampart against the +inundation. + +[Illustration: 324.jpg TWO ROWS OF SHADUFS ON THE BANK OF A RIVER.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from an Assyrian bas-relief from + Koyunjik. + +Rows of shadufs installed along the banks of the canals or streams +provided for the irrigation of the lands.* The fields were laid out like +a chess-board, and the squares, separated from each other by earthen +ridges, formed as it were so many basins: when the elevation of the +ground arrested the flow of the waters, these were collected into +reservoirs, whence by the use of other shadufs they were raised to a +higher level. + + * In Mesopotamia and Chaldaea there may still be seen + “everywhere ruins of ancient canals; and there are also to + be met with, in many places, ridges of earth, which stretch + for considerable distances in a straight line, and surround + lands perfectly level.” (Olivier). + +The plough was nothing more than an obliquely placed mattock, whose +handle was lengthened in order to harness oxen to it. Whilst the +ploughman pressed heavily on the handle, two attendants kept incessantly +goading the beasts, or urging them forward with voice and whip, and +a third scattered the seed in the furrow. A considerable capital was +needed to ensure success in agricultural undertakings: contracts were +made for three years, and stipulated that payments should be made partly +in metal and partly in the products of the soil. + +[Illustration: 325.jpg CHALDAEAN FARMING OPERATIONS.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a Chaldaean intaglio reproduced + in Layard. The original is in the cabinet of medals in the + Bibliotheque Nationale. + +The farmer paid a small sum when entering into possession, and the +remainder of the debt was gradually liquidated at the end of each +twelve months, the payment being in silver one year, and in corn the two +following. The rent varied according to the quality of the soil and the +facilities which it afforded for cultivation: a field, for instance, of +three bushels was made to pay nine hundred measures, while another of +ten bushels had only eighteen hundred to pay. In many instances the +peasant preferred to take the proprietor into partnership, the latter +in such case providing all the expenses of cultivation, on the +understanding that he should receive two-thirds of the gross product. +The tenant was obliged to administer the estate as a careful householder +during the term of his lease: he was to maintain the buildings and +implements in good repair, to see that the hedges were kept up, to keep +the shadufs in working order, and to secure the good condition of the +watercourses. He had rarely enough slaves to manage the business with +profit: those he had purchased were sufficient, with the aid of his +wives and children, to carry on ordinary operations, but when any +pressure arose, especially at harvest-time, he had to seek elsewhere the +additional labourers he required. The temples were the chief sources for +the supply of these. The majority of the supplementary labourers were +free men, who were hired out by their family, or engaged themselves for +a fixed term, during which they were subject to a sort of slavery, the +conditions of which were determined by law. The workman renounced his +liberty for fifteen days, or a month, or for a whole year; he disposed, +so to speak, of a portion of his life to the provisional master of his +choice, and if he did not enter upon his work at the day agreed upon, +or if he showed himself inactive in the duties assigned to him, he was +liable to severe punishment. He received in exchange for his labour +his food, lodging, and clothing; and if an accident should occur to +him during the term of his service, the law granted him an indemnity in +proportion to the injury he had sustained. + +[Illustration: 327.jpg THE FARM OXEN] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a green marble cylinder in the + Louvre. + +His average wage was from four to six shekels of silver per annum. He +was also entitled by custom to another shekel in the form of a retaining +fee, and he could claim his pay, which was given to him mostly in corn, +in monthly instalments, if his agreement were for a considerable time, +and daily if it were for a short period. + +The mercenary never fell into the condition of the ordinary serf: he +retained his rights as a man, and possessed in the person of the patron +for whom he laboured, or whom he himself had selected, a defender of his +interests. When he came to the end of his engagement, he returned to +his family, and resumed his ordinary occupation until the next occasion. +Many of the farmers in a small way earned thus, in a few weeks, +sufficient means to supplement their own modest personal income. Others +sought out more permanent occupations, and hired themselves out as +regular farm-servants. + +The lands which neither the rise of the river nor the irrigation system +could reach so as to render fit for agriculture, were reserved for the +pasture of the flocks in the springtime, when they were covered with +rich grass. The presence of lions in the neighbourhood, however, obliged +the husbandmen to take precautions for the safety of their flocks. They +constructed provisional enclosures into which the animals were driven +every evening, when the pastures were too far off to allow of the flocks +being brought back to the sheepfold. The chase was a favourite pastime +among them, and few days passed without the hunter’s bringing back with +him a young gazelle caught in a trap, or a hare killed by an arrow. +These formed substantial additions to the larder, for the Chaldaeans +do not seem to have kept about them, as the Egyptians did, such tamed +animals as cranes or herons, gazelles or deer: they contented themselves +with the useful species, oxen, asses, sheep, and goats. Some of the +ancient monuments, cylinders, and clay tablets reproduce in a rough +manner scenes from pastoral life. The door of the fold opens, and we see +a flock of goats sallying forth to the cracking of the herdsman’s whip: +when they reach the pasture they scatter over the meadows, and while the +shepherd keeps his eye upon them, he plays upon his reed to the delight +of his dog. In the mean time the farm-people are engaged in the careful +preparation of the evening meal: two individuals on opposite sides of +the hearth watch the pot boiling between them, while a baker makes his +dough into round cakes. + +[Illustration: 329a.jpg COOKING: A QUARREL.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from one of the terra-cotta plaques + discovered by Loftus. + +Sometimes a quarrel breaks out among the comrades, and leads to a +stand-up fight with the fists; or a lion, perhaps, in quest of a meal, +surprises and kills one of the bulls: the shepherd runs up, his axe in +his hand, to contend bravely with the marauder for the possession of his +beast. The shepherd was accustomed to provide himself with assistance +in the shape of enormous dogs, who had no more hesitation in attacking +beasts of prey than they had in pursuing game. In these combats the +natural courage of the shepherd was stimulated by interest: for he was +personally responsible for the safety of his flock, and if a lion should +find an entrance into one of the enclosures. + +[Illustration: 329b.jpg SCENES OF PASTORAL LIFE IN CHALDAEA.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a Chaldaean intaglio from + Layard. Another cylinder of the same kind is reproduced at + p. 233 of the present work; it represents Etana arising to + heaven by the aid of his friend the eagle, while the + pastoral scene below resembles in nearly all particulars + that given above. + +[Illustration: 330.jpg FIGHT WITH A LION] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from one of the terra-cotta tablets + discovered by Loftus. + +Fishing was not so much a pastime as a source of livelihood; for fish +occupied a high place in the bill of fare of the common folk. Caught by +the line, net, or trap, it was dried,in the sun, smoked, or salted. The +chase was essentially the pastime of the great noble--the pursuit of +the lion and the bear in the wooded covers or the marshy thickets of the +river-bank; the pursuit of the gazelle, the ostrich, and bustard on +the elevated plains or rocky tablelands of the desert. The onager of +Mesopotamia is a very beautiful animal, with its grey glossy coat, and +its lively and rapid action. + +[Illustration: 331.jpg THE DOG IN TUB LEASH] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a terra-cotta tablet discovered + by Sir H. Rawlinson in the ruins of Babylon, and now in the + British Museum + +If it is disturbed, it gives forth a cry, kicks up its heels, and dashes +off: when at a safe distance, it stops, turns round, and faces its +pursuer: as soon as he approaches, it starts off again, stops, and takes +to its heels again, continuing this procedure as long as it is followed. +The Chaldaeans found it difficult to catch by the aid of dogs, but they +could bring it down by arrows, or perhaps catch it alive by stratagem. +A running noose was thrown round its neck, and two men held the ends of +the ropes. The animal struggled, made a rush, and attempted to bite, but +its efforts tended only to tighten the noose still more firmly, and +it at length gave in, half strangled; after alternating struggles and +suffocating paroxysms, it became somewhat calmer, and allowed itself to +be led. It was finally tamed, if not to the extent of becoming useful +in agriculture, at least for the purposes of war: before the horse was +known in Chaldaea, it was used to draw the chariot. The original habitat +of the horse was the great table-lands of Central Asia: it is doubtful +whether it was brought suddenly into the region of the Tigrus and +Euphrates by some barbaric invasion, or whether it was passed on from +tribe to tribe, and thus gradually reached that country. It soon became +acclimatized, and its cross-breeding with the ass led for centuries to +the production of magnificent mules. The horse was known to the kings +of Lagash, who used it in harness. The sovereigns of neighbouring cities +were also acquainted with it, but it seems to have been employed solely +by the upper classes of society, and never to have been generally used +in the war-chariot or as a charger in cavalry operations. + +[Illustration: 332.jpg CHALDAEAN CARRYING A FISH. (left)] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from one of the terra-cotta tablets + discovered by Loftus. + +The Chaldaeans carried agriculture to a high degree of perfection, and +succeeded in obtaining from the soil everything it could be made to +yield. + +[Illustration: 333.jpg THE ONAGER TAKEN WITH THE LASSO.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from the Assyrian bas-relief of + Nimrud. See p. 35 of the present work for an illustration of + onagers pierced by arrows in the chase. + +Their methods, transmitted in the first place to the Greeks, and +afterwards to the Arabs, were perpetuated long after their civilization +had disappeared, and were even practised by the people of Iraq under the +Abbasside Caliphs. Agricultural treatises on clay, which contained an +account of these matters, were deposited in one or other of the sacred +libraries in which the priests of each city were long accustomed to +collect together documents from every source on which they could lay +their hands. There were to be found in each of these collections a +certain number of works which were unique, either because the authors +were natives of the city, or because all copies of them had been +destroyed in the course of centuries--the Epic of Grilgames, for +instance, at Uruk; a history of the Creation, and of the battles of +the gods with the monsters at Kutha: all of them had their special +collections of hymns or psalms, religious and magical formulas, their +lists of words and grammatical phraseology, their glossaries and +syllabaries, which enabled them to understand and translate texts drawn +up in Sumerian, or to decipher those whose writing presented more than +ordinary difficulty. In these libraries there was, we find, as in +the inscriptions of Egypt, a complete literature, of which only some +shattered fragments have come down to us. The little we are able to +examine has produced upon our modern investigators a complex impression, +in which astonishment rather than admiration contends with a sense +of tedious-ness. There may be recognized here and there, among the +wearisome successions of phrases, with their rugged proper names, +episodes which seem something like a Chaldaean “Genesis” or “Veda;” now +and then a bold flight of fancy, a sudden exaltation of thought, or a +felicitous expression, arrests the attention and holds it captive for +a time. In the narrative of the adventures of Grilgames, for instance, +there is a certain nobility of character, and the sequence of events, in +their natural and marvellous development, are handled with gravity and +freedom: if we sometimes encounter episodes which provoke a smile or +excite our repugnance, we must take into account the rudeness of the age +with which they deal, and remember that the men and gods of the later +Homeric epic are not a whit behind the heroes of Babylonian story in +coarseness. The recognition of divine omnipotence, and the keenly felt +afflictions of the soul, awakened in the Chaldaean psalmist feelings of +adoration and penitence which still find, in spite of the differences of +religion, an echo in our own hearts; and the unknown scribe, who related +the story of the descent of Ishtar to the infernal regions, was able to +express with a certain gloomy energy the miseries of the “Land without +return. “These instances are to be regarded, however, as exceptional: +the bulk of Chaldaean literature seems nothing more than a heap of +pretentious trash, in which even the best-equipped reader can see no +meaning, or, if he can, it is of such a character as to seem unworthy +of record. His judgment is natural in the circumstances, for the ancient +East is not, like Greece and Italy, the dead of yesterday whose soul +still hovers around us, and whose legacies constitute more than the half +of our patrimony: on the contrary, it was buried soul and body, gods +and cities, men and circumstances, ages ago, and even its heirs, in the +lapse of years, have become extinct. In proportion as we are able to +bring its civilization to light, we become more and more conscious that +we have little or nothing in common with it. Its laws and customs, its +methods of action and its modes of thought, are so far apart from those +of the present day, that they seem to us to belong to a humanity utterly +different from our own. The names of its deities do not appeal to our +imagination like those of the Olympian cycle, and no traditional respect +serves to do away with the sense of uncouthness which we experience +from the jingle of syllables which enter into them. Its artists did not +regard the world from the same point of view as we do, and its writers, +drawing their inspiration from an entirely different source, made use of +obsolete methods to express their feelings and co-ordinate their ideas. +It thus happens that while we understand to a shade the classical +language of the Greeks and Romans, and can read their works almost +without effort, the great primitive literatures of the world, the +Egyptian and Chaldaean, have nothing to offer us for the most part but a +sequence of problems to solve or of enigmas to unriddle with patience. +How many phrases, how many words at which we stumble, require a +painstaking analysis before we can make ourselves master of their +meaning! And even when we have determined to our satisfaction their +literal signification, what a number of excursions we must make in the +domain of religious, ethical, and political history before we can compel +them to render up to us their full import, or make them as intelligible +to others as they are to ourselves! When so many commentaries are +required to interpret the thought of an individual or a people, some +difficulty must be experienced in estimating the value of the expression +which they have given to it. Elements of beauty were certainly, and +perhaps are still, within it; but in proportion as we clear away +the rubbish which encumbers it, the mass of glossaries necessary to +interpret it fall in and bury it so as to stifle it afresh. + +While the obstacles to our appreciation of Chaldaeann literature are of +such a serious character, we are much more at home in our efforts to +estimate the extent and depth of their scientific knowledge. They +were as well versed as the Egyptians, but not more, in arithmetic +and geometry in as far as these had an application to the affairs of +everyday life: the difference between the two peoples consisted chiefly +in their respective numerical systems--the Egyptians employing almost +exclusively the decimal system of notation, while the Chaldaeans combined +its use with the duodecimal. + +[Illustration: 337.jpg Page image] + +To express the units, they made use of so many vertical “nails” + placed one after, or above, each other, thus [symbols] etc.; tens were +represented by bent brackets [symbols], up to 60; beyond this figure +they had the choice of two methods of notation: they could express the +further tens by the continuous additions of brackets thus, [symbols] +or they could represent 50 by a vertical “nail,” and add for every +additional ten a bracket to the right of it, thus: [symbols]. The +notation of a hundred was represented by the vertical “nail” with +a horizontal stroke to the right thus [symbols], and the number of +hundreds by the symbols placed before this sign, thus [symbols], etc.: +a thousand was written [symbols] i.e. ten times one hundred, and the +series of thousands by the combination of different notations which +served to express units, tens, and hundreds. They subdivided the unit, +moreover, into sixty equal parts, and each of these parts into sixty +further equal subdivisions, and this system of fractions was used in all +kinds of quantitive measurements. The fathom, the foot and its square, +talents and bushels, the complete system of Chaldaean weights and +measures, were based on the intimate alliance and parallel use of +the decimal and duodecimal systems of notation. The sixtieth was more +frequently employed than the hundredth when large quantities were in +question: it was called a “soss,” and ten sosses were equal to a “ner,” + while sixty ners were equivalent to a “sar;” the series, sosses, +ners, and sars, being employed in all estimations of values. Years and +measures of length were reckoned in sosses, while talents and bushels +were measured in sosses and sars. The fact that these subdivisions were +all divisible by 10 or 12, rendered calculations by means of them easy +to the merchant and workmen as well as to the mathematical expert. The +glimpses that we have been able to obtain up to the present of Chaldaean +scientific methods indicate that they were on a low level, but they +were sufficiently advanced to furnish practical rules for application in +everyday affairs: helps to memory of different kinds, lists of figures +with their names phonetically rendered in Sumerian and Semitic speech, +tables of squares and cubes, and rudimentary formulas and figures for +land-surveying, furnished sufficient instructions to enable any one +to make complicated calculations in a ready manner, and to work out in +figures, with tolerable accuracy, the superficial area of irregularly +shaped plots of land. The Chaldaeans could draw out, with a fair amount +of exactness, plans of properties or of towns, and their ambition +impelled them even to attempt to make maps of the world. The latter +were, it is true, but rough sketches, in which mythological beliefs +vitiated the information which merchants and soldiers had collected in +their journeys. The earth was represented as a disk surrounded by the +ocean stream: Chaldaea took up the greater part of it, and foreign +countries did not appear in it at all, or held a position out in the +cold at its extremities. Actual knowledge was woven in an extraordinary +manner with mystic considerations, in which the virtues of numbers, +their connections with the gods, and the application of geometrical +diagrams to the prediction of the future, played an important part. +We know what a brilliant fortune these speculations attained in +after-years, and the firm hold they obtained for centuries over Western +nations, as formerly over the Bast. It was not in arithmetic and +geometry alone, moreover, that the Chaldaeans were led away by such +deceits: each branch of science in its turn was vitiated by them, +and, indeed, it could hardly be otherwise when we come to consider the +Chaldaean outlook upon the universe. Its operations, in their eyes, were +not carried on under impersonal and unswerving laws, but by voluntary +and rational agents, swayed by an inexorable fate against which they +dared not rebel, but still free enough and powerful enough to avert by +magic the decrees of destiny, or at least to retard their execution. +From this conception of things each subordinate science was obliged to +make its investigations in two perfectly distinct regions: it had at +first to determine the material facts within its competence--such as the +position of the stars, for instance, or the symptoms of a malady; it +had then to discover the beings which revealed themselves through these +material manifestations, their names and their characteristics. When +once it had obtained this information, and could lay its hands upon +them, it could compel them to work on its behalf: science was thus +nothing else than the application of magic to a particular class of +phenomena. + +The number of astronomical facts with which the Chaldaeans had made +themselves acquainted was considerable. + +[Illustration: 340.jpg CHALDAEAN MAP OF THE WORLD.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a sketch by Peiser. + +It was a question in ancient times whether they or the Egyptians had +been the first to carry their investigations into the infinite depths +of celestial space: when it came to be a question as to which of the two +peoples had made the greater progress in this branch of knowledge, all +hesitation vanished, and the pre-eminence was accorded by the ancients +to the priests of Babylon rather than to those of Heliopolis and +Memphis.* + +* Clement of Alexandria, Lucien, Diogenes Laertius, Macrobius, attribute +the origin of astronomy to the Egyptians, and Diodorus Sioulus asserts +that they were the teachers of the Babylonians; Josephus maintains, on +the contrary, that the Egyptians were the pupils of the Chaldaeans. + +[Illustration: 340.jpg ASTRONOMICAL TABLE] + +The Chaldaeans had conducted astronomical observations from remote +antiquity.* Callisthenes collected and sent to his uncle Aristotle a +number of these observations, of which the oldest had been made nineteen +hundred and three years before his time--that is, about the middle of +the twenty-third century before our era: he could have transcribed +many of a still earlier date if the archives of Babylon had been fully +accessible to him. + + * Epigenes asserts that their observations extended back to + 720,000 years before the time of Alexander, while Berossus + and Critodemus limit their antiquity to 490,000 years, which + was further reduced to 473,000 years by Diodorus, to 470,000 + by Cicero, and to 270,000 by Hipparchus. + +The Chaldaean priests had been accustomed from an early date to record on +their clay tablets the aspect of the heavens and the changes which took +place in them night after night, the appearance of the constellations, +their comparative brilliancy, the precise moments of their rising and +setting and culmination, together with the more or less rapid movements +of the planets, and their motions towards or from one another. To their +unaided eyes, sharpened by practice and favoured by the transparency +of the air, many stars were visible, as to the Egyptians, which we can +perceive only by the aid of the telescope. These thousands of brilliant +bodies, scattered apparently at random over the face of the sky, moved, +however, with perfect regularity, and the period between their departure +from and their return to the same point in the heavens was determined +at an early date: their position could be predicted at any hour, their +course in the firmament being traced so accurately that its various +stages were marked out and indicated beforehand. The moon, they +discovered, had to complete two hundred and twenty-three revolutions of +twenty-nine days and a half each, before it returned to the point from +which it had set out. This period of its career being accomplished, it +began a second of equal length, then a third, and so on, in an infinite +series, during which it traversed the same celestial houses and repeated +in them the same acts of its life: all the eclipses which it had +undergone in one period would again afflict it in another, and would +be manifest in the same places of the earth in the same order of time.* +Whether they ascribed these eclipses to some mechanical cause, or +regarded them as so many unfortunate attacks made upon Sin by the seven, +they recognized their periodical character, and they were acquainted +with the system of the two hundred and twenty-three lunations by which +their occurrence and duration could be predicted. Further observations +encouraged the astronomers to endeavour to do for the sun what they had +so successfully accomplished in regard to the moon. + + * This period of two hundred and twenty-three lunations is + that described by Ptolemy in the fourth book of his + “Astronomy,” in which he deals with the average motion of + the moon. The Chaldaeans seem not to have been able to make a + skilful use of it, for their books indicate the occurrence + of lunar eclipses outside the predicted periods. + +No long experience was needed to discover the fact that the majority of +solar eclipses were followed some fourteen days and a half after by an +eclipse of the moon; but they were unable to take sufficient advantage +of this experience to predict with certainty the instant of a future +eclipse of the sun, although they had been so struck with the connection +of the two phenomena as to believe that they were in a position to +announce it approximately.* They were frequently deceived in their +predictions, and more than one eclipse which they had promised did not +take place at the time expected:** but their successful prognostications +were sufficiently frequent to console them for their failures, and to +maintain the respect of the people and the rulers for their knowledge. +Their years were vague years of three hundred and sixty days. The twelve +equal months of which they were composed bore names which were borrowed, +on the one hand, from events in civil life, such as “Simanu,” from the +making of brick, and “Addaru,” from the sowing of seed, and, on the +other, from mythological occurrences whose origin is still obscure, such +as “Nisanu,” from the altar of Ea, and “Elul,” from a message of Ishtar. +The adjustment of this year to astronomical demands was roughly carried +out by the addition of a month every six years, which was called a +second Adar, Blul, or Nisan, according to the place in which it was +intercalated. + + * Tannery is of opinion that the Chaldaeans must have + predicted eclipses of the sun by means of the period of two + hundred and twenty-three lunations, and shows by what a + simple means they could have arrived at it. + + ** An astronomer mentions, in the time of Assurbanipal, that + on the 28th, 29th, and 30th of the month he prepared for the + observation of an eclipse; but the sun continued brilliant, + and the eclipse did not take place. + +The neglect of the hours and minutes in their calculation of the length +of the year became with them, as with the Egyptians, a source of serious +embarrassment, and we are still ignorant as to the means employed +to meet the difficulty. The months had relations to the signs of the +zodiac, and the days composing them were made up of twelve double hours +each. The Chaldaens had invented two instruments, both of them of a +simple character, to measure time--the clepsydra and the solar clock, +the latter of which in later times became the source of the Greek +“polos.” The sun-dial served to determine a number of simple facts +which were indispensable in astronomical calculations, such as the +four cardinal points, the meridian of the place, the solstitial and +equinoctial epochs, and the elevation of the pole at the position of +observation. The construction of the sundial and clepsydra, if not of +the polos also, is doubtless to be referred back to a very ancient date, +but none of the texts already brought to light makes mention of the +employment of these instruments.* + + * Herodotus (ii. 109) formally attributes the invention of + the sun-dial and polos to the Babylonians. The “polos” was a + solar clock. It consisted of a concave hemisphere with a + style rising from its centre: the shadow of the style + described every day an arc of a circle parallel to the + equator, and the daily parallels were divided into twelve or + twenty-four equal parts. Smith discovered, in the palace of + Sennacherib at Koyunjik, a portion of an astrolabe, which is + now in the British Museum. + +All these discoveries, which constitute in our eyes the scientific +patrimony of the Chaldaeans, were regarded by themselves as the least +important results of their investigations. Did they not know, thanks to +these investigations, that the stars shone for other purposes than to +lighten up the nights--to rule, in fact, the destinies of men and kings, +and, in ruling that of kings, to determine the fortune of empires? Their +earliest astronomers, by their assiduous contemplation of the nightly +heavens, had come to the conclusion that the vicissitudes of the +heavenly bodies were in fixed relations with mundane phenomena and +events. If Mercury, for instance, displayed an unusual brilliancy at +his rising, and his disk appeared as a two-edged sword, riches and +abundance, due to the position of the luminous halo which surrounded +him, would be scattered over Chaldaea, while discords would cease +therein, and justice would triumph over iniquity. The first observer who +was struck by this coincidence noted it down; his successors confirmed +his observations, and at length deduced, in the process of the years, +from their accumulated knowledge, a general law. Henceforward, each time +that Mercury assumed the same aspect it was of favourable augury, and +kings and their subjects became the recipients of his bounty. As long as +he maintained this appearance no foreign ruler could install himself in +Chaldaea, tyranny would be divided against itself, equity would prevail, +and a strong monarch bear sway; while the landholders and the king +would be confirmed in their privileges, and obedience, together with +tranquillity, would rule everywhere in the land. The number of these +observations increased to such a degree that it was found necessary to +classify them methodically to avoid confusion. Tables of them were drawn +up, in which the reader could see at one and the same moment the aspect +of the heavens on such and such a night and hour, and the corresponding +events either then happening, or about to happen, in Chaldaean, Syria, +or some foreign land. If, for instance, the moon displayed the same +appearance on the 1st and 27th of the month, Elam was threatened; but +“if the sun, at his setting, appears double his usual size, with +three groups of bluish rays, the King of Chaldaea is ruined.” To the +indications of the heavenly bodies, the Chaldaeans added the portents +which could be deduced from atmospheric phenomena: if it thundered on +the 27th of Tammuz, the wheat-harvest would be excellent and the produce +of the ears magnificent; but if this, should occur six days later, that +is, on the 2nd of Abu, floods and rains were to be apprehended in a +short time, together with the death of the king and the division of +his empire. It was not for nothing that the sun and moon surrounded +themselves in the evening with blood-red vapours or veiled themselves +in dark clouds; that they grew suddenly pale or red after having been +intensely bright; that unexpected fires blazed out on the confines of +the air, and that on certain nights the stars seemed to have become +detached from the firmament and to be falling upon the earth. These +prodigies were so many warnings granted by the gods to the people +and their kings before great crises in human affairs: the astronomer +investigated and interpreted them, and his predictions had a greater +influence than we are prepared to believe upon the fortunes of +individuals and even of states. The rulers consulted and imposed upon +the astronomers the duty of selecting the most favourable moment for +the execution of the projects they had in view. From an early date each +temple contained a library of astrological writings, where the people +might find, drawn up as in a. code, the signs which bore upon their +destinies. One of these libraries, consisting of not less than seventy +clay tablets, is considered to have been first drawn up in the reign +of Sargon of Agade, but to have been so modified and enriched with new +examples from time to time that the original is well-nigh lost. This was +the classical work on the subject in the VIIth century before our era, +and the astronomers-royal, to whom applications were accustomed to be +made to explain a natural phenomenon or a prodigy, drew their answers +ready-made from it. Astronomy, as thus understood, was not merely the +queen of sciences, it was the mistress of the world: taught secretly +in the temples, its adepts--at least, those who had passed through the +regular curriculum of study which it required--became almost a +distinct class in society. The occupation was a lucrative one, and +its accomplished professors had numerous rivals whose educational +antecedents were unknown, but who excited the envy of the experts in +their trading upon the credulity of the people. These quacks went about +the country drawing up horoscopes, and arranging schemes of birthday +prognostications, of which the majority were without any authentic +warranty. The law sometimes took note of the fact that they were +competing with the official experts, and interfered with their business: +but if they happened to be exiled from one city, they found some +neighbouring one ready to receive them. + +Chaldaea abounded with soothsayers and necromancers no less than with +astrologers; she possessed no real school of medicine, such as we find +in Egypt, in which were taught rational methods of diagnosing maladies +and of curing them by the use of simples. The Chaldaeans were content +to confide the care of their bodies to sorcerers and exorcists, who were +experts in the art of casting out demons and spirits, whose presence in +a living being brought about those disorders to which humanity is prone. +The facial expression of the patient during the crisis, the words which +escaped from him in delirium, were, for these clever individuals, so +many signs revealing the nature and sometimes the name of the enemy +to be combated--the Fever-god, the Plague-god, the Headache-god. +Consultations and medical treatment were, therefore, religious offices, +in which were involved purifications, offerings, and a whole ritual of +mysterious words and gestures. The magician lighted a fire of herbs +and sweet-smelling plants in front of his patient, and the clear flame +arising from this put the spectres to flight and dispelled the malign +influences, a prayer describing the enchantments and their effects being +afterwards recited. “The baleful imprecation like a demon has fallen +upon a man;--wail and pain have fallen upon him,--direful wail has +fallen upon him,--the baleful imprecation, the spell, the pains in +the head!--This man, the baleful imprecation slaughters him like a +sheep,--for his god has quitted his body--his goddess has withdrawn +herself in displeasure from him,--a wail of pain has spread itself as a +garment upon him and has overtaken him!” The harm done by the magician, +though terrible, could be repaired by the gods, and Merodach was moved +to compassion betimes. Merodach cast his eyes on the patient, Merodach +entered into the house of his father Ea, saying: “My father, the baleful +curse has fallen like a demon upon the man!” Twice he thus speaks, +and then adds: “What this man ought to do, I know not; how shall he be +healed?” Ea replies to his son Merodach: “My son, what is there that I +could add to thy knowledge?--Merodach, what is there that I could add +to thy knowledge?--That which I know, thou knowest it:--go then, my son, +Merodach,--lead him to the house of purification of the god who prepares +remedies,--and break the spell that is upon him, draw away the charm +which is upon him,--the ill which afflicts his body,--which he suffers +by reason of the curse of his father,--or the curse of his mother,--or +the curse of his eldest brother,--or by the curse of a murderess who is +unknown to the man.--The curse, may it be taken from him by the charm +of Ea,--like a clove of garlic which is stripped skin by skin,--like a +cluster of dates may it be cut off,--like a bunch of flowers may it be +uprooted! The spell, may heaven avert it,--may the earth avert it!” The +god himself deigned to point out the remedy: the sick man was to take +a clove of garlic, some dates, and a stalk bearing flowers, and was to +throw them into the fire, bit by bit, repeating appropriate prayers at +each stage of the operation. “In like manner as this garlic is peeled +and thrown into the fire,--and the burning flame consumes it,--as +it will never be planted in the vegetable garden, it will never draw +moisture from the pond or from the ditch,--its root will never again +spread in the earth,--its stalk will not pierce the ground and behold +the sun,--it will not serve as food for the gods or the king,--so may it +remove the baleful curse, so may it loose the bond--of sickness, of sin, +of shortcomings, of perversity, of crime!--The sickness which is in my +body, in my flesh, in my muscles,--like this garlic may it be stripped +off,--and may the burning flame consume it in this day;--may the spell +of the sorcerer be cast out, that I may behold the light!” The ceremony +could be prolonged at will: the sick person pulled to pieces the cluster +of dates, the bunch of flowers, a fleece of wool, some goats’ hair, a +skein of dyed thread, and a bean, which were all in turn consumed in +the fire. At each stage of the operation he repeated the formula, +introducing into it one or two expressions characterizing the nature of +the particular offering; as, for instance, “the dates will no more hang +from their stalks, the leaves of the branch will never again be united +to the tree, the wool and the hair will never again lie on the back +of the animal on which they grew, and will never be used for weaving +garments.” The use of magical words was often accompanied by remedies, +which were for the most part both grotesque and disgusting in their +composition: they comprised bitter or stinking wood-shavings, raw meat, +snake’s flesh, wine and oil, the whole reduced to a pulp, or made into +a sort of pill and swallowed on the chance of its bringing relief. The +Egyptian physicians employed similar compounds, to which they +attributed wonderful effects, but they made use of them in exceptional +circumstances only. The medical authorities in Chaldaea recommended them +before all others, and their very strangeness reassured the patient as +to their efficacy: they filled the possessing spirits with disgust, and +became a means of relief owing to the invincible horror with which +they inspired the persecuting demons. The Chaldaeans were not, however, +ignorant of the natural virtues of herbs, and at times made use of them; +but they were not held in very high esteem, and the physicians preferred +the prescriptions which pandered to the popular craving for the +supernatural. Amulets further confirmed the effect produced by the +recipes, and prevented the enemy, once cast out, from re-entering the +body; these amulets were made of knots of cord, pierced shells, bronze +or terra-cotta statuettes, and plaques fastened to the arms or worn +round the neck. On each of the latter kind were roughly drawn the most +terrible images that they could conceive, a shortened incantation +was scrawled on its surface, or it was covered with extraordinary +characters, which when the spirits perceived they at once took flight, +and the possessor of the talisman escaped the threatened illness. + +However laughable, and at the same time deplorable, this hopeless medley +of exact knowledge and gross superstition may appear to us at the +present day, it was the means of bringing a prosperity to the cities of +Chaldaea which no amount of actual science would ever have produced. The +neighbouring barbaric peoples were imbued with the same ideas as the +Chaldaens regarding the constitution of the world and the nature of the +laws which governed it. They lived likewise in perpetual fear of those +invisible beings whose changeable and arbitrary will actuated all +visible phenomena; they attributed all the reverses and misfortunes +which overtook them to the direct action of these malevolent beings; +they believed firmly in the influence of stars on the course of events; +they were constantly on the look out for prodigies, and were greatly +alarmed by them, since they had no certain knowledge of the number and +nature of their enemies, and the means they had invented for protecting +themselves from them or of overcoming them too often proved inefficient. +In the eyes of these barbarians, the Chaldeans seemed to be possessed of +the very powers which they themselves lacked. The magicians of Chaldaea +had forced the demons to obey them and to unmask themselves before them; +they read with ease in the heavens the present and future of men and +nations; they interpreted the will of the immortals in its smallest +manifestations, and with them this faculty was not a limited and +ephemeral power, quickly exhausted by use: the rites and formulas known +to them enabled them to exercise it freely at all times, in all places, +alike upon the most exalted of the gods and the most dreaded of mortals, +without its ever becoming weakened. + +[Illustration:352.jpg A CHALDAEAN AMULET.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a sketch by Loftus. The + original is in the British Museum. + +A race so endowed with wisdom was, indeed, destined to triumph over +its neighbours, and the latter would have no chance of resisting such +a nation unless they borrowed from it its manners, customs, industry, +writing, and all the arts and sciences which had brought about their +superiority. Chaldaeann civilization spread into Elam and took possession +of the inhabitants of the shores of the Persian Gulf, and then, since +its course was impeded on the south by the sea, on the west by the +desert, and on the east by the mountains, it turned in the direction of +the great northern plains and proceeded up the two rivers, beside whose +lower waters it had been cradled. It was at this very time that the +Pharaohs of the XIIIth dynasty had just completed the conquest of +Nubia. Greater Egypt, made what she was by the efforts of twenty +generations, had become an African power. The sea formed her northern +boundary, the desert and the mountains enclosed her on all sides, and +the Nile appeared the only natural outlet into a new world: she followed +it indefatigably from one cataract to another, colonizing as she passed +all the lands fertilized by its waters. Every step which she made in +this direction increased the distance between her capitals and the +Mediterranean, and brought her armies further south. Asia would have +practically ceased to exist, as far as Egypt was concerned, had not the +repeated incursions of the Bedouin obliged her to make advances from +time to time in that direction; still she crossed the frontier as seldom +as possible, and recalled her troops as soon as they had reduced the +marauders to order: Ethiopia alone attracted her, and it was there that +she firmly established her empire. The two great civilized peoples of +the ancient world, therefore, had each their field of action clearly +marked out, and neither of them had ever ventured into that of the +other. There had been no lack of intercourse between them, and the +encounter of their armies, if it ever really had taken place, had been +accidental, had merely produced passing results, and up till then had +terminated without bringing to either side a decisive advantage. + +[Illustration: 354.jpg MAGIC NAIL OF TERRA COTTA] + +[Illustration: 355.jpg EGYPTIAN CORNICE BEARING THE CARTOUCHES OF RAMSES +I.] + + + + +APPENDIX--THE PHARAOHS OF THE ANCIENT AND MIDDLE EMPIRES + +(Dynasties I.-XIV.) + + +The lists of the Pharaohs of the Memphite period appear to have been +drawn up in much the same order as we now possess them, as early as +the XIIth dynasty: it is certain that the sequence was definitely fixed +about the time of the XXth dynasty, since it was under this that the +Canon of Turin was copied. The lists which have come down to us appear +to follow two traditions, which differ completely in certain cases: +one has been preserved for us by the abbreviators of Manetho, while +the other was the authority followed by the compilers of the tables of +Abydos and Saqqara, as well as by the author of the Turin Papyrus. + +There appear to have been in the first five dynasties a certain number +of kings whose exact order and filiation were supposed to be well known +to the compilers; but, at the same time, there were others whose names +were found on the monuments, but whose position with regard to their +predecessors was indicated neither by historical documents nor by +popular romance. We find, therefore, in these two traditional lists +a series of sovereigns always occupying the same position, and others +hovering around them, who have no decided place. The hieroglyphic lists +and the Royal Canon appear to have been chiefly concerned with the +former; but the authorities followed by Manetho have studiously +collected the names of the latter, and have intercalated them in +different places, sometimes in the middle, but mostly at the end of the +dynasty, where they form a kind of _caput mortuum_. The most striking +example of this arrangement is afforded us in the IVth dynasty. The +contemporary monuments show that its kings formed a compact group, to +which are appended the first three sovereigns of the Vth dynasty, +always in the same order: Menkauri succeeded Khafri, Shopsiskaf followed +Menkauri, Usirkaf followed Shopsiskaf, and so on to the end. The lists +of Manetho suppress Shopsiskaf, and substitute four other individuals +in his place, namely, Katoises, Bikheris, Seberkheres, Thamphthis, whose +reigns must have occupied more than half a century; these four were +doubtless aspirants to the throne, or local kings belonging to the time +between the IVth and Vth dynasties, whom Manetho’s authorities inserted +between the compact groups made up of Kheops and his sons on the one +hand, and of Usirkaf and his two real of supposed brothers on the other, +omitting Shopsiskaf, and having no idea that Usirkaf was his immediate +successor, with or without rivals to the throne. + +In a course of lectures given at the _College de France_ (1893-95), I +have examined at length the questions raised by a study of the various +lists, and I may be able, perhaps, some day to publish the result of +my researches: for the present I must confine myself merely to what +is necessary to the elucidation of the present work, namely, the +Manethonian tradition on the one hand, and the tradition of the +monumental tables on the other. The text which I propose to follow for +the latter, during the first five dynasties, is that of the second table +of Abydos; the names placed between brackets [ ] are taken either from +the table of Saqqara or from the Royal Canon of Turin. The numbers of +the years, months, and days are those furnished by the last-mentioned +document. + +[Illustration: 357.jpg LISTS OF THE PHARAOHS OF THE ANCIENT EMPIRE] + +[Illustration: 358.jpg LISTS ON THE MONUMENTS] + +From the VIth to the XIIth dynasty, the lists of Manetho are at fault: +they give the origin and duration of the dynasties, without furnishing +us with the names of the kings. + +[Illustration: 359.jpg LISTS ON THE MONUMENTS] + +This blank is partially filled by the table of Abydos, by the fragments +of the Turin Papyrus, and by information supplied by the monuments. No +such definitely established sequence appears to have existed for this +period, as for the preceding ones. The Heracleopolitan dynasties +figure, perhaps, in the Canon of Turin only; as for the later Memphite +dynasties, the table of Abydos gives one series of Pharaohs, while the +Canon adopts a different one. After the close of the VIth dynasty, and +before the accession of the IXth, there was, doubtless, a period when +several branches of the royal family claimed the supremacy and ruled in +different parts of Egypt: this is what we know to have taken place later +between the XXIInd and the XXIVth dynasties. The tradition of Abydos +had, perhaps, adopted one of these contemporaneous dynasties, while +the Turin Papyrus had chosen another: Manetho, on the other hand, +had selected from among them, as representatives of the legitimate +succession, the line reigning at Memphis which immediately followed +the sovereigns of the VIth dynasty. The following table gives both the +series known, as far as it is possible for the present to re-establish +the order:-- + +[Illustration: 360.jpg LISTS ON THE MONUMENTS] + +The XIth (Theban) dynasty contains but a small number of kings according +to the official lists. The tables on the monuments recognize only two, +Nibkhrouri and Sonkhkari, but the Turin Canon admits at least half a +dozen. These differences probably arose from the fact that, the second +Heracleopolitan dynasty having reigned at the same time as the earlier +Theban princes, the tables on the monuments, while rejecting the +Heracleopolitans, recognized as legitimate Pharaohs only those of the +Theban kings who had ruled over the whole of Egypt, namely, the first +and last of the series; the Canon, on the contrary, replaced the later +Heracleopolitans by those among the contemporary Thebans who had +assumed the royal titles. Whatever may have been the cause of these +combinations, we find the lists again harmonizing with the accession of +the XIIth (Theban) dynasty. + +For the succeeding dynasties we possess merely the names enumerated on +the fragments of the Turin Papyrus, several of which, however, are +also found either in the royal chamber at Karnak, or on contemporary +monuments. The order of the names is not always certain: it is, perhaps, +best to transcribe the sequence as we are able to gather it from the +fragments of the Royal Papyrus, without attempting to distinguish +between those which belong to the XIIIth and those which must be. +relegated to the following dynasties. + +[Illustration: 361.jpg LISTS ON THE MONUMENTS] + +About fifty names still remain, but so mutilated and scattered over +such small fragments of papyrus, that their order is most uncertain. We +possess monuments of about one-fifth of these kings, and the lengths of +their reigns, as far as we know them, all appear to have been short: +we have no reason to doubt that they did really govern, and we can only +hope that in time the progress of excavation will yield us records of +them one after another. They bring us down to the period of the invasion +of the Shepherds, and it is possible that some among them may be found +to be contemporaries of the XVth and XVIth dynasties. + +[Illustration: 362.jpg Tailpiece] + + + + + +End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of History Of Egypt, Chaldaea, Syria, +Babylonia, and Assyria, Volume 3 (of 12), by G. Maspero + +*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HISTORY OF EGYPT, CHALDAEA *** + +***** This file should be named 17323-0.txt or 17323-0.zip ***** +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: + https://www.gutenberg.org/1/7/3/2/17323/ + +Produced by David Widger + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed. + +Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules, +set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to +copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to +protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project +Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you +charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. 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Thus, we do not necessarily +keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition. + + +Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility: + + https://www.gutenberg.org + +This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm, +including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary +Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to +subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks. diff --git a/17323-0.zip b/17323-0.zip Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..9075964 --- /dev/null +++ b/17323-0.zip diff --git a/17323-8.txt b/17323-8.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..8240777 --- /dev/null +++ b/17323-8.txt @@ -0,0 +1,9386 @@ +The Project Gutenberg EBook of History Of Egypt, Chalda, Syria, +Babylonia, and Assyria, Volume 3 (of 12), by G. Maspero + +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: History Of Egypt, Chalda, Syria, Babylonia, and Assyria, Volume 3 (of 12) + +Author: G. Maspero + +Editor: A.H. Sayce + +Translator: M.L. McClure + +Release Date: December 16, 2005 [EBook #17323] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HISTORY OF EGYPT, CHALDA *** + + + + +Produced by David Widger + + + + + +HISTORY OF EGYPT CHALDEA, SYRIA, BABYLONIA, AND ASSYRIA + + +By G. MASPERO, +Honorable Doctor of Civil Laws, and Fellow of Queen's College, Oxford; +Member of the Institute and Professor at the College of France. + +Edited by A. H. SAYCE, +Professor of Assyriology, Oxford. + +Translated by M. L. McCLURE, +Member of the Committee of the Egypt Exploration Fund + + +CONTAINING OVER TWELVE HUNDRED COLORED PLATES AND ILLUSTRATIONS + + +Volume III. + + +LONDON + +THE GROLIER SOCIETY + +PUBLISHERS + + +[Illustration: 001.jpg El Hammam (The Bath)] + + +[Illustration: 002.jpg THE BANKS OF THE EUPHRATES AT IIILLAH] + + Drawn by Boudier, after J. Dieulafoy. The vignette, which is + by Faucher-Gudin, is reproduced from an intaglio in the + Cabinet des Mdailles. + + + + +CHAPTER I--ANCIENT CHALDA + + +The Creation, the Deluge, the history of the gods--The country, its +cities its inhabitants, its early dynasties. + +[Illustration: 002a.jpg] + +"In the time when nothing which was called heaven existed above, and when +nothing below had as yet received the name of earth,* Apsu, the Ocean, +who first was their father, and Chaos-Timat, who gave birth to them +all, mingled their waters in one, reeds which were not united, rushes +which bore no fruit."** Life germinated slowly in this inert mass, in +which the elements of our world lay still in confusion: when at length +it did spring up, it was but feebly, and at rare intervals, through +the hatching of divine couples devoid of personality and almost without +form. "In the time when the gods were not created, not one as yet, when +they had neither been called by their names, nor had their destinies +been assigned to them by fate, gods manifested themselves. Lakhmu and +Lakhamu were the first to appear, and waxed great for ages; then Anshar +and Kishar were produced after them. Days were added to days, and years +were heaped upon years: Anu, Inlil, and Ea were born in their turn, for +Anshar and Kishar had given them birth." As the generations emanated one +from the other, their vitality increased, and the personality of each +became more clearly defined; the last generation included none but +beings of an original character and clearly marked individuality. Anu, +the sunlit sky by day, the starlit firmament by night; Inlil-Bel, +the king of the earth; Ea, the sovereign of the waters and the +personification of wisdom.*** Each of them duplicated himself, Anu into +Anat, Bel into Belit, Ea into Damkina, and united himself to the spouse +whom he had deduced from himself. Other divinities sprang from these +fruitful pairs, and the impulse once given, the world was rapidly +peopled by their descendants. Sin, Shamash, and Kamman, who presided +respectively over the moon, the sun, and the air, were all three of +equal rank; next came the lords of the planets, Ninib, Merodach, Nergal, +the warrior-goddess Ishtar, and Nebo; then a whole army of lesser +deities, who ranged themselves around Anu as round a supreme master. +Timat, finding her domain becoming more and more restricted owing +to the activity of the others, desired to raise battalion against +battalion, and set herself to create unceasingly; but her offspring, +made in her own image, appeared like those incongruous phantoms which +men see in dreams, and which are made up of members borrowed from a +score of different animals. They appeared in the form of bulls with +human heads, of horses with the snouts of dogs, of dogs with quadruple +bodies springing from a single fish-like tail. Some of them had the beak +of an eagle or a hawk; others, four wings and two faces; others, the +legs and horns of a goat; others, again, the hind quarters of a horse +and the whole body of a man. Timat furnished them with terrible +weapons, placed them under the command of her husband Kingu, and set out +to war against the gods. + + * In Chalda, as in Egypt, nothing was supposed to have a + real existence until it had received its name: the sentence + quoted in the text means practically, that at that time + there was neither heaven nor earth. + + ** Apsu has been transliterated kiracruv [in Greek], by the + author an extract from whose works has been preserved by + Damascius. He gives a different version of the tradition, + according to which the amorphous goddess Mummu-Timat + consisted of two persons. The first, Tauth, was the wife of + Apasn; the second, Moymis, was the son of Apasn and of + Tauth. The last part of the sentence is very obscure in the + Assyrian text, and has been translated in a variety of + different ways. It seems to contain a comparison between + Aps and Mummu-Timat on the one hand, and the reeds and + clumps of rushes so common in Chalda on the other; the two + divinities remain inert and unfruitful, like water-plants + which have not yet manifested their exuberant growth. + + *** The first fragments of the Chaldan account of the + Creation were discovered by G. Smith, who described them in + the _Daily Telegraph_ (of March 4, 1875), and published them + in the _Transactions of the Society of Biblical Archology_, + and translated in his Chaldan account of Genesis all the + fragments with which he was acquainted; other fragments have + since been collected, but unfortunately not enough to enable + us to entirely reconstitute the legend. It covered at least + six tablets, possibly more. Portions of it have been + translated after Smith, by Talbot, by Oppert, by Lenormant, + by Schrader, by Sayce, by Jensen, by Winckler, by Zimmern, + and lastly by Deltzsch. Since G. Smith wrote _The Chaldan + Account_, a fragment of a different version has been + considered to be a part of the dogma of the Creation, as it + was put forth at Kutha. + +[Illustration: 006.jpg ONE OF THE EAGLE-HEADED GENII.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin from an Assyrian bas-relief from + Khorsabad + +At first they knew not whom to send against her. Anshar despatched his +son Anu; but Anu was afraid, and made no attempt to oppose her. He sent +Ea; but Ea, like Anu, grew pale with fear, and did not venture to attack +her. Merodach, the son of Ea, was the only one who believed himself +strong enough to conquer her. The gods, summoned to a solemn banquet in +the palace of Anshar, unanimously chose him to be their champion, and +proclaimed him king. "Thou, thou art glorious among the great gods, thy +will is second to none, thy bidding is Anu; Marduk (Merodach), thou art +glorious among the great gods, thy will is second to none,* thy bidding +is Anu.** From this day, that which thou orderest may not be changed, +the power to raise or to abase shall be in thy hand, the word of thy +mouth shall endure, and thy commandment shall not meet with opposition. +None of the gods shall transgress thy law; but wheresoever a sanctuary +of the gods is decorated, the place where they shall give their oracles +shall be thy place.*** Marduk, it is thou who art our avenger! We bestow +on thee the attributes of a king; the whole of all that exists, thou +hast it, and everywhere thy word shall be exalted. Thy weapons shall not +be turned aside, they shall strike thy enemy. O master, who trusts in +thee, spare thou, his life; but the god who hath done evil, put out +his life like water. They clad their champion in a garment, and thus +addressed him: 'Thy will, master, shall be that of the gods. Speak the +word, 'Let it be so,' it shall be so. Thus open thy mouth, this garment +shall disappear; say unto it, 'Return,' and the garment shall be there." +He spoke with his lips, the garment disappeared; he said unto it, +"Return," and the garment was restored. + + * The Assyrian runs, "thy destiny is second to none." This + refers not to the _destiny_ of the god himself, but to the + fate which he allots to others. I have substituted, here and + elsewhere, for the word "destiny," the special meaning of + which would not have been understood, the word "will," + which, though it does not exactly reproduce the Assyrian + expression, avoids the necessity for paraphrases or formulas + calculated to puzzle the modern reader. + + ** Or, to put it less concisely, "When thou commandest, it + is Anu himself who commands," and the same blind obedience + must be paid to thee as to Anu. + + *** The meaning is uncertain. The sentence seems to convey + that henceforth Merodach would be at home in all temples + that were constructed in honour of the other gods. + +Merodach having been once convinced by this evidence that he had the +power of doing everything and of undoing everything at his pleasure, the +gods handed to him the sceptre, the throne, the crown, the insignia of +supreme rule, and greeted him with their acclamations: "Be King!--Go! +Cut short the life of Timat, and let the wind carry her blood to the +hidden extremities of the universe."* He equipped himself carefully for +the struggle. "He made a bow and placed his mark upon it;"** he had a +spear brought to him and fitted a point to it; the god lifted the lance, +brandished it in his right hand, then hung the bow and quiver at +his side. He placed a thunderbolt before him, filled his body with a +devouring flame, then made a net in which to catch the anarchic Timat; +he placed the four winds in such a way that she could not escape, south +and north, east and west, and with his own hand he brought them the net, +the gift of his father Anu. "He created the hurricane, the evil wind, the +storm, the tempest, the four winds, the seven winds, the waterspout, the +wind that is second to none; then he let loose the winds he had created, +all seven of them, in order to bewilder the anarchic Timat by charging +behind her. And the master of the waterspout raised his mighty weapon, +he mounted his chariot, a work without its equal, formidable; he +installed himself therein, tied the four reins to the side, and darted +forth, pitiless, torrent-like, swift." + + * Sayce was the first, I believe, to cite, in connection + with this mysterious order, the passage in which Berossus + tells how the gods created men from a little clay, moistened + with the blood of the god Blos. Here there seems to be a + fear lest the blood of Timat, mingling with the mud, should + produce a crop of monsters similar to those which the + goddess had already created; the blood, if carried to the + north, into the domain of the night, would there lose its + creative power, or the monsters who might spring from it + would at any rate remain strangers to the world of gods and + men. + + ** "Literally, he made his weapon known; "perhaps it would + be better to interpret it, "and he made it known that the + bow would henceforth be his distinctive weapon." + +[Illustration: 008.jpg BEL-MERODACH, ARMED WITH THE THUNDERBOLT, DOES +BATTLE WITH THE TUMULTUOUS TIAMAT.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin from the bas-relief from Nimrd + preserved in the British Museum. + +He passed through the serried ranks of the monsters and penetrated as +far as Timat, and provoked her with his cries. "'Thou hast rebelled +against the sovereignty of the gods, thou hast plotted evil against +them, and hast desired that my fathers should taste of thy malevolence; +therefore thy host shall be reduced to slavery, thy weapons shall be +torn from thee. Come, then, thou and I must give battle to one another!' +Timat, when she heard him, flew into a fury, she became mad with rage; +then Timat howled, she raised herself savagely to her full height, and +planted her feet firmly on the earth. She pronounced an incantation, +recited her formula, and called to her aid the gods of the combat, +both them and their weapons. They drew near one to another, Timat and +Marduk, wisest of the gods: They flung themselves into the combat, they +met one another in the struggle. Then the master unfolded his net and +seized her; he caused the hurricane which waited behind him to pass +in front of him, and, when Timat opened her mouth to swallow him, he +thrust the hurricane into it so that the monster could not close her +jaws again. The mighty wind filled her paunch, her breast swelled, her +maw was split. Marduk gave a straight thrust with his lance, burst +open the paunch, pierced the interior, tore the breast, then bound the +monster and deprived her of life. When he had vanquished Timat, who had +been their leader, her army was disbanded, her host was scattered, and +the gods, her allies, who had marched beside her, trembled, were scared, +and fled." He seized hold of them, and of Kingu their chief, and brought +them bound in chains before the throne of his father. + +He had saved the gods from ruin, but this was the least part of +his task; he had still to sweep out of space the huge carcase which +encumbered it, and to separate its ill-assorted elements, and arrange +them afresh for the benefit of the conquerors. He returned to Timat +whom he had bound in chains. He placed his foot upon her, with his +unerring knife he cut into the upper part of her; then he cut the +blood-vessels, and caused the blood to be carried by the north wind to +the hidden places. And the gods saw his face, they rejoiced, they gave +themselves up to gladness, and sent him a present, a tribute of peace; +then he recovered his calm, he contemplated the corpse, raised it and +wrought marvels. + +[Illustration: 010.jpg A KUFA LADEN WITH STONES, AND MANNED BY A CREW OF +FOUR MEN.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a bas-relief at Koyunjik. + Behind the _kufa_ may be seen a fisherman seated astride on + an inflated skin with his fish-basket attached to his neck. + +He split it in two as one does a fish for drying; then he hung up one of +the halves on high, which became the heavens; the other half he spread +out under his feet to form the earth, and made the universe such as +men have since known it. As in Egypt, the world was a kind of enclosed +chamber balanced on the bosom of the eternal waters.* The earth, which +forms the lower part of it, or floor, is something like an overturned +boat in appearance, and hollow underneath, not like one of the narrow +skiffs in use among other races, but a kufa, or kind of semicircular +boat such as the tribes of the Lower Euphrates have made use of from +earliest antiquity down to our own times. + + * The description of the Egyptian world will be found in + vol. i. p. 21 of the present work. So far the only + systematic attempt to reconstruct the Chaldan world, since + Lenormant, has been made by Jensen, who, after examining all + the elements which went to compose it, one after another, + sums up in a few pages, and reproduces in a plate, the + principal results of his inquiry. It will be seen at a + glance how much I have taken from his work, and in what + respects the drawing here reproduced differs from his. + +[Illustration: 012.jpg THE WORLD AS CONCEIVED BY THE CHALDANS] + +The earth rises gradually from the extremities to the centre, like a +great mountain, of which the snow-region, where the Euphrates finds its +source, approximately marks the summit. It was at first supposed to be +divided into seven zones, placed one on the top of the other along its +sides, like the stories of a temple; later on it was divided into four +"houses," each of which, like the "houses" of Egypt, corresponded with +one of the four cardinal points, and was under the rule of particular +gods. Near the foot of the mountain, the edges of the so-called boat +curve abruptly outwards, and surround the earth with a continuous wall +of uniform height having no opening. The waters accumulated in the +hollow thus formed, as in a ditch; it was a narrow and mysterious sea, +an ocean stream, which no living man might cross save with permission +from on high, and whose waves rigorously separated the domain of men +from the regions reserved to the gods. The heavens rose above the +"mountain of the world" like a boldly formed dome, the circumference +of which rested on the top of the wall in the same way as the upper +structures of a house rest on its foundations. Merodach wrought it out +of a hard resisting metal which shone brilliantly during the day in +the rays of the sun, and at night appeared only as a dark blue surface, +strewn irregularly with luminous stars. He left it quite solid in the +southern regions, but tunnelled it in the north, by contriving within +it a huge cavern which communicated with external space by means of two +doors placed at the east and the west.* The sun came forth each morning +by the first of these doors; he mounted to the zenith, following the +internal base of the cupola from east to south; then he slowly descended +again to the western door, and re-entered the tunnel in the firmament, +where he spent the night,** Merodach regulated the course of the whole +universe on the movements of the sun. He instituted the year and divided +it into twelve months. To each month he assigned three decans, each of +whom exercised his influence successively for a period of ten days; he +then placed the procession of the days under the authority of Nibiru, +in order that none of them should wander from his track and be lost. "He +lighted the moon that she might rule the night, and made her a star of +night that she might indicate the days:*** 'From month to month, without +ceasing, shape thy disk,**** and at the beginning of the month kindle +thyself in the evening, lighting up thy horns so as to make the heavens +distinguishable; on the seventh day, show to me thy disk; and on the +fifteenth, let thy two halves be full from month to month.'" He cleared +a path for the planets, and four of them he entrusted to four gods; the +fifth, our Jupiter, he reserved for himself, and appointed him to be +shepherd of this celestial flock; in order that all the gods might have +their image visible in the sky, he mapped out on the vault of heaven +groups of stars which he allotted to them, and which seemed to men like +representations of real or fabulous beings, fishes with the heads of +rams, lions, bulls, goats and scorpions. + + * Jensen has made a collection of the texts which speak of + the interior of the heavens (Kirib shami) and of their + aspect. The expressions which have induced many + Assyriologists to conclude that the heavens were divided + into different parts subject to different gods may be + explained without necessarily having recourse to this + hypothesis; the "heaven of Ami," for instance, is an + expression which merely affirms Anu's sovereignty in the + heavens, and is only a more elegant way of designating the + heavens by the name of the god who rules them. The gates of + heaven are mentioned in the account of the Creation. + + ** It is generally admitted that the Chaldans believed that + the sun passed over the world in the daytime, and underneath + it during the night. The general resemblance of their theory + of the universe to the Egyptian theory leads me to believe + that they, no less than the Egyptians (cf. vol. i. pp. 24, + 25, of the present work), for along time believed that the + sun and moon revolved round the earth in a horizontal plane. + + *** This obscure phrase seems to be explained, if we + remember that the Chaldan, like the Egyptian day, dated + from the rising of one moon to the rising of the following + moon; for instance, from six o'clock one evening to about + six o'clock the next evening. The moon, the star of night, + thus marks the appearance of each day and "indicates the + days." + + **** The word here translated by "disk" is literally the + royal cap, decorated with horns, "Agu," which Sin, the moon- + god, wears on his head. + +The heavens having been put in order,* he set about peopling the earth, +and the gods, who had so far passively and perhaps powerlessly watched +him at his work, at length made up their minds to assist him. They +covered the soil with verdure, and all collectively "made living beings +of many kinds. The cattle of the fields, the wild beasts of the fields, +the reptiles of the fields, they fashioned them and made of them +creatures of life."** According to one legend, these first animals +had hardly left the hands of their creators, when, not being able to +withstand the glare of the light, they fell dead one after the other. +Then Merodach, seeing that the earth was again becoming desolate, and +that its fertility was of no use to any one, begged his father Ea to cut +off his head and mix clay with the blood which welled from the trunk, +then from this clay to fashion new beasts and men, to whom the virtues +of this divine blood would give the necessary strength to enable them +to resist the air and light. At first they led a somewhat wretched +existence, and "lived without rule after the manner of beasts. But, +in the first year, appeared a monster endowed with human reason named +Oannes, who rose from out of the Erythraean sea, at the point where it +borders Babylonia. He had the whole body of a fish, but above his fish's +head he had another head which was that of a man, and human feet emerged +from beneath his fish's tail; he had a human voice, and his image is +preserved to this day. He passed the day in the midst of men without +taking any food; he taught them the use of letters, sciences and arts of +all kinds, the rules for the founding of cities, and the construction of +temples, the principles of law and of surveying; he showed them how to +sow and reap; he gave them all that contributes to the comforts of life. +Since that time nothing excellent has been invented. At sunset this +monster Oannes plunged back into the sea, and remained all night beneath +the waves, for he was amphibious. He wrote a book on the origin of +things and of civilization, which he gave to men." These are a few of +the fables which were current among the races of the Lower Euphrates +with regard to the first beginnings of the universe. That they possessed +many other legends of which we now know nothing is certain, but either +they have perished for ever, or the works in which they were recorded +still await discovery, it may be under the ruins of a palace or in the +cupboards of some museum. + +* The arrangement of the heavens by Merodach is described at the end +of the fourth and beginning of the fifth tablets. The text, originally +somewhat obscure, is so mutilated in places that it is not always +possible to make out the sense with certainty. + +** The creation of the animals and then of man is related on the seventh +tablet, and on a tablet the place of which, in the series, is still +undetermined. I have been obliged to translate the text rather freely, +so as to make the meaning clear to the modern reader. + +[Illustration: 017.jpg A GOD-FISH] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from an Assyrian bas-relief from + Nimrd. + +They do not seem to have conceived the possibility of an absolute +creation, by means of which the gods, or one of them, should have +evolved out of nothing all that exists: the creation was for them merely +the setting in motion of pre-existing elements, and the creator only an +organizer of the various materials floating in chaos. Popular fancy +in different towns varied the names of the creators and the methods +employed by them; as centuries passed on, a pile of vague, confused, and +contradictory traditions were amassed, no one of which was held to be +quite satisfactory, though all found partisans to support them. Just as +in Egypt, the theologians of local priesthoods endeavoured to classify +them and bring them into a kind of harmony: many they rejected and +others they recast in order to better reconcile their statements: they +arranged them in systems, from which they undertook to unravel, under +inspiration from on high, the true history of the universe. That which I +have tried to set forth above is very ancient, if, as is said to be the +case, it was in existence two or even three thousand years before our +era; but the versions of it which we possess were drawn up much later, +perhaps not till about the VIIth century B.C.* It had been accepted by +the inhabitants of Babylon because it flattered their religious vanity +by attributing the credit of having evolved order out of chaos to +Merodach, the protector of their city.** He it was whom the Assyrian +scribes had raised to a position of honour at the court of the last +kings of Nineveh:*** it was Merodach's name which Berossus inscribed at +the beginning of his book, when he set about relating to the Greeks +the origin of the world according to the Chaldeans, and the dawn of +Babylonian civilization. + + * The question as to whether the text was originally written + in Sumerian or in the Semitic tongue has frequently been + discussed; the form in which we have it at present is not + very old, and does not date much further back than the reign + of Assurbanipal, if it is not even contemporary with that + monarch. According to Sayce, the first version would date + back beyond the XXth century, to the reign of Khammurabi; + according to Jensen, beyond the XXXth century before our + era. + + ** Sayce thinks that the myth originated at Eridu, on the + shores of the Persian Gulf, and afterwards received its + present form at Babylon, where the local schools of theology + adapted it to the god Merodach. + + *** The tablets in which it is preserved for us come partly + from the library of Assurbanipal at Nineveh, partly from + that of the temple of Nebo at Borsippa; these latter are + more recent than the others, and seem to have been written + during the period of the Persian supremacy. + +Like the Egyptian civilization, it had had its birth between the sea and +the dry land on a low, marshy, alluvial soil, flooded annually by the +rivers which traverse it, devastated at long intervals by tidal waves of +extraordinary violence. The Euphrates and the Tigris cannot be regarded +as mysterious streams like the Nile, whose source so long defied +exploration that people were tempted to place it beyond the regions +inhabited by man. The former rise in Armenia, on the slopes of the +Niphates, one of the chains of mountains which lie between the Black Sea +and Mesopotamia, and the only range which at certain points reaches the +line of eternal snow. At first they flow parallel to one another, the +Euphrates from east to west as far as Malatiyeh, the Tigris from the +west towards the east in the direction of Assyria. Beyond Malatiyeh, the +Euphrates bends abruptly to the south-west, and makes its way across the +Taurus as though desirous of reaching the Mediterranean by the shortest +route, but it soon alters its intention, and makes for the south-east +in search of the Persian Gulf. The Tigris runs in an oblique direction +towards the south from the point where the mountains open out, and +gradually approaches the Euphrates. Near Bagdad the two rivers are only +a few leagues apart. However, they do not yet blend their waters; after +proceeding side by side for some twenty or thirty miles, they again +separate and only finally; unite at a point some eighty leagues lower +down. At the beginning of our geological period their course was not +such a long one. The sea then penetrated as far as lat. 33, and was +only arrested by the last undulations of the great plateau of secondary +formation, which descend from the mountain group of Armenia: the two +rivers entered the sea at a distance of about twenty leagues apart, +falling into a gulf bounded on the east by the last spurs of the +mountains of Iran, on the west by the sandy heights which border the +margin of the Arabian Desert.* They filled up this gulf with their +alluvial deposit, aided by the Adhem, the Diyleh, the Kerkha, the +Karun, and other rivers, which at the end of long independent courses +became tributaries of the Tigris. The present beds of the two rivers, +connected by numerous canals, at length meet near the village of Kornah +and form one single river, the Shatt-el-Arab, which carries their waters +to the sea. The mud with which they are charged is deposited when it +reaches their mouth, and accumulates rapidly; it is said that the coast +advances about a mile every seventy years.** In its upper reaches the +Euphrates collects a number of small affluents, the most important of +which, the Kara-Su, has often been confounded with it. Near the middle +of its course, the Sadjur on the right bank carries into it the waters +of the Taurus and the Amanus, on the left bank the Balikh and the Khabur +contribute those of the Karadja-Dagh; from the mouth of the Khabur to +the sea the Euphrates receives no further affluent. The Tigris is fed on +the left by the Bitlis-Khai, the two Zabs, the Adhem, and the Diyleh. +The Euphrates is navigable from Sumeisat, the Tigris from Mossul, both +of them almost as soon as they leave the mountains. They are subject +to annual floods, which occur when the winter snow melts on the higher +ranges of Armenia. The Tigris, which rises from the southern slope of +the Niphates and has the more direct course, is the first to overflow +its banks, which it does at the beginning of March, and reaches its +greatest height about the 10th or 12th of May. The Euphrates rises in +the middle of March, and does not attain its highest level till the +close of May. From June onwards it falls with increasing rapidity; by +September all the water which has not been absorbed by the soil has +returned to the river-bed. The inundation does not possess the same +importance for the regions covered by it, that the rise of the Nile +does for Egypt. In fact, it does more harm than good, and the river-side +population have always worked hard to protect themselves from it and to +keep it away from their lands rather than facilitate its access to +them; they regard it as a sort of necessary evil to which they resign +themselves, while trying to minimize its effects.*** + + * This fact has been established by Ross and Lynch in two + articles in the _Journal of the Royal Geographical Society_, + vol. ix. pp. 446, 472. The Chaldans and Assyrians called + the gulf into which the two rivers debouched, Nr Marrtum, + or "salt river," a name which they extended to the Chaldan + Sea, i.e. to the whole Persian Gulf. + + ** Loftus estimated, about the middle of the last century, + the progress of alluvial deposit at about one English mile + in every seventy years; H. Rawlinson considers that the + progress must have been more considerable in ancient times, + and estimates it at an English mile in thirty years. Kiepert + thinks, taking the above estimate as a basis, that in the + sixth century before our era the fore-shore came from about + ten to twelve German miles (47 to 56 English) higher up than + the present fore-shore. G. Rawlinson estimates on his part + that between the thirtieth and twentieth centuries B.C., a + period in which he places the establishment of the first + Chaldan Empire, the fore-shore was more than 120 miles + above the mouth of Shatt-el-Arab, to the north of the + present village of Kornah. + + *** Fr. Lenormant has energetically defended this hypothesis + in the majority of his works: it is set forth at some length + in his work on _La Langue primitive de la Chalde_. Hommel, + on the other hand, maintains and strives to demonstrate + scientifically the relationship of the non-Semitic tongue + with Turkish. + +The traveller Olivier noticed this, and writes as follows: "The land +there is rather less fertile [than in Egypt], because it does not +receive the alluvial deposits of the rivers with the same regularity as +that of the Delta. It is necessary to irrigate it in order to render it +productive, and to protect it sedulously from the inundations which are +too destructive in their action and too irregular." + +The first races to colonize this country of rivers, or at any rate +the first of which we can find traces, seem to have belonged to three +different types. The most important were the Semites, who spoke a +dialect akin to Aramaic, Hebrew, and Phoenician. It was for a long +time supposed that they came down from the north, and traces of their +occupation have been pointed out in Armenia in the vicinity of Ararat, +or halfway down the course of the Tigris, at the foot of the Gordysean +mountains. It has recently been suggested that we ought rather to seek +for their place of origin in Southern Arabia, and this view is gaining +ground among the learned. Side by side with these Semites, the monuments +give evidence of a race of ill-defined character, which some have +sought, without much success, to connect with the tribes of the Urall or +Alta; these people are for the present provisionally called Sumerians.* +They came, it would appear, from some northern country; they brought +with them from their original home a curious system of writing, which, +modified, transformed, and adopted by ten different nations, has +preserved for us all that we know in regard to the majority of the +empires which rose and fell in Western Asia before the Persian conquest. +Semite or Sumerian, it is still doubtful which preceded the other at the +mouths of the Euphrates. The Sumerians, who were for a time all-powerful +in the centuries before the dawn of history, had already mingled closely +with the Semites when we first hear of them. Their language gave way to +the Semitic, and tended gradually to become a language of ceremony and +ritual, which was at last learnt less for everyday use, than for the +drawing up of certain royal inscriptions, or for the interpretation of +very ancient texts of a legal or sacred character. Their religion became +assimilated to the religion, and their gods identified with the gods, of +the Semites. The process of fusion commenced at such an early date, that +nothing has really come down to us from the time when the two races were +strangers to each other. We are, therefore, unable to say with certainty +how much each borrowed from the other, what each gave, or relinquished +of its individual instincts and customs. We must take and judge them as +they come before us, as forming one single nation, imbued with the +same ideas, influenced in all their acts by the same civilization, and +possessed of such strongly marked characteristics that only in the last +days of their existence do we find any appreciable change. In the course +of the ages they had to submit to the invasions and domination of some +dozen different races, of whom some--Assyrians and Chaldans--were +descended from a Semitic stock, while the others--Elamites, Cossaaans, +Persians, Macedonians, and Parthians--either were not connected with +them by any tie of blood, or traced their origin in some distant manner +to the Sumerian branch. They got quickly rid of a portion of these +superfluous elements, and absorbed or assimilated the rest; like +the Egyptians, they seem to have been one of those races which, once +established, were incapable of ever undergoing modification, and +remained unchanged from one end of their existence to the other. + +* The name _Accadian_ proposed by H. Rawlinson and by Hincks, and +adopted by Sayce, seems to have given way to _Sumerian_, the title put +forward by Oppert. The existence of the Sumerian or Sumero-Accadian +has been contested by Halvy in a number of noteworthy works. M. Halvy +wishes to recognize in the so-called Sumerian documents the Semitic +tongue of the ordinary inscriptions, but written in a priestly syllabic +character subject to certain rules; this would be practically a +_cryptogram_, or rather an _allogram_. M. Halvy won over Messrs. Guyard +and Pognon in France, Delitzsch and a part of the Delitzsch school +in Germany, to his view of the facts. The controversy, which has been +carried on on both sides with a somewhat unnecessary vehemence, still +rages; it has been simplified quite recently by Delitzcsh's return to +the Sumerian theory. Without reviewing the arguments in detail, and +while doing full justice to the profound learning displayed by M. +Halvy, I feel forced to declare with Tiele that his criticisms "oblige +scholars to carefully reconsider all that has been taken as proved in +these matters, but that they do not warrant us in rejecting as untenable +the hypothesis, still a very probable one, according to which the +difference in the graphic systems corresponds to a real difference in. +idiom." + +Their country must have presented at the beginning very much the same +aspect of disorder and neglect which it offers to modern eyes. It was +a flat interminable moorland stretching away to the horizon, there to +begin again seemingly more limitless than ever, with, no rise or fall in +the ground to break the dull monotony; clumps of palm trees and slender +mimosas, intersected by lines of water gleaming in the distance, then +long patches of wormwood and mallow, endless vistas of burnt-up plain, +more palms and more mimosas, make up the picture of the land, whose +uniform soil consists of rich, stiff, heavy clay, split up by the heat +of the sun into a network of deep narrow fissures, from which the +shrubs and wild herbs shoot forth each year in spring-time. By an almost +imperceptible slope it falls gently away from north to south towards +the Persian Gulf, from east to west towards the Arabian plateau. The +Euphrates flows through it with unstable and changing course, between +shifting banks which it shapes and re-shapes from season to season. + +[Illustration: 025.jpg GIGANTIC CHALDAN REEDS] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from an Assyrian bas-relief of the + palace of Nimrd. + +The slightest impulse of its current encroaches on them, breaks through +them, and makes openings for streamlets, the majority of which are +clogged up and obliterated by the washing away of their margins, almost +as rapidly as they are formed. Others grow wider and longer, and, +sending out branches, are transformed into permanent canals or regular +rivers, navigable at certain seasons. They meet on the left bank +detached offshoots of the Tigris, and after wandering capriciously in +the space between the two rivers, at last rejoin their parent stream: +such are the Shatt-el-Ha and the Shatt-en-Nil. The overflowing waters +on the right bank, owing to the fall of the land, run towards the +low limestone hills which shut in the basin of the Euphrates in the +direction of the desert; they are arrested at the foot of these hills, +and are diverted on to the low-lying ground, where they lose themselves +in the morasses, or hollow out a series of lakes along its borders, +the largest of which, Bahr--Nedjf, is shut in on three sides by steep +cliffs, and rises or falls periodically with the floods. A broad canal, +which takes its origin in the direction of Hit at the beginning of the +alluvial plain, bears with it the overflow, and, skirting the lowest +terraces of the Arabian chain, runs almost parallel to the Euphrates. In +proportion as the canal proceeds southward the ground sinks still lower, +and becomes saturated with the overflowing waters, until, the banks +gradually disappearing, the whole neighbourhood is converted into a +morass. The Euphrates and its branches do not at all times succeed in +reaching the sea: they are lost for the most part in vast lagoons to +which the tide comes up, and in its ebb bears their waters away with +it. Reeds grow there luxuriantly in enormous beds, and reach sometimes +a height of from thirteen to sixteen feet; banks of black and putrid mud +emerge amidst the green growth, and give off deadly emanations. Winter +is scarcely felt here: snow is unknown, hoar-frost is rarely seen, +but sometimes in the morning a thin film of ice covers the marshes, to +disappear under the first rays of the sun.* + + * Loftus attributes the lowering of the temperature during + the winter to the wind blowing over a soil impregnated with + saltpetre. "We were," he says, "in a kind of immense + freezing chamber." + +[Illustration: 027.jpg THE MARSHES ABOUT THE CONFLUENCE OF THE KERKHA +AND TIGRIS.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a sketch by J. Dieulafoy. +For six weeks in November and December there is much rain: after this +period there are only occasional showers, occurring at longer and longer +intervals until May, when they entirely cease, and the summer sets in, +to last until the following November. There are almost six continuous +months of depressing and moist heat, which overcomes both men and +animals and makes them incapable of any constant effort.* Sometimes +a south or east wind suddenly arises, and bearing with it across the +fields and canals whirlwinds of sand, burns up in its passage the little +verdure which the sun had spared. Swarms of locusts follow in its train, +and complete the work of devastation. A sound as of distant rain is at +first heard, increasing in intensity as the creatures approach. Soon +their thickly concentrated battalions fill the heavens on all sides, +flying with slow and uniform motion at a great height. They at length +alight, cover everything, devour everything, and, propagating their +species, die within a few days: nothing, not a blade of vegetation, +remains on the region where they alighted. + + * Loftus says that he himself had witnessed in the + neighbourhood of Bagdad during the daytime birds perched on + the palm trees in an exhausted condition, and panting with + open beaks. The inhabitants of Bagdad during the summer pass + their nights on the housetops, and the hours of day in + passages within, expressly constructed to protect them from + the heat. + +Notwithstanding these drawbacks, the country was not lacking in +resources. The soil was almost as fertile as the loam of Egypt, and, +like the latter, rewarded a hundredfold the labour of the inhabitants.* +Among the wild herbage which spreads over the country in the spring, +and clothes it for a brief season with flowers, it was found that some +plants, with a little culture, could be rendered useful to men and +beasts. There were ten or twelve different species of pulse to choose +from--beans, 'lentils, chick-peas, vetches, kidney beans, onions, +cucumbers, egg-plants, "gombo," and pumpkins. From the seed of the +sesame an oil was expressed which served for food, while the castor-oil +plant furnished that required for lighting. The safflower and henna +supplied the women with dyes for the stuffs which they manufactured from +hemp and flax. Aquatic plants were more numerous than on the banks +of the Nile, but they did not occupy such an important place among +food-stuffs. The "lily bread" of the Pharaohs would have seemed meagre +fare to people accustomed from early times to wheaten bread. Wheat and +barley are considered to be indigenous on the plains of the Euphrates; +it was supposed to be here that they were first cultivated in Western +Asia, and that they spread from hence to Syria, Egypt, and the whole +of Europe.** "The soil there is so favourable to the growth of cereals, +that it yields usually two hundredfold, and in places of exceptional +fertility three hundredfold. The leaves of the wheat and barley have a +width of four digits. As for the millet and sesame, which in altitude +are as great as trees, I will not state their height, although I know +it from experience, being convinced that those who have not lived in +Babylonia would regard my statement with incredulity." Herodotus in his +enthusiasm exaggerated the matter, or perhaps, as a general rule, he +selected as examples the exceptional instances which had been mentioned +to him: at present wheat and barley give a yield to the husbandman of +some thirty or forty fold. + + * Olivier, who was a physician and naturalist, and had + visited Egypt as well as Mesopotamia, thought that Babylonia + was somewhat less fertile than Egypt. Loftus, who was + neither, and had not visited Egypt, declares, on the + contrary, that the banks of the Euphrates are no less + productive than those of the Nile. + + ** Native traditions collected by Berossus confirm this, and + the testimony of Olivier is usually cited as falling in with + that of the Chaldan writer. Olivier is considered, indeed, + to have discovered wild cereals in Mesopotamia. Pie only + says, however, that on the banks of the Euphrates above Anah + he had met with "wheat, barley, and spelt in a kind of + ravine;" from the context it clearly follows that these were + plants which had reverted to a wild state--instances of + which have been observed several times in Mesopotamia. A. de + Oandolle admitted the Mesopotamian origin of the various + species of wheat and barley. + +[Illustration: 030.jpg THE GATHERING OF THE SPATHES OF THE MALE PALM +TREE] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a cylinder in the Museum at the + Hague. The original measures almost an inch in height. + +"The date palm meets all the other needs of the population; they make +from it a kind of bread, wine, vinegar, honey, cakes, and numerous kinds +of stuffs; the smiths use the stones of its fruit for charcoal; these +same stones, broken and macerated, are given as a fattening food to +cattle and sheep." Such a useful tree was tended with a loving care, +the vicissitudes in its growth were observed, and its reproduction was +facilitated by the process of shaking the flowers of the male palm over +those of the female: the gods themselves had taught this artifice to +men, and they were frequently represented with a bunch of flowers in +their right hand, in the attitude assumed by a peasant in fertilizing +a palm tree. Fruit trees were everywhere mingled with ornamental +trees--the fig, apple, almond, walnut, apricot, pistachio, vine, with +the plane tree, cypress, tamarisk, and acacia; in the prosperous period +of the country the plain of the Euphrates was a great orchard which +extended uninterruptedly from the plateau of Mesopotamia to the shores +of the Persian Gulf. + +The flora would not have been so abundant if the fauna had been +sufficient for the supply of a large population. A considerable +proportion of the tribes on the Lower Euphrates lived for a long time +on fish only. They consumed them either fresh, salted, or smoked: they +dried them in the sun, crushed them in a mortar, strained the pulp +through linen, and worked it up into a kind of bread or into cakes. The +barbel and carp attained a great size in these sluggish waters, and if +the Chalans, like the Arabs who have succeeded them in these regions, +clearly preferred these fish above others, they did not despise at the +same time such less delicate species as the eel, murena, silurus, and +even that singular gurnard whose habits are an object of wonder to our +naturalists. This fish spends its existence usually in the water, but +a life in the open air has no terrors for it: it leaps out on the bank, +climbs trees without much difficulty, finds a congenial habitat on the +banks of mud exposed by the falling tide, and basks there in the sun, +prepared to vanish in the ooze in the twinkling of an eye if some +approaching bird should catch sight of it. Pelicans, herons, cranes, +storks, cormorants, hundreds of varieties of seagulls, ducks, swans, +wild geese, secure in the possession of an inexhaustible supply of food, +sport and prosper among the reeds. The ostrich, greater bustard, the +common and red-legged partridge and quail, find their habitat on the +borders of the desert; while the thrush, blackbird, ortolan, pigeon, +and turtle-dove abound on every side, in spite of daily onslaughts from +eagles, hawks, and other birds of prey. + +[Illustration: 032.jpg A WINGED GENIUS HOLDING IN HIS HAND THE SPATHE OF +THE MALE DATE-PALM.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a bas-relief from Nimrd, in + the British Museum. + +[Illustration: 033.jpg THE HEAVILY MANED LION WOUNDED BY AN ARROW AND +VOMITING BLOOD.] + +Snakes are found here and there, but they are for the most part of +innocuous species: three poisonous varieties only are known, and their +bite does not produce such terrible consequences as that of the horned +viper or Egyptian uraeus. There are two kinds of lion--one without mane, +and the other hooded, with a heavy mass of black and tangled hair: the +proper signification of the old Chaldan name was "the great 'dog," and +they have, indeed, a greater resemblance to large dogs than to the +red lions of Africa.* They fly at the approach of man; they betake +themselves in the daytime to retreats among the marshes or in the +thickets which border the rivers, sallying forth at night, like +the jackal, to scour the country. Driven to bay, they turn upon the +assailant and fight desperately. The Chaldan kings, like the Pharaohs, +did not shrink from entering into a close conflict with them, +and boasted of having rendered a service to their subjects by the +destruction of many of these beasts. + +* The Sumerian name of the lion is ur-malch "the great dog." The best +description of the first-mentioned species is still that of Olivier, who +saw in the house o the Pasha of Bagdad five of them in captivity; cf. +Layard, Nineveh and Babylon, p. 487. Father Scheil tells me the lions +have disappeared completely since the last twenty years. + +[Illustration: 034.jpg THE URUS IN ACT OF CHARGING] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from an Assyrian bas-relief from + Nimrd (Layard, Monuments of Nineveh, 1st series, pi. 11). + +[Illustration: 035.jpg a herd of onagers pursued by dogs and wounded by +arrows.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a bas-relief in the British + Museum. + +The elephant seems to have roamed for some time over the steppes of +the middle Euphrates;* there is no indication of its presence after the +XIIIth century before our era, and from that time forward it was merely +an object of curiosity brought at great expense from distant countries. +This is not the only instance of animals which have disappeared in +the course of centuries; the rulers of Nineveh were so addicted to the +pursuit of the urus that they ended by exterminating it. Several sorts +of panthers and smaller felid had their lairs in the thickets of +Mesopotamia. The wild ass and onager roamed in small herds between the +Balikh and the Tigris. Attempts were made, it would seem, at a very +early period to tame them and make use of them to draw chariots; but +this attempt either did not succeed at all, or issued in such uncertain +results, that it was given up as soon as other less refractory animals +were made the subjects of successful experiment. + + * The existence of the elephant in Mesopotamia and Northern + Syria is well established by the Egyptian inscription of + Amenemhabi in the XVth century before our era. + +[Illustration: 036.jpg THE CHIEF DOMESTIC ANIMALS OP THE REGIONS OF THE +EUPHRATES.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from an Assyrian bas-relief from + Kouyunjik. + +The wild boar, and his relative, the domestic hog, inhabited the +morasses. Assyrian sculptors amused themselves sometimes by representing +long gaunt sows making their way through the cane-brakes, followed by +their interminable offspring. The hog remained here, as in Egypt, in +a semi-tamed condition, and the people were possessed of only a small +number of domesticated animals besides the dog--namely, the ass, ox, +goat, and sheep; the horse and camel were at first unknown, and were +introduced at a later period.* + +[Illustration: 037.jpg THE SOW AND HER LITTER MAKING THEIR WAY THROUGH A +BED OF REEDS.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a bas-relief from Kouyunjik. + + * The horse is denoted in the Assyrian texts by a group of + signs which mean "the ass of the East," and the camel by + other signs in which the character for "ass" also appears. + The methods of rendering these two names show that the + subjects of them were unknown in the earliest times; the + epoch of their introduction is uncertain. A chariot drawn by + horses appears on the "Stele of the Vultures." Camels are + mentioned among the booty obtained from the Bedouin of the + desert. + +We know nothing of the efforts which the first inhabitants--Sumerians +and Semites--had to make in order to control the waters and to bring the +land under culture: the most ancient monuments exhibit them as already +possessors of the soil, and in a forward state of civilization.* Their +chief cities were divided into two groups: one in the south, in the +neighbourhood of the sea; the other in a northern direction, in the +region where the Euphrates and Tigris are separated from each other by +merely a narrow strip of land. The southern group consisted of seven, of +which Eridu lay nearest to the coast. This town stood on the left bank +of the Euphrates, at a point which is now called Abu-Shahrein. A little +to the west, on the opposite bank, but at some distance from the stream, +the mound of Mugher marks the site of Uru, the most important, if not +the oldest, of the southern cities. Lagash occupied the site of the +modern Telloh to the north of Eridu, not far from the Shatt-el-Ha; +Nisin and Mar, Larsam and Uruk, occupied positions at short distances +from each other on the marshy ground which extends between the Euphrates +and the Shatt-en-Nl. The inscriptions mention here and there other +less important places, of which the ruins have not yet been +discovered--Zirlab and Shurippak, places of embarkation at the mouth +of the Euphrates for the passage of the Persian Gulf; and the island of +Dilmun, situated some forty leagues to the south in the centre of the +Salt Sea,--"Nar-Marratum." The northern group comprised Nipur, the +"incomparable;" Barsip, on the branch which flows parallel to the +Euphrates and falls into the Bahr--Nedjf; Babylon, the "gate of the +god," the "residence of life," the only metropolis of the Euphrates +region of which posterity never lost a reminiscence; Kishu, Kuta, +Agade;** and lastly the two Sipparas, that of Shamash and that of +Anunit. The earliest Chaldan civilization was confined almost entirely +to the two banks of the Lower Euphrates: except at its northern +boundary, it did not reach the Tigris, and did not cross this river. +Separated from the rest of the world--on the east by the marshes which +border the river in its lower course, on the north by the badly watered +and sparsely inhabited table-land of Mesopotamia, on the west by the +Arabian desert--it was able to develop its civilization, as Egypt had +done, in an isolated area, and to follow out its destiny in peace. The +only point from which it might anticipate serious danger was on the +east, whence the Kashshi and the Elamites, organized into military +states, incessantly harassed it year after year by their attacks. The +Kashshi were scarcely better than half-civilized mountain hordes, but +the Elamites were advanced in civilization, and their capital, Susa, +vied with the richest cities of the Euphrates, Uru and Babylon, in +antiquity and magnificence. + + * For an ideal picture of what may have been the beginnings + of that civilization, see Delitzsch, Die Entstehung des + ltesten Schriflssystems, p. 214, et seq. I will not enter + into the question as to whether it did or did not come by + sea to the mouths of the Euphrates and Tigris. The legend of + the fish-god Oannes (Berossus, frag. 1), which seems to + conceal some indication on the subject, is merely a + mythological tradition, from which it would be wrong to + deduce historical conclusions. + + ** Agade, or Agane, has been identified with one of the two + towns of which Sippara is made up, more especially with that + which was called Anunit Sippara; the reading Agadi, Agacle, + was especially assumed to lead to its identification with + the Accad of _Genesis x. 10_, and with the Akkad of native + tradition. This opinion has been generally abandoned by + Assyriologists, and Agane has not yet found a site. Was it + only a name for Babylon? + +[Illustration: 040.jpg MAP OF CHALDA] + +There was nothing serious to fear from the Guti, on the branch of the +Tigris to the north-east, or from the Shuti to the north of these; they +were merely marauding tribes, and, however troublesome they might be +to their neighbours in their devastating incursions, they could not +compromise the existence of the country, or bring it into subjection. +It would appear that the Chaldseans had already begun to encroach upon +these tribes and to establish colonies among them--El-Ashshur on the +banks of the Tigris, Harran on the furthest point of the Mesopotamian +plain, towards the sources of the Balikh. Beyond these were vague and +unknown regions--Tidanum, Martu, the sea of the setting sun, the vast +territories of Milukhkha and Mgan.* Egypt, from the time they were +acquainted with its existence, was a semi-fabulous country at the ends +of the earth. + + * The question concerning Milukhkha and Mgan has exercised + Assyriologists for twenty years. The prevailing opinion + appears to be that which identifies Mgan with the Sinaitic + Peninsula, and Milukhkha with the country to the north of + Mgan as far as the Wady Arish and the Mediterranean; others + maintain, not the theory of Delitzsch, according to whom + Mgan and Milukhkha are synonyms for Shumir and Akkad, and + consequently two of the great divisions of Babylonia, but an + analogous hypothesis, in which they are regarded as + districts to the west of the Euphrates, either in Chaldan + regions or on the margin of the desert, or even in the + desert itself towards the Sinaitic Peninsula. What we know + of the texts induces me, in common with H. Rawlinson, to + place these countries on the shores of the Persian Gulf, + between the mouth of the Euphrates and the Bahrein islands; + possibly the Makse and the Melangitso of classical + historians and geographers were the descendants of the + people of Mgan (Mkan) and Milukhkha (Melugga), who had + been driven towards the entrance to the Persian Gulf by some + such event as the increase in these regions of the Kashdi + (Chaldans). The names, emigrated to the western parts of + Arabia and to the Sinaitic Peninsula in after-times, as the + name of India passed to America in the XVIth century of our + era. + +How long did it take to bring this people out of savagery, and to +build up so many flourishing cities? The learned did not readily resign +themselves to a confession of ignorance on the subject. As they +had depicted the primordial chaos, the birth of the gods, and their +struggles over the creation, so they related unhesitatingly everything +which had happened since the creation of mankind, and they laid claim to +being able to calculate the number of centuries which lay between their +own day and the origin of things. The tradition to which most credence +was attached in the Greek period at Babylon, that which has been +preserved for us in the histories of Berossue, asserts that there was +a somewhat long interval between the manifestation of Oannes and +the foundation of a dynasty. The first king was Alros of Babylon, a +Chaldan of whom nothing is related except that he was chosen by the +divinity himself to be a shepherd of the people. He reigned for ten +sari, amounting in all to 36,000 years; for the saros is 3600 years, the +ner 600 years, and the soss 60 years. + +[Illustration: 041.jpg TWO FISH-LIKE DEITIES OF THE CHALDANS.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from an intaglio in the British Museum. + +After the death of Alros, his son Alaparos ruled for three sari, after +which Amillaros, of the city of Pantibibla, reigned thirteen sari. It +was under him that there issued from the Bed Sea a second Annedtos, +resembling Oannes in his semi-divine shape, half man and half fish. +After him Ammenon, also from Pantibibla, a Chaldaean, ruled for a term +of twelve sari; under him, they say, the mysterious Oannes appeared. +Afterwards Amelagaros of Pantibibla governed for eighteen sari; then +Davos, the shepherd from Pantibibla, reigned ten sari: under him there +issued from the Red Sea a fourth Annedtos, who had a form similar to +the others, being made up of man and fish. After him Bvedoranchos of +Pantibibla reigned for eighteen sari; in his time there issued yet +another monster, named Andaphos, from the sea. These various monsters +developed carefully and in detail that which Oannes had set forth in a +brief way. Then Amempsinos of Larancha, a Chalan, reigned ten sari; and +Obartes, also a Chaldan, of Larancha, eight sari. Finally, on the death +of Obartes, his son Xisuthros held the sceptre for eighteen sari. It +was under him that the great deluge took place. Thus ten kings are to +be reckoned in all, and the duration of their combined reigns amounts +to one hundred and twenty sari. From the beginning of the world to the +Deluge they reckoned 691,200 years, of which 259,200 had passed +before the coming of Alros, and the remaining 432,000 were generously +distributed between this prince and his immediate successors: the Greek +and Latin writers had certainly a fine occasion for amusement over these +fabulous numbers of years which the Chaldans assigned to the lives and +reigns of their first kings. + +Men in the mean time became wicked; they lost the habit of offering +sacrifices to the gods, and the gods, justly indignant at this +negligence, resolved to be avenged.* Now, Shamashnapishtim I was +reigning at this time in Shurippak, the "town of the ship:" he and +all his family were saved, and he related afterwards to one of his +descendants how Ea had snatched him from the disaster which fell upon +his people.** "Shurippak, the city which thou thyself knowest, is +situated on the bank of the Euphrates; it was already an ancient town +when the hearts of the gods who resided in it impelled them to bring the +deluge upon it--the great gods as many as they are; their father Anu, +their counsellor Bel the warrior, their throne-bearer Ninib, their +prince Innugi. The master of wisdom, Ea, took his seat with them,*** +and, moved with pity, was anxious to warn Shamashnapishtim, his servant, +of the peril which threatened him;" but it was a very serious affair to +betray to a mortal a secret of heaven, and as he did not venture to do +so in a direct manner, his inventive mind suggested to him an artifice. + + * The account of Bcrossus implies this as a cause of the + Deluge, since he mentions the injunction imposed upon the + survivors by a mysterious voice to be henceforward + respectful towards the gods, [Greek word]. The Chalan + account considers the Deluge to have been sent as a + punishment upon men for their sins against the gods, since + it represents towards the end (cf. p. 52 of this History) Ea + as reproaching Bel for having confounded the innocent and + the guilty in one punishment. + + ** The name of this individual has been read in various + ways: Shamashnapishtim, "sun of life," Sitnapishtim, "the + saved," and Pirnapishtim. In one passage at least we find, + in place of Shamashnapishtim, the name or epithet of + Aclrakhasis, or by inversion Khasisadra, which appears to + signify "the very shrewd," and is explained by the skill + with which he interpreted the oracle of Ea. Khasisadra is + most probably the form which the Greeks have transcribed by + Xisuthros, Sisuthros, Sisithes. + + *** The account of the Deluge covers the eleventh tablet of + the poem of Gilgames. The hero, threatened with death, + proceeds to rejoin his ancestor Shamashnapishtim to demand + from him the secret of immortality, and the latter tells him + the manner in which he escaped from the waters: he had saved + his life only at the expense of the destruction of men. The + text of it was published by Smith and by Haupt, fragment by + fragment, and then restored consecutively. The studies of + which it is the object would make a complete library. The + principal translations are those of Smith, of Oppert, of + Lenor-mant, of Haupt, of Jensen, of A. Jeremias, of + Sauveplane, and of Zimmern. + +[Illustration: 045.jpg Page with ONE OF THE TABLETS OF THE DELUGE +SERIES.] + + Facsimile by Faucher-Gudin, from the photograph published by + G. Smith, Chaldan Account of the Deluge from terra-cotta + tablets found at Nineveh. + +He confided to a hedge of reeds the resolution that had been adopted:* +"Hedge, hedge, wall, wall! Hearken, hedge, and understand well, wall! +Man of Shurippak, son of Ubaratutu, construct a wooden house, build a +ship, abandon thy goods, seek life; throw away thy possessions, save thy +life, and place in the vessel all the seed of life. The ship which thou +shalt build, let its proportions be exactly measured, let its dimensions +and shape be well arranged, then launch it in the sea." Shamashnapishtim +heard the address to the field of reeds, or perhaps the reeds repeated +it to him. "I understood it, and I said to my master Ea 'The command, +O my master, which thou hast thus enunciated, I myself will respect it, +and I will execute it: but what shall I say to the town, the people and +the elders?'" Ea opened his mouth and spake; he said to his servant: +"Answer thus and say to them: 'Because Bel hates me, I will no longer +dwell in your town, and upon the land of Bel I will no longer lay my +head, but I will go upon the sea, and will dwell with Ea my master. Now +Bel will make rain to fall upon you, upon the swarm of birds and the +multitude of fishes, upon all the animals of the field, and upon all +the crops; but Ea will give you a sign: the god who rules the rain will +cause to fall upon you, on a certain evening, an abundant rain. When the +dawn of the next day appears, the deluge will begin, which will cover +the earth and drown all living things.'" Shamashnapishtim repeated the +warning to the people, but the people refused to believe it, and turned +him into ridicule. The work went rapidly forward: the hull was a hundred +and forty cubits long, the deck one hundred and forty broad; all the +joints were caulked with pitch and bitumen. A solemn festival was +observed at its completion, and the embarkation began.** "All that I +possessed I filled the ship with it all that I had of silver, I filled +it with it; all that I had of gold I filled it with it, all that I had +of the seed of life of every kind I filled it with it; I caused all +my family and my servants to go up into it; beasts of the field, wild +beasts of the field, I caused them to go up all together. Shamash had +given me a sign: 'When the god who rules the rain, in the evening shall +cause an abundant rain to fall, enter into the ship and close thy door.' +The sign was revealed: the god who rules the rain caused to fall one +night an abundant rain. The day, I feared its dawning; I feared to see +the daylight; I entered into the ship and I shut the door; that the ship +might be guided, I handed over to Buzur-Bel, the pilot, the great ark +and its fortunes." + + * The sense of this passage is far from being certain; I + have followed the interpretation proposed, with some + variations, by Pinches, by Haupt, and by Jensen. The + stratagem at once recalls the history of King Midas, and the + talking reeds which knew the secret of his ass's ears. In + the version of Berossus, it is Kronos who plays the part + here assigned to Ea in regard to Xisuthros. + + ** The text is mutilated, and does not furnish enough + information to follow in every detail the building of the + ark. From what we can understand, the vessel of + Shamashnapishtim was a kind of immense kelek, decked, but + without masts or rigging of any sort. The text identifies + the festival celebrated by the hero before the embarkation + with the festival Akitu of Merodach, at Babylon, during + which "Nebo, the powerful son, sailed from Borsippa to + Babylon in the bark of the river Asmu, of beauty." The + embarkation of Nebo and his voyage on the stream had + probably inspired the information according to which the + embarkation of Shamashnapishtim was made the occasion of a + festival Akitu, celebrated at Shurippak; the time of the + Babylonian festival was probably thought to coincide with + the anniversary of the Deluge. + +"As soon as the morning became clear, a black cloud arose from the +foundations of heaven. Bamman growled in its bosom; Nebo and Marduk +ran before it--ran like two throne-bearers over hill and dale. Nera +the Great tore up the stake to which the ark was moored. Ninib came up +quickly; he began the attack; the Anunnaki raised their torches and made +the earth to tremble at their brilliancy; the tempest of Ramman scaled +the heaven, changed all the light to darkness, flooded the earth like a +lake.* For a whole day the hurricane raged, and blew violently over the +mountains and over the country; the tempest rushed upon men like the +shock of an army, brother no longer beheld brother, men recognized each +other no more. + + * The progress of the tempest is described as the attack of + the gods, who had resolved on the destruction of men. Ramman + is the thunder which growls in the cloud; Nebo, Merodach, + Nera the Great (Nergal), and Ninib, denote the different + phases of the hurricane from the moment when the wind gets + up until it is at its height; the Anunnaki represent the + lightning which flashes carelessly across the heaven. + +[Illustration: 048.jpg SHAMASHNAPISHTIM SHUT INTO THE ARK.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a Chalan intaglio. + +In heaven, the gods were afraid of the deluge;* they betook themselves +to flight, they clambered to the firmament of Anu; the gods, howling +like dogs, cowered upon the parapet.** Ishtar wailed like a woman +in travail; she cried out, "the lady of life, the goddess with the +beautiful voice: 'The past returns to clay, because I have prophesied +evil before the gods! Prophesying evil before the gods, I have +counselled the attack to bring my men to nothing; and these to whom I +myself have given birth, where are they? Like the spawn of fish they +encumber the sea! 'The gods wept with her over the affair of the +Anunnaki;' the gods, in the place where they sat weeping, their lips +were closed." It was not pity only which made their tears to flow: +there were mixed up with it feelings of regret and fears for the future. +Mankind once destroyed, who would then make the accustomed offerings? +The inconsiderate anger of Bel, while punishing the impiety of their +creatures, had inflicted injury upon themselves. "Six days and nights +the wind continued, the deluge and the tempest raged. The seventh day at +daybreak the storm abated; the deluge, which had carried on warfare like +an army, ceased, the sea became calm and the hurricane disappeared, the +deluge ceased. I surveyed the sea with my eyes, raising my voice; but +all mankind had returned to clay, neither fields nor woods could be +distinguished.*** I opened the hatchway and the light fell upon my face; +I sank down, I cowered, I wept, and my tears ran down my cheeks when I +beheld the world all terror and all sea. At the end of twelve days, a +point of land stood up from the waters, the ship touched the land of +Nisir:**** the mountain of Nisir stopped the ship and permitted it to +float no longer. One day, two days, the mountain of Nisir stopped the +ship and permitted it to float no longer. + + * The gods enumerated above alone took part in the drama of + the Deluge: they were the confederates and emissaries of + Bel. The others were present as spectators of the disaster, + and were terrified. + + ** The upper part of the mountain wall is here referred to, + upon which the heaven is supported. There was a narrow space + between the escarpment and the place upon which the vault of + the firmament rested: the Babylonian poet represented the + gods as crowded like a pack of hounds upon this parapet, and + beholding from it the outburst of the tempest and the + waters. + + ***The translation is uncertain: the text refers to a legend + which has not come down to us, in which Ishtar is related to + have counselled the destruction of men. + + **** The Anunnaki represent here the evil genii whom the + gods that produced the deluge had let loose, and whom + Ramman, Nebo, Merodach, Nergal, and Ninib, all the followers + of Bel, had led to the attack upon men: the other deities + shared the fears and grief of Ishtar in regard to the + ravages which these Anunnaki had brought about (cf. below, + pp. 141-143 of this History). + + + +Three days, four days, the mountain of Nisir* stopped the ship and +permitted it to float no longer. Five days, six days, the mountain of +Nisir stopped the ship and permitted it to float no longer. The seventh +day, at dawn, I took out a dove and let it go: the dove went, turned +about, and as there was no place to alight upon, came back. I took out a +swallow and let it go: the swallow went, turned about, and as there was +no place to alight upon, came back. I took out a raven and let it go: +the raven went, and saw that the water had abated, and came near the +ship flapping its wings, croaking, and returned no more." +Shamashnapishtim escaped from the deluge, but he did not know whether +the divine wrath was appeased, or what would be done with him when it +became known that he still lived.** He resolved to conciliate the +gods by expiatory ceremonies. "I sent forth the inhabitants of the ark +towards the four winds, I made an offering, I poured out a propitiatory +libation on the summit of the mountain. I set up seven and seven +vessels, and I placed there some sweet-smelling rushes, some cedar-wood, +and storax." He thereupon re-entered the ship to await there the effect +of his sacrifice. + + * I have adopted, in the translation of this difficult + passage, the meaning suggested by Haupt, according to which + it ought to be translated, "The field makes nothing more + than one with the mountain;" that is to say, "mountains and + fields are no longer distinguishable one from another." I + have merely substituted for mountain the version wood, piece + of land covered with trees, which Jensen has suggested. + + ** The mountain of Nisir is replaced in the version of + Berossus by the Gordyan mountains of classical geography; a + passage of Assur-nazir-pal informs us that it was situated + between the Tigris and the Great Zab, according to Delitzsch + between 35 and 36 N. latitude. The Assyrian-speaking + people interpreted the name as _Salvation_, and a play upon + words probably decided the placing upon its slopes the + locality where those _saved_ from the deluge landed on the + abating of the waters. Fr. Lenormant proposes to identify it + with the peak Rowandz. + +The gods, who no longer hoped for such a wind-fall, accepted the +sacrifice with a wondering joy. "The gods sniffed up the odour, the gods +sniffed up the excellent odour, the gods gathered like flies above the +offering. "When Ishtar, the mistress of life, came in her turn, she held +up the great amulet which Anu had made for her."* She was still furious +against those who had determined upon the destruction of mankind, +especially against Bel: "These gods, I swear it on the necklace of my +neck! I will not forget them; these days I will remember, and will not +forget them for ever. Let the other gods come quickly to take part in +the offering. Bel shall have no part in the offering, for he was not +wise: but he has caused the deluge, and he has devoted my people to +destruction." Bel himself had not recovered his temper: "When he arrived +in his turn and saw the ship, he remained immovable before it, and his +heart was filled with rage against the gods of heaven. 'Who is he who +has come out of it living? No man must survive the destruction!'" The +gods had everything to fear from his anger: Ninib was eager to exculpate +himself, and to put the blame upon the right person. Ea did not disavow +his acts: "he opened his mouth and spake; he said to Bel the warrior: +'Thou, the wisest among the gods, O warrior, why wert thou not wise, and +didst cause the deluge? The sinner, make him responsible for his sin; +the criminal, make him responsible for his crime: but be calm, and do +not cut off all; be patient, and do not drown all. What was the good of +causing the deluge? A lion had only to come to decimate the people. +What was the good of causing the deluge? A leopard had only to come to +decimate the people. What was the good of causing the deluge? Famine +had only to present itself to desolate the country. What was the good +of causing the deluge? Nera the Plague had only to come to destroy the +people. As for me, I did, not reveal the judgment of the gods: I caused +Khasisadra to dream a dream, and he became aware of the judgment of the +gods, and then he made his resolve.'" Bel was pacified at the words of +Ea: "he went up into the interior of the ship; he took hold of my hand +and made me go up, even me; he made my wife go up, and he pushed her to +my side; he turned our faces towards him, he placed himself between +us, and blessed us: 'Up to this time Shamashnapishtim was a man: +henceforward let Shamashnapishtim and his wife be reverenced like us, +the gods, and let Shamashnapishtim dwell afar off, at the mouth of the +seas, and he carried us away and placed us afar off, at the mouth of the +seas.'" Another form of the legend relates that by an order of the god, +Xisuthros, before embarking, had buried in the town of Sippara all the +books in which his ancestors had set forth the sacred sciences--books +of oracles and omens, "in which were recorded the beginning, the middle, +and the end. When he had disappeared, those of his companions who +remained on board, seeing that he did not return, went out and set off +in search of him, calling him by name. He did not show himself to them, +but a voice from heaven enjoined upon them to be devout towards the +gods, to return to Babylon and dig up the books in order that they might +be handed down to future generations; the voice also informed them that +the country in which they were was Armenia. They offered sacrifice in +turn, they regained their country on foot, they dug up the books of +Sippara and wrote many more; afterwards they refounded Babylon." It was +even maintained in the time of the Seleucido, that a portion of the ark +existed on one of the summits of the Gordyan mountains.** Pilgrimages +were made to it, and the faithful scraped off the bitumen which covered +it, to make out of it amulets of sovereign virtue against evil spells. + +[Illustration: 051.jpg THE JUD MOUNTAINS SOMETIMES IDENTIFIED WITH TUB +NTSIB MOUNTAINS.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a sketch by G. Smith, _Assyrian + Discoveries_, p. 108. + + * We are ignorant of the object which the goddess lifted up: + it may have been the sceptre surmounted by a radiating star, + such as we see on certain cylinders. Several Assyriologists + translate it arrows or lightning. Ishtar is, in fact, an + armed goddess who throws the arrow or lightning made by her + father Anu, the heaven. + + ** Bekossus, fragm. xv. The legend about the remains of the + ark has passed into Jewish tradition concerning the Deluge. + Nicholas of Damascus relates, like Berossus, that they were + still to be seen on the top of Mount Baris. From that time + they have been continuously seen, sometimes on one peak and + sometimes on another. In the last century they were pointed + out to Chardin, and the memory of them has not died out in + our own century. Discoveries of charcoal and bitumen, such + as those made at Gebel Jud, upon one of the mountains + identified with Nisir, probably explain many of these local + traditions. + +The chronicle of these fabulous times placed, soon after the abating of +the waters, the foundation of a new dynasty, as extraordinary or almost +as extraordinary in character as that before the flood. According to +Berossus it was of Chaldan origin, and comprised eighty-six kings, who +bore rule during 34,080 years; the first two, Evechous and Khomasbelos, +reigned 2400 and 2700 years, while the later reigns did not exceed +the ordinary limits of human life. An attempt was afterwards made to +harmonize them with probability: the number of kings was reduced to +six, and their combined reigns to 225 years. This attempt arose from +a misapprehension of their true character; names and deeds, everything +connected with them belongs to myth and fiction only, and is irreducible +to history proper. They supplied to priests and poets material for +scores of different stories, of which several have come down to us in +fragments. Some are short, and serve as preambles to prayers or magical +formulas; others are of some length, and may pass for real epics. The +gods intervene in them, and along with kings play an important part. It +is Nera, for instance, the lord of the plague, who declares war against +mankind in order to punish them for having despised the authority of +Anu. He makes Babylon to feel his wrath first: "The children of Babel, +they were as birds, and the bird-catcher, thou wert he! thou takest them +in the net, thou enclosest them, thou decimatest them--hero Nera!" +One after the other he attacks the mother cities of the Euphrates and +obliges them to render homage to him--even Uruk, "the dwelling of Anu +and Ishtar--the town of the priestesses, of the _almehs_, and the sacred +courtesans; "then he turns upon the foreign nations and carries his +ravages as far as Phoenicia. In other fragments, the hero Etana makes an +attempt to raise himself to heaven, and the eagle, his companion, flies +away with him, without, however, being able to bring the enterprise to +a successful issue. Nimrod and his exploits are known to us from the +Bible.* "He was a mighty hunter before the Lord: wherefore it is said, +Even as Nimrod the mighty hunter before the Lord. And the beginning of +his kingdom was Babel, and Erech, and Accad, and Calneh, in the land of +Shinar." Almost all the characteristics which are attributed by Hebrew +tradition to Nimrod we find in G-ilgames, King of Uruk and descendant of +the Shamashnapishtim who had witnessed the deluge.** + + * Genesis x. 9, 10. Among the Jews and Mussulmans a complete + cycle of legends have developed around Nimrod. He built the + Tower of Babel; he threw Abraham into a fiery furnace, and + he tried to mount to heaven on the back of an eagle. Sayce + and Grivel saw in Nimrod an heroic form of Merodach, the god + of Babylonia: the majority of living Assyriologists prefer + to follow Smith's example, and identify him with the hero + Gilgames. + + ** The name of this hero is composed of three signs, which + Smith provisionally rendered Isdubar--a reading which, + modified into Gishdhubar, Gistubar, is still retained by + many Assyriologists. There have been proposed one after + another the renderings Dhubar, Namrdu, Anamarutu, Numarad, + Namrasit, all of which exhibit in the name of the hero that + of Nimrod. Pinches discovered, in 1890, what appears to be + the true signification of the three signs,Gilgamesh, + Gilgames; Sayce and Oppert have compared this name with that + of Gilgamos, a Babylonian hero, of whom. lian has preserved + the memory. A. Jeremias continued to reject both the reading + and the identification. + +Several copies of a poem, in which an unknown scribe had celebrated his +exploits, existed about the middle of the VIIth century before our era +in the Royal Library at Nineveh; they had been transcribed by order of +Assur-banipal from a more ancient copy, and the fragments of them which +have come down to us, in spite of their lacunae, enable us to restore +the original text, if not in its entirety, at least in regard to +the succession of events. They were divided into twelve episodes +corresponding with the twelve divisions of the year, and the ancient +Babylonian author was guided in his choice of these divisions by +something more than mere chance. Gilgames, at first an ordinary mortal +under the patronage of the gods, had himself become a god and son of the +goddess Aruru: "he had seen the abyss, he had learned everything that +is kept secret and hidden, he had even made known to men what had taken +place before the deluge." The sun, who had protected him in his human +condition, had placed him beside himself on the judgment-seat, and +delegated to him authority to pronounce decisions from which there was +no appeal: he was, as it were, a sun on a small scale, before whom the +kings, princes, and great ones of the earth humbly bowed their heads.* +The scribes had, therefore, some authority for treating the events of +his life after the model of the year, and for expressing them in twelve +chants, which answered to the annual course of the sun through the +twelve months. + + * The identity of Gilgames with the Accadian fire-god, or + rather with the sun, was recognized from the first by H. + Rawlinson, and has been accepted since by almost all + Assyriologists. A tablet brought back by G. Smith, called + attention to by Fr. Delitzsch, and published by Haupt, + contains the remains of a hymn addressed to Gilgames, "the + powerful king, the king of the Spirits of the Earth." + +[Illustration: 057.jpg GILGAMES STRANGLES A LION.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from an Assyrian bas-relief from + Khorsabad, in the Museum of the Louvre + +The whole story is essentially an account of his struggles with Ishtar, +and the first pages reveal him as already at issue with the goddess. His +portrait, such as the monuments have preserved it for us, is singularly +unlike the ordinary type: one would be inclined to regard it as +representing an individual of a different race, a survival of some very +ancient nation which had held rule on the plains of the Euphrates before +the arrival of the Sumerian or Semitic* tribes. + + * Smith (The Chaldan Account of Genesis, p. 194) remarked + the difference between the representations of Gilgames and + the typical Babylonian: he concluded from this that the hero + was of Ethiopian origin. Hommel declares that his features + have neither a Sumerian nor Semitic aspect, and that they + raise an insoluble question in ethnology. + +His figure is tall, broad, muscular to an astonishing degree, and +expresses at once vigour and activity; his head is massive, bony, almost +square, with a somewhat flattened face, a large nose, and prominent +cheek-bones, the whole framed by an abundance of hair, and a thick beard +symmetrically curled. All the young men of Uruk, the well-protected, +were captivated by the prodigious strength and beauty of the hero; the +elders of the city betook themselves to Ishtar to complain of the state +of neglect to which the young generation had relegated them. "He has no +longer a rival in their hearts, but thy subjects are led to battle, and +Gilgames does not send one child back to his father. Night and day they +cry after him: 'It is he the shepherd of Uruk, the well-protected, he +is its shepherd and master, he the powerful, the perfect and the wise.'" +Even the women did not escape the general enthusiasm: "he leaves not a +single virgin to her mother, a single daughter to a warrior, a single +wife to her master. Ishtar heard their complaint, the gods heard it, and +cried with a loud voice to Aruru: 'It is thou, Aruru, who hast given him +birth; create for him now his fellow, that he may be able to meet him on +a day when it pleaseth him, in order that they may fight with each other +and Uruk may be delivered.'When Aruru heard them, she created in her +heart a man of Anu. Aruru washed her hands, took a bit of clay, cast it +upon the earth, kneaded it and created Babani, the warrior, the exalted +scion, the man of Ninib, whose whole body is covered with hair, whose +tresses are as long as those of a woman; the locks of his hair bristle +on his head like those on the corn-god; he is clad in a vestment +like that of the god of the fields; he browses with the gazelles, he +quenches his thirst with the beasts of the field, he sports with the +beasts of the waters." Frequent representations of Eabani are found upon +the monuments; he has the horns of a goat, the legs and tail of a bull.* +He possessed not only the strength of a brute, but his intelligence also +embraced all things, the past and the future: he would probably have +triumphed over Gilgames if Shamash had not succeeded in attaching them +to one another by an indissoluble tie of friendship. The difficulty was +to draw these two future friends together, and to bring them face to +face without their coming to blows; the god sent his courier Sadu, +the hunter, to study the habits of the monster, and to find out the +necessary means to persuade him to come down peaceably to Uruk. +"Sadu, the hunter, proceeded to meet Eabani near the entrance of the +watering-place. One day, two days, three days, Eabani met him at the +entrance of the watering-place. He perceived Sadu, and his countenance +darkened: he entered the enclosure, he became sad, he groaned, he cried +with a loud voice, his heart was heavy, his features were distorted, +sobs burst from his breast. The hunter saw from a distance that his face +was inflamed with anger," and judging it more prudent not to persevere +farther in his enterprise, returned to impart to the god what he had +observed. + + * Smith was the first, I believe, to compare his form to + that of a satyr or faun; this comparison is rendered more + probable by the fact that the modern inhabitants of Chalda + believe in the existence of similar monsters. A. Jeremias + places Eabani alongside Priapus, who is generally a god of + the fields, and a clever soothsayer. Following out these + ideas, we might compare our Eabani with the Graico-Roman + Proteus, who pastures the flocks of the sea, and whom it was + necessary to pursue and seize by force or cunning words to + compel him to give oracular predictions. + +[Illustration: 060.jpg GILGAMES FIGHTS, ON THE LEFT WITH A BULL, ON THE +RIGHT WITH EABANI.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a Chaldan intaglio in the + Museum at the Hague. The original measures about 1 7/10 inch + in height. + +"I was afraid," said he, in finishing his narrative,* "and I did not +approach him. He had filled up the pit which I had dug to trap him, he +broke the nets which I had spread, he delivered from my hands the cattle +and the beasts of the field, he did not allow me to search the country +through." Shamash thought that where the strongest man might fail by the +employment of force, a woman might possibly succeed by the attractions +of pleasure; he commanded Sadu to go quickly to Uruk and there to +choose from among the priestesses of Ishtar one of the most beautiful.** +The hunter presented himself before Grilgames, recounted to him his +adventures, and sought his permission to take away with him one of the +sacred courtesans. "'Go, my hunter, take the priestess; when the beasts +come to the watering-place, let her display her beauty; he will see +her, he will approach her, and his beasts that troop around him will be +scattered.'"*** The hunter went, he took with him the priestess, he took +the straight road; the third day they arrived at the fatal plain. The +hunter and the priestess sat down to rest; one day, two days, they sat +at the entrance of the watering-place from whose waters Eabani drank +along with the animals, where he sported with the beasts of the water. + + * Haupt, Das Babylonische Nimrodepos, p. 9, 11. 42-50. The + beginning of each line is destroyed, and the translation of + the whole is only approximate. + + ** The priestesses of Ishtar were young and beautiful women, + devoted to the service of the goddess and her worshippers. + Besides the title _qadishtu,_ priestess, they bore various + names, _kizireti, ukhati, kharimti_; the priestess who + accompanied Sadu was an _ukhat_. + + *** As far as can be guessed from the narrative, interrupted + as it is by so many lacun, the power of Eabani over the + beasts of the field seems to have depended on his + continence. From the moment in which he yields to his + passions the beasts fly from him as they would do from an + ordinary mortal; there is then no other resource for him but + to leave the solitudes to live among men in towns. This + explains the means devised by Shamash against him: cf. in + the _Arabian Nights_ the story of Shehabeddin. + +"When Eabani arrived, he who dwells in the mountains, and who browses +upon the grass like the gazelles, who drinks with the animals, who +sports with the beasts of the water, the priestess saw the satyr." She +was afraid and blushed, but the hunter recalled her to her duty. "It is +he, priestess. Undo thy garment, show him thy form, that he may be +taken with thy beauty; be not ashamed, but deprive him of his soul. He +perceives thee, he is rushing towards thee, arrange thy garment; he is +coming upon thee, receive him with every art of woman; his beasts +which troop around him will be scattered, and he will press thee to his +breast." The priestess did as she was commanded; she received him with +every art of woman, and he pressed her to his breast. Six days and seven +nights, Eabani remained near the priestess, his well-beloved. When he +got tired of pleasure he turned his face towards his cattle, and he saw +that the gazelles had turned aside and that the beasts of the field had +fled far from him. Eabani was alarmed, he fell into a swoon, his knees +became stiff because his cattle had fled from him. While he lay as if +dead, he heard the voice of the priestess: he recovered his senses, +he came to himself full of love; he seated himself at the feet of the +priestess, he looked into her face, and while the priestess spoke his +ears listened. For it was to him the priestess spoke--to him, Eabani. +"Thou who art superb, Eabani, as a god, why dost thou live among +the beasts of the field? Come, I will conduct thee to Uruk the +well-protected, to the glorious house, the dwelling of Anu and +Ishtar--to the place where is Gilgames, whose strength is supreme, and +who, like a Urus, excels the heroes in strength." While she thus spoke +to him, he hung upon her words, he the wise of heart, he realized +by anticipation a friend. Eabani said to the priestess: "Let us go, +priestess; lead me to the glorious and holy abode of Anu and Ishtar--to +the place where is Gilgames, whose strength is supreme, and who, like +a Urus, prevails over the heroes by his strength. I will fight with him +and manifest to him my power; I will send forth a panther against Uruk, +and he must struggle with it."* The priestess conducted her prisoner +to Uruk, but the city at that moment was celebrating the festival of +Tammuz, and Gilgames did not care to interrupt the solemnities in order +to face the tasks to which Eabani had invited him: what was the use of +such trials since the gods themselves had deigned to point out to him in +a dream the line of conduct he was to pursue, and had taken up the +cause of their children. Shamash, in fact, began the instruction of the +monster, and sketched an alluring picture of the life which awaited him +if he would agree not to return to his mountain home. Not only would +the priestess belong to him for ever, having none other than him for +husband, but Gilgames would shower upon him riches and honours. "He will +give thee wherein to sleep a great bed cunningly wrought; he will seat +thee on his divan, he will give thee a place on his left hand, and +the princes of the earth shall kiss thy feet, the people of Uruk +shall grovel on the ground before thee." It was by such flatteries +and promises for the future that Gilgames gained the affection of his +servant Eabani, whom he loved for ever. + + * I have softened down a good deal the account of the + seduction, which is described with a sincerity and precision + truly primitive. + +Shamash had reasons for being urgent. Khumbaba, King of Elam, had +invaded the country of the Euphrates, destroyed the temples, and +substituted for the national worship the cult of foreign deities;* the +two heroes in concert could alone check his advance, and kill him. They +collected their troops, set out on the march, having learned from a +female magician that the enemy had concealed himself in a sacred grove. +They entered it in disguise, "and stopped in rapture for a moment before +the cedar trees; they contemplated the height of them, they contemplated +the thickness of them; the place where Khumbaba was accustomed to walk +up and down with rapid strides, alleys were made in it, paths kept up +with great care. They saw at length the hill of cedars, the abode of the +gods, the sanctuary of Irnini, and before the hill, a magnificent cedar, +and pleasant grateful shade." They surprised Khumbaba at the moment when +he was about to take his outdoor exercise, cut off his head, and came +back in triumph to Uruk.** "Gilgames brightened his weapons, he polished +his weapons. He put aside his war-harness, he put on his white garments, +he adorned himself with the royal insignia, and bound on the diadem: +Gilgames put his tiara on his head, and bound on his diadem." + + * Khumbaba contains the name of the Elamite god, Khumba, + whichenters into the composition of names of towns, like Ti- + Khumbi; or into those of princes, as Khumbanigash, + Khumbasundasa, Khumbasidh. The comparison between Khumbaba + and Combabos, the hero of a singular legend, current in the + second century of our era, does not seem to be admissible, + at least for the present. The names agree well in sound, + but, as Oppert has rightly said, no event in the history of + Combabos finds a counterpart in anything we know of that of + Khumbaba up to the present. + + ** G. Smith places at this juncture Gilgames's accession to + the throne; this is not confirmed by the fragments of the + text known up to the present, and it is not even certain + that the poem relates anywhere the exaltation and coronation + of the hero. It would appear even that Gilgames is + recognized from the beginning as King of Uruk, the well- + protected. + +Ishtar saw him thus adorned, and the same passion consumed her which +inflames mortals.* "To the love of Gilgames she raised her eyes, the +mighty Ishtar, and she said, 'Come, Gilgames, be my husband, thou! Thy +love, give it to me, as a gift to me, and thou shalt be my spouse, and +I shall be thy wife. I will place thee in a chariot of lapis and gold, +with golden wheels and mountings of onyx: thou shalt be drawn in it by +great lions, and thou shalt enter our house with the odorous incense of +cedar-wood. When thou shalt have entered our house, all the country by +the sea shall embrace thy feet, kings shall bow down before thee, the +nobles and the great ones, the gifts of the mountains and of the plain +they will bring to thee as tribute. Thy oxen shall prosper, thy sheep +shall be doubly fruitful, thy mules shall spontaneously come under the +yoke, thy chariot-horse shall be strong and shall galop, thy bull +under the yoke shall have no rival.'" Gilgames repels this unexpected +declaration with a mixed feeling of contempt and apprehension: he abuses +the goddess, and insolently questions her as to what has become of her +mortal husbands during her long divine life. "Tammuz, the spouse of thy +youth, thou hast condemned him to weep from year to year.** Nilala, the +spotted sparrow-hawk, thou lovedst him, afterward thou didst strike +him and break his wing: he continues in the wood and cries: 'O, my +wings!'*** Thou didst afterwards love a lion of mature strength, and +then didst cause him to be rent by blows, seven at a time.**** Thou +lovedst also a stallion magnificent in the battle; thou didst devote him +to death by the goad and whip: thou didst compel him to galop for ten +leagues, thou didst devote him to exhaustion and thirst, thou didst +devote to tears his mother Silili. + + * Ishtar's declaration to Gilgames and the hero's reply have + been frequently translated and summarized since the + discovery of the poem. Smith thought to connect this episode + with the "Descent of Ishtar to Hades," which we shall meet + with further on in this History, but his opinion is no + longer accepted. The "Descent of Ishtar" in its present + condition is the beginning of a magical formula: it has + nothing to do with the acts of Gilgames. + + ** Tammuz-Adonis is the only one known to us among this long + list of the lovers of the goddess. The others must have been + fairly celebrated among the Chaldans, since the few words + devoted to each is sufficient to recall them to the memory + of the reader, but we have not as yet found anything + bearing upon their adventures in the table of the ancient + Chaldo-Assyrian classics, which had been copied out by a + Ninevite scribe for the use of Assur-bani-pal, the title of + the poems is wanting. + + *** The text gives _kapp_, and the legend evidently refers + to a bird whose cry resembles the word meaning "my + wings." The spotted sparrow-hawk utters a cry which may be + strictly understood and interpreted in this way. + + **** This is evidently the origin of our fable of the + "Amorous Lion." + +Thou didst also love the shepherd Tabulu, who lavished incessantly upon +thee the smoke of sacrifices, and daily slaughtered goats to thee; thou +didst strike him and turn him into a leopard; his own servants went in +pursuit of him, and his dogs followed his trail.* Thou didst love +Ishullanu, thy father's gardener, who ceaselessly brought thee presents +of fruit, and decorated every day thy table. Thou raisedst thine eyes to +him, thou seizedst him: 'My Ishullanu, we shall eat melons, then shalt +thou stretch forth thy hand and remove that which separates us.' +Ishullanu said to thee: 'I, what dost thou require from me? O my mother, +prepare no food for me, I myself will not eat: anything I should eat +would be for me a misfortune and a curse, and my body would be stricken +by a mortal coldness.' Then thou didst hear him and didst become angry, +thou didst strike him, thou didst transform him into a dwarf, thou didst +set him up on the middle of a couch; he could not rise up, he could not +get down from where he was. Thou lovest me now, afterwards thou wilt +strike me as thou didst these."** + + * The changing of a lover, by the goddess or sorceress + who loves him, into a beast, occurs pretty frequently in + Oriental tales; as to the man changed by Ishtar into a + brute, which she caused to be torn by his own hounds, we may + compare the classic story of Artemis surprised at her bath + by Actseon. + + ** As to the misfortune of Ishullanu, we may compare the + story in the _Abrabian Nights_ of the Fisherman and the + Genie shut up in the leaden bottle. The king of the Black + Islands was transformed into a statue from the waist to the + feet by the sorceress, whom he had married and afterwards + offended; he remained lying on a bed, from which he could + not get down, and the unfaithful one came daily to whip him. + +"When Ishtar heard him, she fell into a fury, she ascended to heaven. +The mighty Ishtar presented herself before her father Anu, before her +mother Anatu she presented herself, and said: 'My father, Grilgames +has despised me. Grilgames has enumerated my unfaithfulnesses, my +unfaithfulnesses and my ignominies.' Anu opened his mouth and spake to +the mighty Ishtar: 'Canst thou not remain quiet now that Gilgames +has enumerated to thee thy unfaithfulnesses, thy unfaithfulnesses and +ignominies?'" But she refused to allow the outrage to go unpunished. +She desired her father to make a celestial urus who would execute her +vengeance on the hero; and, as he hesitated, she threatened to destroy +every living thing in the entire universe by suspending the impulses of +desire, and the effect of love. Anu finally gives way to her rage: he +creates a frightful urus, whose ravages soon rendered uninhabitable the +neighbourhood of Uruk the well-protected. The two heroes, Gilgames and +Eabani, touched by the miseries and terror of the people, set out on the +chase, and hastened to rouse the beast from its lair on the banks of +the Euphrates in the marshes, to which it resorted after each murderous +onslaught. + +[Illustration: 068.jpg GILGAMES AND EABANI FIGHTING WITH MONSTERS.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a Chaldan intaglio in the New + York Museum. The original is about an inch and a half in + height. + +A troop of three hundred valiant warriors penetrated into the thickets +in three lines to drive the animal towards the heroes. The beast with +head lowered charged them; but Eabani seized it with one hand by the +right horn, and with the other by the tail, and forced it to rear. +Gilgames at the same instant, seizing it by the leg, plunged his dagger +into its heart. The beast being despatched, they celebrated their +victory by a sacrifice of thanksgiving, and poured out a libation to +Sharnash, whose protection had not failed them in this last danger. +Ishtar, her projects of vengeance having been defeated, "ascended the +ramparts of Uruk the well-protected. She sent forth a loud cry, she +hurled forth a malediction: 'Cursed be Gilgames, who has insulted me, +and who has killed the celestial urus.' Eabani heard these words of +Ishtar, he tore a limb from the celestial urus and threw it in the face +of the goddess: 'Thou also I will conquer, and I will treat thee like +him: I will fasten the curse upon thy sides.' Ishtar assembled her +priestesses, her female votaries, her frenzied women, and together they +intoned a dirge over the limb of the celestial urus. Gilgames assembled +all the turners in ivory, and the workmen were astonished at the +enormous size of the horns; they were worth thirty _mim_ of lapis, +their diameter was a half-cubit, and both of them could contain six +measures of oil." He dedicated them to Shamash, and suspended them on +the corners of the altar; then he washed his hands in the Euphrates, +re-entered Uruk, and passed through the streets in triumph. A riotous +banquet ended the day, but on that very night Eabani felt himself +haunted by an inexplicable and baleful dream, and fortune abandoned the +two heroes. Gilgames had cried in the intoxication of success to the +women of Uruk: "Who shines forth among the valiant? Who is glorious +above all men? Gilgames shines forth among the valiant, Gilgames is +glorious above all men." Ishtar made him feel her vengeance in the +destruction of that beauty of which he was so proud; she covered him +with leprosy from head to foot, and made him an object of horror to his +friends of the previous day. A life of pain and a frightful death--he +alone could escape them who dared to go to the confines of the world in +quest of the Fountain of Youth and the Tree of Life which were said to +be there hidden; but the road was rough, unknown, beset by dangers, and +no one of those who had ventured upon it had ever returned. Gilgames +resolved to brave every peril rather than submit to his fate, and +proposed this fresh adventure to his friend Eabani, who, notwithstanding +his sad forebodings, consented to accompany him. They killed a tiger +on the way, but Eabani was mortally wounded in a struggle in which they +engaged in the neighbourhood of Nipur, and breathed his last after an +agony of twelve days' duration. + +"Gilgames wept bitterly over his friend Eabani, grovelling on the bare +earth." The selfish fear of death struggled in his spirit with regret at +having lost so dear a companion, a tried friend in so many encounters. +"I do not wish to die like Eabani: sorrow has entered my heart, the fear +of death has taken possession of me, and I am overcome. But I will go +with rapid steps to the strong Shamashnapishtim, son of Ubaratutu, +to learn from him how to become immortal." He leaves the plain of the +Euphrates, he plunges boldly into the desert, he loses himself for a +whole day amid frightful solitudes. "I reached at nightfall a ravine in +the mountain, I beheld lions and trembled, but I raised my face towards +the moon-god, and I prayed: my supplication ascended even to the father +of the gods, and he extended over me his protection." A vision from on +high revealed to him the road he was to take. With axe and dagger +in hand, he reached the entrance of a dark passage leading into the +mountain of Mshu,* "whose gate is guarded day and night by supernatural +beings." + + * The land of Mshu is the land to the west of the + Euphrates, coterminous on one part with the northern regions + of the Red Sea, on the other with the Persian Gulf; the name + appears to be preserved in that of the classic Mesene, and + possibly in the land of Massa of the Hebrews. + +[Illustration: 071.jpg THE SCORPION-MEN OF THE MOUNTAINS OF MSHU.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from an Assyrian intaglio. + +"The scorpion-men, of whom the stature extends upwards as far as the +supports of heaven, and of whom the breasts descend as low as Hades, +guard the door. The terror which they inspire strikes down like a +thunderbolt; their look kills, their splendour confounds and overturns +the mountains; they watch over the sun at his rising and setting. +Grilgames perceived them, and his features were distorted with fear and +horror; their savage appearance disturbed his mind. The scorpion-man +said to his wife: 'He who comes towards us, his body is marked by the +gods.'* The scorpion-woman replied to him: 'In his mind he is a god, in +his mortal covering he is a man.' The scorpion-man spoke and said: +'It is as the father of the gods, has commanded, he has travelled over +distant regions before joining us, thee and me.'" Gilgames learns +that the guardians are not evilly disposed towards him, and becomes +reassured, tell them his misfortunes and implores permission to pass +beyond them so as to reach "Sha-mashnapishtim, his father, who was +translated to the gods, and who has at his disposal both life and +death." The scorpion-man in vain shows to him the perils before him, of +which the horrible darkness enveloping the Mshu mountains is not the +least: Gilgames proceeds through the depths of the darkness for long +hours, and afterwards comes out in the neighbourhood of a marvellous +forest upon the shore of the ocean which encircles the world. One tree +especially excites his wonder: "As soon as he sees it he runs towards +it. Its fruits are so many precious stones, its boughs are splendid +to look upon, for the branches are weighed down with lapis, and their +fruits are superb." When his astonishment had calmed down, Gilgames +begins to grieve, and to curse the ocean which stays his steps. "Sabitu, +the virgin who is seated on the throne of the seas," perceiving him +from a distance, retires at first to her castle, and barricades herself +within it. He calls out to her from the strand, implores and threatens +her in turn, adjures her to help him in his voyage. "If it can be done, +I will cross the sea; if it cannot be done, I will lay me down on the +land to die." The goddess is at length touched by his tears. "Gilgames, +there has never been a passage hither, and no one from time immemorial +has been able to cross the sea. Shamash the valiant crossed the sea; +after Shamash, who can cross it? The crossing is troublesome, the way +difficult, perilous the Water of Death, which, like a bolt, is drawn +between thee and thy aim. Even if, Gilgames, thou didst cross the +sea, what wouldest thou do on arriving at the Water of Death?" Arad-Ea, +Shamashnapishtim's mariner, can alone bring the enterprise to a happy +ending: "if it is possible, thou shalt cross the sea with him; if it is +not possible, thou shalt retrace thy steps." + +* We must not forget that Gilgames is covered with leprosy; this is the +disease with which the Chaldan gods mark their enemies when they wish +to punish them in a severe fashion. + +[Illustration: 073.jpg GILGAMES AND ARAD-EA NAVIGATING THEIR VESSEL.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a Chaldan intaglio in the + British Museum. The original measures a little over an inch. + +Arad-Ea and the hero took ship: forty days' tempestuous cruising brought +them to the Waters of Death, which with a supreme effort they passed. +Beyond these they rested on their oars and loosed their girdles: the +happy island rose up before them, and Shamashnapishtim stood upon the +shore, ready to answer the questions of his grandson. + +None but a god dare enter his mysterious paradise: the bark bearing +an ordinary mortal must stop at some distance from the shore, and the +conversation is carried on from on board. Gilgames narrated once +more the story of his life, and makes known the object of his visit; +Shamashnapishtim answers him stoically that death follows from an +inexorable law, to which it is better to submit with a good grace. +"However long the time we shall build houses, however long the time we +shall put our seal to contracts, however long the time brothers shall +quarrel with each other, however long the time there shall be hostility +between kings, however long the time rivers shall overflow their banks, +we shall not be able to portray any image of death. When the spirits +salute a man at his birth, then the genii of the earth, the great gods, +Mamitu the moulder of destinies, all of them together assign a fate to +him, they determine for him his life and death; but the day of his death +remains unknown to him." Gilgames thinks, doubtless, that his forefather +is amusing himself at his expense in preaching resignation, seeing that +he himself had been able to escape this destiny. "I look upon thee, +Shamashnapishtim, and thy appearance has not changed: thou art like me +and not different, thou art like me and I am like thee. Thou wouldest +be strong enough of heart to enter upon a combat, to judge by thy +appearance; tell me, then, how thou hast obtained this existence among +the gods to which thou hast aspired?" Shamashnapishtim yields to his +wish, if only to show him how abnormal his own case was, and indicate +the merits which had marked him out for a destiny superior to that of +the common herd of humanity. He describes the deluge to him, and relates +how he was able to escape from it by the favour of Ea, and how by that +of Bel he was made while living a member of the army of the gods. "'And +now,' he adds, 'as far as thou art concerned, which one of the Gods will +bestow upon thee the strength to obtain the life which thou seekest? +Come, go to sleep!' Six days and seven nights he is as a man whose +strength appears suspended, for sleep has fallen upon him like a blast +of wind. Shamashnapishtim spoke to his wife: 'Behold this man who asks +for life, and upon whom sleep has fallen like a blast of wind.' The wife +answers Shamashnapishtim, the man of distant lands: 'Cast a spell upon +him, this man, and he will eat of the magic broth; and the road by which +he has come, he will retrace it in health of body; and the great gate +through which he has come forth, he will return by it to his country.' +Shamashnapishtim spoke to his wife: 'The misfortunes of this man +distress thee: very well, cook the broth, and place it by his head.' +And while Gilgames still slept on board his vessel, the material for the +broth was gathered; on the second day it was picked, on the third it was +steeped, on the fourth Shamashnapishtim prepared his pot, on the fifth +he put into it 'Senility,' on the sixth the broth was cooked, on the +seventh he cast his spell suddenly on his man, and the latter consumed +the broth. Then Gilgames spoke to Shamashnapishtim, the inhabitant of +distant lands: 'I hesitated, slumber laid hold of me; thou hast cast a +spell upon me, thou hast given me the broth.'" The effect would not have +been lasting, if other ceremonies had not followed in addition to this +spell from the sorcerer's kitchen: Gilgames after this preparation could +now land upon the shore of the happy island and purify himself there. +Shamashnapishtim confided this business to his mariner Arad-Ea: "'The +man whom thou hast brought, his body is covered with ulcers, the leprous +scabs have spoiled the beauty of his body. Take him, Arad-Ea, lead him +to the place of purification, let him wash his ulcers white as snow in +the water, let him get rid of his scabs, and let the sea bear them away +so that at length his body may appear healthy. He will then change +the fillet which binds his brows, and the loin-cloth which hides his +nakedness: until he returns to his country, until he reaches the end of +his journey, let him by no means put off the loin-cloth, however ragged; +then only shall he have always a clean one.' Then Arad-Ea took him and +conducted him to the place of purification: he washed his ulcers white +as snow in the water, he got rid of his scabs, and the sea carried them +away, so that at length his body appeared healthy. He changed the fillet +which bound his brows, the loincloth which hid his nakedness: until +he should reach the end of his journey, he was not to put off the +loin-cloth, however ragged; then alone was he to have a clean one." The +cure effected, Gilgames goes again on board his bark, and returns to the +place where Shamashnapishtim was awaiting him. + +Shamashnapishtim would not send his descendant back to the land of the +living without making him a princely present. "His wife spoke to him, +to him Shamashnapishtim, the inhabitant of distant lands: 'Gilgames has +come, he is comforted, he is cured; what wilt thou give to him, now that +he is about to return to his country?' He took the oars, Gilgames, he +brought the bark near the shore, and Shamashnapishtim spoke to him, to +Gilgames: 'Gilgames, thou art going from here comforted; what shall I +give thee, now that thou art about to return to thy country? I am about +to reveal to thee, Gilgames, a secret, and the judgment of the gods I am +about to tell it thee. There is a plant similar to the hawthorn in its +flower, and whose thorns prick like the viper. If thy hand can lay hold +of that plant without being torn, break from it a branch, and bear it +with thee; it will secure for thee an eternal youth.'Gilgames gathers +the branch, and in his joy plans with Arad-Ea future enterprises: +'Arad-Ea, this plant is the plant of renovation, by which a man +obtains life; I will bear it with me to Uruk the well-protected, I will +cultivate a bush from it, I will cut some of it, and its name shall +be, "the old man becomes young by it;" I will eat of it, and I shall +repossess the vigour of my youth.'" He reckoned without the gods, whose +jealous minds will not allow men to participate in their privileges. +The first place on which they set foot on shore, "he perceived a well of +fresh water, went down to it, and whilst he was drawing water, a serpent +came out of it, and snatched from him the plant, yea--the serpent rushed +out and bore away the plant, and while escaping uttered a malediction. +That day Gilgames sat down, he wept, and his tears streamed down his +cheeks he said to the mariner Arad-Ba: 'What is the use, Arad-Ea, of my +renewed strength; what is the use of my heart's rejoicing in my return +to life? It is not myself I have served; it is this earthly lion I have +served. Hardly twenty leagues on the road, and he for himself alone has +already taken possession of the plant. As I opened the well, the plant +was lost to me, and the genius of the fountain took possession of it: +who am I that I should tear it from him?'" He re-embarks in sadness, +he re-enters Uruk the well-protected, and at length begins to think of +celebrating the funeral solemnities of Eabani, to whom he was not able +to show respect at the time of his death. He supervises them, fulfils +the rites, intones the final chant: "The temples, thou shalt enter them +no more; the white vestments, thou shalt no longer put them on; the +sweet-smelling ointments, thou shalt no longer anoint thyself with them +to envelop thee with their perfume. Thou shalt no longer press thy +bow to the ground to bend it, but those that the bow has wounded shall +surround thee; thou no longer holdest thy sceptre in thy hand, but +spectres fascinate thee; thou no longer adornest thy feet with wings, +thou no longer givest forth a sound upon the earth. Thy wife whom thou +lovedst thou embracest her no more; thy wife whom thou hatedst thou +beatest her no more. Thy daughter whom thou lovedst thou embracest her +no more; thy daughter whom thou hatedst, thou beatest her no more. The +resounding earth lies heavy upon thee, she who is dark, she who is +dark, Tjinazu the mother, she who is dark, whose side is-not veiled with +splendid vestments, whose bosom, like a new-born animal, is not covered. +Eabani has descended from the earth to Hades; it is not the messenger +of Nergal the implacable who has snatched him away, it is not the plague +which has carried him off, it is not consumption that has carried him +off, it is the earth which has carried him off; it is not the field of +battle which has carried him off, it is the earth which has carried him +off!" Gilgames dragged himself along from temple to temple, repeating +his complaint before Bel and before Sin, and at length threw himself +at the feet of the god of the Dead, Nergal: "'Burst open the sepulchral +cavern, open the ground, that the spirit of Eabani may issue from the +soil like a blast of wind.' As soon as Nergal the valiant heard him, +he burst open the sepulchral vault, he opened the earth, he caused the +spirit of Eabani to issue from the earth like a blast of wind." Gilgames +interrogates him, and asks him with anxiety what the state of the dead +may be: "'Tell, my friend, tell, my friend, open the earth and what thou +seest tell it.'--'I cannot tell it thee, my friend, I cannot tell it +thee; if I should open the earth before thee, if I were to tell to thee +that which I have seen, terror would overthrow thee, thou wouldest faint +away, thou wouldest weep.'--'Terror will overthrow me, I shall faint +away, I shall weep, but tell it to me.'" And the ghost depicts for him +the sorrows of the abode and the miseries of the shades. Those only +enjoy some happiness who have fallen with arms in their hands, and who +have been solemnly buried after the fight; the manes neglected by their +relatives succumb to hunger and thirst.* "On a sleeping couch he lies, +drinking pure water, he who has been killed in battle. 'Thou hast seen +him?'--'I have seen him; his father and his mother support his head, and +his wife bends over him wailing.' 'But he whose body remains forgotten +in the fields,--thou hast seen him?'--'I have seen him; his soul has no +rest at all in the earth.' 'He whose soul no one cares for,--thou hast +seen him?'--'I have seen him; the dregs of the cup, the remains of a +repast, that which is thrown among the refuse of the street, that is +what he has to nourish him.'" This poem did not proceed in its entirety, +or at one time, from the imagination of a single individual. Each +episode of it answers to some separate legend concerning Gilgames, or +the origin of Uruk the well-protected: the greater part preserves under +a later form an air of extreme antiquity, and, if the events dealt with +have not a precise bearing on the life of a king, they paint in a lively +way the vicissitudes of the life of the people.** These lions, leopards, +or gigantic uruses with which Grilgames and his faithful Eabani carry +on so fierce a warfare, are not, as is sometimes said, mythological +animals. + + * Cf. vol. i. pp. 160, 161 of this History for analogous + ideas among the Egyptians as to the condition of the dead + who were neglected by their relatives: the Egyptian double + had to live on the same refuse as the Chaldan soul. + + ** G. Smith, identifying Gilgames with Nimrod, believes, on + the other hand, that Nimrod was a real king, who reigned in + Mesopotamia about 2250 B.C.; the poem contains, according to + him, episodes, more or less embellished, in the life of the + sovereign. + +Similar monsters, it was believed, appeared from time to time in the +marshes of Chalda, and gave proof of their existence to the inhabitants +of neighbouring villages by such ravages as real lions and tigers commit +in India or the Sahara. It was the duty of chiefs on the border lands of +the Euphrates, as on the banks of the Nile, as among all peoples still +sunk in semi-barbarism, to go forth to the attack of these beasts +single-handed, and to sacrifice themselves one after the other, until +one of them more fortunate or stronger than the rest should triumph +over these mischievous brutes. The kings of Babylon and Nineveh in later +times converted into a pleasure that which had been an official duty of +their early predecessors: Gilgames had not yet arrived at that stage, +and the seriousness, not to speak of the fear, with which he entered +on the fight with such beasts, is an evidence of the early date of the +portions of his history which are concerned with his hunting exploits. +The scenes are represented on the seals of princes who reigned prior to +the year 3000 B.C., and the work of the ancient engraver harmonizes so +perfectly with the description of the comparatively modern scribe that +it seems like an anticipated illustration of the latter; the engravings +represent so persistently and with so little variation the images of +the monsters, and those of Gilgames and his faithful Eabani, that the +corresponding episodes in the poem must have already existed as we know +them, if not in form, at least in their main drift. Other portions of +the poem are more recent, and it would seem that the expedition against +Khumbaba contains allusions to the Elamite* invasions from which Chalda +had suffered so much towards the XXth century before our era. The +traditions which we possess of the times following the Deluge, embody, +like the adventures of Gilganes, very ancient elements, which the +scribes or narrators wove together in a more or less skilful manner +around the name of some king or divinity. + + * Smith thought he could restore from the poem a part of + Chaldan history: he supposed Izdubar-Nimrod to have been, + about 2250, the liberator of Babylon, oppressed by Elam, and + the date of the foundation of a great Babylonian empire to + have coincided with his victory over the Elamites. The + annals of Assurbanipal show us, in fact, that an Elamite + king, Kudurnankhundi, had pillaged Uruk about 2280 B.C., and + had transported to Susa a statue of the goddess Ishtar. + +[Illustration: 082.jpg GILGAMES STRUGGLES WITH A LION] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a Chaldan intaglio in the + British Museum. The original measures about 1 2/5 inch in + height. + +The fabulous chronicle of the cities of the Euphrates existed, +therefore, in a piecemeal condition--in the memory of the people or in +the books of the priests--before even their primitive history began; +the learned who collected it later on had only to select some of the +materials with which it furnished them, in order to form out of them a +connected narrative, in which the earliest ages were distinguished from +the most recent only in the assumption of more frequent and more direct +interpositions of the powers of heaven in the affairs of men. Every city +had naturally its own version, in which its own protecting deities, its +heroes and princes, played the most important parts. That of Babylon +threw all the rest into the shade; not that it was superior to them, +but because this city had speedily become strong enough to assert its +political supremacy over the whole region of the Euphrates. Its scribes +were accustomed to see their master treat the lords of other towns as +subjects or vassals. They fancied that this must have always been +the case, and that from its origin Babylon had been recognized as the +queen-city to which its contemporaries rendered homage. They made its +individual annals the framework for the history of the entire country, +and from the succession of its princely families on the throne, diverse +as they were in origin, they constructed a complete canon of the kings +of Chalda. + +But the manner of grouping the names and of dividing the dynasties +varied according to the period in which the lists were drawn up, and at +the present time we are in possession of at least two systems which the +Babylonian historians attempted to construct. Berossus, who communicated +one of them to the Greeks about the beginning of the IInd century B.C., +would not admit more than eight dynasties in the period of thirty-six +thousand years between the Deluge and the Persian invasion. The lists, +which he had copied from originals in the cuneiform character, have +suffered severely at the hands of his abbreviators, who omitted the +majority of the names which seemed to them very barbarous in form, while +those who copied these abbreviated lists have made such further havoc +with them that they are now for the most part unintelligible. Modern +criticism has frequently attempted to restore them, with varying +results; the reconstruction here given, which passes for the most +probable, is not equally certain in all its parts:--* + +[Illustration: 084.jpg CHRONOLOGIC TABLE] + +It was not without reason that Berossus and his authorities had put the +sum total of reigns at thirty-six thousand years; this number falls in +with a certain astrological period, during which the gods had granted to +the Chaldans glory, prosperity, and independence, and whose termination +coincided with the capture of Babylon by Cyrus.** Others before them had +employed the same artifice, but they reckoned ten dynasties in the place +of the eight accepted by Berossus:-- + + * After the example of G. B. Niebuhr, Gutschmid admitted + here, as Oppert did, 45 Assyrians; he based his view on + Herodotus, in which it is said that the Assyrians held sway + in Asia for 520 years, until its conquest by the Medes. Upon + the improbability of this opinion, see Schrader's + demonstration. + + ** The existence of this astronomical or astrological scheme + on which Berossus founded his chronology, was pointed out by + Brandis, afterwards by Gutschmid; it is now generally + accepted. + +[Illustration: 085.jpg TABLE] + +Attempts have been made to bring the two lists* into harmony, with +varying results; in my opinion, a waste of time and labour. For even +comparatively recent periods of their history, the Chaldans, like +the Egyptians, had to depend upon a collection of certain abbreviated, +incoherent, and often contradictory documents, from which they found it +difficult to make a choice: they could not, therefore, always come to an +agreement when they wished to determine how many dynasties had succeeded +each other during these doubtful epochs, how many kings were included in +each dynasty, and what length of reign was to be assigned to each king. +We do not know the motives which influenced Berossus in his preference +of one tradition over others; perhaps he had no choice in the matter, +and that of which he constituted himself the interprter was the only +one which was then known. In any case, the tradition he followed forms a +system which we cannot, modify without misinterpreting the intention of +those who drew it up or who have handed it down to us. We must accept +or reject it just as it is, in its entirety and without alteration: +to attempt to adapt it to the testimony of the monuments would be +equivalent to the creation of a new system, and not to the correction +simply of the old one. The right course is to put it aside for the +moment, and confine ourselves to the original lists whose fragments have +come down to us: they do not furnish us, it is true, with a history of +Chalda such as it unfolded itself from age to age, but they teach us +what the later Chaldans knew, or thought they knew, of that history. +Still it is wise to treat them with some reserve, and not to forget that +if they agree with each other in the main, they differ frequently in +details. Thus the small dynasties, which are called the VIth and VIIth, +include the same number of kings on both the tablets which establish +their existence, but the number of years assigned to the names of +the kings and the total years of each dynasty vary a little from one +another:-- + + * The first document having claim to the title of Royal + Canon was found among the tablets of the British Museum, and + was published by G. Smith. The others were successively + discovered by Pinches; some erroneous readings in them have + been corrected by Fr. Delitzsch, and an exact edition has + been published by Knudtzon. Smith's list is the fragment of + a chronicle in which the VIth, VIIth, and VIIIth dynasties + only are almost complete. One of Pinches's lists consists + merely of a number of royal names not arranged in any + consistent order, and containing their non-Semitic as well + as their Semitic forms. The other two lists are actual + canons, giving the names of the kings and the years of their + reigns; unfortunately they are much mutilated, and the + lacun in them cannot yet be filled up. All of them have + been translated by Sayce. + +[Illustration: 080.jpg TABLE] + +[Illustration: 081.jpg TABLE] + +Is the difference in the calculations the fault of the scribes, who, +in mechanically copying and recopying, ended by fatally altering the +figures? Or is it to be explained by some circumstance of which we are +ignorant--an association on the throne, of which the duration is at one +time neglected with regard to one of the co-regents, and at another time +with regard to the other; or was it owing to a question of legitimacy, +by which, according to the decision arrived at, a reign was prolonged or +abbreviated? Cotemporaneous monuments will some day, perhaps, enable +us to solve the problem which the later Chaldans did not succeed in +clearing up. While awaiting the means to restore a rigorously exact +chronology, we must be content with the approximate information +furnished by the tablets as to the succession of the Babylonian kings. + +Actual history occupied but a small space in the lists--barely twenty +centuries out of a whole of three hundred and sixty: beyond the historic +period the imagination was given a free rein, and the few facts which +were known disappeared almost completely under the accumulation of +mythical narratives and popular stories. It was not that the documents +were entirely wanting, for the Chaldans took a great interest in their +past history, and made a diligent search for any memorials of it. Each +time they succeeded in disinterring an inscription from the ruins of a +town, they were accustomed to make-several copies of it, and to deposit +them among the archives, where they would be open to the examination +of their archaeologists.* When a prince undertook the rebuilding of +a temple, he always made excavations under the first courses of the +ancient structure in order to recover the documents which preserved the +memory of its foundation: if he discovered them, he recorded on the new +cylinders, in which he boasted of his own work, the name of the first +builder, and sometimes the number of years which had elapsed since its +erection.** + + * We have a considerable number of examples of copies of + ancient texts made in this manner. For instance, the + dedication of a temple at Uruk by King Singashid, copied by + the scribe Nabubalatsuikbi, son of Mizira ("the Egyptian + "), for the temple of Ezida; the legendary history of King + Sargon of Agad, copied from the inscription on the base of + his statue, of which there will be further mention (pp. 91- + 93 of this History); a dedication of the King Khammurabi; + the inscription of Agumkakrimi, which came from the library + of Assurbanipal. + + ** Nabonidos, for instance, the last king of Babylon before + the Persian conquest, has left us a memorial of his + excavations. He found in this manner the cylinders of + Shagashaltiburiash at Sippara, those of Khammurabi, and + those of Naramsin. + +We act in a similar way to-day, and our excavations, like those of the +Chaldaeans, end in singularly disconnected results: the materials which +the earth yields for the reconstruction of the first centuries consist +almost entirely of mutilated records of local dynasties, isolated +names of sovereigns, dedications of temples to gods, on sites no longer +identifiable, of whose nature we know nothing, and too brief allusions +to conquests or victories over vaguely designated nations.* The +population was dense and life active in the plains of the Lower +Euphrates. The cities in this region formed at their origin so many +individual and, for the most part, petty states, whose kings and patron +gods claimed to be independent of all the neighbouring kings and gods: +one city, one god, one lord--this was the rule here as in the ancient +feudal districts from which the nomes of Egypt arose. The strongest +of these principalities imposed its laws upon the weakest: formed into +unions of two or three under a single ruler, they came to constitute a +dozen kingdoms of almost equal strength on the banks of the Euphrates. +On the north we are acquainted with those of Agad, Babylon, Kuta, +Kharsag-Kalama, and that of Kishu, which comprised a part of Mesopotamia +and possibly the distant fortress of Harran: petty as these States were, +their rulers attempted to conceal their weakness by assuming such titles +as "Kings of the Four Houses of the World," "Kings of the Universe," +"Kings of Shumir and Akkad." Northern Babylonia seems to have possessed +a supremacy amongst them. We are probably wise in not giving too much +credit to the fragmentary tablet which assigns to it a dynasty of +kings, of which we have no confirmatory information from other +sources--Amilgula, Shamashnazir, Amilsin, and several others: this list, +however, places among these phantom rulers one individual at least, +Shargina-Sharrukin, who has left us material evidences of his existence. +This Sargon the Elder, whose complete name is Shargani-shar-ali, was +the son of a certain Ittibel, who does not appear to have been king. +At first his possessions were confined to the city of Agad and some +undetermined portions of the environs of Babylon, but he soon succeeded +in annexing Babylon itself, Sippara, Kshu, Uruk, Kuta, and Nipur: the +contemporary records attest his conquest of Elam, Guti, and even of the +far-off land of Syria, which was already known to him under the name of +Amuru. His activity as a builder was in no way behind his warlike zeal. +He built Ekur, the sanctuary of Bel in Nipur, and the great temple +Eulbar in Agad, in honour of Anunit, the goddess presiding over the +morning star. He erected in Babylon a palace which afterwards became a +royal burying-place. He founded a new capital, a city which he peopled +with families brought from Kishu and Babylon: for a long time after his +day it bore the name which he bestowed upon it, Dur-Sharrukn. This +sums up all the positive knowledge we have about him, and the later +Chaldseans seem not to have been much better informed than ourselves. + + * The earliest Assyriologists, H. Rawlinson, Oppert, + considered the local kings as having been, for the most + part, kings of all Chalda, and placed them in succession + one after the other in the framework of the most ancient + dynasties of Berossus. The merit of having established the + existence of series of local dynasties, and of having given + to Chaldan history its modern form, belongs to G. Smith. + Smith's idea was adopted by Menant, by Delitzsch-Murdter, by + Tiele, by Winckler, and by all Assyriologists, with + modifications suggested by the progress of decipherment. + +They filled up the lacunae of his history with legends. As he seemed +to them to have appeared suddenly on the scene, without any apparent +connection with the king who preceded him, they assumed that he was a +usurper of unknown origin, irregularly introduced by the favour of the +gods into the lawful series of kings. An inscription engraved, it was +said, on one of his statues, and afterwards, about the VIIth century +B.C., copied and deposited in the library of Nineveh, related at length +the circumstances of his mysterious birth. "Sharrukn, the mighty king, +the king of Agad, am I. My mother was a princess; my father, I did not +know him; the brother of my father lived in the mountains. My town was +Azupirni, which is situated on the bank of the Euphrates. My mother, +the princess, conceived me, and secretly gave birth to me: she placed +me in a basket of reeds, she shut up the mouth of it with bitumen, she +abandoned me to the river, which did not overwhelm me. The river bore +me; it brought me to Akki, the drawer of water. Akki, the drawer of +water, received me in the goodness of his heart; Akki, the drawer of +water, made me a gardener. As gardener, the goddess Ishtar loved me, and +during forty-four years I held royal sway; I commanded the Black Heads,* +and ruled them." This is no unusual origin for the founders of empires +and dynasties; witness the cases of Cyrus and Bomulus.* Sargon, like +Moses, and many other heroes of history or fable, is exposed to the +waters: he owes his safety to a poor fellah who works his shadouf on the +banks of the Euphrates to water the fields, and he passes his infancy in +obscurity, if not in misery. Having reached the age of manhood, Ishtar +falls in love with him as she did with his fellow-craftsman, the +gardener Ishullanu, and he becomes king, we know not by what means. + + * The phrase "Black Heads," _nishi salmat hahhadi_, has been + taken in an ethnological sense as designating one of the + races of Chalda, the Semitic; other Assyriologists consider + it as denoting mankind in general. The latter meaning seems + the more probable. + + ** Smith had already compared the infancy of Sargon with + that of Moses; the comparison with Cyrus, Bacchus, and + Romulus was made by Talbot. Traditions of the same kind are + frequent in history or folk-tales. + +The same inscription which reveals the romance of his youth, recounts +the successes of his manhood, and boasts of the uniformly victorious +issue of his warlike exploits. Owing to lacunae, the end of the account +is in the main wanting, and we are thus prevented from following the +development of his career, but other documents come to the rescue and +claim to furnish its most important vicissitudes. He had reduced the +cities of the Lower Euphrates, the island of Dilmun, Durlu, Elam, the +country of Kazalla: he had invaded Syria, conquered Phoenicia, crossed +the arm of the sea which separates Cyprus from the coast, and only +returned to his palace after an absence of three years, and after having +erected his statues on the Syrian coast. He had hardly settled down to +rest when a rebellion broke out suddenly; the chiefs of Chalda formed +a league against him, and blockaded him in Agad: Ishtar, exceptionally +faithful to the end, obtains for him the victory, and he comes out of a +crisis, in which he might have been utterly ruined, with a more secure +position than ever. All these events are regarded as having occurred +sometime about 3800 B.C., at a period when the VIth dynasty was +flourishing in Egypt. Some of them have been proved to be true by recent +discoveries, and the rest are not at all improbable in themselves, +though the work in which they are recorded is a later astrological +treatise. The writer was anxious to prove, by examples drawn from the +chronicles, the use of portents of victory or defeat, of civic peace +or rebellion--portents which he deduced from the configuration of the +heavens on the various days of the month: by going back as far as Sargon +of Agad for his instances, he must have at once increased the respect +for himself on account of his knowledge of antiquity, and the difficulty +which the common herd must have felt in verifying his assertions. His +zeal in collecting examples was probably stimulated by the fact that +some of the exploits which he attributes to the ancient Sargon had been +recently accomplished by a king of the same name: the brilliant career +of Sargon of Agad would seem to have been in his estimation something +like an anticipation of the still more glorious life of the Sargon of +Nineveh.* What better proof of the high veneration in which the learned +men of Assyria held the memory of the ancient Chaldan conqueror? +Naramsin, who succeeded Sargon about 3750 B.C.** inherited his +authority, and to some extent his renown. + + * Hommel (Gescamede, p. 307) believes that the life of our + Sargon was modelled, not on the Assyrian Sargon, but on a + second Sargon, whom he places about 2000 B.C. Tiele refuses + to accept the hypothesis, but his objections are not + weighty, in my opinion; Hilprecht and Sayce accepted the + authenticity of the facts in their details, and the recent + discoveries have shown that they were right in so doing. + There is a distant resemblance between the life of the + legendary Sargon and the account of the victories of Ramses + II. ending in a conspiracy on his return. + + + ** The date of Naramsin is given us by the cylinder of + Nabonidos, who is cited lower down. It was discovered by + Pinches. Its authenticity is maintained by Oppert, by + Latrille, by Tiele, by Hommel, who felt at first some + hesitation, by Delitzsch-Murdter; it has been called in + question, with hesitation, by Ed. Meyer, and more boldly by + Winckler. There is at present no serious reason to question + its accuracy, at least relatively, except the instinctive + repugnance of modern critics to consider as legitimate, + dates which carry them back further into the past than they + are accustomed to go. + +The astrological tablets assert that he attacked the city of Apirak, on +the borders of Elam, killed the Sing, Rish-ramman, and led the people +away into slavery. He conquered at least part, if not the whole of Elam, +and one of the few monuments which have come down to us was raised at +Sippara in commemoration of his prowess against the mountaineers of the +Zagros. He is represented on it overpowering their chief: his warriors +follow after him and charge up the hill, carrying everything before +their steady onslaught. Another of his warlike expeditions is said to +have had as its field of operations a district of Mgan, which, in the +view of the writer, undoubtedly represented the Sinaitic Peninsula and +perhaps Egypt. This expedition against Mgan no doubt took place, and +one of the few monuments of Naramsin which have reached us refers to it. +Other inscriptions tell us incidentally that Naramsin reigned over the +"four Houses of the world," Babylon, Sippara, Nipur, and Lagash. Like +his father, he had worked at the building of the Ekur of Nipur and the +Bulbar of Agad; he erected, moreover, at his own cost, the temple +of the Sun at Sippara.* The latter passed through many and varied +vicissitudes. Restored, enlarged, ruined on several occasions, the date +of its construction and the name of its founder were lost in the course +of ages. + + * The text giving us this information is that in which + Nabonidos affirms that Naramsin, son of Sargon of Agad, had + founded the temple of the Sun at Sippara, 3200 years before + himself, which would give us 3750 B.C. for the reign of + Naramsin. + +The last independent King of Babylon, Nabonad [Nabonidos], at length +discovered the cylinders in which Naramsin, son of Sargon, had signified +to posterity all that he had done towards the erection of a temple +worthy of the deity to the god of Sippara: "for three thousand two +hundred years not one of the kings had been able to find them." We +have no means of judging what these edifices were like for which +the Chaldans themselves showed such veneration; they have entirely +disappeared, or, if anything remains of them, the excavations hitherto +carried out have not revealed it. Many small objects, however, which +have accidentally escaped destruction give us a fair idea of the artists +who lived in Babylon at this time, and of their skill in handling the +graving-tool and chisel. An alabaster vase with the name of +Naramsin, and a mace-head of exquisitely veined marble, dedicated by +Shargani-shar-ali to the sun-god of Sippara, are valued only on account +of the beauty of the material and the rarity of the inscription; but a +porphyry cylinder, which belonged to Ibnishar, scribe of the above-named +Shargani, must be ranked among the masterpieces of Oriental engraving. +It represents the hero Gilgames, kneeling and holding with both hands +a spherically shaped vase, from which flow two copious jets forming a +stream running through the country; an ox, armed with a pair of gigantic +crescent-shaped horns, throws back its head to catch one of the jets +as it falls. Everything in this little specimen is equally worthy of +admiration--the purity of outline, the skilful and delicate cutting of +the intaglio, the fidelity of the action, and the accuracy of form. +A fragment of a bas-relief of the reign of Naramsin shows that the +sculptors were not a bit behind the engravers of gems. This consists now +only of a single figure, a god, who is standing on the right, wearing a +conical head-dress and clothed in a hairy garment which leaves his right +arm free. The legs are wanting, the left arm and the hair are for +the most part broken away, while the features have also suffered; its +distinguishing characteristic is a sublety of workmanship which is +lacking in the artistic products of a later age. The outline stands out +from the background with a rare delicacy, the details of the muscles +being in no sense exaggerated: were it not for the costume and pointed +beard, one would fancy it a specimen of Egyptian work of the best +Memphite period. + +[Illustration 096.jpg THE SEAL OF SHARGANI-SHAR-ALI: GILGAMES WATERS THE +CELESTIAL OX.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from Menant. + +One is almost tempted to believe in the truth of the tradition which +ascribes to Naramsin the conquest of Egypt, or of the neighbouring +countries. + +[Illustration: 096a.jpg Painting in Color of Charioteer] + + Drawn by Boudier, from a photograph published by Father + Schiel. + +[Illustration: 097.jpg Page image] + +Did Sargon and Naramsin live at so early a date as that assigned to +them by Nabonidos? The scribes who assisted the kings of the second +Babylonian empire in their archaeological researches had perhaps +insufficient reasons for placing the date of these kings so far back in +the misty past: should evidence of a serious character A constrain us to +attribute to them a later origin, we ought not to be surprised. In the +mean time our best course is to accept the opinion of the Chaldans, +and to leave Sargon and Naramsin in the century assigned to them by +Nabonidos, although from this point they look down as from a high +eminence upon all the rest of Chaldan antiquity. Excavations have +brought to light several personages of a similar date, whether a +little earlier, or a little later: Bingani-sharali, Man-ish-turba, +and especially Alusharshid, who lived at Kishu and Nipur, and gained +victories over Elam. + +[Illustration: 098.jpg Page image: the arms op the city and kings of +Lagash] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a bas-relief from Lagash, now + in the Louvre + +After this glimpse of light on these shadowy kings darkness once more +closes in upon us, and conceals from us the majority of the sovereigns +who ruled afterwards in Babylon. The facts and names which can be +referred with certainty to the following centuries belong not to +Babylon, but to the southern States, Lagash, Uruk, Uru, Nishin, and +Larsam. The national writers had neglected these principalities; +we possess neither a resume of their chronicles nor a list of their +dynasties, and the inscriptions which speak of their the arms of the +city gods and princes are still very rare and kings of Lagash. Lagash, +as far as our evidence goes, was, perhaps, the most illustrious of +all these cities.* It occupied the heart of the country, and its site +covered both sides of the Shatt-el-Ha; the Tigris separated it on the +east from Anshan, the westernmost of the Elamite districts, with which +it carried on a perpetual frontier war. + + * We are indebted almost exclusively to the researches of M. + de Sarzec, and his discoveries at Telloh, for what we know + of it. The results of his excavations, acquired by the + French government, are now in the Louvre. The description of + the ruins, the text of the inscriptions, and an account of + the statues and other objects found in the course of the + work, have been published by Heuzey-Sakzec, _Dcouvertes en + Chalde_. The name of the ancient town has been read + Sirpurla, Zirgulla, etc. + +All parts of the country were not equally fertile: the fruitful and +well-cultivated district in the neighbourhood of the Shatt-el-Ha gave +place to impoverished lands ending to the eastward, finally in swampy +marshes, which with great difficulty furnished means of sustenance to a +poor and thinly scattered population of fisher-folk. + +[Illustration: 099.jpg FRAGMENT OF BAS-RELIEF BY URNIN, KING OF +LAGASH.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a stone in the Louvre. + +The capital, built on the left bank of the river, stretched out to the +north-east and south-west a distance of some five miles. It was not so +much a city as an agglomeration of large villages, each grouped around a +temple or palace--Uruazagga, Gishgalla, G-irsu, Nina, and Lagash, +which latter imposed its name upon the whole. A branch of the river +Shatt-el-Ha protected it on the south, and supplied the village of +Nin with water; no trace of an inclosing wall has been found, and the +temples and palaces seem to have served as refuges in case of attack. +It had as its arms, or totem, a double-headed eagle standing on a lion +passant, or on two demi-lions placed back to back. Its chief god was +called Ningirsu, that is, the lord of Girsu, where his temple stood: his +companion Bau, and his associates Ninagal, Innanna and Ninsia, were +the deities of the other divisions of the city. The princes were first +called kings, but afterwards vicegerents--_patesi_--when they came under +the suzerainty of a more powerful king, the King of Uruk or of Babylon. + +The earlier history of this remarkable town is made up of the +scanty memoirs of its rulers, together with those of the princes of +Gishban--"the land of the Bow," of which Ishin seems to have been the +principal town. A very ancient document states, that, at the instigation +of Inlil, the god of Nipur, the local deities, Ningirsu and Kirsig, set +up a boundary between the two cities. In the course of time, Meshilim, +a king of Kishu, which, before the rise of Agad, was the chief town in +those parts, extended his dominion over Lagash and erected his stele at +its border; Ush, vicegerent of Gishban, however, removed it, and had to +suffer defeat before he would recognize the new order of things. After +the lapse of some years, of which we possess no records, we find the +mention of a certain Urukagina, who assumes the title of king: he +restored or enlarged several temples, and dug the canal which supplied +the town of Nina with water. A few generations later we find the ruling +authority in the hands of a certain Urnin, whose father Ninigaldun and +grandfather Gurshar received no titles--a fact which proves that they +could not have been reigning sovereigns. Urnin appears to have been of +a peaceful and devout disposition, as the inscriptions contain frequent +references to the edifices he had erected in honour of the gods, the +sacred objects he had dedicated to them, and the timber for building +purposes which he had brought from Mgan, but there is no mention in +them of any war. His son Akurgal was also a builder of temples, but +his grandson Idingiranagin, who succeeded Akurgal, was a warlike and +combative prince. + +[Illustration: 101.jpg IDINGIRANAGIN HOLDING THE TOTEM OF LAGASH.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from the bas-relief F2 in the + Louvre. + +It seems probable that, about that time, the kingdom of Gishban had +become a really powerful state. It had triumphed not only over +Babylonia proper, but over Kish, Uru, Uruk, and Larsam, while one of its +sovereigns had actually established his rule in some parts of Northern +Syria. Idingiranagin vanquished the troops of Gishban, and there is now +in the Louvre a trophy which he dedicated in the temple of Ninglrsu on +his return from the campaign. + + * Hilpeecht, Bab. Expcd. of the Univ. of Pennsylvania, vol. + i., 2nd part, p. 47 sqq. + +[Illustration: 102.jpg IDINGIRANAGIN IN HIS CHARIOT LEADING HIS TROOPS.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a bas-relief in the Louvre. The + attendant standing behind the king has been obliterated, but + we see clearly the contour of his shoulder, and his hands + holding the reins. It is a large stele of close-grained + white limestone, rounded at the top, and covered with scenes + and inscriptions on both its faces. One of these faces + treats only of religious subjects. Two warlike goddesses, + crowned with plumed head-dresses and crescent-shaped horns, + are placed before a heap of weapons and various other + objects, which probably represent some of the booty + collected in the campaign. It would appear that they + accompany a tall figure of a god or king, possibly that of + the deity Ningirsu, patron of Lagash and its kings. Ningirsu + raises in one hand an ensign, of which the staff bears at + the top the royal totem, the eagle with outspread wings + laying hold by his talons of two half-lions back to back; + with the other hand he brings a, club down heavily upon a + group of prisoners, who struggle at his feet in the meshes + of a large net. + + +[Illustration: 103.jpg Page image. VULTURES FEEDING UPON THE DEAD.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from the fragment of a bas-relief in + the Louvre. This is the human sacrifice after the victory, + such as we find it in Egypt--the offering to the national + god of a tenth of the captives, who struggle in vain to + escape from fate. On the other stele the battle is at its + height. Idingiranagin, standing upright in his chariot, + which is guided by an attendant, charges the enemy at the + head of his troops, and the plain is covered with corpses + cut down by his fierce blows: a flock of vultures accompany + him, and peck at each other in their struggles over the + arms, legs, and decapitated heads of the vanquished. Victory + once secured, he retraces his steps to bestow funeral + honours upon the dead. + + +[Illustration: 104.jpg PILING UP THE MOUND OF THE DEAD AFTER THE +BATTLE.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from the fragment of a bas-relief in + the Louvre. The bodies raised regularly in layers form an + enormous heap: priests or soldiers wearing loin-cloths mount + to its top, where they pile the offerings and the earth + which are to form the funerary mound. The sovereign, + moreover, has, in honour of the dead, consigned to execution + some of the prisoners, and deigns to kill with his own hand + one of the principal chiefs of the enemy. + +The design and execution of these scenes are singularly rude; men and +beasts--indeed, all the figures--have exaggerated proportions, uncouth +forms, awkward positions, and an uncertain and heavy gait. The war ended +in a treaty concluded with Enakalli, vicegerent of Grishban, by which +Lagash obtained considerable advantages. Idingiranagin replaced the +stele of Meshilim, overthrown by one of Enakalli's predecessors, and +dug a ditch from the Euphrates to the provinces of Guedln to serve +henceforth as a boundary. He further levied a tribute of corn for the +benefit of the goddess Nina and her consort Ningirsu, and applied +the spoils of the campaign to the building of new sanctuaries for the +patron-gods of his city. + +[Illustration: 105.jpg KING URNINA AND HIS FAMILY.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a bas-relief in the Louvre. Cf. + another bas-relief of the same king, p. 244; and for the + probable explanation of these pierced plaques, see p. 258 of + the present work. + +His reign was, on the whole, a glorious and successful one. He conquered +the mountain district of Elam, rescued Uruk and Uru, which had both +fallen into the hands of the people of Gishban, organized an expedition +against the town of Az and killed its vicegerent, in addition to which +he burnt Arsua, and devastated the district of Mishime. He next directed +an attack against Zuran, king of Udban, and, by vanquishing this Prince +on the field of battle, he extended his dominion over nearly the whole +of Babylonia. + +The prosperity of his dynasty was subjected to numerous and strange +vicissitudes. Whether it was that its resources were too feeble to +stand the exigencies and strain of war for any length of time, or that +intestine strife had been the chief cause of its decline, we cannot +say. Its kings married many wives and became surrounded with a numerous +progeny: Urnin had at least four sons. They often entrusted to their +children or their sons-in-law the government of the small towns which +together made up the city: these represented so many temporary fiefs, of +which the holders were distinguished by the title of "vicegerents." This +dismemberment of the supreme authority in the interest of princes, who +believed for the most part that they had stronger claims to the throne +than its occupant, was attended with dangers to peace and to the +permanence of the dynasty. The texts furnish us with evidence of the +existence of at least half a dozen descendants of Akurgal--Inannatuma +I., Intemena, his grandson Inannatuma II, all of whom seem to have been +vigorous rulers who energetically maintained the supremacy of their city +over the neighbouring estates. Inannatuma I., however, proved no match +in the end against Urlamma, the vicegerent of Gishban, and lost part, at +least, of the territory acquired by Idingiranagin, but his son Intemena +defeated Urlamma on the banks of the Lumasirta Canal, and, having killed +or deposed him, gave the vicegerency of Gishban to a certain Hi, priest +of Ninab, who remained his loyal vassal to the end of his days. With +his aid Intemena restored the stelae and walls which had been destroyed +during the war; he also cleared out the old canals and dug new ones, the +most important of which was apparently an arm of the Shatt-el-Hai, and +ran from the Euphrates to the Tigris, through the very centre of the +domains of Ghirsu. + +Other kings and vicegerents of doubtful sequence were followed lastly by +Urbau and his son Gudea. These were all piously devoted to Ningirsu in +general, and in particular to the patron of their choice from among +the divinities of the country--Papsukal, Dunziranna, and Ningal. They +restored and enriched the temples of these gods: they dedicated to +them statues or oblation vases for the welfare of themselves and their +families. It would seem, if we are to trust the accounts which they give +of themselves, that their lives were passed in profound peace, without +other care than that of fulfilling their duties to heaven and its +ministers. Their actual condition, if we could examine it, would +doubtless appear less agreeable and especially less equable; revolutions +in the palace would not be wanting, nor struggles with the other peoples +of Chalda, with Susiana and even more distant nations. When Agad rose +into power in Northern Babylonia, they fell under its rule, and one of +them, Lugal-ushum-gal, acknowledged himself a dependant of Sargon. On +the decline of Agade, and when that city was superseded by Uru in the +hegemony of Babylonia proper, the vicegerents of Lagash were transferred +with the other great towns to the jurisdiction of Uru, and flourished +under the supremacy of the new dynasty. + +Grudea, son of Urbau, who, if not the most powerful of its princes, +is at least the sovereign of whom we possess the greatest number of +monuments, captured the town of Anshan in Elam, and this is probably not +the only campaign in which he took part, for he speaks of his success +in an incidental manner, and as if he were in a hurry to pass to more +interesting subjects. + +[Illustration: 108.jpg THE SACRIFICE] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a stone in the Louvre. + +That which seemed to him important in his reign, and which especially +called forth the recognition of posterity, was the number of his pious +foundations, distinguished as they were by beauty and magnificence. The +gods themselves had inspired him in his devout undertakings, and had +even revealed to him the plans which he was to carry out. An old man of +venerable aspect appeared to him in a vision, and commanded him to build +a temple: as he did not know with whom he had to do, Nina his mother +informed him that it was his brother, the god Ningirsu. This having been +made clear, a young woman furnished with style and writing tablet was +presented to him--Nisaba, the sister of Nina; she made a drawing in his +presence, and put before him the complete model of a building. He set +to work on it _con amore_, and sent for materials to the most distant +countries--to Mgan, Amanus, the Lebanon, and into the mountains which +separate the valley of the Upper Tigris from that of the Euphrates. + +[Illustration: 109.jpg SITTING STATUE OF GUDEA] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin + +The sanctuaries which he decorated, and of which he felt so proud, are +to-day mere heaps of bricks, now returned to their original clay; but +many of the objects which he placed in them, and especially the statues, +have traversed the centuries without serious damage before finding a +resting-place in the Louvre. The sculptors of Lagash, after the time of +Idingi-ranagin, had been instructed in a good school, and had learned +their business. Their bas-reliefs are not so good as those of Naramsin; +the execution of them is not so refined, the drawing less delicate, and +the modelling of the parts not so well thought out. A good illustration +of their work is the fragment of a square stele which represents a scene +of offering or sacrifice. We see in the lower part of the picture a +female singer, who is accompanied by a musician, playing on a lyre +ornamented with the head of an ox, and a bull in the act of walking. +In the upper part an individual advances, clad in a fringed mantle, and +bearing in his right hand a kind of round paten, and in his left a short +staff. An acolyte follows him, his arms brought up to his breast, while +another individual marks, by clapping his hands, the rhythm of the ode +which a singer like the one below is reciting. The fragment is much +abraded, and its details, not being clearly exhibited, have rather to +be guessed at; but the defaced aspect which time has produced is of some +service to it, since it conceals in some respect the rudeness of +its workmanship. The statues, on the other hand, bear evidence of a +precision of chiselling and a skill beyond question. Not that there are +no faults to be found in the work. They are squat, thick, and heavy +in form, and seem oppressed by the weight of the woollen covering with +which the Chaldeans enveloped themselves; when viewed closely, they +excite at once the wonder and repulsion of an eye accustomed to the +delicate grace, and at times somewhat slender form, which usually +characterized the good statues of the ancient and middle empire of +Egypt. But when we have got over the effect of first impressions, we can +but admire the audacity with which the artists attacked their material. +This is of hard dolerite, offering great resistance to the tool--harder, +perhaps, than the diorite out of which the Memphite sculptor had to +cut his Khephren: they succeeded in mastering it, and in handling it as +freely as if it were a block of limestone or marble. + +[Illustration: 111.jpg Plan of the Ruins of Mugher] + +The surface of the breast and back, the muscular development of the +shoulders and arms, the details of the hands and feet, all the nude +portions, are treated at once with a boldness and attention to minutiae +rarely met with in similar works. The pose is lacking in variety; the +individual, whether male or female, is sometimes represented standing +and sometimes sitting on a low seat, the legs brought together, the bust +rising squarely from the hips, the hands crossed upon the breast, in a +posture of submission or respectful adoration. The mantle passes over +the left shoulder, leaving the right free, and is fastened on the right +breast, the drapery displaying awkward and inartistic folds: the latter +widens in the form of a funnel from top to bottom, being bell-shaped +around the lower part of the body, and barely leaves the ankles exposed. + +[Illustration: 112.jpg STATUES FROM TELLOH. and HEAD OF ONE OF THE +STATUE OF GUDEA.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from Heuzey-Sarzec. + +All the large statues to be seen at the Louvre have lost their heads; +fortunately we possess a few separate heads. Some are completely shaven, +others wear a kind of turban affording shade to the forehead and eyes; +among them all we see the same qualities and defects which we find in +the bodies: a hardness of expression, heaviness, absence of vivacity, +and yet withal a vigour of reproduction and an accurate knowledge of +human anatomy. These are instances of what could be accomplished in a +city of secondary rank; better things were doubtless produced in the +great cities, such as Uru and Babylon. Chaldan art, as we are able +to catch a glimpse of it in the monuments of Lagash, had neither the +litheness, nor animation, nor elegance of the Egyptian, but it was +nevertheless not lacking in force, breadth, and originality. Urningirsu +succeeded his father Gudea, to be followed rapidly by several successive +vicegerents, ending, it would appear, in Gala-lama. Their inscriptions +are short and insignificant, and show that they did not enjoy the same +resources or the same favour which enabled Gudea to reign gloriously. +The prosperity of Lagash decreased steadily under their administration, +and they were all the humble vassals of the King of Uru, Dungi, son of +Urbau; a fact which tends to make us regard Urbau as having been the +suzerain upon whom Gudea himself was dependent. Uru, the only city among +those of Lower Chalda which stands on the right bank of the Euphrates, +was a small but strong place, and favourably situated for becoming one +of the commercial and industrial centres in these distant ages. The +Wady Eummein, not far distant, brought to it the riches of Central and +Southern Arabia, gold, precious stones, gums, and odoriferous resins for +the exigencies of worship. Another route, marked out by wells, traversed +the desert to the land of the semi-fabulous Mshu, and from thence +perhaps penetrated as far as Southern Syria and the Sinaitic +Peninsula--Mgan and Milukhkha on the shores of the Red Sea: this was +not the easiest but it was the most direct route for those bound for +Africa, and products of Egypt were no doubt carried along it in order +to reach in the shortest time the markets of Uru. The Euphrates now +runs nearly five miles to the north of the town, but from the regions +bordering the Black Sea. + +[Illustration: 114.jpg Plan of the Ruins of Abu-Shahreyn] + +In ancient times it was not so distant, but passed almost by its +gates. The cedars, cypresses, and pines of Amamis and the Lebanon,the +limestones, marbles, and hard stones of Upper Syria, were brought down +to it by boat; and probably also metalsiron, copper and lead. + +The Shatt-el-Ha, moreover, poured its waters into the Euphrates almost +opposite the city, and opened up to it commercial relations with the +Upper and Middle Tigris. And this was not all; whilst some of its +boatmen used its canals and rivers as highways, another section made +their way to the waters of the Persian Gulf and traded with the ports on +its coast. Eridu, the only city which could have barred their access +to the sea, was a town given up to religion, and existed only for its +temples and its gods. It was not long before it fell under the influence +of its powerful neighbour, becoming the first port of call for vessels +proceeding up the Euphrates. + +[Illustration: 115.jpg AN ARAB CROSSING THE TIGRIS IN A "KUFA."] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a sketch by Chesney. + +In the time of the Greeks and Romans the Chaldaeans were accustomed +to navigate the Tigris either in round flat-bottomed boats, of little +draught--"kufas," in fact--or on rafts placed upon inflated skins, +exactly similar in appearance and construction to the "keleks" of our +own day. These keleks were as much at home on the sea as upon the river, +and they may still be found in the Persian Gulf engaged in the coasting +trade. Doubtless many of these were included among the vessels of Uru +mentioned in the texts, but there were also among the latter those +long large rowing-boats with curved stem and stern, Egyptian in their +appearance, which are to be found roughly incised on some ancient +cylinders. These primitive fleets were not disposed to risk the +navigation of the open sea. They preferred to proceed slowly along the +shore, hugging it in all cases, except when it was necessary to reach +some group of neighbouring islands; many days of navigation were thus +required to make a passage which one of our smallest sail-boats would +effect in a few hours, and at the end of their longest voyages they +were not very distant from their point of departure. It would be a great +mistake to suppose them capable of sailing round Arabia and of fetching +blocks of stone by sea from the Sinaitic Peninsula; such an expedition, +which would have been dangerous even for Greek or Roman Galleys, would +have been simply impossible for them. If they ever crossed the Strait +of Ormuzd, it was an exceptional thing, their ordinary voyages being +confined within the limits of the gulf. The merchants of Uru were +accustomed to visit regularly the island of Dilmun, the land of Mgan, +the countries of Milukhkha and Gubn; from these places they brought +cargoes of diorite for their sculptors, building-timber for their +architects, perfumes and metals transported from Yemen by land, and +possibly pearls from the Bahrein Islands. They encountered serious +rivalry from the sailors of Dilmun and Mgan, whose maritime tribes were +then as now accustomed to scour the seas. The risk was great for those +who set out on such expeditions, perhaps never to return, but the profit +was considerable. + +[Illustration: 117.jpg AN ASSYRIAN KELEK LADEN WITH BUILDING-STONE.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a bas-relief from "Kouyunjik" + (Layard, _The Monuments of Nineveh_, 2nd series, pi. 13; cf. + Place, _Ninive et l'Assyrie_, pl. 43, No. 1.) + +Uru, enriched by its commerce, was soon in a position to subjugate +the petty neighbouring states--Uruk, Larsam, Lagash, and Nipur. Its +territory formed a fairly extended sovereignty, whose lords entitled +themselves kings of Shumir and Akkad, and ruled over all Southern +Chalda for many centuries. + +Several of these kings, the Lugalkigubnidudu and the Lugalkisalsi, of +whom some monuments have been preserved to us, seem to have extended +their influence beyond these limits prior to the time of Sargon the +Elder; and we can date the earliest of them with tolerable probability. +Urbau reigned some time about 2900 B.C. He was an energetic builder, and +material traces of his activity are to be found everywhere throughout +the country. The temple of the Sun at Larsam, the temple of Nina in +Uruk, and the temples of Inlilla and Ninlilla in Nipur were indebted +to him for their origin or restoration: he decorated or repaired +all structures which were not of his own erection: in Uru itself +the sanctuary of the moon-god owes its foundation to him, and the +fortifications of the city were his work. Dungi, his son, was an +indefatigable bricklayer, like his father: he completed the sanctuary +of the moon-god, and constructed buildings in Uruk, Lagash, and Kutha. +There is no indication in the inscriptions of his having been engaged +in any civil struggle or in war with a foreign nation; we should make a +serious mistake, however, if we concluded from this silence that peace +was not disturbed in his time. The tie which bound together the petty +states of which Uru was composed was of the slightest. The sovereign +could barely claim as his own more than the capital and the district +surrounding it; the other cities recognized his authority, paid him +tribute, did homage to him in religious matters, and doubtless rendered +him military service also, but each one of them nevertheless maintained +its particular constitution and obeyed its hereditary lords. These +lords, it is true, lost their title of king, which now belonged +exclusively to their suzerain, and each one had to be content in his +district with the simple designation of "vicegerent;" but having once +fulfilled their feudal obligations, they had absolute power over +their ancient domains, and were able to transmit to their progeny the +inheritance they had received from their fathers. Gudea probably, and +most certainly his successors, ruled in this way over Lagash, as a fief +depending on the crown of Uru. After the manner of the Egyptian barons, +the vassals of the kings of Chaldaea submitted to the control of their +suzerain without resenting his authority as long as they felt the +curbing influence of a strong hand: but on the least sign of feebleness +in their master they reasserted themselves, and endeavoured to recover +their independence. A reign of any length was sure to be disturbed by +rebellions sometimes difficult to repress: if we are ignorant of any +such, it is owing to the fact that inscriptions hitherto discovered are +found upon objects upon which an account of a battle would hardly find +a fitting place, such as bricks from a temple, votive cones or cylinders +of terra-cotta, amulets or private seals. We are still in ignorance as +to Dungi's successors, and the number of years during which this first +dynasty was able to prolong its existence. We can but guess that its +empire broke up by disintegration after a period of no long duration. +Its cities for the most part became emancipated, and their rulers +proclaimed themselves kings once more. We see that the kingdom of +Amnanu, for instance, was established on the left bank of the Euphrates, +with Uruk as its capital, and that three successive sovereigns at +least--of whom Singashid seems to have been the most active--were able +to hold their own there. Uru had still, however, sufficient prestige and +wealth to make it the actual metropolis of the entire country. No one +could become the legitimate lord of Shumir and Accad before he had +been solemnly enthroned in the temple at Uru. For many centuries every +ambitious kinglet in turn contended for its possession and made it +his residence. The first of these, about 2500 B.C., were the lords +of Nishin, Libitanunit, Gamiladar, Inedn, Bursn I., and Ismidgan: +afterwards, about 2400 B.C., Gungunum of Nipur made himself master of +it. The descendants of Gungunum, amongst others Bursn II., Gimilsn, +Insin, reigned gloriously for a few years. Their records show that +they conquered not only a part of Elam, but part of Syria. They were +dispossessed in their turn by a family belonging to Lrsam, whose two +chief representatives, as far as we know, were Nurramman and his son +Sinidinnam (about 2300 B.C.). Naturally enough, Sinidinnam was a builder +or repairer of temples, but he added to such work the clearing of the +Shatt-el-Ha and the excavation of a new canal giving a more direct +communication between the Shatt and the Tigris, and in thus controlling +the water-system of the country became worthy of being considered one of +the benefactors of Chalda. + +We have here the mere dust of history, rather than history itself: here +an isolated individual makes his appearance in the record of his name, +to vanish when we attempt to lay hold of him; there, the stem of a +dynasty which breaks abruptly off, pompous preambles, devout formulas, +dedications of objects or buildings, here and there the account of some +battle, or the indication of some foreign country with which relations +of friendship or commerce were maintained--these are the scanty +materials out of which to construct a connected narrative. Egypt has not +much more to offer us in regard to many of her Pharaohs, but we have in +her case at least the ascertained framework of her dynasties, in +which each fact and each new name falls eventually, and after some +uncertainty, into its proper place. The main outlines of the picture are +drawn with sufficient exactitude to require no readjustment, the groups +are for the most part in their fitting positions, the blank spaces or +positions not properly occupied are gradually restricted, and filled in +from day to day; the expected moment is in sight when, the arrangement +of the whole being accomplished, it will be necessary only to fill in +the details. In the case of Chalda the framework itself is wanting, +and expedients must be resorted to in order to classify the elements +entering into its composition. Naramsn is in his proper place, or +nearly so; but as for Gudea, what interval separates him from Naramsn, +and at what distance from Gudea are we to place the kings of Uru? The +beginnings of Chalda have merely a provisional history: the facts in +it are certain, but the connection of the facts with one another is too +often a matter of speculation. The arrangement which is put forward at +present can be regarded only as probable, but it would be difficult +to propose a better until the excavations have furnished us with fresh +material; it must be accepted merely as an attempt, without pledging to +it our confidence on the one hand, or regarding it with scepticism on +the other. + + + + +CHAPTER II--THE TEMPLES AND THE GODS OF CHALDA + +_THE CONSTRUCTION AND REVENUES OF THE TEMPLES--THE POPULAR GODS AND THE +THEOLOGICAL TRIADS----THE DEAD AND HADES_. + +_Chaldan cities: the resemblance of their ruins to natural mounds +caused by their exclusive use of brick as a building material--Their +city walls: the temples and local gods; reconstruction of their history +by means of the stamped bricks of which they were built--The two types +of ziggurt: the arrangement of the temple of Nannar at Uru. + +The tribes of the Chaldan gods--Genii hostile to men, their monstrous +shapes; the south-west wind; friendly genii--The Seven, and their +attacks on the moon-god; Gibil, the fire-god, overcomes them and their +snares--The Sumerian gods; Ningirsu: the difficulty of defining them and +of understanding the nature of them; they become merged in the Semitic +deities. + +Characteristics and dispositions of the Chaldan gods--the goddesses, +like women of the harem, are practically nonentities; Mylitta and +her meretricious rites--The divine aristocracy and its principal +representatives: their relations to the earth, oracles, speaking +statues, household gods--The gods of each city do not exclude those +of neighbouring cities: their alliances and their borrowings from one +another--The sky-gods and the earth-gods, the sidereal gods: the moon +and the sun. + +The feudal gods: several among them unite to govern the world; the two +triads of Eridu--The supreme triad: Anu the heaven; Bel the earth and +his fusion with the Babylonian Merodach; Ea, the god of the waters--The +second triad: Sin the moon and Shamash the sun; substitution of Bamman +for Ishtar in this triad; the winds and the legend of Adapa, the +attributes of Ramman--The addition of goddesses to these two triads; +the insignificant position which they occupy. + +The assembly of the gods governs the world: the bird Zu steals the +tablets of destiny--Destinies are written in the heavens and determined +by the movements of the stars; comets and their presiding deities, Nebo +and Ishtai--The numerical value of the gods--The arrangement of the +temples, the local priesthood, festivals, revenues of the gods and gifts +made to them--Sacrifices, the expiation of crimes--Death and the future +of the soul--Tombs and the cremation of the dead; the royal sepulchres +and funerary rites--Hades and its sovereigns: Nergal, Allt, the +descent of Ishtar into the infernal regions, and the possibility of a +resurrection The invocation of the dead--The ascension of Etana._ + + +[Illustration: 124.jpg Chapter II] + + + + +CHAPTER II--THE TEMPLES AND THE GODS OF CHALDA + +_The construction and revenues of the temples--Popular gods and +theological triads--The dead and Hades_. + + +The cities of the Euphrates attract no attention, like those of the +Nile, by the magnificence of their ruins, which are witnesses, +even after centuries of neglect, to the activity of a powerful and +industrious people: on the contrary, they are merely heaps of rubbish in +which no architectural outline can be distinguished--mounds of stiff +and greyish clay, cracked by the sun, washed into deep crevasses by the +rain, and bearing no apparent traces of the handiwork of man. + +[Illustration: 126.jpg PLAN OF THE RUINS OF WAKKA] + +In the estimation of the Chaldan architects, stone was a material of +secondary consideration: as it was necessary to bring it from a great +distance and at considerable expense, they used it very sparingly, and +then merely for lintels, uprights, thresholds, for hinges on which to +hang their doors, for dressings in some of their state apartments, in +cornices or sculptured friezes on the external walls of their buildings; +and even then its employment suggested rather that of a band of +embroidery carefully disposed on some garment to relieve the plainness +of the material. Crude brick, burnt brick, enamelled brick, but always +and everywhere brick was the principal element in their construction. +The soil of the marshes or of the plains, separated from the pebbles +and foreign substances which it contained, mixed with grass or chopped +straw, moistened with water, and assiduously trodden underfoot, +furnished the ancient builders with materials of incredible tenacity. +This was moulded into thin square bricks, eight inches to a foot across, +and three to four inches thick, but rarely larger: they were stamped on +the flat side, by means of an incised wooden block, with the name of +the reigning sovereign, and were then dried in the sun.* A layer of +fine mortar or of bitumen was sometimes spread between the courses, or +handfuls of reeds would be strewn at intervals between the brickwork to +increase the cohesion: more frequently the crude bricks were piled one +upon another, and their natural softness and moisture brought about +their rapid agglutination.** As the building proceeded, the weight +of the courses served to increase still further the adherence of the +layers: the walls soon became consolidated into a compact mass, in which +the horizontal strata were distinguishable only by the varied tints of +the clay used to make the different relays of bricks. + + * The making of bricks for the Assyrian monuments of the + time of the Sargonids has been minutely described by Place, + _Ninive et l'Assyrie_, vol. i. pp. 211-214. The methods of + procedure were exactly the same as those used under the + earliest king known, as has been proved by the examination + of the bricks taken from the monuments of Uru and Lagash. + + ** This method of building was noticed by classical writers. + The word "Bowarieh," borne by several ancient mounds in + Chaldoa, signifies, properly speaking, a mat of reeds; it is + applied only to such buildings as are apparently constructed + with alternate layers of brick and dried reeds. The + proportion of these layers differs in certain localities: in + the ruins of the ancient temple of Belos at Babylon, now + called the "Mujelibeh," the lines of straw and reeds run + uninterruptedly between each course of bricks; in the ruins + of Akkerkuf, they only occur at wider intervals--according + to Niebuhr and Ives, every seventh or eighth course; + according to Raymond, every seventh course, or sometimes + every fifth or sixth course, but in these cases the layer of + reeds becomes 3 1/2 to 3 3/4 inches wide. H. Rawlin-son + thinks, on the other hand, that all the monuments in which + we find layers of straw and reeds between the brick courses + belong to the Parthian period. + +[Illustration: 128.jpg A CHALDAN STAMPED BRICK.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a brick preserved in the + Louvre. The bricks bearing historical inscriptions, which + are sometimes met with, appear to have been mostly ex-voto + offerings placed somewhere prominently, and not building + materials hidden in the masonry. + + +Monuments constructed of such a plastic material required constant +attention and frequent repairs, to keep them in good condition: after a +few years of neglect they became quite disfigured, the houses suffered +a partial dissolution in every storm, the streets were covered with +a coating of fine mud, and the general outline of the buildings and +habitations grew blurred and defaced. Whilst in Egypt the main features +of the towns are still traceable above ground, and are so well preserved +in places that, while excavating them, we are carried away from +the present into the world of the past, the Chaldan cities, on the +contrary, are so overthrown and seem to have returned so thoroughly to +the dust from which their founders raised them, that the most patient +research and the most enlightened imagination can only imperfectly +reconstitute their arrangement. + +The towns were not enclosed within those square or rectangular +enclosures with which the engineers of the Pharaohs fortified their +strongholds. The ground-plan of Uru was an oval, that of Larsam formed +almost a circle upon the soil, while Uruk and Eridu resembled in shape +a sort of irregular trapezium. The curtain of the citadel looked down on +the plain from a great height, so that the defenders were almost out +of reach of the arrows or slings of the besiegers: the remains of the +ramparts at Uruk at the present day are still forty to fifty feet +high, and twenty or more feet in thickness at the top. Narrow turrets +projected at intervals of every fifty feet along the face of the wall: +the excavations have not been sufficiently pursued to permit of our +seeing what system of defence was applied to the entrances. The area +described by these cities was often very large, but the population +in them was distributed very unequally; the temples in the different +quarters formed centres around which were clustered the dwellings of the +inhabitants, sometimes densely packed, and elsewhere thinly scattered. +The largest and richest of these temples was usually reserved for the +principal deity, whose edifices were being continually decorated by +the ruling princes, and the extent of whose ruins still attracts the +traveller. The walls, constructed and repaired with bricks stamped +with the names of lords of the locality, contain in themselves alone an +almost complete history. Did Urbau, we may ask, found the ziggurat of +Nannar in Uru? We meet with his bricks at the base of the most ancient +portions of the building, and we moreover learn, from cylinders +unearthed not far from it, that "for Nannar, the powerful bull of Anu, +the son of Bel, his King, Urbau, the brave hero, King of Uru, had built +E-Timila, his favourite temple." The bricks of his son Dungi are found +mixed with his own, while here and there other bricks belonging to +subsequent kings, with cylinders, cones, and minor objects, strewn +between the courses, mark restorations at various later periods. What +is true of one Chaldan city is equally true of all of them, and the +dynasties of Uruk and of Lagash, like those of Uru, can be reconstructed +from the revelations of their brickwork. The lords of heaven promised +to the lords of the earth, as a reward of their piety, both glory and +wealth in this life, and an eternal fame after death: they have, indeed, +kept their word. The majority of the earliest Chaldan heroes would be +unknown to us, were it not for the witness of the ruined sanctuaries +which they built, and that which they did in the service of their +heavenly patrons has alone preserved their names from oblivion. Their +most extravagant devotion, however, cost them less money and effort than +that of the Pharaohs their contemporaries. While the latter had to +bring from a distance, even from the remotest parts of the desert, the +different kinds of stone which they considered worthy to form part of +the decoration of the houses of their gods, the Chaldan kings gathered +up outside their very doors the principal material for their buildings: +should they require any other accessories, they could obtain, at +the worst, hard stone for their statues and thresholds in Mgan and +Milukhkha, and beams of cedar and cypress in the forests of the Amanus +and the Upper Tigris. Under these conditions a temple was soon erected, +and its construction did not demand centuries of continuous labour, like +the great limestone and granite sanctuaries of Egypt: the same ruler who +laid the first brick, almost always placed the final one, and succeeding +generations had only to keep the building in ordinary repair, without +altering its original plan. The work of construction was in almost +every case carried out all at one time, designed and finished from +the drawings of one architect, and bears traces but rarely of those +deviations from the earlier plans which sometimes make the comprehension +of the Theban temples so difficult a matter: if the state of decay of +certain parts, or more often inadequate excavation, frequently prevent +us from appreciating their details, we can at least reinstate their +general outline with tolerable accuracy. + +While the Egyptian temple was spread superficially over a large area, +the Chalan temple strove to attain as high an elevation as possible. +The "ziggurats," whose angular profile is a special characteristic of +the landscapes of the Euphrates, were composed of several immense cubes, +piled up on one another, and diminishing in size up to the small shrine +by which they were crowned and wherein the god himself was supposed to +dwell. There are two principal types of these ziggurats. In the first, +for which the builders of Lower Chalda showed a marked preference, +the vertical axis, common to all the superimposed stories, did not pass +through the centre of the rectangle which served as the base of the +whole building; it was carried back and placed near to one of the narrow +ends of the base, so that the back elevation of the temple rose abruptly +in steep narrow ledges above the plain, while the terraces of the front +broadened out into wide platforms. The stories are composed of solid +blocks of crude brick; up to the present, at least, no traces of +internal chambers have been found.* The chapel on the summit could not +contain more than one apartment: an altar stood before the door, and +access to it was obtained by a straight external staircase, interrupted +at each terrace by a more or less spacious landing.** The second type +of temple frequently found in Northern Chalda was represented by a +building on a square base with seven stories, all of equal height, +connected by one or two lateral staircases, having on the summit, the +pavilion of the god; this is the "terraced tower" which excited the +admiration of the Greeks at Babylon, and of which the temple of Bel was +the most remarkable example. The ruins of it still exist, but it has +been so frequently and so completely restored in the course of ages, +that it is impossible to say how much now remains of the original +construction. We know of several examples, however, of the other type +of ziggurat--one at Uru, another at Bridu, a third at Uruk, without +mentioning those which have not as yet been methodically explored. None +of them rises directly from the surface of the ground, but they are all +built on a raised platform, which consequently places the foundations of +the temple nearly on a level with the roofs of the surrounding houses. +The raised platform of the temple of Nannar at Uru still measures 20 +feet in height, and its four angles are orientated exactly to the four +cardinal points. Its faade was approached by an inclined plane, or by +a flight of low steps, and the summit, which was surrounded by a low +balustrade, was paved with enormous burnt bricks. On this terrace, +processions at solemn festivals would have ample space to perform their +evolutions. The lower story of the temple occupies a parallelogram of +198 feet in length by 173 feet in width, and rises about 27 feet in +height. + + * Perrot-Ohipiez admit that between the first and second + story there was a sort of plinth seven feet in height which + corresponded to the foundation platform below the first + story. It appears to me, as it did to Loftus, that the slope + which now separates the two vertical masses of brickwork "is + accidental, and owes its existence to the destruction of the + upper portion of the second story." Taylor mentions only two + stories, and evidently considers the slope in question to be + a bank of rubbish. + + ** Perrot-Chipiez place the staircase leading from the + ground-level to the terrace inside the building--"an + arrangement which would have the advantage of not + interfering with the outline of this immense platform, and + would not detract from the strength and solidity of its + appearance;" Reber proposes a different combination. At Uru, + the whole staircase projects in front of the platform and + "loads up to the edge of the basement of the second story," + then continues as an inclined plane from the edge of the + first story to the terrace of the second, forming one single + staircase, perhaps of the same width as this second story, + leading from the base to the summit of the building. + +[Illustration: 134.jpg THE TEMPLE OF NANNAR AT URU, APPROXIMATELY +RESTORED.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin. The restoration differs from that + proposed by Perrot-Chipiez. I have made it by working out + the description taken down on the spot by Taylor. + +The central mass of crude brick has preserved its casing of red tiles, +cemented with bitumen, almost intact up to the top; it is +strengthened by buttresses--nine on the longer and six on the shorter +sides--projecting about a foot, which relieve its rather bare surface. +The second story rises to the height of only 20 feet above, the first, +and when intact could not have been more than 26 to 30 feet high.* Many +bricks bearing the stamp of Dungi are found among the materials used in +the latest restoration, which took place about the VIth century before +our era; they have a smooth surface, are broken here and there by +air-holes, and their very simplicity seems to bear witness to the fact +that Nabonidos confined himself to the task of merely restoring things +to the state in which the earlier kings of Uru had left them.** + +[Illustration: 135.jpg THE TEMPLE OF URU IN ITS PRESENT STATE, ACCORDING +TO TAYLOR] + + Facsimile, by Faucher-Gudin, of the drawing published by + Taylor. + + + * At the present time 14 feet high, plus 5 feet of rubbish, + 119 feet long, 75 feet wide (Loftus, _Travels and Researches + in Olialdsea and Susiana_, p. 129). + + ** The cylinders of Nabonidos describing the restoration of + the temple were found at the four angles of the second story + by Taylor. + +Till within the last century, traces of a third story to this temple +might have been distinguished; unlike the lower ones, it was not of +solid brickwork, but contained at least one chamber: this was the Holy +of Holies, the sanctuary of Nannar. The external walls were covered with +pale blue enamelled tiles, having a polished surface. The interior +was panelled with cedar or cypress--rare woods procured as articles +of commerce from the peoples of the North and West; this woodwork was +inlaid in parts with thin leaves of gold, alternating with panels of +mosaics composed of small pieces of white marble, alabaster, onyx, and +agate, cut and polished. + +[Illustration: 136.jpg FURTHER VIEW OF THE TEMPLE OF URU] + + In Its Present State, According To Loftus. Drawn by + Bouchier, from Loftus. + +Here stood the statue of Nannar, one of those stiff and conventionalized +figures in the traditional pose handed down from generation to +generation, and which lingered even in the Chaldan statues of Greek +times. The spirit of the god dwelt within it in the same way as the +double resided in the Egyptian idols, and from thence he watched over +the restless movements of the people below, the noise of whose turmoil +scarcely reached him at that elevation. The gods of the Euphrates, like +those of the Nile, constituted a countless multitude of visible and +invisible beings, distributed into tribes and empires throughout all the +regions of the universe. A particular function or occupation formed, +so to speak, the principality of each one, in which he worked with an +indefatigable zeal, under the orders of his respective prince or king; +but, whereas in Egypt they were on the whole friendly to man, or at the +best indifferent in regard to him, in Chalda they for the most part +pursued him with an implacable hatred, and only seemed to exist in order +to destroy him. These monsters of alarming aspect, armed with knives and +lances, whom the theologians of Heliopolis and Thebes confined within +the caverns of Hades in the depths of eternal darkness, were believed +by the Chaldans to be let loose in broad daylight over the earth,--such +were the "gallu" and the "mas-kim," the "lu" and the "utukku," besides +a score of other demoniacal tribes bearing curious and mysterious names. + +[Illustration: 137.jpg Lion-headed genius.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a small terra-cotta figure of + the Assyrian period, and now in the Louvre. It was one of + the figures buried under the threshold of one of the gates + of the town at Khorsabad, to keep off baleful influences. + +Some floated in the air and presided over the unhealthy winds. The +South-West Wind, the most cruel of them all, stalked over the solitudes +of Arabia, whence he suddenly issued during the most oppressive months +of the year: he collected round him as he passed the malarial vapours +given off by the marshes under the heat of the sun, and he spread them +over the country, striking down in his violence not only man and beast, +but destroying harvests, pasturage, and even trees. + +[Illustration: 138.jpg THE SOUTH-WEST WIND] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from the bronze original now in the + Louvre. The latter museum and the British Museum possess + several other figures of the same demon. + +The genii of fevers and madness crept in silently everywhere, insidious +and traitorous as they were. The plague alternately slumbered or made +furious onslaughts among crowded populations. Imps haunted the houses, +goblins wandered about the water's edge, ghouls lay in wait for +travellers in unfrequented places, and the dead quitting their tombs in +the night stole stealthily among the living to satiate themselves with +their blood. The material shapes attributed to these murderous beings +were supposed to convey to the eye their perverse and ferocious +characters. They were represented as composite creatures in whom the +body of a man would be joined grotesquely to the limbs of animals in the +most unexpected combinations. They worked in as best they could, birds' +claws, fishes' scales, a bull's tail, several pairs of wings, the head +of a lion, vulture, hyaena, or wolf; when they left the creature a human +head, they made it as hideous and distorted as possible. The South-West +Wind was distinguished from all the rest by the multiplicity of the +incongruous elements of which his person was composed. His dog-like body +was supported upon two legs terminating in eagle's claws; in addition to +his arms, which were furnished with sharp talons, he had four outspread +wings, two of which fell behind him, while the other two rose up and +surrounded his head; he had a scorpion's tail, a human face with large +goggle-eyes, bushy eyebrows, fleshless cheeks, and retreating lips, +showing a formidable row of threatening teeth, while from his flattened +skull protruded the horns of a goat: the entire combination was so +hideous, that it even alarmed the god and put him to flight, when he was +unexpectedly confronted with his own portrait. There was no lack of +good genii to combat this deformed and vicious band. They too +were represented as monsters, but monsters of a fine and noble +bearing,--griffins, winged lions, lion-headed men, and more especially +those splendid human-headed bulls, those "lamassi" crowned with mitres, +whose gigantic statues kept watch before the palace and temple gates. +Between these two races hostility was constantly displayed: restrained +at one point, it broke out afresh at another, and the evil genii, +invariably beaten, as invariably refused to accept their defeat. Man, +less securely armed against them than were the gods, was ever meeting +with them. "Up there, they are howling, here they lie in wait,--they are +great worms let loose by heaven--powerful ones whose clamour rises above +the city--who pour water in torrents from heaven, sons who have come +out of the bosom of the earth.--They twine around the high rafters, +the great rafters, like a crown;--they take their way from house to +house,--for the door cannot stop them, nor bar the way, nor repulse +them,--for they creep like a serpent under the door--they insinuate +themselves like the air between the folding doors,--they separate the +bride from the embraces of the bridegroom,--they snatch the child from +between the knees of the man,--they entice the unwary from out of his +fruitful house,--they are the threatening voice which pursues him from +behind." Their malice extended even to animals: "They force the raven +to fly away on the wing,--and they make the swallow to escape from its +nest;--they cause the bull to flee, they cause the lamb to flee--they, +the bad demons who lay snares." + +The most audacious among them did not fear at times to attack the gods +of light; on one occasion, in the infancy of the world, they had sought +to dispossess them and reign in their stead. Without any warning they +had climbed the heavens, and fallen upon Sin, the moon-god; they had +repulsed Shamash, the Sun, and Eamman, both of whom had come to the +rescue; they had driven Ishtar and Anu from their thrones: the whole +firmament would have become a prey to them, had not Bel and Nusku, Ea +and Merodach, intervened at the eleventh hour, and succeeded in hurling +them down to the earth, after a terrible battle. They never completely +recovered from this reverse, and the gods raised up as rivals to them a +class of friendly genii--the "Igigi," who were governed by five heavenly +Anunnas. + +[Illustration: 141.jpg SIN DELIVERED BY MERODACH FROM THE ASSAULT OF THE +SEVEN EVIL SPIRITS.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from an Assyrian intaglio published + by Layard. + +The earthly Anunnas, the Anunnaki, had as their chiefs seven sons +of Bel, with bodies of lions, tigers, and serpents: "the sixth was a +tempestuous wind which obeyed neither god nor king,--the seventh, a +whirlwind, a desolating storm which destroys everything,"--"Seven, +seven,--in the depth of the abyss of waters they are seven,--and +destroyers of heaven they are seven.--They have grown up in the depths +of the abyss, in the palace;--males they are not, females they are +not,--they are storms which pass quickly.--They take no wife, they give +birth to no child,--they know neither compassion nor kindness,--they +listen to no prayer nor supplication.--As wild horses they are born in +the mountains,--they are the enemies of Ba,--they are the agents of the +gods;--they are evil, they are evil--and they are seven, they are seven, +they are twice seven." Man, if reduced to his own resources, could have +no chance of success in struggling against beings who had almost reduced +the gods to submission. He invoked in his defence the help of the whole +universe, the spirits of heaven and earth, the spirit of Bel and of +Belit, that of Ninib and of Nebo, those of Sin, of Ishtar, and of +Bamman; but Gibir or Gibil, the Lord of Fire, was the most powerful +auxiliary in this incessant warfare. The offspring of night and of dark +waters, the Anunnaki had no greater enemy than fire; whether kindled +on the household hearth or upon the altars, its appearance put them to +flight and dispelled their power. + +[Illustration: 142.jpg STRUGGLE BETWEEN A GOOD AND AN EVIL GENIUS.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from Layard. + +"Gibil, renowned hero in the land,--valiant, son of the Abyss, exalted +in the land,--Gibil, thy clear flame, breaking forth,--when it lightens +up the darkness,--assigns to all that bears a name its own destiny. +--The copper and tin, it is thou who dost mix them,--gold and silver, +it is thou who meltest them,--thou art the companion of the goddess +Ninkasi--thou art he who exposes his breast to the nightly enemy!--Cause +then the limbs of man, son of his god, to shine,--make him to be bright +like the sky,--may he shine like the earth,--may he be bright like the +interior of the heavens,--may the evil word be kept far from him," and +with it the malignant spirits. The very insistence with which help is +claimed against the Anunnaki shows how much their power was dreaded. +The Chaldean felt them everywhere about him, and could not move without +incurring the danger of coming into contact with them. He did not fear +them so much during the day, as the presence of the luminary deities in +the heavens reassured him; but the night belonged to them, and he was +open to their attacks. If he lingered in the country at dusk, they were +there, under the hedges, behind walls and trunks of trees, ready to +rush out upon him at every turn. If he ventured after sundown into the +streets of his village or town, he again met with them quarrelling with +dogs over the offal on a rubbish heap, crouched in the shelter of a +doorway, lying hidden in corners where the shadows were darkest. Even +when barricaded within his house, under the immediate protection of +his domestic idols, these genii still threatened him and left him not a +moment's repose.* The number of them was so great that he was unable to +protect himself adequately from all of them: when he had disarmed the +greater portion of them, there were always several remaining against +whom he had forgotten to take necessary precautions. What must have +been the total of the subordinate genii, when, towards the IXth century +before our era, the official census of the invisible beings stated +the number of the great gods in heaven and earth to be sixty-five +thousand!** + + * The presence of the evil spirits everywhere is shown, + among other magical formulas, by the incantation in + Rawlinson, _Cun, Ins. W. As._, vol. ii. pi. 18, where we + find enumerated at length the places from which they are to + be kept out. The magician closes the house to them, the + hedge which surrounds the house, the yoke laid upon the + oxen, the tomb, the prison, the well, the furnace, the + shade, the vase for libation, the ravines, the valleys, the + mountains, the door. + + ** Assurnazirpal, King of Assyria, speaks in one of his + inscriptions of these sixty-five thousand great gods of + heaven and earth. + +We are often much puzzled to say what these various divinities, whose +names we decipher on the monuments, could possibly have represented. The +sovereigns of Lagash addressed their prayers to Ningirsu, the valiant +champion of Inlil; to Ninursag, the lady of the terrestrial mountain: +to Ninsia, the lord of fate; to the King Ninagal; to Inzu, of whose real +name no one has an idea; to Inanna, the queen of battles; to Pasag, to +Galalim, to Dunshagana, to Ninmar, to Ningishzida. Gudea raised temples +to them in all the cities over which his authority extended, and he +devoted to these pious foundations a yearly income out of his domain +land or from the spoils of his wars. "Gudea, the 'vicegerent' of +Lagash, after having built the temple Ininnu for Ningirsu, constructed a +treasury; a house decorated with sculptures, such as no 'vicegerent' +had ever before constructed for Ningirsu; he constructed it for him, +he wrote his name in it, he made in it all that was needful, and he +executed faithfully all the words from the mouth of Ningirsu." The +dedication of these edifices was accompanied with solemn festivals, in +which the whole population took an active part. "During seven years no +grain was ground, and the maidservant was the equal of her mistress, the +slave walked beside his master, and in my town the weak rested by +the side of the strong." Henceforward Gudea watched scrupulously lest +anything impure should enter and mar the sanctity of the place. + +[Illustration: 145.jpg THE GOD NINGIBSU, PATRON OF LAGASH.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from Heuzey-Sarzec. The attribution + of this figure to Ningirsu is very probable, but not wholly + certain. + +Those we have enumerated were the ancient Sumerian divinities, but the +characteristics of most of them would have been lost to us, had we +not learned, by means of other documents, to what gods the Semites +assimilated them, gods who are better known and who are represented +under a less barbarous aspect. Ningirsu, the lord of the division of +Lagash which was called Girsu, was identified with Ninib; Inlil is Bel, +Ninursag is Beltis, Inzu is Sin, Inanna is Ishtar, and so on with the +rest. The cultus of each, too, was not a local cultus, confined to some +obscure corner of the country; they all were rulers over the whole of +Chalda, in the north as in the south, at Uruk, at Urn, at Larsam, at +Nipur, even in Babylon itself. Inlil was the ruler of the earth and of +Hades, Babbar was the sun, Inzu the moon, Inanna-Antmit the morning and +evening star and the goddess or love, at a time when two distinct +religious and two rival groups of gods existed side by side on the banks +of the Euphrates. The Sumerian language is for us, at the present day, +but a collection of strange names, of whose meaning and pronunciation we +are often ignorant. We may well ask what beings and beliefs were +originally hidden under these barbaric combinations of syllables which +are constantly recurring in the inscriptions of the oldest dynasties, +such as Pasag, Dunshagana, Dumuzi-. Zuaba, and a score of others. The +priests of subsequent times claimed to define exactly the attributes of +each of them, and probably their statements are, in the main, correct. +But it is impossible for us to gauge the motives which determined the +assimilation of some of these divinities, the fashion in which it was +carried out, the mutual concessions which Semite and Sumerian must have +made before they could arrive at an understanding, and before the +primitive characteristics of each deity were softened down or entirely +effaced in the process. Many of these divine personages, such as Ea, +Merodach, Ishtar, are so completely transformed, that we may well ask to +which of the two peoples they owed their origin. The Semites finally +gained the ascendency over their rivals, and the Sumerian gods from +thenceforward preserved an independent existence only in connection with +magic, divination, and the science of foretelling events, and also in +the formulas of exorcists and physicians, to which the harshness of +their names lent a greater weight. Elsewhere it was Bel and Sin, Shamash +and Eamman, who were universally worshipped, but a Bel, a Sin, a +Shamash, who still betrayed traces of their former connection with the +Sumerian Inlil and Inzu, with Babbar and Mermer. In whatever language, +however, they were addressed, by whatever name they were called upon, +they did not fail to hear and grant a favourable reply to the appeals of +the faithful. + +Whether Sumerian or Semitic, the gods, like those of Egypt, were not +abstract personages, guiding in a metaphysical fashion the forces of +nature. Each of them contained in himself one of the principal elements +of which our universe is composed,--earth, water, sky, sun, moon, and +the stars which moved around the terrestrial mountain. The succession of +natural phenomena with them was not the result of unalterable laws; it +was due entirely to a series of voluntary acts, accomplished by beings +of different grades of intelligence and power. Every part of the great +whole is represented by a god, a god who is a man, a Chaldan, who, +although of a finer and more lasting nature than other Chaldans, +possesses nevertheless the same instincts and is swayed by the same +passions. He is, as a rule, wanting in that somewhat lithe grace of +form, and in that rather easy-going good-nature, which were the primary +characteristics of the Egyptian gods: the Chaldan divinity has the +broad shoulders, the thick-set figure and projecting muscles of the +people over whom he rules; he has their hasty and violent temperament, +their coarse sensuality, their cruel and warlike propensities, their +boldness in conceiving undertakings, and their obstinate tenacity in +carrying them out. Their goddesses are modelled on the tyra of the +Chaldn women, or, more properly speaking, on that of their queens. The +majority of them do not quit the harem, and have no other ambition than +to become speedily the mother of a numerous offspring. Those who openly +reject the rigid constraints of such a life, and who seek to share the +rank of the gods, seem to lose all self-restraint when they put off +the veil: like Ishtar, they exchange a life of severe chastity for +the lowest debauchery, and they subject their followers to the same +irregular life which they themselves have led. "Every woman born in the +country must enter once during her lifetime the enclosure of the temple +of Aphrodite, must there sit down and unite herself to a stranger. Many +who are wealthy are too proud to mix with the rest, and repair thither +in closed chariots, followed by a considerable train of slaves. The +greater number seat themselves on the sacred pavement, with a cord +twisted about their heads,--and there is always a great crowd there, +coming and going; the women being divided by ropes into long lanes, down +which strangers pass to make their choice. A woman who has once taken +her place here cannot return home until a stranger has thrown into her +lap a silver coin, and has led her away with him beyond the limits of +the sacred enclosure. As he throws the money he pronounces these words: +'May the goddess Mylitta make thee happy! '--Now, among the Assyrians, +Aphrodite is called Mylitta. The silver coin may be of any value, but +none may refuse it, that is forbidden by the law, for, once thrown, it +is sacred. The woman follows the first man who throws her the money, and +repels no one. When once she has accompanied him, and has thus satisfied +the goddess, she returns to her home, and from thenceforth, however +large the sum offered to her, she will yield to no one. The women who +are tall or beautiful soon return to their homes, but those who are ugly +remain a long time before they are able to comply with the law; some +of them are obliged to wait three or four years within the enclosure."* +This custom still existed in the Vth century before our era, and the +Greeks who visited Babylon about that time found it still in full force. + + * Herodotus, i. 199: of. Stabo, xvi. p. 1058, who probably + has merely quoted this passage from Herodotus, or some + writer who copied from Herodotus. We meet with a direct + allusion to this same custom in the Bible, in the _Book of + Barueh_; "The women also, with cords about them, sitting in + the ways, burn bran for perfume; but if any of them, drawn + by some that passeth by, lie with him, she reproacheth her + fellow, that she was not thought as worthy as herself, nor + her cord broken." + +The gods, who had begun by being the actual material of the element +which was their attribute, became successively the spirit of it, then +its ruler.* They continued at first to reside in it, but in the course +of time they were separated from it, and each was allowed to enter the +domain of another, dwell in it, and even command it, as they could +have done in their own, till finally the greater number of them were +identified with the firmament. + + * Pk. Lbnoemant, _La Magie chez les Chaldens_, p. 144, et + seq., where the author shows how Anu, after having at + first been the Heaven itself, the starry vault stretched + above the earth, became successively the Spirit of Heaven + (_Zi-ana_), and finally the supreme ruler of the world: + according to Lenormant, it was the Semites in particular who + transformed the primitive spirit into an actual god-king. + +Bel, the lord of the earth, and Ea, the ruler of the waters, passed info +the heavens, which did not belong to them, and took their places beside +Ami: the pathways were pointed out which they had made for themselves +across the celestial vault, in order to inspect their kingdoms from the +exalted heights to which they had been raised; that of Bel was in the +Tropic of Cancer, that of Ea in the Tropic of Capricorn. They gathered +around them all the divinities who could easily be abstracted from the +function or object to which they were united, and they thus constituted +a kind of divine aristocracy, comprising all the most powerful +beings who guided the fortunes of the world. The number of them was +considerable, for they reckoned seven supreme and magnificent gods, +fifty great gods of heaven and earth, three hundred celestial +spirits, and six hundred terrestrial spirits. Each of them deputed +representatives here below, who received the homage of mankind for him, +and signified to them his will. The god revealed himself in dreams to +his seers and imparted to them the course of coming events,* or, in +some cases, inspired them suddenly and spoke by their mouth: their +utterances, taken down and commented on by their assistants, were +regarded as infallible oracles. But the number of mortal men possessing +adequate powers, and gifted with sufficiently acute senses to bear +without danger the near presence of a god, was necessarily limited; +communications were, therefore, more often established by means of +various objects, whose grosser substance lessened for human intelligence +and flesh and blood the dangers of direct contact with an immortal. The +statues hidden in the recesses of the temples or erected on the summits +of the "ziggurats" became imbued, by virtue of their consecration, with +the actual body of the god whom they represented, and whose name was +written either on the base or garment of the statue.** The sovereign +who dedicated them, summoned them to speak in the days to come, and from +thenceforth they spoke: when they were interrogated according to the +rite instituted specially for each one, that part of the celestial soul, +which by means of the prayers had been attracted to and held captive +by the statue, could not refuse to reply.** Were there for this purpose +special images, as in Egypt, which were cleverly contrived so as to +emit sounds by the pulling of a string by the hidden prophet? Voices +resounded at night in the darkness of the sanctuaries, and particularly +when a king came there to prostrate himself for the purpose of learning +the future: his rank alone, which raised him halfway to heaven, prepared +him to receive the word from on high by the mouth of the image. + + * A prophetic dream is mentioned upon, one of the statues of + Telloh. In the records of Assurbanipal we find mention of + several "seers"--_shabru_--one of whom predicts the + general triumph of the king over his enemies, and of whom + another announces in the name of Ishtar the victory over the + Elamites and encourages the Assyrian army to cross a torrent + swollen by rains, while a third sees in a dream the defeat + and death of the King of Elam. These "seers" are mentioned in + the texts of Gudea with the prophetesses "who tell the + message" of the gods. + + ** In a formula drawn up against evil spirits, for the + purpose of making talismanic figures for the protection of + houses, it is said of Merodach that he "inhabits the image" + --_ashibu salam_--which has been made of him by the magician. + + ** This is what Gudea says, when, describing his own statue + which he had placed in the temple of Telloh, he adds that + "he gave the order to the statue: 'To the statue of my king, + speak!'" The statue of the king, inspired by that of the + god, would thenceforth speak when interrogated according to + the formularies. Cf. what is said of the divine or royal + statues dedicated in the temples of Egypt, vol. i. pp. 169, + 170. A number of oracles regularly obtained in the time of + Asarhaddon and Assurbanabal have been published by Knudtzon. + +[Illustration: 152.jpg THE ADORATION OF THE MACE AND THE WHIP.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from the Chaldan intaglio + reproduced in Heuzey-Sarzec, _Dcouvertes en Chalde_, pl. + 30bis, No. 13b. + +More frequently a priest, accustomed from childhood to the office, +possessed the privilege of asking the desired questions and of +interpreting to the faithful the various signs by means of which the +divine will was made known. The spirit of the god inspired, moreover, +whatever seemed good to him, and frequently entered into objects +where we should least have expected to find it. It animated stones, +particularly such as fell from heaven; also trees, as, for example, the +tree of Eridu which pronounced oracles; and, besides the battle-mace, +with a granite head fixed on a wooden handle, the axe of Ramman, lances +made on the model of Gilgames' fairy javelin, which came and went at its +master's orders, without needing to be touched. Such objects, when it +was once ascertained that they were imbued with the divine spirit, were +placed upon the altar and worshipped with as much veneration as were the +statues themselves. + +[Illustration: 153.jpg A protecting amulet.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from the terra-cotta figurine of + Assyrian date now in the Louvre. + +Animals never became objects of habitual worship as in Egypt: some of +them, however, such as the bull and lion, were closely allied to the +gods, and birds unconsciously betrayed by their flight or cries the +secrets of futurity.* In addition to all these, each family possessed +its household gods, to whom its members recited prayers and poured +libations night and morning, and whose statues set up over the domestic +hearth defended it from the snares of the evil ones.** The State +religion, which all the inhabitants of the same city, from the king down +to the lowest slave, were solemnly bound to observe, really represented +to the Chaldans but a tithe of their religious life: it included some +dozen gods, no doubt the most important, but it more or less left out of +account all the others, whose anger, if aroused by neglect, might become +dangerous. The private devotion of individuals supplemented the State +religion by furnishing worshippers for most of the neglected divinities, +and thus compensated for what was lacking in the official public worship +of the community. + + * Animal forms are almost always restricted either to the + genii, the constellations, or the secondary forms of the + greater divinities: Ea, however, is represented by a man + with a fish's tail, or as a man clothed with a fish-skin, + which would appear to indicate that at the outset he was + considered to be an actual fish. + + ** The images of these gods acted as amulets, and the fact + of their presence alone repelled the evil spirits. At + Khorsabad they were found buried under the threshold of the + city gates. A bilingual tablet in the British Museum has + preserved for us the formula of consecration which was + supposed to invest these protecting statuettes with divine + powers. + +If the idea of uniting all these divine beings into a single supreme +one, who would combine within himself all their elements and the whole +of their powers, ever for a moment crossed the mind of some Chaldan +theologian, it never spread to the people as a whole. Among all the +thousands of tablets or inscribed stones on which we find recorded +prayers and magical formulas, we have as yet discovered no document +treating of the existence of a supreme god, or even containing the +faintest allusion to a divine unity. We meet indeed with many passages +in which this or that divinity boasts of his power, eloquently +depreciating that of his rivals, and ending his discourse with the +injunction to worship him alone: "Man who shall come after, trust +in Nebo, trust in no other god!" The very expressions which are used, +commanding future races to abandon the rest of the immortals in +favour of Nebo, prove that even those who prided themselves on being +worshippers of one god realized how far they were from believing in the +unity of God. They strenuously asserted that the idol of their choice +was far superior to many others, but it never occurred to them to +proclaim that he had absorbed them all into himself, and that he +remained alone in his glory, contemplating the world, his creature. Side +by side with those who expressed this belief in Nebo, an inhabitant +of Babylon would say as much and more of Merodach, the patron of +his birthplace, without, however, ceasing to believe in the actual +independence and royalty of Nebo. "When thy power manifests itself, who +can withdraw himself from it?--Thy word is a powerful net which thou +spreadest in heaven and over the earth:--it falls upon the sea, and +the sea retires,--it falls upon the plain, and the fields make great +mourning,--it falls upon the upper waters of the Euphrates, and the word +of Merodach stirs up the flood in them.--O Lord, thou art sovereign, +who can resist thee?--Merodach, among the gods who bear a name, thou art +sovereign." Merodach is for his worshippers the king of the gods, he is +not the sole god. Each of the chief divinities received in a similar +manner the assurance of his omnipotence, but, for all that, his most +zealous followers never regarded them as the only God, beside whom there +was none other, and whose existence and rule precluded those of any +other. The simultaneous elevation of certain divinities to the supreme +rank had a reactionary influence on the ideas held with regard to the +nature of each. Anu, Bel, and Ea, not to mention others, had enjoyed +at the outset but a limited and incomplete personality, confined to a +single concept, and were regarded as possessing only such attributes as +were indispensable to the exercise of their power within a prescribed +sphere, whether in heaven, or on the earth, or in the waters; as each in +his turn gained the ascendency over his rivals, he became invested with +the qualities which were exercised by the others in their own domain. +His personality became enlarged, and instead of remaining merely a +god of heaven or earth or of the waters, he became god of all three +simultaneously. Anu reigned in the province of Bel or of Ea as he ruled +in his own; Bel joined to his own authority that of Anu and Ea; Ea +treated Anu and Bel with the same absence of ceremony which they had +shown to him, and added their supremacy to his own. The personality +of each god was thenceforward composed of many divers elements: each +preserved a nucleus of his original being, but superadded to this were +the peculiar characteristics of all the gods above whom he had been +successively raised. Anu took to himself somewhat of the temperaments +of Bel and of Ea, and the latter in exchange borrowed from him +many personal traits. The same work of levelling which altered the +characteristics of the Egyptian divinities, and transformed them +little by little into local variants of Osiris and the Sun, went on as +vigorously among the Chaldan gods: those who were incarnations of +the earth, the waters, the stars, or the heavens, became thenceforth +so nearly allied to each other that we are tempted to consider them +as being doubles of a single god, worshipped under different names +in different localities. Their primitive forms can only be clearly +distinguished when they are stripped of the uniform in which they are +all clothed. + +The sky-gods and the earth-gods had been more numerous at the outset +than they were subsequently. We recognize as such Anu, the immovable +firmament, and the ancient Bel, the lord of men and of the soil on which +they live, and into whose bosom they return after, death; but there +were others, who in historic times had partially or entirely lost their +primitive character,--such as Nergal, Ninib, Dumuzi; or, among the +goddesses, Damkina, Esharra, and even Ishtar herself, who, at the +beginning of their existence, had represented only the earth, or one +of its most striking aspects. For instance, Nergal and Ninib were the +patrons of agriculture and protectors of the soil, Dumuzi was the +ground in spring whose garment withered at the first approach of summer, +Damkina was the leafy mould in union with fertilizing moisture, Esharra +was the field whence sprang the crops, Ishtar was the clod which again +grew green after the heat of the dog days and the winter frosts. All +these beings had been forced to submit in a greater or less degree to +the fate which among most primitive races awaits those older earth-gods, +whose manifestations are usually too vague and shadowy to admit of their +being grasped or represented by any precise imagery without limiting and +curtailing their spheres. New deities had arisen of a more definite and +tangible kind, and hence more easily understood, and having a real or +supposed province which could be more easily realized, such as the sun, +the moon, and the fixed or wandering stars. The moon is the measure of +time; it determines the months, leads the course of the years, and the +entire life of mankind and of great cities depends upon the regularity +of its movements: the Chaldans, therefore, made it, or rather the +spirit which animated it, the father and king of the gods; but +its suzerainty was everywhere a conventional rather than an actual +superiority, and the sun, which in theory was its vassal, attracted more +worshippers than the pale and frigid luminary. Some adored the sun under +its ordinary title of Shamash, corresponding to the Egyptian R; others +designated it as Merodach, Ninib, Nergal, Dumuzi, not to mention other +less usual appellations. Nergal in the beginning had nothing in common +with Ninib, and Merodach differed alike from Shamash, Ninib, Nergal, +and Dumuzi; but the same movement which instigated the fusion of so many +Egyptian divinities of diverse nature, led the gods of the Chaldans to +divest themselves little by little of their individuality and to lose +themselves in the sun. Each one at first became a complete sun, and +united in himself all the innate virtues of the sun--its brilliancy +and its dominion over the world, its gentle and beneficent heat, its +fertilizing warmth, its goodness and justice, its emblematic character +of truth and peace; besides the incontestable vices which darken certain +phases of its being--the fierceness of its rays at midday and in summer, +the inexorable strength of its will, its combative temperament, its +irresistible harshness and cruelty. By degrees they lost this uniform +character, and distributed the various attributes among themselves. If +Shamash continued to be the sun in general, Ninib restricted himself, +after the example of the Egyptian Harmakhis, to being merely the rising +and setting sun, the sun on the two horizons. Nergal became the feverish +and destructive summer sun.* Merodach was transformed into the youthful +sun of spring and early morning;** Dumuzi, like Merodach, became the sun +before the summer. Their moral qualities naturally were affected by the +process of restriction which had been applied to their physical being, +and the external aspect now assigned to each in accordance with their +several functions differed considerably from that formerly attributed +to the unique type from which they had sprung. Ninib was represented as +valiant, bold, and combative; he was a soldier who dreamed but of +battle and great feats of arms. Nergal united a crafty fierceness to +his bravery: not content with being lord of battles, he became the +pestilence which breaks out unexpectedly in a country, the death which +comes like a thief, and carries off his prey before there is time +to take up arms against him. Merodach united wisdom with courage and +strength: he attacked the wicked, protected the good, and used his power +in the cause of order and justice. A very ancient legend, which was +subsequently fully developed among the Canaanites, related the story of +the unhappy passion of Ishtar for Dumuzi. The goddess broke out yearly +into a fresh frenzy, but the tragic death of the hero finally moderated +the ardour of her devotion. She wept distractedly for him, went to beg +the lords of the infernal regions for his return, and brought him back +triumphantly to the earth: every year there was a repetition of the same +passionate infatuation, suddenly interrupted by the same mourning. The +earth was united to the young sun with every recurring spring, and under +the influence of his caresses became covered with verdure; then followed +autumn and winter, and the sun, grown old, sank into the tomb, from +whence his mistress had to call him up, in order to plunge afresh with +him by a common impulse into the joys and sorrows of another year. + + * The solar character of Nergal, at least in later times, is + admitted, but with restrictions, by all Assyriologists. The + evident connection between him and Ninib, of which we have + proofs, was the ground of Delitzsch's theory that he was + likewise the burning and destructive sun, and also of + Jensen's analogous concept of a midday and summer sun. + + ** Pr. Lenormant seems to have been the first to distinguish + in Merodach, besides the god of the planet Jupiter, a solar + personage. This notion, which has been generally admitted by + most Assyriologists, has been defined with greater + exactitude by Jensen, who is inclined to see in Merodach + both the morning sun and the spring sun; and this is the + opinion held at present. + +The differences between the gods were all the more accentuated, for the +reason that many who had a common origin were often separated from one +another by, relatively speaking, considerable distances. Having divided +the earth's surface between them, they formed, as in Egypt, a complete +feudal system, whose chiefs severally took up their residence in a +particular city. Anu was worshipped in Uruk, Enlil-Bel reigned in Nipur, +Eridu belonged to Ea, the lord of the waters. The moon-god, Sin, alone +governed two large fiefs, Uru in the extreme south, and Harran towards +the extreme north-west; Shamash had Larsam and one of the Sipparas for +his dominion, and the other sun-gods were not less well provided for, +Nergal possessing Kutha, Zamama having Kish, Ninib side by side with Bel +reigning in Nipur, while Merodach ruled at Babylon. Each was absolute +master in his own territory, and it is quite exceptional to find two of +them co-regnant in one locality, as were Ninib and Bel at Nipur, or Ea +and Ishtar in Uruk; not that they raised any opposition on principle +to the presence of a stranger divinity in their dominions, but they +welcomed them only under the titles of allies or subjects. Each, +moreover, had fair play, and Nebo or Shamash, after having filled +the _rle_ of sovereign at Borsippa or at Larsam, did not consider it +derogatory to his dignity to accept a lower rank in Babylon or at Uru. +Hence all the feudal gods played a double part, and had, as it were, +a double civil portion--that of suzerain in one or two localities, and +that of vassals everywhere else--and this dual condition was the surest +guarantee not only of their prosperity, but of their existence. Sin +would have run great risk of sinking into oblivion if his resources had +been confined to the subventions from his domain temples of Harran and +Uru. Their impoverishment would in such case have brought about his +complete failure: after having enjoyed an existence amid riches and +splendour in the beginning of history, he would have ended his life in a +condition of misery and obscurity. But the sanctuaries erected to him in +the majority of the other cities, the honours which these bestowed upon +him, and the offerings which they made to him, compensated him for the +poverty and neglect which he experienced in his own domains; and he was +thus able to maintain his divine dignity on a suitable footing. All +the gods were, therefore, worshipped by the Chaldeans, and the only +difference among them in this respect arose from the fact that some +exalted one special deity above the others. The gods of the richest and +most ancient principalities naturally enjoyed the greatest popularity. +The greatness of Uru had been the source of Sin's prestige, and Merodach +owed his prosperity to the supremacy which Babylon had acquired over the +districts of the north. Merodach was regarded as the son of Ba, as the +star which had risen from the abyss to illuminate the world, and to +confer upon mankind the decrees of eternal wisdom. He was proclaimed as +lord--"blu"--_par excellence_, in comparison with whom all other lords +sank into insignificance, and this title soon procured for him a second, +which was no less widely recognized than the first: he was spoken of +everywhere as the Bel of Babylon, Bel-Merodach--before whom Bel of Nipur +was gradually thrown into the shade. The relations between these feudal +deities were not always pacific: jealousies arose among them like those +which disturbed the cities over which they ruled; they conspired against +each other, and on occasions broke out into open warfare. Instead of +forming a coalition against the evil genii who threatened their rule, +and as a consequence tended to bring everything into jeopardy, they +sometimes made alliances with these malign powers and mutually betrayed +each other. Their history, if we could recover it in its entirety, would +be marked by as violent deeds as those which distinguished the princes +and kings who worshipped them. Attempts were made, however, and that too +from an early date, to establish among them a hierarchy like that which +existed among the great ones of the earth. The faithful, who, instead of +praying to each one separately, preferred to address them all, invoked +them always in the same order: they began with Anu, the heaven, and +followed with Bel, Ea, Sin, Shamash, and Bamman. They divided these six +into two groups of three, one trio consisting of Anu, Bel, and Ea, the +other of Sin, Shamash, and Bamman. All these deities were associated +with Southern Chaldoa, and the system which grouped them must have taken +its rise in this region, probably at Uruk, whose patron Anu V occupied +the first rank among them. The theologians who classified them in this +manner seem never to have dreamt of explaining, like the authors of +the Heliopolitan Ennead, the successive steps in their creation: these +triads were not, moreover, copies of the human family, consisting of +a father and mother whose marriage brings into the world a new being. +Others had already given an account of the origin of things, and of +Merodach's struggles with chaos; these theologians accepted the universe +as it was, already made, and contented themselves with summing up its +elements by enumerating the gods which actuated them.* They assigned the +first place to those elements which make the most forcible impression +upon man--beginning with Anu, for the heaven was the god of their city; +following with Bel of Nipur, the earth which from all antiquity has +been associated with the heaven; and concluding with Ea of Eridu, the +terrestrial waters and primordial Ocean whence Anu and Bel, together +with all living creatures, had sprung--Ea being a god whom, had they +not been guided by local vanity, they would have made sovereign lord +of all. Anu owed his supremacy to an historical accident rather than a +religious conception: he held his high position, not by his own merits, +but because the prevailing theology of an early period had been the work +of his priesthood. + + * I know of Sayce only who has endeavoured to explain the + historical formation of the triads. They are considered by + him as of Accadian origin, and probably began in an + astronomical triad, composed of the moon-god, the sun-god, + and the evening star, Sin, Shamash, and Ishtar; alongside + this elementary trinity, "the only authentic one to be found + in the religious faith of primitive Chalda," the Semites + may have placed the cosmogonical trinity of Anu, Bel, and + Ea, formed by the reunion of the gods of Uruk, Nipur, and + Eridu. + +The characters of the three personages who formed the supreme triad can +be readily deduced from the nature of the elements which they represent. +Anu is the heaven itself--"ana"--the immense vault which spreads itself +above our heads, clear during the day when glorified by the sun, obscure +and strewn with innumerable star clusters during the night. Afterwards +it becomes the spirit which animates the firmament, or the god which +rules it: he resides in the north towards the pole, and the ordinary +route chosen by him when inspecting his domain is that marked out by our +ecliptic. He occupies the high regions of the universe, sheltered from +winds and tempests, in an atmosphere always serene, and a light always +brilliant. The terrestrial gods and those of middle-space take refuge in +this "heaven of Anu," when they are threatened by any great danger, but +they dare not penetrate its depths, and stop, shortly after passing its +boundary, on the ledge which supports the vault, where they loll and +howl like dogs. It is but rarely that it may be entered, and then +only by the highly privileged--kings whose destiny marked them out for +admittance, and heroes who have fallen valiantly on the field of +battle. In his remote position on unapproachable summits Anu seems to +participate in the calm and immobility of his dwelling. If he is quick +in forming an opinion and coming to a conclusion, he himself never puts +into execution the plans which he has matured or the judgments which +he has pronounced: he relieves himself of the trouble of acting, by +assigning the duty to Bel-Merodach, Ea, or Eamman, and he often employs +inferior genii to execute his will. "They are seven, the messengers of +Anu their king; it is they who from town to town raise the stormy wind; +they are the south wind which drives mightily in the heavens; they are +the destroying clouds which overturn the heavens; they are the rapid +tempests which bring darkness in the midst of clear day, they roam here +and there with the wicked wind and the ill-omened hurricane." Anu sends +forth all the gods as he pleases, recalls them again, and then, to make +them his pliant instruments, enfeebles their personality, reducing it to +nothing by absorbing it into his own. He blends himself with them, and +their designations seem to be nothing more than doublets of his own: he +is Anu the Lakhmu who appeared on the first days of creation; Ahu Ursh +or Ninib is the sun-warrior of Nipur; and Anu is also the eagle Alala +whom Ishtar enfeebled by her caresses. Anu regarded in this light ceases +to be the god _par excellence_: he becomes the only chief god, and the +idea of authority is so closely attached to his name that the latter +alone is sufficient in common speech to render the idea of God. Bel +would have been entirely thrown into the shade by him, as the earth-gods +generally are by the sky-gods, if it had not been that he was confounded +with his namesake Bel-Merodach of Babylon: to this alliance he owed +to the end the safety of his life, in presence of Anu. Ea was the +most active and energetic member of the triad.* As he represented the +bottomless abyss, the dark waters which had filled the universe until +the day of the creation, there had been attributed to him a complete +knowledge of the past, present, and future, whose germs had lain within +him, as in a womb. The attribute of supreme wisdom was revered in Ea, +the lord of spells and charms, to which gods and men were alike subject: +no strength could prevail against his strength, no voice against his +voice: when once he opened his mouth to give a decision, his will became +law, and no one might gainsay it. If a peril should arise against +which the other gods found themselves impotent, they resorted to +him immediately for help, which was never refused. He had saved +Shamashnapishtirn from the Deluge; every day he freed his votaries from +sickness and the thousand demons which were the causes of it. He was +a potter, and had modelled men out of the clay of the plains. From him +smiths and workers in gold obtained the art of rendering malleable +and of fashioning the metals. Weavers and stone-cutters, gardeners, +husbandmen, and sailors hailed him as their teacher and patron. From his +incomparable knowledge the scribes derived theirs, and physicians and +wizards invoked spirits in his name alone by the virtue of prayers which +he had condescended to teach them. + + * The name of this god was read "Nisrok" by Oppert, + "Nouah" by Hincks and Lenormant. The true reading is Ia, Ea, + usually translated "house," "water-house"; this is a popular + interpretation which appears to have occurred to the + Chaldans from the values of the signs entering into the + name of the god. From the outset H. Rawlinson recognized in + Ea, which he read Hea, Hoa, the divinity presiding over the + abyss of waters; he compared him with the serpent of Holy + Scripture, in its relation to the Tree of Knowledge and the + Tree of Life, and deduced therefrom his character of lord of + wisdom. His position as lord of the primordial waters, from + which all things proceeded, clearly denned by Lenormant, is + now fully recognized. His name was transcribed As by + Damascius, a form which is not easily explained; the most + probable hypothesis is that of Hommel who considers Aos as a + shortened form of Ias = Ia, Ea. + +Subordinate to these limitless and vague beings, the theologians placed +their second triad, made up of gods of restricted power and invariable +form. They recognized in the unswerving regularity with which the moon +waxed and waned, or with which the sun rose and set every day, a +proof of their subjection to the control of a superior will, and they +signalized this dependence by making them sons of one or other of the +three great gods. Sin was the offspring of Bel, Shamash of Sin, +Kamman of Anu. Sin was indebted for this primacy among the subordinate +divinities to the preponderating influence which Uru exercised over +Southern Chalda. Mar, where Ramman was the chief deity, never emerged +from its obscurity, and Larsam acquired supremacy only many centuries +after its neighbour, and did not succeed in maintaining it for any +length of time. The god of the suzerain city necessarily took precedence +of those of the vassal towns, and when once his superiority was admitted +by the people, he was able to maintain his place in spite of all +political revolutions. Sin was called in Uru, "Uruki," or "Nannar the +glorious," and his priests sometimes succeeded in identifying him +with Anu. "Lord, prince of the gods, who alone in heaven and earth is +exalted,--father Nannar, lord of the hosts of heaven, prince of the +gods,--father Nannar, lord, great Anu, prince of the gods,--father +Nannar, lord, moon-god, prince of the gods,--father Nannar, lord of Uni, +prince of the gods....--Lord, thy deity fills the far-off heavens, +like the vast sea, with reverential fear! Master of the earth, thou who +fixest there the boundaries [of the towns] and assignest to them their +names,--father, begetter of gods and men, who establishest for them +dwellings and institutest for them that which is good, who proclaimest +royalty and bestowest the exalted sceptre on those whose destiny was +determined from distant times,--chief, mighty, whose heart is great, god +whom no one can name, whose limbs are steadfast, whose knees never bend, +who preparest the paths of thy brothers the gods....--In heaven, who is +supreme? As for thee, it is thou alone who art supreme! As for thee, thy +decree is made known in heaven, and the Igigi bow their faces!--As for +thee, thy decree is made known upon earth, and the spirits of the abyss +kiss the dust!--As for thee, thy decree blows above like the wind, +and stall and pasture become fertile!--As for thee, thy decree is +accomplished upon earth below, and the grass and green things grow!--As +for thee, thy degree is seen in the cattle-folds and in the lairs of the +wild beasts, and it multiplies living things!--As for thee, thy +decree has called into being equity and justice, and the peoples have +promulgated thy law!--As for thee, thy decree, neither in the far-off +heaven, nor in the hidden depths of the earth, can any one recognize +it!--As for thee, thy decree, who can learn it, who can try conclusions +with it?--O Lord, mighty in heaven, sovereign upon earth, among the gods +thy brothers, thou hast no rival." Outside Uru and Harran, Sin did not +obtain this rank of creator and ruler of things; he was simply the +moon-god, and was represented in human form, usually accompanied by a +thin crescent, upon which he sometimes stands upright, sometimes appears +with the bust only rising out of it, in royal costume and pose. + +[Illustration: 169.jpg THE GOD SUN RECEIVES THE HOMAGE OF TWO +WORSHIPPERS.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a heliogravure by Menant. + +His mitre is so closely associated with him that it takes his place on +the astrological tablets; the name he bears--"agu"--often indicates +the moon regarded simply as a celestial body and without connotation +of deity. Babbar-Shamash, "the light of the gods, his fathers," "the +illustrious scion of Sin," passed the night in the depths of the north, +behind the polished metal walls which shut in the part of the firmament +visible to human eyes. + +[Illustration: 170.jpg SHAMASH SETS OUT, IN THE MORNING, FROM THE +INTERIOR OF THE HEAVEN BY THE EASTERN GATE.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a Chaldan intaglio of green + jasper in the Louvre. The original measures about 1 3/10 + inch in height. + +As soon as the dawn had opened the gates for him, he rose in the east +all aflame, his club in his hand, and he set forth on his headlong +course over the chain of mountains which surrounds the world;* six hours +later he had attained the limit of his journey towards the south, he +then continued his journey to the west, gradually lessening his heat, +and at length re-entered his accustomed resting-place by the western +gate, there to remain until the succeeding morning. He accomplished his +journey round the earth in a chariot conducted by two charioteers, +and drawn by two vigorous onagers, "whose legs never grew weary;" the +flaming disk which was seen from earth was one of the wheels of his +chariot.** + + * His course along the embankment which runs round the + celestial vault was the origin of the title, _Line of Union + between Heaven and Earth_; he moved, in fact, where the + heavens and the earth come into contact, and appeared to + weld them into one by the circle of fire which he described. + Another expression of this idea occurs in the preamble of + Nergal and Ninib, who were called "the separators"; the + course of the sun might, in fact, be regarded as separating, + as well as uniting, the two parts of the universe. + + ** The disk has sometimes four, sometimes eight rays + inscribed on it, indicating wheels with four or eight spokes + respectively. Rawlinson supposed "that these two figures + indicate a distinction between the male and female power of + the deity, the disk with four rays symbolizing Shamash, the + orb with eight rays being the emblem of Ai, Gula, or + Anunit." + +[Illustration: 171.jpg SHAMASH IN HIS SHRINE, HIS EMBLEM BEFORE HIM ON +THE ALTAR.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a photograph by Rassam. The + busts of the two deities on the front of the roof of the + shrine are the two charioteers of the sun; they uphold and + guide the rayed disk upon the altar. Cf. in the Assyrian + period the winged disk led with cords by two genii. + +As soon as he appeared he was hailed with the chanting of hymns: "O Sun, +thou appearest on the foundation of the heavens,--thou drawest back the +bolts which bar the scintillating heavens, thou openest the gate of +the heavens! O Sun, thou raisest thy head above the earth,--Sun, thou +extendest over the earth the brilliant vaults of the heavens." +The powers of darkness fly at his approach or take refuge in their +mysterious caverns, for "he destroys the wicked, he scatters them, the +omens and gloomy portents, dreams, and wicked ghouls--he converts evil +to good, and he drives to their destruction the countries and men--who +devote themselves to black magic." In addition to natural light, he sheds +upon the earth truth and justice abundantly; he is the "high judge" +before whom everything makes obeisance, his laws never waver, his +decrees are never set at naught. "O Sun, when thou goest to rest in the +middle of the heavens--may the bars of the bright heaven salute thee +in peace, and may the gate of heaven bless thee!--May Misharu, thy +well-beloved servant, guide aright thy progress, so that on Rbarra, +the seat of thy rule, thy greatness may rise, and that A, thy cherished +spouse, may receive thee joyfully! May thy glad heart find in her thy +rest!--May the food of thy divinity be brought to thee by her,--warrior, +hero, sun, and may she increase thy vigour;--lord of Ebarra, when +thou ap-proachest, mayest thou direct thy course aright!---0 Sun, urge +rightly thy way along the fixed road determined for thee,--O Sun, thou +who art the judge of the land, and the arbiter of its laws!" + +It would appear that the triad had begun by having in the third place a +goddess, Ishtar of Dilbat. Ishtar is the evening star which precedes the +appearance of the moon, and the morning star which heralds the approach +of the sun: the brilliance of its light justifies the choice which +made it an associate of the greater heavenly bodies. "In the days of +the past.... Ea charged Sin, Shamash, and Ishtar with the ruling of the +firmament of heaven; he distributed among them, with Anu, the command +of the army of heaven, and among these three gods, his children, +he apportioned the day and the night, and compelled them to work +ceaselessly." + +[Illustration: 173.jpg ISHTAR HOLDING HER STAR BEFORE SIN.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from an intaglio at Rome. + +Ishtar was separated from her two companions, when the group of the +planets was definitely organized and claimed the adoration of the +devout; the theologians then put in her place an individual of a less +original aspect, Ramman. Ramman embraced within him the elements of many +very ancient genii, all of whom had been set over the atmosphere, and +the phenomena which are daily displayed in it--wind, rain, and thunder. +These genii occupied an important place in the popular religion which +had been cleverly formulated by the theologians of Uruk, and there have +come down to us many legends in which their incarnations play a part. +They are usually represented as enormous birds flocking on their swift +wings from below the horizon, and breathing flame or torrents of water +upon the countries over which they hovered. The most terrible of them +was Zu, who presided over tempests: he gathered the clouds together, +causing them to burst in torrents of rain or hail; he let loose the +winds and lightnings, and nothing remained standing where he had passed. +He had a numerous family: among them cross-breeds of extraordinary +species which would puzzle a modern naturalist, but were matters of +course to the ancient priests. His mother Siris, lady of the rain and +clouds, was a bird like himself; but Zu had as son a vigorous bull, +which, pasturing in the meadows, scattered abundance and fertility +around him. The caprices of these strange beings, their malice, and +their crafty attacks, often brought upon them vexatious misfortunes. +Shutu, the south wind, one day beheld Adapa, one of the numerous +offspring of Ea, fishing in order to provide food for his family. In +spite of his exalted origin, Adapa was no god; he did not possess the +gift of immortality, and he was not at liberty to appear in the presence +of Anu in heaven. He enjoyed, nevertheless, certain privileges, thanks +to his familiar intercourse with his father Ea, and owing to his birth +he was strong enough to repel the assaults of more than one deity. When, +therefore, Shutu, falling upon him unexpectedly, had overthrown him, his +anger knew no bounds: "'Shutu, thou hast overwhelmed me with thy hatred, +great as it is,--I will break thy wings! 'Having thus spoken with his +mouth unto Shutu, Adapa broke his wings. For seven days,--Shutu breathed +no longer upon the earth." Anu, being disturbed at this quiet, which +seemed to him not very consonant with the meddling temperament of the +wind, made inquiries as to its cause through his messenger Ilabrt. "His +messenger Ilabrt answered him: 'My master,--Adapa, the son of Ea, +has broken Shutu's wings.'--Anu, when he heard these words, cried out: +'Help!'" and he sent to Ea Barku, the genius of the lightning, with an +order to bring the guilty one before him. Adapa was not quite at his +ease, although he had right on his side; but Ea, the cleverest of the +immortals, prescribed a line of conduct for him. He was to put on at +once a garment of mourning, and to show himself along with the messenger +at the gates of heaven. Having arrived there, he would not fail to meet +the two divinities who guarded them,--Dumuzi and Gishzida: "'In whose +honour this garb, in whose honour, Adapa, this garment of mourning?' +'On our earth two gods have disappeared--it is on this account I am as +I am.' Dumuzi and Gishzida will look at each other,* they will begin +to lament, they will say a friendly word--to the god Anu for thee, they +will render clear the countenance of Anu,--in thy favour. When thou +shalt appear before the face of Anu, the food of death, it shall be +offered to thee, do not eat it. The drink of death, it shall be offered +to thee, drink it not. A garment, it shall be offered to the, put it on. +Oil, it shall be offered to thee, anoint thyself with it. The command I +have given thee observe it well.'" + + * Dumuzi and Gishzida are the two gods whom Adapa indicates + without naming them; insinuating that he has put on mourning + on their account, Adapa is secure of gaining their sympathy, + and of obtaining their intervention with the god Anu in his + favour. As to Dumuzi, see pp. 158, 159 of the present work; + the part played by Gishzida, as well as the event noted in + the text regarding him, is unknown. + +Everything takes place as Ea had foreseen. Dumuzi and Gishzida +welcome the poor wretch, speak in his favour, and present him: "as he +approached, Anu perceived him, and said to him: 'Come, Adapa, why didst +thou break the wings of Shutu?' Adapa answered Anu: 'My lord,--for the +household of my lord Ea, in the middle of the sea,---I was fishing, +and the sea was all smooth.--Shutu breathed, he, he overthrew me, and +I plunged into the abode of fish. Hence the anger of my heart,--that he +might not begin again his acts of ill will,--I broke his wings.'" Whilst +he pleaded his cause the furious heart of Anu became calm. The presence +of a mortal in the halls of heaven was a kind of sacrilege, to be +severely punished unless the god should determine its expiation by +giving the philtre of immortality to the intruder. Anu decided on the +latter course, and addressed Adapa: "'Why, then, did Ea allow an unclean +mortal to see--the interior of heaven and earth?' He handed him a cup, +he himself reassured him.--'We, what shall we give him? The food of +life--take some to him that he may eat.' The food of life, some was +taken to him, but he did not eat of it. The water of life, some was +taken to him, but he drank not of it. A garment, it was taken to him, +and he put it on. Oil, some was taken to him, and he anointed himself +with it." Anu looked upon him; he lamented over him: "'Well, Adapa, why +hast thou not eaten--why hast thou not drunk? Thou shalt not now have +eternal life.' Ea, my lord, has commanded me: thou shalt not eat, thou +shalt not drink." Adapa thus lost, by remembering too well the commands +of his father, the opportunity which was offered to him of rising to +the rank of the immortals; Anu sent him back to his home just as he had +come, and Shutu had to put up with his broken wings. + +Bamman absorbed one after the other all these genii of tempest and +contention, and out of their combined characters his own personality of +a hundred diverse aspects was built up. + +[Illustration: 177.jpg THE BIRDS OF THE TEMPEST] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a Chaldan cylinder in the + Museum of New York. Lenormant, in a long article, which he + published under the pseudonym of Mansell, fancied he + recognized here the encounter between Sabitum and Gilgames + on the shores of the Ocean. + +He was endowed with the capricious and changing disposition of the +element incarnate in him, and passed from tears to laughter, from anger +to calm, with a promptitude which made him one of the most disconcerting +deities. The tempest was his favourite rle. Sometimes he would burst +suddenly on the heavens at the head of a troop of savage subordinates, +whose chiefs were known as Matu, the squall, and Barku, the lightning; +sometimes these were only the various manifestations of his own nature, +and it was he himself who was called Matu and Barku. He collected the +clouds, sent forth the thunder-bolt, shook the mountains, and "before +his rage and violence, his bellowings, his thunder, the gods of heaven +arose to the firmament--the gods of the earth sank into the earth" in +their terror. The monuments represent him as armed for battle with +club, axe, or the two-bladed flaming sword which was usually employed to +signify the thunderbolt. As he destroyed everything in his blind +rage, the kings of Chalda were accustomed to invoke him against their +enemies, and to implore him to "hurl the hurricane upon the rebel +peoples and the insubordinate nations." When his wrath was appeased, and +he had returned to more gentle ways, his kindness knew no limits. From +having been the waterspout which overthrew the forests, he became the +gentle breeze which caresses and refreshes them: with his warm showers +he fertilizes the fields: he lightens the air and tempers the summer +heat. + +[Illustration: 178.jpg RAMMAN ARMED WITH AN AXE.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a sketch by Loftus. The + original, a small stele of terra-cotta, is in the British + Museum. The date of this representation is uncertain. Ramman + stands upon the mountain which supports the heaven. + +He causes the rivers to swell and overflow their banks; he pours out the +waters over the fields, he makes channels for them, he directs them to +every place where the need of water is felt. + +But his fiery temperament is stirred up by the slightest provocation, +and then "his flaming sword scatters pestilence over the land: he +destroys the harvest, brings the ingathering to nothing, tears up trees, +and beats down and roots up the corn." + +[Illustration: 179.jpg RAMMAN, THE GOD OF TEMPESTS AND THUNDER.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from Layard. Properly speaking, this + is a Susian deity brought by the soldiers of Assurbanipal + into Assyria, but it carries the usual insignia of Ramman. + +In a word, the second triad formed a more homogeneous whole when Ishtar +still belonged to it, and it is entirely owing to the presence of this +goddess in it that we are able to understand its plan and purpose; it +was essentially astrological, and it was intended that none should be +enrolled in it but the manifest leaders of the constellations. Ramman, +on the contrary, had nothing to commend him for a position alongside the +moon and sun; he was not a celestial body, he had no definitely shaped +form, but resembled an aggregation of gods rather than a single deity. +By the addition of Ramman to the triad, the void occasioned by the +removal of Ishtar was filled up in a blundering way. We must, however, +admit that the theologians must have found it difficult to find any one +better fitted for the purpose: when Venus was once set along with the +rest of the planets, there was nothing left in the heavens which +was sufficiently brilliant to replace her worthily. The priests were +compelled to take the most powerful deity they knew after the other +five--the lord of the atmosphere and the thunder.* + + * Their embarrassment is shown in the way in which they have + classed this god. In the original triad, Ishtar, being the + smallest of the three heavenly bodies, naturally took the + third place. Ramman, on the contrary, had natural affinities + with the elemental group, and belonged to Anu, Bel, Ea, + rather than to Sin and Shamash. So we find him sometimes in + the third place, sometimes in the first of the second triad, + and this post of eminence is so natural to him, that + Assyriologists have preserved it from the beginning, and + describe the triad as composed, not of Sin, Shamash, and + Ramman, but of Ramman, Sin, and Shamash, or even of Sin, + Ramman, and Shamash. + +The gods of the triads were married, but their goddesses for the most +part had neither the liberty nor the important functions of the Egyptian +goddesses.* They were content, in their modesty, to be eclipsed behind +the personages of their husbands, and to spend their lives in the shade, +as the women of Asiatic countries still do. It would appear, moreover, +that there was no trouble taken about them until it was too late--when +it was desired, for instance, to explain the affiliation of the +immortals. Anu and Bel were bachelors to start with. When it was +determined to assign to them female companions, recourse was had to the +procedure adopted by the Egyptians in a similar case: there was added to +their names the distinctive suffix of the feminine gender, and in this +manner two grammatical goddesses were formed, Anat and Belit, whose +dispositions give some indications of this accidental birth. There was +always a vague uncertainty about the parts they had to play, and their +existence itself was hardly more than a seeming one. Anat sometimes +represented a feminine heaven, and differed from Anu only in her sex. +At times she was regarded as the antithesis of Anu, i.e. as the earth in +contradistinction to the heaven. Belit, as far as we can distinguish her +from other persons to whom the title "lady" was attributed, shared with +Bel the rule over the earth and the regions of darkness where the dead +were confined. The wife of Ea was distinguished by a name which was not +derived from that of her husband, but she was not animated by a more +intense vitality than Anat or Belit: she was called Damkina, the lady +of the soil, and she personified in an almost passive manner the earth +united to the water which fertilized it. The goddesses of the second +triad were perhaps rather less artificial in their functions. Ningal, +doubtless, who ruled along with Sin at Uru, was little more than an +incarnate epithet. Her name means "the great lady," "the queen," and her +person is the double of that of her husband; as he is the man-moon, she +is the woman-moon, his beloved, and the mother of his children Shamash +and Ishtar. But A or Sirrida enjoyed an indisputable authority alongside +Shamash: she never lost sight of the fact that she had been a sun like +Shamash, a disk-god before she was transformed into a goddess. Shamash, +moreover, was surrounded by an actual harem, of which Sirrid was the +acknowledged queen, as he himself was its king, and among its members +Gula, the great, and Anunit, the daughter of Sin, the morning star, +found a place. Shala, the compassionate, was also included among them; +she was subsequently bestowed upon Ramman. They were all goddesses of +ancient lineage, and each had been previously worshipped on her own +account when the Sumerian people held sway in Chalda: as soon as the +Semites gained the upper hand, the powers of these female deities became +enfeebled, and they were distributed among the gods. There was but one +of them, Nana, the doublet of Ishtar, who had succeeded in preserving +her liberty: when her companions had been reduced to comparative +insignificance, she was still acknowledged as queen and mistress in her +city of Eridu. The others, notwithstanding the enervating influence +to which they were usually subject in the harem, experienced at times +inclinations to break into rebellion, and more than one of them, shaking +off the yoke of her lord, had proclaimed her independence: Anunit, for +instance, tearing herself away from the arms of Shamash, had vindicated, +as his sister and his equal, her claim to the half of his dominion. +Sippara was a double city, or rather there were two neighbouring +Sippars, one distinguished as the city of the Sun, "Sippara sha +Shamash," while the other gave lustre to Anunit in assuming the +designation of "Sippara sha Anunitum." Rightly interpreted, these family +arrangements of the gods had but one reason for their existence--the +necessity of explaining without coarseness those parental connections +which the theological classification found it needful to establish +between the deities constituting the two triads. In Chalda as in Egypt +there was no inclination to represent the divine families as propagating +their species otherwise than by the procedure observed in human +families: the union of the goddesses with the gods thus legitimated +their offspring. + + * The passive and almost impersonal character of the + majority of the Babylonian and Assyrian goddesses is well + known. The majority must have been independent at the + outset, in the Sumerian period, and were married later on, + under the influence of Semitic ideas. + +The triads were, therefore, nothing more than theological fictions. Each +of them was really composed of six members, and it was thus really a +council of twelve divinities which the priests of Uruk had instituted to +attend to the affairs of the universe; with this qualification, that the +feminine half of the assembly rarely asserted itself, and contributed +but an insignificant part to the common work. When once the great +divisions had been arranged, and the principal functionaries designated, +it was still necessary to work out the details, and to select v agents +to preserve an order among them. Nothing happens by chance in this +world, and the most insignificant events are determined by previsional +arrangements, and decisions arrived at a long time previously. The gods +assembled every morning in a hall, situated near the gates of the sun in +the east, and there deliberated on the events of the day. The sagacious +Ea submitted to them the fates which are about to be fulfilled, and +caused a record of them to be made in the chamber of destiny on tablets +which Shamash or Merodach carried with them to scatter everywhere on his +way; but he who should be lucky enough to snatch these tablets from him +would make himself master of the world for that day. This misfortune had +arisen only once, at the beginning of the ages. Zu, the storm-bird, who +lives with his wife and children on Mount Sabu under the protection of +Bel, and who from this elevation pounces down upon the country to ravage +it, once took it into his head to make himself equal to the supreme +gods. He forced his way at an early hour into the chamber of destiny +before the sun had risen: he perceived within it the royal insignia of +Bel, "the mitre of his power, the garment of his divinity,--the fatal +tablets of his divinity, Zu perceived them. He perceived the father +of the gods, the god who is the tie between heaven and earth,--and the +desire of ruling took possession of his heart;--yea, Zu perceived +the father of the gods, the god who is the tie between heaven and +earth,--and the desire of ruling took possession of his heart,--'I will +take the fatal tablets of the gods, I myself,--and the oracles of all +the gods, it is I who will give them forth;--I will install myself on +the throne, I will send forth decrees,--I will manage the whole of the +Igigi.'--And his heart plotted warfare;--lying in wait on the threshold +of the hall, he watched for the dawn.--When Bel had poured out the +shining waters,--had installed himself on the throne, and donned the +crown, Zu took away the fatal tablets from his hand,--he seized power, +and the authority to give forth decrees,--the god Zu, he flew away and +concealed himself in the mountains." Bel immediately cried out, he was +inflamed with anger, and ravaged the world with the fire of his +wrath. "Anu opened his mouth, he spake,--he said to the gods his +offspring:--'Who will conquer the god Zu?--He will make his name great +in every land.'--Bamman, the supreme, the son of Anu, was called, and +Anu himself gave to him his orders;--yea, Bamman, the supreme, the son +of Anu, was called, and Anu himself gave to him his orders.--'Go, my son +Kamman, the valiant, since nothing resists thy attack;--conquer Zu by +thine arm, and thy name shall be great among the great gods,--among the +gods, thy brothers, thou shalt have no equal: sanctuaries shall be built +to thee, and if thou buildest for thyself thy cities in the "four houses +of the world,"* --thy cities shall extend over all the terrestrial +mountain! 'Be valiant, then, in the sight of the gods, and may thy +name be strong.' Bamman answers, he addresses this bpeech to Anu his +father:--'Father, who will go to the inaccessible mountains? Who is the +equal of Zu among the gods, thy offspring? He has carried off in his +hand the fatal tablets,--he has seized power and authority to give forth +decrees,--Zu thereupon flew away and hid himself in his mountain.--Now, +the word of his mouth is like that of the god who unites heaven and +earth;---my power is no more than clay,--and all the gods must bow +before him.'" Anu sent for the god Bara, the son of Ishtar, to help him, +and exhorted him in the same language he had addressed to Ramman: Bara +refused to attempt the enterprise. Shamash, called in his turn, at +length consented to set out for Mount Sabu: he triumphed over the +storm-bird, tore the fatal tablets from him, and brought him before Ea +as a prisoner. + + * Literally, "Construct thy cities in the four regions of + the world (cf. pp. 12, 13 of the present work), and thy + cities will extend to the mountain of the earth." Anu would + appear to have promised to Ramman a monopoly; if he wished + to build cities which would recognize him as their patron, + these cities will cover the entire earth. + +[Illustration: 186.jpg SHAMASH FIGHTS WITH ZU AND THE STORM BIRDS.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from Layard. + +[Illustration: 186a.jpg The Plenisphere taken from the Temple of +Tentyra] + +[Illustration: 186b.jpg Text of The Plenisphere] + +The sun of the complete day, the sun in the full possession of his +strength, could alone win back the attributes of power which the morning +sun had allowed himself to be despoiled of. From that time forth the +privilege of delivering immortal decrees to mortals was never taken out +of the hands of the gods of light. + +Destinies once fixed on the earth became a law--"mamit"--a good or bad +fate, from which no one could escape, but of which any one might learn +the disposition beforehand if he were capable of interpreting the +formulas of it inscribed on the book of the sky. The stars, even those +which were most distant from the earth, were not unconcerned in the +events which took place upon it. They were so many living beings endowed +with various characteristics, and their rays as they passed across the +celestial spaces exercised from above an active control on everything +they touched. Their influences became modified, increased or weakened +according to the intensity with which they shed them, according to the +respective places they occupied in the firmament, and according to the +hour of the night and the month of the year in which they rose or +set. Each division of time, each portion of space, each category of +existences--and in each category each individual--was placed under their +rule and was subject to their implacable tyranny. The infant was born +their slave, and continued in this condition of slavery until his life's +end: the star which was in the ascendent at the instant of his birth +became his star, and ruled his destiny. The Chaldans, like the +Egyptians, fancied they discerned in the points of light which +illuminate the nightly sky, the outline of a great number of various +figures--men, animals, monsters, real and imaginary objects, a lance, a +bow, a fish, a scorpion, ears of wheat, a bull, and a lion. The majority +of these were spread out above their heads on the surface of the +celestial vault; but twelve of these figures, distinguishable by their +brilliancy, were arranged along the celestial horizon in the pathway of +the sun, and watched over his daily course along the walls of the world. +These divided this part of the sky into as many domains or "houses," in +which they exercised absolute authority, and across which the god could +not go without having previously obtained their consent, or having +brought them into subjection beforehand. This arrangement is a +reminiscence of the wars by which Bel-Merodach, the divine bull, the +god of Babylon, had succeeded in bringing order out of chaos: he had not +only killed Timat, but he had overthrown and subjugated the monsters +which led the armies of darkness. He meets afresh, every year and every +day, on the confines of heaven and earth, the scorpion-men of his ancient +enemy, the fish with heads of men or goats, and many more. The twelve +constellations were combined into a zodiac, whose twelve signs, +transmitted to the Greeks and modified by them, may still be read on +our astronomical charts. The constellations, immovable, or actuated by a +slow motion, in longitude only, contain the problems of the future, +but they are not sufficient of themselves alone to furnish man with the +solution of these problems. The heavenly bodies capable of explaining +them, the real interpreters of destiny, were at first the two divinities +who rule the empires of night and day--the moon and the sun; afterwards +there took part in this work of explanation the five planets which we +call Jupiter, Venus, Saturn, Mars, and Mercury, or rather the five gods +who actuate them, and who have controlled their course from the moment +of creation--Merodach, Ishtar, Ninib, Nergal, and Nebo. The planets +seemed to traverse the heavens in every direction, to cross their own +and each other's paths, and to approach the fixed stars or recede from +them; and the species of rhythmical dance in which they are carried +unceasingly across the celestial spaces revealed to men, if they +examined it attentively, the irresistible march of their own destinies, +as surely as if they had made themselves master of the fatal tablets of +Shamash, and could spell them out line by line. + +The Chaldns were disposed to regard the planets as perverse sheep who +had escaped from the fold of the stars to wander wilfully in search of +pasture.* At first they were considered to be so many sovereign deities, +without other function than that of running through the heavens and +furnishing there predictions of the future; afterwards two of them +descended to the earth, and received upon it the homage of men* --Ishtar +from the inhabitants of the city of Dilbat, and Nebo* from those of +Borsippa. Nebo assumed the _rle_ of a soothsayer and a prophet. He +knew and foresaw everything, and was ready to give his advice upon any +subject: he was the inventor of the method of making clay tablets, +and of writing upon them. Ishtar was a combination of contradictory +characteristics.**** + + * Their generic name, read as "lubat," in Sumero-Accadian, + "bibbu" in Semitic speech (Fr. Lenormant, _Essai de + Commentaire de Brose_, pp. 370, 371), denoted a quadruped, + the species of which Lenormant was not able to define; + Jensen (_Die Kosmologie_, pp. 95-99) identified it with the + sheep and the ram. At the end of the account of the + creation, Merodach-Jupiter is compared with a shepherd who + feeds the flock of the gods on the pastures of heaven (cf. + p. 15 of the present work). + + ** The site of Dilbat is unknown: it has been sought in the + neighbourhood of Kishu and Babylon (Delitzsch, _Wo lag das + Paradies?_ p. 219); it is probable that it was in the + suburbs of Sippara. The name given to the goddess was + transcribed AeXckit (Hesychius, _sub voce_), and signifies + the herald, the messenger of the day. + + *** The rle of Nebo was determined by the early + Assyriologists (Rawlin-son, _On the Religion of the + Babylonians and Assyrians_, pp. 523-52G; Oppeet, _Expdition + en Msopotamie_, vol. ii. p. 257; Lenormant, _Essai de + Commentaire de Brose_, pp. 114-116). He owed his functions + partly to his alliance with other gods (Sayce, _Religion of + the Ancient Babylonians_, pp. 118, 119). + + **** See the chapter devoted by Sayce to the consideration + of Ishtar in his Religion of the Ancient Babylonians (IV. + Tammuz and Ishtar, p. 221, et seq.), and the observations + made by Jeremias on the subject in the sequel of his + Izdubar-Nimrod (Ishtar-Astarte im Izdubar-Epos), pp. 56-66. + +[Illustration: 190.jpg ISHTAR AS A WARRIOR-GODDESS] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a heliogravure in Mnant's + _Recherches sur la Glyptique orientale_. + +In Southern Chalda she was worshipped under the name of Nan, +the supreme mistress.* The identity of this lady of the gods, +"Blit-ilnit," the Evening Star, with Anunit, the Morning Star, was +at first ignored, and hence two distinct goddesses were formed from the +twofold manifestation of a single deity: having at length discovered +their error, the Chaldans merged these two beings in one, and their +names became merely two different designations for the same star under a +twofold aspect. The double character, however, which had been attributed +to them continued to be attached to the single personality. + + * With regard to Nana, consult, with reserve, Fk. Lenormant, + Essai de Commentaire de Brose, pp. 100-103, 378, 379, where + the identity of Ishtar and Nana is still unrecognized. + +[Illustration: 191.jpg NEBO] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from an Assyrian statue in alabaster + in the British Museum. + +The Evening Star had symbolized the goddess of love, who attracted +the sexes towards one another, and bound them together by the chain +of desire; the Morning Star, on the other hand, was regarded as the +cold-blooded and cruel warrior who despised the pleasures of love and +rejoiced in warfare: Ishtar thus combined in her person chastity and +lasciviousness, kindness and ferocity, and a peaceful and warlike +disposition, but this incongruity in her characteristics did not seem +to disconcert the devotion of her worshippers. The three other planets +would have had a wretched part to play in comparison with Nebo and +Ishtar, if they had not been placed under new patronage. The secondary +solar gods, Merodach, Ninib, and Nergal, led, if we examine their rle +carefully, but an incomplete existence: they were merely portions of the +sun, while Shamash represented the entire orb. What became of them apart +from the moment in the day and year in which they were actively engaged +in their career? Where did they spend their nights, the hours during +which Shamash had retired into the firmament, and lay hidden behind the +mountains of the north? As in Egypt the Horuses identified at first with +the sun became at length the rulers of the planets, so in Chalda +the three suns of Ninib, Merodach, and Nergal became respectively +assimilated to Saturn, Jupiter, and Mars;* and this identification was +all the more easy in the case of Saturn, as he had been considered from +the beginning as a bull belonging to Shamash. Henceforward, therefore, +there was a group of five powerful gods--distributed among the stars +of heaven, and having abodes also in the cities of the earth--whose +function it was to announce the destinies of the universe. Some, +deceived by the size and brilliancy of Jupiter, gave the chief command +to Merodach, and this opinion naturally found a welcome reception at +Babylon, of which he was the feudal deity. Others, taking into account +only the preponderating influence exercised by the planets over the +fortunes of men, accorded the primacy to Ninib, placing Merodach next, +followed respectively by Ishtar, Nergal, and Nebo. The five planets, +like the six triads, were not long before they took to themselves +consorts, if indeed they had not already been married before they were +brought together in a collective whole. Ninib chose for wife, in the +first place, Bau, the daughter of Anu, the mistress of Uru, highly +venerated from the most remote times; afterwards Gula, the queen of +physicians, whose wisdom alleviated the ills of humanity, and who was +one of the goddesses sometimes placed in the harem of Shamash himself. +Merodach associated with him Zirbanit, the fruitful, who secures from +generation to generation the permanence and increase of living beings. +Nergal distributed his favours sometimes to Laz, and sometimes to +Esharra, who was, like himself, warlike and always victorious in battle. +Nebo provided himself with a mate in Tashmit, the great bride, or +even in Ishtar herself. But Ishtar could not be content with a single +husband: after she had lost Dumuzi-Tammuz, the spouse of her youth, she +gave herself freely to the impulses of her passions, distributing her +favours to men as well as gods, and was sometimes subject to be repelled +with contempt by the heroes upon whom she was inclined to bestow her +love. The five planets came thus to be actually ten, and advantage was +taken of these alliances to weave fresh schemes of affiliation: Nebo was +proclaimed to be the son of Merodach and Zirbanit, Merodach the son of +Ba, and Ninib the offspring of Bel and Esharra. + + * Ishtar, Nebo, Sin, and Shamash being heavenly bodies, to + begin with, and the other great gods, Anu, Bel, Ea, and + Ramman having their stars in the heavens, the Chaldans + were led by analogy to ascribe to the gods which represented + the phases of the sun, Merodach, Ninib, and Nergal, three + stars befitting their importance, i.e. three planets. + +There were two councils, one consisting of twelve members, the other +of ten; the former was composed of the most popular gods of Southern +Chalda, representing the essential elements of the world, while +the latter consisted of the great deities of Northern Chalda, whose +function it was to regulate or make known the destinies of men. The +authors of this system, who belonged to Southern Chalda, naturally +gave the position to their patron gods, and placed the twelve above +the ten. It is well known that Orientals display a great respect for +numbers, and attribute to them an almost irresistible power; we can +thus understand how it was that the Chaldans applied them to designate +their divine masters, and we may calculate from these numbers the +estimation in which each of these masters was held. The goddesses had +no value assigned to them in this celestial arithmetic, Ishtar excepted, +who was not a mere duplication, more or less ingenious, of a previously +existing deity, but possessed from the beginning an independent life, +and could thus claim to be called goddess in her own right. The members +of the two triads were arranged on a descending scale, Anu taking the +highest place: the scale was considered to consist of a soss of sixty +units in length, and each of the deities who followed Anu was placed ten +of these units below his predecessor, Bel at 50 units, Ea at 40, Sin at +30, Shamash at 20, Ramman at 10 or 6. The gods of the planets were not +arranged in a regular series like those of the triads, but the numbers +attached to them expressed their proportionate influence on terrestrial +affairs: to Ninib was assigned the same number as had been given to Bel, +50, to Merodach perhaps 25, to Ishtar 15, to Nergal 12, and to Nebo +10. The various spirits were also fractionally estimated, but this as a +class, and not as individuals: the priests would not have known how to +have solved the problem if they had been obliged to ascribe values +to the infinity of existences.* As the Heliopolitans were obliged to +eliminate from the Ennead many feudal divinities, so the Chaldans +had left out of account many of their sovereign deities, especially +goddesses, Bau of Uru, Nana of Uruk, and Allt; or if they did introduce +them into their calculations, it was by a subterfuge, by identifying +them with other goddesses, to whom places had been already assigned; +Bau being thus coupled with Ohila, Nana with Ishtar, and Allt with +Ninhl-Beltis. If figures had been assigned to the latter proportionate +to the importance of the parts they played, and the number of their +votaries, how comes it that they were excluded from the cycle of the +great gods? They were actually placed alongside rather than below the +two councils, and without insistence upon the rank which they enjoyed +in the hierarchy. But the confusion which soon arose among divinities +of identical or analogous nature opened the way for inserting all the +neglected personalities in the framework already prepared for them. A +sky-god, like Dagan, would mingle naturally with Anu, and enjoy like +honours with him. The gods of all ranks associated with the sun or fire, +Nusku, Gibil, and Dumuzi, who had not been at first received among the +privileged group, obtained a place there by virtue of their assimilation +to Shamash, and his secondary forms, Bel-Merodach, Ninib, and Nergal. +Ishtar absorbed all her companions, and her name put in the plural, +Ishtarati, "the Ishtars," embraced all goddesses in general, just as the +name Hani took in all the gods. Thanks to this compromise, the system +flourished, and was widely accepted: local vanity was always able to +find a means for placing in a prominent place within it the feudal +deity, and for reconciling his pretensions to the highest rank with the +order of precedence laid down by the theologians of Uruk. The local +god was always the king of the gods, the father of the gods, he who +was worshipped above the others in everyday life, and whose public cult +constituted the religion of the State or city. + + * As far as we can at present determine, the most ancient + series established was that of the planetary gods, whose + values, following each other irregularly, are not calculated + on a scheme of mathematical progression, but according to + the empirical importance, which a study of predictions had + ascribed to each planet. The regular series, that of the + great gods, bears in its regularity the stamp of its later + introduction: it was instituted after the example of the + former, but with corrections of what seemed capricious, and + fixing the interval between the gods always at the same + figure. + +The temples were miniature reproductions of the arrangement of the +universe. The "ziggurat" represented in its form the mountain of the +world, and the halls ranged at its feet resembled approximately +the accessory parts of the world: the temple of Merodach at Babylon +comprised them all up to the chambers of fate, where the sun received +every morning the tablets of destiny. The name often indicated the +nature of the patron deity or one of his attributes: the temple of +Shamash at Larsam, for instance was called E-Babbara, "the house of +the sun," and that of Nebo at Borsippa, E-Zida, "the eternal house." No +matter where the sanctuary of a specific god might be placed, it always +bore the same name; Shamash, for example, dwelt at Sippara as at Larsam +in an E-Babbara. In Chalda, as in Egypt, the king or chief of the +State was the priest _par excellence_, and the title of "vicegerent," +so frequent in the early period, shows that the chief was regarded as +representing the divinity among his own people; but a priestly body, +partly hereditary, partly selected, fulfilled for him his daily +sacerdotal functions, and secured the regularity of the services. A +chief priest--"ishshakku"--was at their head, and his principal duty was +the pouring out of the libation. Each temple had its "ishshakku," but he +who presided over the worship of the feudal deity took precedence of +all the others in the city, as in the case of the chief priests of +Bel-Merodach at Babylon, of Sin at Uru, and of Shamash at Larsam or +Sippara. He presided over various categories of priests and priestesses +whose titles and positions in the hierarchy are not well known. The +"sangutu" appear to have occupied after him the most important place, as +chamberlains attached to the house of the god, and as his liegemen. +To some of these was entrusted the management of the harem of the god, +while others were overseers of the remaining departments of his +palace. The "kpu" and the "shatammu" were especially charged with the +management of his financial interests, while the "pashishu" anointed +with holy and perfumed oil his statues of stone, metal, or wood, the +votive stel set up in the chapels, and the objects used in worship +and sacrifice, such as the great basins, the "seas" of copper which +contained the water employed in the ritual ablutions, and the victims +led to the altar. After these came a host of officials, butchers and +their assistants, soothsayers, augurs, prophets,--in fact, all the +attendants that the complicated rites, as numerous in Chalda as in +Egypt, required, not to speak of the bands of women and men who honoured +the god in meretricious rites. Occupation for this motley crowd was +never lacking. Every day and almost every hour a fresh ceremony required +the services of one or other member of the staff, from the monarch +himself, or his deputy in the temple, down to the lowest sacristan. The +12th of the month Blul was set apart at Babylon for the worship of Bel +and Beltis: the sovereign made a donation to them according as he was +disposed, and then celebrated before them the customary sacrifices, and +if he raised his hand to plead for any favour, he obtained it without +fail. The 13th was dedicated to the moon, the supreme god; the 14th to +Beltis and Nergal; the 15th to Shamash; the 16th was a fast in honour +of Merodach and Zirbanit; the 17th was the annual festival of Nebo and +Tashmit; the 18th was devoted to the laudation of Sin and Shamash; while +the 19th was a "white day" for the great goddess Gula. The whole year +was taken up in a way similar to this casual specimen from the calendar. +The kings, in founding a temple, not only bestowed upon it the objects +and furniture required for present exigencies, such as lambs and oxen, +birds, fish, bread, liquors, incense, and odoriferous essences; +they assigned to it an annual income from the treasury, slaves, and +cultivated lands; and their royal successors were accustomed to renew +these gifts or increase them on every opportunity. Every victorious +campaign brought him his share in the spoils and captives; every +fortunate or unfortunate event which occurred in connection with the +State or royal family meant an increase in the gifts to the god, as +an act of thanksgiving on the one hand for the divine favour, or as an +offering on the other to appease the wrath of the god. Gold, silver, +copper, lapis-lazuli, gems and precious woods, accumulated in the sacred +treasury; fields were added to fields, flocks to flocks, slaves to +slaves; and the result of such increase would in a few generations +have made the possessions of the god equal to those of the reigning +sovereign, if the attacks of neighbouring peoples had not from time to +time issued in the loss of a part of it, or if the king himself had not, +under financial pressure, replenished his treasury at the expense of the +priests. To prevent such usurpations as far as possible, maledictions +were hurled at every one who should dare to lay a sacrilegious hand on +the least object belonging to the divine domain; it was predicted of +such "that he would be killed like an ox in the midst of his prosperity, +and slaughtered like a wild urus in the fulness of his strength!... May +his name be effaced from his stel in the temple of his god! May his +god see pitilessly the disaster of his country, may the god ravage his +land with the waters of heaven, ravage it with the waters of the +earth. May he be pursued as a nameless wretch, and his seed fall under +servitude! May this man, like every one who acts adversely to his +master, find nowhere a refuge, afar off, under the vault of the skies or +in any abode of man whatsoever." These threats, terrible as they were, +did not succeed in deterring the daring, and the mighty men of the +time were willing to brave them, when their interests promoted them. +Gulkishar, Lord of the "land of the sea," had vowed a wheat-field to +Nina, his lady, near the town of Deri, on the Tigris. Seven hundred +years later, in the reign of Belnadinabal, Ekarrakas, governor of +Btsinmagir, took possession of it, and added it to the provincial +possessions, contrary to all equity. The priest of the goddess appealed +to the king, and prostrating himself before the throne with many prayers +and mystic formulas, begged for the restitution of the alienated land. +Belnadinabal acceded to the request, and renewed the imprecations which +had been inserted on the original deed of gift: "If ever, in the +course of days, the man of law, or the governor of a suzerain who will +superintend the town of Btsinmagir, fears the vengeance of the god +Zikum or the goddess Nina, may then Zikum and Nina, the mistress of the +goddesses, come to him with the benediction of the prince of the gods; +may they grant to him the destiny of a happy life, and may they accord +to him days of old age, and years of uprightness! But as for thee, who +hast a mind to change this, step not across its limits, do not covet +the land: hate evil and love justice." If all sovereigns were not so +accommodating in their benevolence as Belnadinabal, the piety of private +individuals, stimulated by fear, would be enough to repair the loss, +and frequent legacies would soon make up for the detriment caused to +the temple possessions by the enemy's sword or the rapacity of an +unscrupulous lord. The residue, after the vicissitudes of revolutions, +was increased and diminished from time to time, to form at length in the +city an indestructible fief whose administration was a function of the +chief priest for life, and whose revenue furnished means in abundance +for the personal exigencies of the gods as well as the support of his +ministers. + +This was nothing more than justice would prescribe. A loyal and +universal faith would not only acknowledge the whole world to be the +creation of the gods, but also their inalienable domain. It belonged to +them at the beginning; every one in the State of which the god was +the sovereign lord, all those, whether nobles or serfs, vicegerents +or kings, who claimed to have any possession in it, were but ephemeral +lease-holders of portions of which they fancied themselves the owners. +Donations to the temples were, therefore, nothing more than voluntary +restitutions, which the gods consented to accept graciously, deigning +to be well pleased with the givers, when, after all-, they might have +considered the gifts as merely displays of strict honesty, which merited +neither recognition nor thanks. They allowed, however, the best part of +their patrimony to remain in the hands of strangers, and they contented +themselves with what the pretended generosity of the faithful might see +fit to assign to them. Of their lands, some were directly cultivated by +the priests themselves; others were leased to lay people of every rank, +who took off the shoulders of the priesthood all the burden of managing +them, while rendering at the same time the profit that accrued from +them; others were let at a fixed rent according to contract. The +tribute of dates, corn, and fruit, which was rendered to the temples to +celebrate certain commemorative ceremonies in the honour of this or that +deity, were fixed charges upon certain lands, which at length usually +fell entirely into the hands of the priesthood as mortmain possessions. +These were the sources of the fixed revenues of the gods, by means of +which they and their people were able to live, if not luxuriously, at +least in a manner befitting their dignity. The offerings and sacrifices +were a kind of windfall, of which the quantity varied strangely with the +seasons; at certain times few were received, while at other times there +was a superabundance. The greatest portion of them was consumed on +the spot by the officials of the sanctuary; the part which could be +preserved without injury was added to the produce of the domain, and +constituted a kind of reserve for a rainy day, or was used to produce +more of its kind. The priests made great profit out of corn and metals, +and the skill with which they conducted commercial operations in silver +was so notorious that no private person hesitated to entrust them with +the management of his capital: they were the intermediaries between +lenders and borrowers, and the commissions which they obtained in these +transactions was not the smallest or the least certain of their profits. +They maintained troops of slaves, labourers, gardeners, workmen, and +even women-singers and sacred courtesans of which mention has been made +above, all of whom either worked directly for them in their several +trades, or were let out to those who needed their services. The god was +not only the greatest cultivator in the State after the king, sometimes +even excelling him in this respect, but he was also the most active +manufacturer, and many of the utensils in daily use, as well as articles +of luxury, proceeded from his workshops. His possessions secured for him +a paramount authority in the city, and also an influence in the councils +of the king: the priests who represented him on earth thus became mixed +up in State affairs, and exercised authority on his behalf in the same +measure as the officers of the crown. + +[Illustration: 203.jpg A VOTARY LED TO THE GOD TO RECEIVE THE REWARD OF +THE SACRIFICE] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a Chaldan intaglio in the + Berlin Museum. + +He, had, indeed, as much need of riches and renown as the least of his +clients. As he was subject to all human failings, and experienced all +the appetites of mankind, he had to be nourished, clothed, and amused, +and this could be done only at great expense. The stone or wooden +statues erected to him in the sanctuaries furnished him with bodies, +which he animated with his breath, and accredited to his clients as the +receivers of all things needful to him in his mysterious kingdom. The +images of the gods were clothed in vestments, they were anointed with +odoriferous oils, covered with jewels, served with food and drink; and +during these operations the divinities themselves, above in the heaven, +or down in the abyss, or in the bosom of the earth, were arrayed in +garments, their bodies were perfumed with unguents, and their appetites +fully satisfied: all that was further required for this purpose was the +offering of sacrifices together with prayers and prescribed rites. The +priest began by solemnly inviting the gods to the feast: as soon as they +sniffed from afar the smell of the good cheer that awaited them, they +ran "like a swarm of flies" and prepared themselves to partake of it. + +[Illustration: 204.jpg THE SACRIFICE: A GOAT PRESENTED TO ISHTAR.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from an Assyrian intaglio + illustrated in A. Rich, _Narrative of a Journey to the Site + of Babylon in 1811_. The sacrifice of the goat, or rather + its presentation to the god, is not infrequently represented + on the Assyrian bas-reliefs. + +The supplications having been heard, water was brought to the gods for +the necessary ablutions before a repast. "Wash thy hands, cleanse thy +hands,--may the gods thy brothers wash their hands!--From a clean dish +eat a pure repast,--from a clean cup drink pure water." The statue, from +the rigidity of the material out of which it was carved, was at a loss +how to profit by the exquisite things which had been lavished upon it: +the difficulty was removed by the opening of its mouth at the moment +of consecration, thus enabling it to partake of the good fare to its +satisfaction.* The banquet lasted a long time, and consisted of every +delicacy which the culinary skill of the time could prepare: the courses +consisted of dates, wheaten flour, honey, butter, various kinds of +wines, and fruits, together with roast and boiled meats. + + * This operation, which was also resorted to in Egypt in the + case of the statues of the gods and deceased persons, is + clearly indicated in a text of the second Chaldan empire + published in _W. A. Insc_, vol. iv. pi. 25. The priest who + consecrates an image makes clear in the first place that + "its mouth not being open it can partake of no refreshment: + it neither eats food nor drinks water." Thereupon he performs + certain rites, which he declares were celebrated, if not at + that moment, at least for the first time by Ea himself: "Ea + has brought thee to thy glorious place,--to thy glorious + place he has brought thee,--brought thee with his splendid + hand,--brought also butter and honey;--_he has poured + consecrated water into thy mouth--and by magic has opened + thy mouth._" Henceforward the statue can eat and drink like + an ordinary living being the meat and beverages offered to + it during the sacrifice. + +[Illustration: 205.jpg THE GOD SHAMASH SEIZES WITH HIS LEFT HAND THE +SMOKE OF THE SACRIFICE.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a Chaldan intaglio pointed out + by Heuzey-Sarzcc; the original is in the Louvre. The scene + depicted behind Shamash deals with a legend still unknown. A + goddess, pursued by a genius with a double face, has taken + refuge under a tree, which bows down to protect her; while + the monster endeavours to break down the obstacle branch by + branch, a god rises from the stem and hands to the goddess a + stone-headed mace to protect her against her enemy. + +In the most ancient times it would appear that even human sacrifices +were offered, but this custom was obsolete except on rare occasions, and +lambs, oxen, sometimes swine's flesh, formed the usual elements of +the sacrifice. The gods seized as it arose from the altar the unctuous +smoke, and fed on it with delight. When they had finished their repast, +the supplication of a favour was adroitly added, to which they gave a +favourable hearing. Services were frequent in the temples: there was one +in the morning and another in the evening on ordinary days, in addition +to those which private individuals might require at any hour of the day. +The festivals assigned to the local god and his colleagues, together +with the acts of praise in which the whole nation joined, such as that +of the New Year, required an abundance of extravagant sacrifices, in +which the blood of the victims flowed like water. Days of sorrow and +mourning alternated with these days of joy, during which the people and +the magnates gave themselves up to severe fasting and acts of penitence. +The Chaldeans had a lively sense of human frailty, and of the risks +entailed upon the sinner by disobedience to the gods. The dread of +sinning haunted them during their whole life; they continually +subjected the motives of their actions to a strict scrutiny, and once +self-examination had revealed to them the shadow of an evil intent, they +were accustomed to implore pardon for it in a humble manner. "Lord, my +sins are many, great are my misdeeds!--O my god, my sins are many, great +my misdeeds!--O my goddess, my sins are many, great my misdeeds!--I have +committed faults and I knew them not; I have committed sin and I knew +it not; I have fed upon misdeeds and I knew them not; I have walked in +omissions and I knew them not.--The lord, in the anger of his heart, +he has stricken me,--the god, in the wrath of his heart, has abandoned +me,--Ishtar is enraged against me, and has treated me harshly!--I make +an effort, and no one offers me a hand,--I weep, and no one comes to +me,--I cry aloud, and no one hears me:--I sink under affliction, I am +overwhelmed, I can no longer raise up my head,--I turn to my merciful +god to call upon him, and I groan!... Lord reject not thy servant,--and +if he is hurled into the roaring waters, stretch to him thy hand;--the +sins I have committed, have mercy upon them,--the misdeeds I have +committed, scatter them to the winds--and my numerous faults, tear them +to pieces like a garment." Sin in the eyes of the Chaldan was not, as +with us, an infirmity of the soul; it assaulted the body like an actual +virus, and the fear of physical suffering or death engendered by it, +inspired these complaints with a note of sincerity which cannot be +mistaken. + +Every individual is placed, from the moment of his birth, under the +protection of a god and goddess, of whom he is the servant, or rather +the son, and whom he never addresses otherwise than as his god and +his goddess. These deities accompany him night and day, not so much to +protect him from visible dangers, as to guard him from the invisible +beings which ceaselessly hover round him, and attack him on every side. +If he is devout, piously disposed towards his divine patrons and the +deities of his country, if he observes the prescribed rites, recites the +prayers, performs the sacrifices--in a word, if he acts rightly--their +aid is never lacking; they bestow upon him a numerous posterity, a +happy old age, prolonged to the term fixed by fate, when he must resign +himself to close his eyes for ever to the light of day. If, on the +contrary, he is wicked, violent, one whose word cannot be trusted, "his +god cuts him down like a reed," extirpates his race, shortens his days, +delivers him over to demons who possess themselves of his body and +afflict it with sicknesses before finally despatching him. Penitence +is of avail against the evil of sin, and serves to re-establish a right +course of life, but its efficacy is not permanent, and the moment at +last arrives in which death, getting the upper hand, carries its victim +away. The Chaldans had not such clear ideas as to what awaited them in +the other world as the Egyptians possessed: whilst the tomb, the mummy, +the perpetuity of the funeral revenues, and the safety of the double, +were the engrossing subjects in Egypt, the Chaldan texts are almost +entirely silent as to the condition of the soul, and the living seem to +have had no further concern about the dead than to get rid of them +as quickly and as completely as possible. They did not believe that +everything was over at the last breath, but they did not on that account +think that the fate of that which survived was indissolubly associated +with the perishable part, and that the disembodied soul was either +annihilated or survived, according as the flesh in which it was +sustained was annihilated or survived in the tomb. The soul was +doubtless not utterly unconcerned about the fate of the _larva_ it had +quitted: its pains were intensified on being despoiled of its earthly +case if the latter were mutilated, or left without sepulture, a prey +to the fowls, of the air. This feeling, however, was not sufficiently +developed to create a desire for escape from corruption entirely, and to +cause a resort to the mummifying process of the Egyptians. + +[Illustration: 208.jpg DECORATED WRAPPINGS FROM A MUMMY (Color)] + +The Chaldans did not subject the body, therefore, to those injections, +to those prolonged baths in preserving fluids, to that laborious +swaddling which rendered it indestructible; whilst the family wept and +lamented, old women who exercised the sad function of mourners washed +the dead body, perfumed it, clad it in its best apparel, painted its +cheeks, blackened its eyelids, placed a collar on its neck, rings on its +fingers, arranged its arms upon its breast, and stretched it on a bed, +setting up at its head a little altar for the customary offerings of +water, incense, and cakes. + +[Illustration: 209.jpg Chaldan coffin in the form of a jar] + +[Illustration: 209a.jpg A VAULTED TOMB IN URU] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a sketch by Taylor. + +[Illustration: 210.jpg CHALDAN TOMB WITH DOMED ROOF.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a sketch by Taylor. + +Evil spirits, prowled incessantly around the dead bodies of the +Chaldans, either to feed upon them, or to use them in their sorcery: +should they succeed in slipping into a corpse, from that moment it could +be metamorphosed into a vampire, and return to the world to suck the +blood of the living. The Chaldans were, therefore, accustomed to invite +by prayers beneficent genii and gods to watch over the dead. Two of +these would take their invisible places at the head and foot of the bed, +and wave their hands in the act of blessing: these were the vassals +of Ea, and, like their master, were usually clad in fish-skins. Others +placed themselves in the sepulchral chamber, and stood ready to strike +any one who dared to enter: these had human figures, or lions' heads +joined to the bodies of men. Others, moreover, hovered over the house in +order to drive off the spectres who might endeavour to enter through the +roof. During the last hours in which the dead body remained among its +kindred, it reposed under the protection of a legion of gods. + +We must not expect to find on the plains of the Euphrates the rock-cut +tombs, the mastabas or pyramids, of Egypt. No mountain chain ran on +either side of the river, formed of rock soft enough to be cut and +hollowed easily into chambers or sepulchral halls, and at the same time +sufficiently hard to prevent the tunnels once cut from falling in. + +[Illustration: 111.jpg CHALDEAN TOMB WITH FLAT ROOF.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a sketch by Taylor. + +The alluvial soil upon which the Chaldan cities were built, far from, +preserving the dead body, rapidly decomposed it under the influence of +heat and moisture: vaults constructed in it would soon be invaded by +water in spite of masonry; paintings and sculpture would soon be +eaten away by nitre, and the funereal furniture and the coffin quickly +destroyed. The dwelling-house of the Chaldan dead could not, therefore, +properly be called, as those of Egypt, an "eternal house." It was +constructed of dried or burnt brick, and its form varied much from +the most ancient times. Sometimes it was a great vaulted chamber, the +courses forming the roof being arranged corbel-wise, and contained the +remains of one or two bodies walled up within it.* At other times +it consisted merely of an earthen jar, in which the corpse had +been inserted in a bent-up posture, or was composed of two enormous +cylindrical jars, which, when united and cemented with bitumen, formed a +kind of barrel around the body. Other tombs are represented by wretched +structures, sometimes oval and sometimes round in shape, placed upon a +brick base and covered by a flat or domed roof. The interior was not of +large dimensions, and to enter it was necessary to stoop to a creeping +posture. The occupant of the smallest chambers was content to have with +him his linen, his ornaments, some bronze arrowheads, and metal or clay +vessels. Others contained furniture which, though not as complete as +that found in Egyptian sepulchres, must have ministered to all the +needs of the spirit. The body was stretched, fully clothed, upon a +mat impregnated with bitumen, the head supported by a cushion or flat +brick,** the arms laid across the breast, and the shroud adjusted by +bands to the loins and legs. Sometimes the corpse was placed on its left +side, with the legs slightly bent, and the right hand, extending +over the left shoulder, was inserted into a vase, as if to convey the +contents to the mouth. + + * Vaulted chambers are confined chiefly to the ancient + cemeteries of Uru at Mugheir; they are rather over six to + seven feet long, with a breadth of five and a half feet. The + walls are not quite perpendicular, but are somewhat splayed + up to two-thirds of their height, where they begin to narrow + into the vaulted roof. + + ** The object placed under the head of the skeleton is the + dried brick mentioned in the text; the vessel to which the + hand is stretched out was of copper; the other vessels were + of earthenware, and contained water, or dates, of which the + stones were found. The small cylinders on the side were of + stone; the two large cylinders, between the copper vessel + and those of earthenware, were pieces of bamboo, of whose + use we are ignorant. + +[Illustration: 213.jpg THE INTERIOR OF THE TOMB] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a sketch by Taylor + +Clay jars and dishes, arranged around the body, contained the food and +drink required for the dead man's daily fare--his favourite wine, +dates, fish, fowl, game, occasionally also a boar's head--and even stone +representations of provisions, which, like those of Egypt, were lasting +substitutes for the reality. The dead man required weapons also to +enable him to protect his food-store, and his lance, javelins and baton +of office were placed alongside him, together with a cylinder bearing +his name, which he had employed as his seal in his lifetime. Beside +the body of a woman or young girl was arranged an abundance of spare +ornaments, flowers, scent-bottles, combs, cosmetic pencils, and cakes +of the black paste with which they were accustomed to paint the eyebrows +and the edges of the eyelids. + +Cremation seems in many cases to have been preferred to burial in a +tomb. The funeral pile was constructed at some distance from the town, +on a specially reserved area in the middle of the marshes. The body, +wrapped up in coarse matting, was placed upon a heap of reeds and rushes +saturated with bitumen: a brick wall, coated with moist clay, was built +around this to circumscribe the action of the flames, and, the customary +prayers having been recited, the pile was set on fire, masses of fresh +material, together with the funerary furniture and usual viaticum, +being added to the pyre. When the work of cremation was considered to +be complete, the fire was extinguished, and an examination made of the +residue. It frequently happened that only the most accessible and most +easily destroyed parts of the body had been attacked by the flames, and +that there remained a black and disfigured mass which the fire had +not consumed. The previously prepared coating of mud was then made to +furnish a clay covering for the body, so as to conceal the sickening +spectacle from the view of the relatives and spectators. Sometimes, +however, the furnace accomplished its work satisfactorily, and there was +nothing to be seen at the end but greasy ashes and scraps of calcined +bones. The remains were frequently left where they were, and the funeral +pile became their tomb. They were, however, often collected and disposed +of in a manner which varied with their more or less complete combustion. +Bodies insufficiently burnt were interred in graves, or in public +chapels; while the ashes of those fully cremated, together with the +scraps of bones and the _dbris_ of the offerings, were placed in long +urns. The heat had contorted the weapons and half melted the vessels +of copper; and the deceased was thus obliged to be content with the +fragments only of the things provided for him. These were, however, +sufficient for the purpose, and his possessions, once put to the test +of the flames, now accompanied him whither he went: water alone was +lacking, but provision was made for this by the construction on the +spot of cisterns to collect it. For this purpose several cylinders of +pottery, some twenty inches broad, were inserted in the ground one +above the other from a depth of from ten to twelve feet, and the last +cylinder, reaching the level of the ground, was provided with a narrow +neck, through which the rainwater or infiltrations from the river flowed +into this novel cistern. Many examples of these are found in one and the +same chamber,* thus giving the soul an opportunity of finding water in +one or other of them. The tombs at Uruk, arranged closely together +with coterminous walls, and gradually covered by the sand or by the +accumulation and _dbris_ of new tombs, came at length to form an actual +mound. In cities where space was less valuable, and where they were free +to extend, the tombs quickly disappeared without leaving any vestiges +above the surface, and it would now be necessary to turn up a great +deal of rubbish before discovering their remains. The Chalda of to-day +presents the singular aspect of a country almost without cemeteries, and +one would be inclined to think that its ancient inhabitants had taken +pains to hide them.** The sepulture of royal personages alone furnishes +us with monuments of which we can determine the site. At Babylon these +were found in the ancient palaces in which the living were no longer +inclined to dwell: that of Shargina, for instance, furnished a +burying-place for kings more than two thousand years after the death +of its founder. The chronicles devoutly indicate the spot where each +monarch, when his earthly reign was over, found a last resting-place; +and where, as the subject of a ceremonial worship similar to that of +Egypt, his memory was preserved from the oblivion which had overtaken +most of his illustrious subjects. + + * The German expedition of 1886-87 found four of these + reservoirs in a single chamber, and nine distributed in the + chambers of a house entirely devoted to the burial of the + dead. + + ** Various explanations have been offered to account for + this absence of tombs, Without mentioning the desperate + attempt to get rid of the difficulty by the assumption that + the dead bodies were cast into the river, Loftus thinks that + the Chaldans and Assyrians were accustomed to send them to + some sanctuary in Southern Chalda, especially to Uru and + Uruk, whose vast cemeteries, he contends, would have + absorbed during the centuries the greater part of the + Euphratean population; his opinion has been adopted by some + historians, and, as far only as the later period is + concerned, by Hommel. + +The dead man, or rather that part of him which survived--his +"ekimmu"--dwelt in the tomb, and it was for his comfort that there were +provided, at the time of sepulture or cremation, the provisions and +clothing, the ornaments and weapons, of which he was considered to stand +in need. Furnished with these necessities by his children and heirs, he +preserved for the donors the same affection which he had felt for them +in his lifetime, and gave evidence of it in every way he could, watching +over their welfare, and protecting them from malign influences. If +they abandoned or forgot him, he avenged himself for their neglect by +returning to torment them in their homes, by letting sickness attack +them, and by ruining them with his imprecations: he became thus no +less hurtful than the "luminous ghost" of the Egyptians, and if he were +accidentally deprived of sepulture, he would not be merely a plague +to his relations, but a danger to the entire city. The dead, who were +unable to earn an honest living, showed little pity to those who were +in the same position as themselves: when a new-comer arrived among them +without prayers, libations, or offerings, they declined to receive him, +and would not give him so much as a piece of bread out of their meagre +store. The spirit of the unburied dead man, having neither place of +repose nor means of subsistence, wandered through the town and country, +occupied with no other thought than that of attacking and robbing the +living. He it was who, gliding into the house during the night, revealed +himself to its inhabitants with such a frightful visage as to drive them +distracted with terror. Always on the watch, no sooner does he surprise +one of his victims than he falls upon him, "his head against his +victim's head, his hand against his hand, his foot against his foot." +He who has been thus attacked, whether man or beast, would undoubtedly +perish if magic were not able to furnish its all-powerful defence +against this deadly embrace.* This human survival, who is so forcibly +represented both in his good and evil aspects, was nevertheless nothing +more than a sort of vague and fluid existence--a double, in fact, +analogous in appearance to that of the Egyptians. + + * The majority of the spells employed against sickness + contain references to the spirits against which they + contend--"the wicked ekimmu who oppresses men during the + night," or simply "the wicked ekimmu," the ghost. + +With the faculty of roaming at will through space, and of going forth +from and returning to his abode, it was impossible to regard him as +condemned always to dwell in the case of terra-cotta in which his body +lay mouldering: he was transferred, therefore, or rather he +transferred himself, into the dark land--the Aralu--situated very far +away--according to some, beneath the surface of the earth; according to +others, in the eastern or northern extremities of the universe. A river +which opens into this region and separates it from the sunlit earth, +finds its source in the primordial waters into whose bosom this world +of ours is plunged. This dark country is surrounded by seven high walls, +and is approached through seven gates, each of which is guarded by a +pitiless warder. Two deities rule within it--Nergal, "the lord of the +great city," and Beltis-Allat, "the lady of the great land," whither +everything which has breathed in this world descends after death. A +legend relates that Allt, called in Sumerian Erishkigal, reigned alone +in Hades, and was invited by the gods to a feast which they had prepared +in heaven. Owing to her hatred of the light, she sent a refusal by her +messenger Narntar, who acquitted himself on this mission with such a +bad grace, that Ann and Ea were incensed against his mistress, and +commissioned Nergal to descend and chastise her; he went, and finding +the gates of hell open, dragged the queen by her hair from the throne, +and was about to decapitate her, but she mollified him by her prayers, +and saved her life by becoming his wife. The nature of Nergal fitted +him well to play the part of a prince of the departed: for he was the +destroying sun of summer, and the genius of pestilence and battle. His +functions, however, in heaven and earth took up so much of his time +that he had little leisure to visit his nether kingdom, and he was +consequently obliged to content himself with the _rle_ of providing +subjects for it by despatching thither the thousands of recruits which +he gathered daily from the abodes of men or from the field of battle. +Allt was the actual sovereign of the country. She was represented with +the body of a woman, ill-formed and shaggy, the grinning muzzle of a +lion, and the claws of a bird of prey. She brandished in each hand a +large serpent--a real animated javelin, whose poisonous bite inflicted +a fatal wound upon the enemy. Her children were two lions, which she is +represented as suckling, and she passed through her empire, not seated +in the saddle, but standing upright or kneeling on the back of a +horse, which seems oppressed by her weight. Sometimes she set out on +an expedition upon the river which communicates with the countries +of light, in order to meet the procession of newly arrived souls +ceaselessly despatched to her: she embarked in this case upon an +enchanted vessel, which made its way without sail or oars, its prow +projecting like the beak of a bird, and its stern terminating in the +head of an ox. She overcomes all resistance, and nothing can escape from +her: the gods themselves can pass into her empire only on the condition +of submitting to death like mortals, and of humbly avowing themselves +her slaves. + +[Illustration: 220.jpg THE GODDESS ALLAT PASSES THROUGH THE NETHER +REGIONS IN HER BARK.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a bronze plaque of which an + engraving was published by Clermont-Ganneau. The original, + which belonged to M. Preti, is now in the collection of M. + de Clercq + +[Illustration: 221.jpg NERGAL, THE GOD OF HADES; BACK VIEW.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin. This is the back of the bronze plate + represented on the preceding page; the animal-head of the + god appears in relief at the top of the illustration. + +The warders at the gates despoiled the new-comers of everything which +they had brought with them, and conducted them in a naked condition +before Allt, who pronounced sentence upon them, and assigned to each +his place in the nether world. The good or evil committed on earth by +such souls was of little moment in determining the sentence: to secure +the favour of the judge, it was of far greater importance to have +exhibited devotion to the gods and to Allt herself, to have lavished +sacrifices and offerings upon them and to have enriched their temples. +The souls which could not justify themselves were subjected to horrible +punishment: leprosy consumed them to the end of time, and the most +painful maladies attacked them, to torture them ceaselessly without any +hope of release. Those who were fortunate enough to be spared from +her rage, dragged out a miserable and joyless existence. They were +continually suffering from the pangs of thirst and hunger, and found +nothing to satisfy their appetites but clay and dust. They shivered with +cold, and they obtained no other garment to protect them than mantles of +feathers--the great silent wings of the night-birds, invested with which +they fluttered about and filled the air with their screams. This gloomy +and cruel conception of ordinary life in this strange kingdom was still +worse than the idea formed of the existence in the tomb to which it +succeeded. In the cemetery the soul was, at least, alone with the dead +body; in the house of Allt, on the contrary, it was lost as it were +among spirits as much afflicted as itself, and among the genii born of +darkness. None of these genii had a simple form, or approached the +human figure in shape; each individual was a hideous medley of human +and animal parts, in which the most repellent features were artistically +combined. Lions' heads stood out from the bodies of scorpion-tailed +jackals, whose feet were armed with eagles' claws: and among such +monsters the genii of pestilence, fever, and the south-west wind took +the chief place. When once the dead had become naturalized among this +terrible population, they could not escape from their condition, +unless by the exceptional mandate of the gods above. They possessed +no recollection of what they had done upon earth. Domestic affection, +friendships, and the memory of good offices rendered to one +another,--all were effaced from their minds: nothing remained there but +an inexpressible regret at having been exiled from the world of light, +and an excruciating desire to reach it once more. The threshold of +Allat's palace stood upon a spring which had the property of restoring +to life all who bathed in it or drank of its waters: they gushed forth +as soon as the stone was raised, but the earth-spirits guarded it with a +jealous care, and kept at a distance all who attempted to appropriate a +drop of it. They permitted access to it only by order of Ea himself, or +one of the supreme gods, and even then with a rebellious heart at seeing +their prey escape them. Ancient legends related how the shepherd Dumuzi, +son of Ea and Damkina, having excited the love of Ishtar while he was +pasturing his flocks under the mysterious tree of Eridu, which covers +the earth with its shade, was chosen by the goddess from among all +others to be the spouse of her youth, and how, being mortally wounded by +a wild boar, he was cast into the kingdom of Allat. One means remained +by which he might be restored to the light of day: his wounds must be +washed in the waters of the wonderful spring, and Ishtar resolved to +go in quest of this marvellous liquid. The undertaking was fraught with +danger, for no one might travel to the infernal regions without having +previously gone through the extreme terrors of death, and even the gods +themselves could not transgress this fatal law. "To the land without +return, to the land which thou knowest--Ishtar, the daughter of Sin, +turned her thoughts: she, the daughter of Sin, turned her thoughts--to +the house of darkness, the abode of Irkalla--to the house from which he +who enters can never emerge--to the path upon which he who goes shall +never come back--to the house into which he who enters bids farewell +to the light--the place where dust is nourishment and clay is food; the +light is not seen, darkness is the dwelling, where the garments are the +wings of birds--where dust accumulates on door and bolt." Ishtar +arrives at the porch, she knocks at it, she addresses the guardian in an +imperious voice: "'Guardian of the waters, open thy gate--open thy +gate that I may enter, even I.--If thou openest not the door that I may +enter, even I,--I will burst open the door, I will break the bars, I +will break the threshold, I will burst in the panels, I will excite the +dead that they may eat the living,--and the dead shall be more numerous +than the living.'--The guardian opened his mouth and spake, he announced +to the mighty Ishtar: 'Stop, O lady, and do not overturn the door until +I go and apprise the Queen Allt of thy name.' Allat hesitates, and then +gives him permission to receive the goddess: 'Go, guardian, open the +gate to her--but treat her according to the ancient laws. Mortals +enter naked into the world, and naked must they leave it: and since +Ishtar has decided to accept their lot, she too must be prepared to +divest herself of her garments.'" The guardian went, he opened his mouth: +'Enter, my lady, and may Kutha rejoice--may the palace and the land +without return exult in thy presence! 'He causes her to pass through the +first gate, divests her, removes the great crown from her head:--'Why, +guardian, dost thou remove the great crown from my head?'--'Enter, my +lady, such is the law of Allt.' The second gate, he causes her to pass +through it, he divests her--removes the rings from her ears:--'Why, +guardian, dost thou remove the rings from my ears?'--'Enter, my lady, +such is the law of Allt.'" And from gate to gate he removes some +ornament from the distressed lady--now her necklace with its attached +amulets, now the tunic which covers her bosom, now her enamelled girdle, +her bracelets, and the rings on her ankles: and at length, at the +seventh gate, takes from her her last covering. When she at length +arrives in the presence of Allat, she throws herself upon her in order +to wrest from her in a terrible struggle the life of Dumuzi; but Allat +sends for Namtar, her messenger of misfortune, to punish, the rebellious +Ishtar. "Strike her eyes with the affliction of the eyes--strike +her loins with the affliction of the loins--strike her feet with the +affliction of the feet--strike her heart with the affliction of the +heart--strike her head with the affliction of the head--strike violently +at her, at her whole body!" While Ishtar was suffering the torments of +the infernal regions, the world of the living was wearing mourning on +account of her death. In the absence of the goddess of love, the rites +of love could no longer be performed. The passions of animals and men +were suspended. If she did not return quickly to the daylight, the +races of men and animals would become extinct, the earth would become a +desert, and the gods would have neither votaries nor offerings. + +[Illustration: 226.jpg ISHTAR DESPOILED OF HER GARMENTS IN HADES] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a Chaldan intaglio in the + Hague Museum. Salomon Reinach has demonstrated that the + naked figure is not the goddess herself, but a statue of the + goddess which was adored in one of the temples. + +"Papsukal, the servant of the great gods, tore his face before +Shamash--clothed in mourning, filled with sorrow. Shamash went--he +wept in the presence of Sin, his father,--and his tears flowed in the +presence of Ea, the king:--'Ishtar has gone down into the earth, and +she has not come up again!--And ever since Ishtar has descended into +the land without return... [the passions of men and beasts have been +suspended]... the master goes to sleep while giving his command, the +servant goes to sleep on his duty.'" The resurrection of the goddess +is the only remedy for such ills, but this is dependent upon the +resurrection of Damuzi: Ishtar will never consent to reappear in the +world, if she cannot bring back her husband with her. Ea, the supreme +god, the infallible executor of the divine will--he who alone can modify +the laws imposed upon creation--at length decides to accord to her +what she desires. "Ea, in the wisdom of his heart, formed a male +being,--formed Uddushunmir, the servant of the gods:--'Go then, +Uddushunmir, turn thy face towards the gate of the land without return; +--the seven gates of the land without return--may they become open at +thy presence--may Allt behold thee, and rejoice in thy presence! When +her heart shall be calm, and her wrath appeased, charm her in the name +of the great gods--turn thy thoughts to the spring'--'May the spring, my +lady, give me of its waters that I may drink of them.'" Allt broke +out into a terrible rage, when she saw herself obliged to yield to her +rival; "she beat her sides, she gnawed her fingers," she broke out into +curses against the messenger of misfortune. "'Thou hast expressed to me +a wish which should not be made!--Fly, Uddushunmir, or I will shut thee +up in the great prison--the mud of the drains of the city shall be thy +food--the gutters of the town shall be thy drink--the shadow of +the walls shall be thy abode--the thresholds shall be thy +habitation--confinement and isolation shall weaken thy strength.'"* She +is obliged to obey, notwithstanding; she calls her messenger Namtar and +commands him to make all the preparations for resuscitating the goddess. +It was necessary to break the threshold of the palace in order to get at +the spring, and its waters would have their full effect only in presence +of the Anunnas. "Namtar went, he rent open the eternal palace,--he +twisted the uprights so that the stones of the threshold trembled;--he +made the Anunnaki come forth, and seated them on thrones of gold,--he +poured upon Ishtar the waters of life, and brought her away." She +received again at each gate the articles of apparel she had abandoned +in her passage across the seven circles of hell: as soon as she saw the +daylight once more, it was revealed to her that the fate of her husband +was henceforward in her own hands. Every year she must bathe him in pure +water, and anoint him with the most precious perfumes, clothe him in a +robe of mourning, and play to him sad airs upon a crystal flute, whilst +her priestesses intoned their doleful chants, and tore their breasts +in sorrow: his heart would then take fresh life, and his youth flourish +once more, from springtime to springtime, as long as she should +celebrate on his behalf the ceremonies already prescribed by the deities +of the infernal world. + + * It follows from this passage that Ishtar could be + delivered only at the cost of another life: it was for this + reason, doubtless, that Ea, instead of sending the ordinary + messenger of the gods, created a special messenger. Allt, + furious at the insignificance of the victim sent to her, + contents herself with threatening Uddushanmir with an + ignominious treatment if he does not escape as quickly as + possible. + +Dumuzi was a god, the lover, moreover, of a goddess, and the deity +succeeded where mortals failed.* Ea, Nebo, Gula, Ishtar, and their +fellows possessed, no doubt, the faculty of recalling the dead to life, +but they rarely made use of it on behalf of their creatures, and their +most pious votaries pleaded in vain from temple to temple for the +resurrection of their dead friends; they could never obtain the favour +which had been granted by Allt to Dumuzi. + + * Merodach is called "the merciful one who takes pleasure in + raising the dead to life," and "the lord of the pure + libation," the "merciful one who has power to give life." In + Jeremias may be found the list of the gods who up to the + present are known to have had the power to resuscitate the + dead; it is probable that this power belonged to all the + gods and goddesses of the first rank. + +[Illustration: 229.jpg DUMUZI REJUVENATED ON THE KNEES OF ISHTAR.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a Chaldan intaglio. + +When the dead body was once placed in the tomb, it rose up no more, it +could no more be reinstated in the place in the household it had +lost, it never could begin once more a new earthly existence. The +necromancers, indeed, might snatch away death's prey for a few moments. +The earth gaped at the words of their invocations, the soul burst forth +like a puff of wind and answered gloomily the questions proposed to it; +but when the charm was once broken, it had to retrace its steps to +the country without return, to be plunged once more in darkness. This +prospect of a dreary and joyless eternity was not so terrifying to the +Chaldans as it was to the Egyptians. The few years of their earthly +existence were of far more concern to them than the endless ages which +were to begin their monotonous course on the morrow of their funeral. +The sum of good and evil fortune assigned to them by destiny they +preferred to spend continuously in the light of day on the fair plains +of the Euphrates and Tigris: if they were to economize during this +period with the view of laying up a posthumous treasure of felicity, +their store would have no current value beyond the tomb, and would thus +become so much waste. The gods, therefore, whom they served faithfully +would recoup them, here in their native city, with present prosperity, +with health, riches, power, glory, and a numerous offspring, for the +offerings of their devotion; while, if they irritated the deities +by their shortcomings, they had nothing to expect but overwhelming +calamities and sufferings. The gods would "cut them down like a reed," +and their "names would be annihilated, their seed destroyed;--they would +end their days in affliction and hunger,--their dead bodies would be at +the mercy of chance, and would receive no sepulture." They were content +to resign themselves, therefore, to the dreary lot of eternal misery +which awaited them after death, provided they enjoyed in this world a +long and prosperous existence. Some of them felt and rebelled against +the injustice of the idea, which assigned one and the same fate, without +discrimination, to the coward and the hero killed on the battle-field, +to the tyrant and the mild ruler of his people, to the wicked and +the righteous. These therefore supposed that the gods would make +distinctions, that they would separate such heroes from the common herd, +welcome them in a fertile, sunlit island, separated from the abode of +men by the waters of death--the impassable river which leads to the +house of Allt. The tree of life flourished there, the spring of life +poured forth there its revivifying waters; thither Ea transferred +Xisuthros after the Deluge; Gilgames saw the shores of this island and +returned from it, strong and healthy as in the days of his youth. The +site of this region of delights was at first placed in the centre of +the marshes of the Euphrates, where this river flows into the sea; +afterwards when the country became better known, it was transferred +beyond the ocean. In proportion as the limits of the Chaldan +horizon were thrust further and further away by mercantile or warlike +expeditions, this mysterious island was placed more and more to the +east, afterwards to the north, and at length at a distance so great that +it tended to vanish altogether. As a final resource, the gods of heaven +themselves became the hosts, and welcomed into their own kingdom the +purified souls of the heroes. + +These souls were not so securely isolated from humanity that the +inhabitants of the world were not at times tempted to rejoin them before +their last hour had come. Just as Gilgames had dared of old the +dangers of the desert and the ocean in order to discover the island of +Khasisadra, so Etana darted through the air in order to ascend to the +sky of Anu, to become incorporated while still living in the choir of +the blessed. The legend gives an account of his friendship with the +eagle of Shamash, and of the many favours he had obtained from and +rendered to the bird. It happened at last, that his wife could not bring +forth the son which lay in her womb; the hero, addressing himself to +the eagle, asked from her the plant which alleviates the birth-pangs +of women and facilitates their delivery. This was only to be found, +however, in the heaven of Anu, and how could any one run the risk of +mounting so high, without being destroyed on the way by the anger of the +gods? The eagle takes pity upon the sorrow of his comrade, and resolves +to attempt the enterprise with him. "'Friend,' she says, 'banish the +cloud from thy face! Come, and I will carry thee to the heaven of the +god Anu. Place thy breast against my breast--place thy two hands upon +the pinions of my wings--place thy side against my side.' He places his +breast against the breast of the eagle, he places his two hands upon the +pinions of the wings, he places his side against her side;--he adjusts +himself firmly, and his weight was great." The Chaldan artists have +more than once represented the departure of the hero. They exhibit him +closely attached to the body of his ally, and holding her in a strong +embrace. A first flight has already lifted them above the earth, and the +shepherds scattered over the country are stupefied at the unaccustomed +sight: one announces the prodigy to another, while their dogs seated at +their feet extend their muzzles as if in the act of howling with terror. +"For the space of a double hour the eagle bore him--then the eagle spake +to him, to him Etana: 'Behold, my friend, the earth what it is; regard +the sea which the ocean contains! See, the earth is no more than a +mountain, and the sea is no more than a lake.' The space of a second +double hour she bore him, then the eagle spake to him, to him Etana: +'Behold, my friend, the earth what it is; the sea appears as the girdle +of the earth! 'The space of a third double hour she bore him, then the +eagle spake to him, to him Etana: 'See, my friend, the earth, what it +is:--the sea is no more than the rivulet made by a gardener.'" + +[Illustration: 233.jpg ETANA CARRIED TO HEAVEN BY AN EAGLE.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a Chaldan intaglio. + +"They at length arrive at the heaven of Anu, and rest there for a +moment. Etana sees around him nothing but empty space--no living thing +within it--not even a bird: he is struck with terror, but the eagle +reassures him, and tells him to proceed on his way to the heaven of +Ishtar. "'Come, my friend, let me bear thee to Ishtar,--and I will place +thee near Ishtar, the lady,--and at the feet of Ishtar, the lady, thou +shalt throw thyself.--Place thy side against my side, place thy hands +on the pinions of my wings.' The space of a double hour she bore him: +'Friend, behold the earth what it is.--The face of the earth stretches +out quite flat--and the sea is no greater than a mere.' The space of +a second double hour she bore him: 'Friend, behold the earth what it +is,--the earth is no more than a square plot in a garden, and the great +sea is not greater than a puddle of water.'" At the third hour Etana +lost courage, and cried, "Stop!" and the eagle immediately descended +again; but, Etana's strength being exhausted, he let go his hold, and +was dashed to pieces on the ground. + +The eagle escaped unhurt this time, but she soon suffered a more painful +death than that of Etana. She was at war with the serpent, though the +records which we as yet possess do not vouchsafe the reason, when she +discovered in the roots of a tree the nest in which her enemy concealed +its brood. She immediately proposed to her young ones to pounce down +upon the growing snakes; one of her eaglets, wiser than the rest, +reminded her that they were under the protection of Shamash, the great +righter of wrongs, and cautioned her against any transgression of the +divine laws. The old eagle felt herself wiser than her son, and rebuked +him after the manner of wise mothers: she carried away the serpent's +young, and gave them as food to her own brood. The hissing serpent +crawled as far as Shamash, crying for vengeance: "The evil she has done +me, Shamash--behold it! Come to my help, Shamash! thy net is as wide as +the earth--thy snares reach to the distant mountain--who can escape +thy net?--The criminal Zu, Zu who was the first to act wickedly, did he +escape it?" Shamash refused to interfere personally, but he pointed out +to the serpent an artifice by which he might satisfy his vengeance as +securely as if Shamash himself had accomplished it. "Set out upon the +way, ascend the mountain,--and conceal thyself in a dead bull;--make +an incision in his inside--tear open his belly,--take up thy +abode--establish thyself in his belly. All the birds of the air will +pounce upon it....--and the eagle herself will come with them, ignorant +that thou art within it;--she will wish to possess herself of the +flesh, she will come swiftly--she will think of nothing but the entrails +within. As soon as she begins to attack the inside, seize her by her +wings, beat down her wings, the pinions of her wings and her claws, tear +her and throw her into a ravine of the mountain, that she may die there +a death of hunger and thirst." + +The serpent did as Shamash advised, and the birds of the air began to +flock round the carcase in which she was hidden. The eagle came with the +rest, and at first kept aloof, looking for what should happen. When she +saw that the birds flew away unharmed all fear left her. In vain did the +wise eaglet warn her of the danger that was lurking within the prey; she +mocked at him and his predictions, dug her beak into the carrion, and +the serpent leaping out seized her by the wing. Then "the eagle her +mouth opened, and spake unto the snake, 'Have mercy upon me, and +according to thy pleasure a gift I will lavish upon thee!' The snake +opened her mouth and spake unto the eagle, 'Did I release thee, Shamash +would take part against me; and the doom would fall upon me, which now +I fulfil upon thee.' She tore out her wings, her feathers, her pinions; +she tore her to pieces, she threw her into a cleft, and there she died a +death of hunger and of thirst." + +The gods allowed no living being to penetrate with impunity into their +empire: he who was desirous of ascending thither, however brave he might +be, could do so only by death. The mass of humanity had no pretensions +to mount so high. Their religion gave them the choice between a +perpetual abode in the tomb, or confinement in the prison of Allt; if +at times they strove to escape from these alternatives, and to picture +otherwise their condition in the world beyond, their ideas as to the +other life continued to remain vague, and never approached the minute +precision of the Egyptian conception. The cares of the present life were +too absorbing to allow them leisure to speculate upon the conditions of +a future existence. + +[Illustration: 230.jpg Endplate] + + + + +CHAPTER III--CHALDAN CIVILIZATION + + +_CHALDAN CIVILIZATION--ROYALTY--THE CONSTITUTION OF THE FAMILY AND ITS +PROPERTY--CHALMAN COMMERCE AND INDUSTRY._ + +_The kings not gods, but the vicegerents of the gods: their sacerdotal +character--The queens and the women of the royal family: the sons and +the order of succession to the throne--The royal palaces: description +of the palace of Gudea at Lagash, the faades, the zigurt, the private +apartments, the furniture, the external decoration--Costume of the +men and women: the employees of the palace and the method of royal +administration; the military and the great lords._ + +_The scribe and the clay books.--Cuneiform writing: its hieroglyphic +origin; the Protean character of the sounds which may be assigned to the +ideograms, grammatical tablets, and dictionaries--Their contracts, and +their numerous copies of them: the finger-nail mark, the seal._ + +_The constitution of the family: the position held by the +wife--Marriage, the contract, the religious ceremonies--Divorce: +the rights of wealthy women; woman and marriage among the lower +classes--Adopted children, their position in the family; ordinary +motives for adoption--Slaves, their condition, their enfranchisement._ + +_The Chaldan towns: the aspect and distribution of the houses, domestic +life--The family patrimony: division of the inheritance--Lending +on usury, the rate of interest, commercial intercourse by land and +sea--Trade corporations: brick-making, industrial implements in stone +and metal, goldsmiths, engravers of cylinders, weavers; the state of the +working classes._ + +_Farming and cultivation of the ground: landmarks, slaves, +and agricultural labourers--Scenes of pastoral life: fishing, +hunting--Archaic literature; positive sciences: arithmetic and geometry, +astronomy and astrology, the science of foretelling the future--The +physician; magic and its influence on neighbouring countries._ + +[Illustration: 239.jpg CHAPTER III.] + + Drawn by Boudier, from the sketch by Loftus. The initial + vignette, which is by Faucher-Gudin, represents a royal + figure kneeling and holding a large nail in both hands. The + nail serves to keep the figure fixed firmly in the earth. It + is a reproduction of the bronze figurine in the Louvre, + already published by Heuzey-Sakzeo, _Dcouvertes en + Chalde_, pl. 28, No. 4. + + + + +CHAPTER III--CHALDAN CIVILIZATION + + +_Royalty--The constitution of the family and its property--Chaldan +commerce and industry_. + + +The Chaldan kings, unlike their contemporaries the Pharaohs, rarely +put forward any pretensions to divinity. They contented themselves with +occupying an intermediate position between their subjects and the gods, +and for the purpose of mediation they believed themselves to be endowed +with powers not possessed by ordinary mortals. They sometimes designated +themselves the sons of Ea, or of Nnsun, or some other deity, but +this involved no belief in a divine parentage, and was merely pious +hyperbole: they entertained no illusions with regard to any descent from +a god or even from one of his doubles, but they desired to be recognized +as his vicegerents here below, as his prophets, his well-beloved, +his pastors, elected by him to rule his human flocks, or as priests +devotedly attached to his service. While, however, the ordinary priest +chose for himself a single master to whom he devoted himself, the +priest-king exercised universal sacerdotal functions and claimed to be +pontiff of all the national religions. His choice naturally was directed +by preference to the patrons of his city, those who had raised his +ancestors from the dust, and had exalted him to the supreme rank, but +there were other divinities who claimed their share of his homage +and expected of him a devotion suited to their importance. If he had +attempted to carry out these duties personally in detail, he would have +had to spend his whole life at the foot of the altar; even when he had +delegated as many of them as he could to the regular clergy, there still +remained sufficient to occupy a large part of his time. Every month, +every day, brought its inevitable round of sacrifices, prayers, and +processions. On the 1st of the second Elul, the King of Babylon had to +present a gazelle without blemish to Sin; he then made an offering of +his own choosing to Shamash, and cut the throats of his victims +before the god. These ceremonies were repeated on the 2nd without any +alteration, but from the 3rd to the 12th they took place during the +night, before the statues of Merodach and Ishtar, in turn with those +of Nebo and Tashmit, of Mullil and Ninlil, of Eamman and of Zirbanit; +sometimes at the rising of a particular constellation--as, for instance, +that of the Great Bear, or that of the sons of Ishtar; sometimes at the +moment when the moon "raised above the earth her luminous crown." On such +a date a penitential psalm or a litany was to be recited; at another +time it was forbidden to eat of meat either cooked or smoked, to change +the body-linen, to wear white garments, to drink medicine, to sacrifice, +to put forth an edict, or to drive out in a chariot. Not only at +Babylon, but everywhere else, obedience to the religious rites weighed +heavily on the local princes; at Uru, at Lagash, at Nipur, and in +the ruling cities of Upper and Lower Chalda. The king, as soon as he +succeeded to the throne, repaired to the temple to receive his solemn +investiture, which differed in form according to the gods he worshipped: +at Babylon, he addressed himself to the statue of Bel-Merodach in the +first days of the month Nisan which followed his accession, and he "took +him by the hands" to do homage to him. From thenceforth, he officiated +for Merodach here below, and the scrupulously minute devotions, which +daily occupied hours of his time, were so many acts of allegiance which +his fealty as a vassal constrained him to perform to his suzerain. They +were, in fact, analogous to the daily audiences demanded of a great +lord by his steward, for the purpose of rendering his accounts and of +informing him of current business: any interruption not justified by a +matter of supreme importance would be liable to be interpreted as a want +of respect or as revealing an inclination to rebel. By neglecting the +slightest ceremonial detail the king would arouse the suspicions of +the gods, and excite their anger against himself and his subjects: the +people had, therefore, a direct interest in his careful fulfilment of +the priestly functions, and his piety was not the least of his virtues +in their eyes. All other virtues--bravery, equity, justice--depended on +it, and were only valuable from the divine aid which piety obtained for +them. The gods and heroes of the earliest ages had taken upon themselves +the task of protecting the faithful from all their enemies, whether men +or beasts. If a lion decimated their flocks, or a urus of gigantic size +devastated their crops, it was the king's duty to follow the example +of his fabulous predecessors and to set out and overcome them. The +enterprise demanded all the more courage and supernatural help, since +these beasts were believed to be no mere ordinary animals, but were +looked on as instruments of divine wrath the cause of which was often +unknown, and whoever assailed these monsters, provoked not only them but +the god who instigated them. Piety and confidence in the patron of the +city alone sustained the king when he set forth to drive the animal back +to its lair; he engaged in close combat with it, and no sooner had he +pierced it with his arrows or his lance, or felled it with axe and +dagger, than he hastened to pour a libation upon it, and to dedicate it +as a trophy in one of the temples. His exalted position entailed on him +no less perils in time of war: if he did not personally direct the first +attacking column, he placed himself at the head of the band composed of +the flower of the army, whose charge at an opportune moment was wont to +secure the victory. + +What would have been the use of his valour, if the dread of the gods had +not preceded his march, and if the light of their countenances had not +struck terror into the ranks of the enemy? As soon as he had triumphed +by their command, he sought before all else to reward them amply for the +assistance they had given him. He poured a tithe of the spoil into the +coffers of their treasury, he made over a part of the conquered country +to their domain, he granted them a tale of the prisoners to cultivate +their lands or to work at their buildings. Even the idols of the +vanquished shared the fate of their people: the king tore them from +the sanctuaries which had hitherto sheltered them, and took them as +prisoners in his train to form a court of captive gods about his patron +divinity. Shamash, the great judge of heaven, inspired him with justice, +and the prosperity which his good administration obtained for the people +was less the work of the sovereign than that of the immortals. + +We know too little of the inner family life of the kings, to attempt +to say how they were able to combine the strict sacerdotal obligations +incumbent on them with the routine of daily life. We merely observe that +on great days of festival or sacrifice, when they themselves officiated, +they laid aside all the insignia of royalty during the ceremony and were +clad as ordinary priests. We see them on such occasions represented +with short-cut hair and naked breast, the loin-cloth about their waist, +advancing foremost in the rank, carrying the heavily laden "kufa," or +reed basket, as if they were ordinary slaves; and, as a fact, they +had for the moment put aside their sovereignty and were merely temple +servants, or slaves appearing before their divine master to do his +bidding, and disguising themselves for the nonce in the garb of +servitors. The wives of the sovereign do not seem to have been invested +with that semi-sacred character which led the Egyptian women to be +associated with the devotions of the man, and made them indispensable +auxiliaries in all religious ceremonies; they did not, moreover, occupy +that important position side by side with the man which the Egyptian +law assigned to the queens of the Pharaohs. Whereas the monuments on the +banks of the Nile reveal to us princesses sharing the throne of their +husbands whom they embrace with a gesture of frank affection, in Chalda +the wives of the prince, his mother, sisters, daughters, and even his +slaves, remain invisible to posterity. + +[Illustration: 244.jpg THE KING URNINA BEARING THE "KUFA."] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from Heuzey Sarzec. + +The harem in which they were shut up by custom, rarely opened its doors: +the people seldom caught sight of them, their relatives spoke of them +as little as possible, those in power avoided associating them in any +public acts of worship or government, and we could count on our fingers +the number of those whom the inscriptions mention by name. Some of them +were drawn from the noble families of the capital, others came from the +kingdoms of Chalda or from foreign courts; a certain number never rose +above the condition of mere concubines, many assumed the title of queen, +while almost all served as living pledges of alliances made with rival +states, or had been given as hostages at the concluding of a peace on +the termination of a war.* As the kings, who put forward no pretensions +to a divine origin, were not constrained, after the fashion of the +Pharaohs, to marry their sisters in order to keep up the purity of their +race, it was rare to find one among their wives who possessed an equal +right to the crown with themselves: such a case could be found only in +troublous times, when an aspirant to the throne, of base extraction, +legitimated his usurpation by marrying a sister or daughter of his +predecessor. + + * Political marriage-alliances between Egypt and Chalda + were of frequent occurrence, according to the Tel el-Amarna + tablets, and at a later period between Chalda and Assyria; + among the few queens of the very earliest times, the wife of + Nammaghani is the daughter of Urbau, vicegerent of Lagash, + and consequently the cousin or niece of her husband, while + the wife of Rimsin appears to be the daughter of a nobleman + of the name of Rimnannar. + +The original status of the mother almost always determined that of her +children, and the sons of a princess were born princes, even if their +father were of obscure or unknown origin.* These princes exercised +important functions at court, or they received possessions which +they administered under the suzerainty of the head of the family; +the daughters were given to foreign kings, or to scions of the most +distinguished families. The sovereign was under no obligation to hand +down his crown to any particular member of his family; the eldest son +usually succeeded him, but the king could, if he preferred, select his +favourite child as his successor even if he happened to be the youngest, +or the only one born of a slave. As soon as the sovereign had made known +his will, the custom of primogeniture was set aside, and his word became +law. We can well imagine the secret intrigues formed both by mothers and +sons to curry favour with the father and bias his choice; we can picture +the jealousy with which they mutually watched each other, and the bitter +hatred which any preference shown to one would arouse in the breasts +of all the others. Often brothers who had been disappointed in their +expectations would combine secretly against the chosen or supposed heir; +a conspiracy would break out, and the people suddenly learn that their +ruler of yesterday had died by the hand of an assassin and that a new +one filled his place. + + * This fact is apparent from the introduction to the + inscription in which Sargon I. is supposed to give an + account of his life: "My father was unknown, my mother was a + princess;" and it was, indeed, from his mother that he + inherited his rights to the crown of Agade. + +Sometimes discontent spread beyond the confines of the palace, the army +became divided into two hostile camps, the citizens took the side of one +or other of the aspirants, and civil war raged for several years till +some decisive action brought it to a close. Meantime tributary vassals +took advantage of the consequent disorder to shake off the yoke, the +Blamites and various neighbouring cities joined in the dispute and +ranged themselves on the side of the party from which there was most +to be gained: the victorious faction always had to pay dearly for this +somewhat dubious help, and came out impoverished from the struggle. Such +an internecine war often caused the downfall of a dynasty--at times, +indeed, that of the entire state.* + + * The above is perfectly true of the later Assyrian and + Chalan periods: it is scarcely needful to recall to the + reader the murders of Sargon II. and Sennacherib, or the + revolt of Assurdanpal against his father Shalmaneser III. + With regard to the earliest period we have merely + indications of what took place; the succession of King + Urnina of Lagash appears to have been accompanied by + troubles of this kind, and it is certain that his successor + Akurgal was not the eldest of his sons, but we do not at + present know to what events Akurgal owed his elevation. + +The palaces of the Chaldan kings, like those of the Egyptians, +presented the appearance of an actual citadel: the walls had to be +sufficiently thick to withstand an army for an indefinite period, and +to protect the garrison from every emergency, except that of treason or +famine. One of the statues found at Telloh holds in its lap the plan +of one of these residences: the external outline alone is given, but by +means of it we can easily picture to ourselves a fortified place, with +its towers, its forts, and its gateways placed between two bastions. +It represents the ancient palace of Lagash, subsequently enlarged and +altered by Oudea or one of the vicegerents who succeeded him, in which +many a great lord of the place must have resided down to the time of the +Christian era. The site on which it was built in the Girsu quarter of. +the city was not entirely unoccupied at the time of its foundation. +Urbau had raised a ziggurat on that very spot some centuries previously, +and the walls which he had constructed were falling into ruin. + +[Illustration: 248.jpg THE PLAN OF A PALACE BUILT BY GUDEA.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from Heuzey-Sarzec. The plan is + traced upon the tablet held in the lap of Statue E in the + Louvre. Below the plan can be seen the ruler marked with the + divisions used by the architect for drawing his designs to + the desired scale; the scribe's stylus is represented lying + on the left of the plan. [Prof. Ptrie has shown that the + unit of measurement represented on this ruler is the cubit + of the Pyramid-builders of Egypt.--Te.] + +Gudea did not destroy the work of his remote predecessor, he merely +incorporated it into the substructures of the new building, thus +showing an indifference similar to that evinced by the Pharaohs for the +monuments of a former dynasty. The palaces, like the temples, never +rose directly from the soil, but were invariably built on the top of an +artificial mound of crude brick. At Lagash, this solid platform rises to +the height of 40 feet above the plain, and the only means of access +to the top is by a single narrow steep staircase, easily cut off or +defended. + +[Illustration: 249.jpg TERRA-COTTA BARREL-right] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from the facsimile by Place. + +The palace which surmounts this artificial eminence describes a sort of +irregular rectangle, 174 feet long by 69 feet wide, and had, contrary +to the custom in Egypt, the four angles orientated to the four cardinal +points. The two principal sides are not parallel, but swell out slightly +towards the middle, and the flexion of the lines almost follows the +contour of one of those little clay cones upon which the kings were wont +to inscribe their annals or dedications. This flexure was probably +not intentional on the part of the architect, but was owing to the +difficulty of keeping a wall of such considerable extent in a straight +line from one end to another; and all Eastern nations, whether Chaldans +or Egyptians, troubled themselves but little about correctness of +alignment, since defects of this kind were scarcely ever perceptible in +the actual edifice, and are only clearly revealed in the plan drawn out +to scale with modern precision.* + + * Mons. Heuzey thinks that the outward deflection of the + lines is owing "merely to a primitive method of obtaining + greater solidity of construction, and of giving a better + foundation to these long faades, which are placed upon + artificial terraces of crude brick always subject to cracks + and settlements." I think that the explanation of the facts + which I have given in the text is simpler than that + ingeniously proposed by Mons. Heuzey: the masons, having + begun to build the wall at one end, were unable to carry it + on in a straight line until it reached the spot denoted on + the architect's plan, and therefore altered the direction of + the wall when they detected their error; or, having begun to + build the wall from both ends simultaneously, were not + successful in making the two lines meet correctly, and they + have frankly patched up the junction by a mass of projecting + brickwork which conceals their unskilfulness. + +[Illustration: 250.jpg PLAN OF THE EXISTING BUILDINGS OF TELLOH.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from Heuzey-Sarzec. + +The faade of the building faces south-east, and is divided into three +blocks of unequal size. The centre of the middle block for a length +of 18 feet projects some 3 feet from the main front, and, by directly +facing the spectator, ingeniously masks the obtuse angle formed by the +meeting of the two walls. This projection is flanked right and left by +rectangular grooves, similar to those which ornament the faades of the +fortresses and brick houses of the Ancient Empire in Egypt: the regular +alternation of projections and hollows breaks the monotony of the facing +by the play of light and shade. Beyond these, again, the wall surface +is broken by semicircular pilasters some 17 inches in diameter, without +bases, capitals, or even a moulding, but placed side by side like so +many tree-trunks or posts forming a palisade. + +[Illustration: 251.jpg DECORATION OF COLOURED CONES ON THE FAADE AT URUK] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from the sketch by Loftus. + +Various schemes of decoration succeed each other in progressive +sequence, less ornate and at greater distances apart, the further +they recede from the central block and the nearer they approach to the +extremities of the faade. They stop short at the southern angle, and +the two sides of the edifice running from south to west, and again from +west to north, are flat, bare surfaces, unbroken by projection or groove +to relieve the poverty and monotony of their appearance. The decoration +reappears on the north-east front, where the arrangement of the +principal faade is partly reproduced. The grooved divisions here start +from the angles, and the engaged columns are wanting, or rather they +are transferred to the central projection, and from a distance have the +effect of a row of gigantic organ-pipes. We may well ask if this squat +and heavy mass of building, which must have attracted the eye from all +parts of the town, had nothing to relieve the dull and dismal colour of +its component bricks. + +[Illustration: 252.jpg PILASTERS OF THE FACADE OF GUDEA'S PALACE] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from Heuzey-Sarzec + +The idea might not have occurred to us had we not found elsewhere an +attempt to lessen the gloomy appearance of the architecture by coloured +plastering. At Uruk, the walls of the palace are decorated by means of +terra-cotta cones, fixed deep into the solid plaster and painted red, +black, or yellow, forming interlaced or diaper patterns of chevrons, +spirals, lozenges, and triangles, with a very fair result: this mosaic +of coloured plaster covered all the surfaces, both flat and curved, +giving to the building a cheerful aspect entirely wanting in that of +Lagash. + +A long narrow trough of yellowish limestone stood in front of the +palace, and was raised on two steps: it was carved in relief on the +outside with figures of women standing with outstretched hands, passing +to each other vases from which gushed forth two streams of water. This +trough formed a reservoir, which was filled every morning for the use of +the men and beasts, and those whom some business or a command brought to +the palace could refresh themselves there while waiting to be received +by the master. The gates which gave access to the interior were placed +at somewhat irregular intervals: two opened from the principal faade, +but on each of the other sides there was only one entrance. They were +arched and so low that admittance was not easily gained; they were +closed with two-leaved doors of cedar or cypress, provided with bronze +hinges, which turned upon two blackish stones firmly set in the masonry +on either side, and usually inscribed with the name of the founder or +that of the reigning sovereign. Two of the entrances possessed a sort +of covered way, in which the soldiers of the external watch could take +shelter from the heat of the sun by day, from the cold at night, and +from the dews at dawn. On crossing the threshold, a corridor, flanked +with two small rooms for porters or warders, led into a courtyard +surrounded with buildings of sufficient depth to take up nearly half +of the area enclosed within the walls. This court was moreover a +semi-public place, to which tradesmen, merchants, suppliants, and +functionaries of all ranks had easy access. A suite of three rooms shut +off in the north-east angle did duty for a magazine or arsenal. The +southern portion of the building was occupied by the State apartments, +the largest of which measures only 40 feet in length. In these rooms +Gudea and his successors gave audience to their nobles and administered +justice. The administrative officers and the staff who had charge of +them were probably located in the remaining part of the building. The +roof was flat, and ran all round the enclosing wall, forming a terrace, +access to it being gained by a staircase built between the principal +entrance and the arsenal. At the northern angle rose a ziggurat. Custom +demanded that the sovereign should possess a temple within his dwelling, +where he could fulfil his religious duties without going into the town +and mixing with the crowd. At Lagash the sacred tower was of older date +than the palace, and possibly formed part of the ancient building of +Urbau. It was originally composed of three stories, but the lower one +was altered by Gudea, and disappeared entirely in the thickness of the +basal platform. The second story thus became the bottom one; it was +enlarged, slightly raised above the neighbouring roofs, and was probably +crowned by a sanctuary dedicated to Ningirsu. It was, indeed, a monument +of modest proportions, and most of the public temples soared far above +it; but, small as it was, the whole town might be seen from the summit, +with its separate quarters and its belt of gardens; and beyond, the +open country intersected with streams, studded with isolated villages, +patches of wood, pools and weedy marshes left by the retiring +inundation, and in the far distance the lines of trees and bushes which +bordered the banks of the Euphrates and its confluents. Should a troop +of enemies venture within the range of sight, or should a suspicious +tumult arise within the city, the watchers posted on the highest terrace +would immediately give the alarm, and 'through their warning the king +would have time to close his gates, and take measures to resist the +invading enemy or crush the revolt of his subjects. + +[Illustration: 255.jpg STONE SOCKET OF ONE OF THE DOORS IN THE PALACE OF +GUDEA.( right)] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from Heuzey-Sarzec. + +The northern apartments of the palace were appropriated to Gudea and his +family. They were placed with their back to the entrance court, and +were divided into two groups; the sovereign, his male children and their +attendants, inhabited the western one, while the women and their slaves +were cloistered, so to speak, in the northern set. The royal dwelling +had an external exit by means of a passage issuing on the north-west of +the enclosure, and it also communicated with the great courtyard by a +vaulted corridor which ran along one side of the base of the ziggurat: +the doors which, closed these two entrances opened wide enough to admit +only one person at a time, and to the right and left were recesses in +the wall which enabled the guards to examine all comers unobserved, and +stab them promptly if there were anything suspicious in their behaviour. +Eight chambers were lighted from the courtyard. In one of them were kept +all the provisions for the day, while another served as a kitchen: +the head, cook carried on his work at a sort of rectangular dresser of +moderate size, on which several fireplaces were marked out by little +dividing walls of burnt bricks, to accommodate as many pots or pans +of various sizes. A well sunk in the corner right down below the +substructure provided the water needed for culinary purposes. The king +and his belongings accommodated themselves in the remaining five or six +rooms as best they could. A corridor, guarded as carefully as the one +previously described, led to his private apartments and to those of his +wives: these comprised a yard, some half-dozen cells varying in size, +a kitchen, a well, and a door through which the servants could come and +go, without passing through the men's quarters. The whole description in +no way corresponds with the marvellous ideal of an Oriental palace which +we form for ourselves: the apartments are mean and dismal, imperfectly +lighted by the door or by some small aperture timidly cut in the +ceiling, arranged so as to protect the inmates from the heat and +dust, but without a thought given to luxury or display. The walls were +entirely void of any cedar woodwork inlaid with gold, or panels of +mosaic such as we find in the temples, nor were they hung with dyed or +embroidered draperies such as we moderns love to imagine, and which we +spread about in profusion, when we attempt to reproduce the interior of +an ancient house or palace.* + + * Mons. de Sarzec expressly states that he was unable to + find anywhere in the palace of Gudea "the slightest trace of + any coating on the walls, either of colour or glazed brick. + The walls appear to have been left bare, without any + decoration except the regular joining of the courses of + brickwork." The wood panelling was usually reserved for the + temples or sacred edifices: Mons. de Sarzec found the + remains of carbonized cedar panels in the ruins of a + sanctuary dedicated to Ningirsu. According to Mons. Heuzey, + the wall-hangings were probably covered with geometrical + designs, similar to thoe formed by the terra-cotta cones on + the walls of the palace at Uruk; the inscriptions, however, + which are full of minute details with regard to the + construction and ornamentation of the temples and palaces, + have hitherto contained nothing which would lead us to infer + that hangings were used for mural decoration in Chaldoa or + Assyria. + +The walls had to remain bare for the sake of coolness: at the most they +were only covered with a coat of white plaster, on which were painted, +in one or two colours, some scene of civil or religious life, or troops +of fantastic monsters struggling with one another, or men each with a +bird seated on his Wrist. The furniture was not less scanty than the +decoration; there were mats on the ground, coffers in which were kept +the linen and wearing apparel, low beds inlaid with ivory and metal and +provided with coverings and a thin mattress, copper or wooden stands to +support lamps or vases, square stools on four legs united by crossbars, +armchairs with lions' claw feet, resembling the Egyptian armchairs +in outline, and making us ask if they were brought into Chaldaea by +caravans, or made from models which had come from some other country. +A few rare objects of artistic character might be found, which bore +witness to a certain taste for elegance and refinement; as, for +instance, a kind of circular trough of black stone, probably used to +support a vase. Three rows of imbricated scales surrounded the base of +this, while seven small sitting figures lean back against the upper +part with an air of satisfaction which is most cleverly rendered. +The decoration of the larger chambers used for public receptions and +official ceremonies, while never assuming the monumental character which +we observe in contemporary Egyptian buildings, afforded more scope for +richness and variety than was offered by the living-rooms. + +[Illustration: 258.jpg STAND OF BLACK STONE FROM THE PALACE OF TELLOH.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from Heuzey-Sarzec. + +Small tablets of brownish limestone, let into the wall or affixed to +its surface by terra-cotta pegs, and decorated with inscriptions, +represented in a more or less artless fashion the figure of the +sovereign officiating before some divinity, while his children and +servants took part in the ceremony by their chanting. Inscribed +bricks celebrating the king's exploits were placed here and there in +conspicuous places. These were not embedded like the others in two +layers of bitumen or lime, but were placed in full view upon bronze +statues of divinities or priests, fixed into the ground or into some +part of the masonry as magical nails destined to preserve the bricks +from destruction, and consequently to keep the memory of the dedicator +continually before posterity. Stelaa engraved on both sides recalled the +wars of past times, the battle-field, the scenes of horror which took +place there, and the return of the victor and his triumph. Sitting +or standing figures of diorite, silicious sandstone or hard limestone, +bearing inscriptions on their robes or shoulders, perpetuated the +features of the founder or of members of his family, and commemorated +the pious donations which had obtained for him the favour of the gods: +the palace of Lagash contained dozens of such statues, several of which +have come down to us almost intact--one of the ancient Urbau, and nine +of Gudea. + +To judge by the space covered and the arrangement of the rooms, the +vicegerents of Lagash and the chiefs of towns of minor importance +must, as a rule, have been content with a comparatively small number of +servants; their court probably resembled that of the Egyptian barons who +lived much about the same period, such as Khnmhotp of the nome of the +Gazelle, or Thothotp of Hermopolis. In great cities such as Babylon +the palace occupied a much larger area, and the crowd of courtiers was +doubtless as great as that which thronged about the Pharaohs. No exact +enumeration of them has come down to us, but the titles which we come +across show with what minuteness they defined the offices about the +person of the sovereign. His costume alone required almost as many +persons as there were garments. The men wore the light loin-cloth or +short-sleeved tunic which scarcely covered the knees; after the fashion +of the Egyptians, they threw over the loin-cloth and the tunic a large +"abayah," whose shape and material varied with the caprice of fashion. +They often chose for this purpose a sort of shawl of a plain material, +fringed or ornamented with a flat stripe round the edge; often they seem +to have preferred it ribbed, or artificially kilted from top to bottom.* + + * The relatively modern costume was described by Herodotus, + i. 114; it was almost identical with the ancient one, as + proved by the representations on the cylinders and monuments + of Telloh. The short-sleeved tunic is more rarely + represented, and the loin-cloth is usually hidden under the + abayah in the case of nobles and kings. We see the princes + of Lagash wearing the simple loin-cloth, on the monuments of + Urnin, for example. For the Egyptian abayah, and the manner + of representing it, cf. vol. i. pp. 69, 71. + +The favourite material in ancient times, however, seems to have been +a hairy, shaggy cloth or woollen stuff, whose close fleecy thread hung +sometimes straight, sometimes crimped or waved, in regular rows like +flounces one above another. This could be arranged squarely around the +neck, like a mantel, but was more often draped crosswise over the left +shoulder and brought under the right arm-pit, so as to leave the upper +part of the breast and the arm bare on that side. It made a convenient +and useful garment--an excellent protection in summer from the sun, and +from the icy north wind in the winter. The feet were shod with sandals, +a tight-fitting cap covered the head, and round it was rolled a thick +strip of linen, forming a sort of rudimentary turban, which completed +the costume.* + + *Cf. the head belonging to one of the statues of Telloh, + which is reproduced on p. 112 of this volume. We notice the + same head-dress on several intaglios and monuments, and also + on the terra-cotta plaque which will be found on p. 330 of + this volume, and which represents a herdsman wrestling with + a lion. Until we have further evidence, we cannot state, as + G. Raw-linson did, that this strip forming a turban was of + camel's hair; the date of the introduction of the camel into + Chaldoa still remains uncertain. + +It is questionable whether, as in Egypt, wigs and false beards formed +part of the toilette. On some monuments we notice smooth faces and +close-cropped heads; on others the men appear with long hair, either +falling loose or twisted into a knot on the back of the neck.* While +the Egyptians delighted in garments of thin white linen, but slightly +plaited or crimped, the dwellers on the banks of the Euphrates preferred +thick and heavy stuffs patterned and striped with many colours. The +kings wore the same costume as their subjects, but composed of richer +and finer materials, dyed red or blue, decorated with floral, animal, +or geometrical designs;** a high tower-shaped tiara covered the +forehead,*** unless replaced by a diadem of Sin or some of the other +gods, which was a conical mitre supporting a double pair of horns, and +sometimes surmounted by a sort of diadem of feathers and mysterious +figures, embroidered or painted on the cap. Their arms were loaded with +massive bracelets and their fingers with rings; they wore necklaces and +earrings, and carried each a dagger in the belt. + + * Dignitaries went bareheaded and shaved the chin; see, for + example, the two bas-reliefs given on pp. 105 and 244 of + this volume; cf. the heads reproduced as tailpieces on pp. + 2, 124. The knot of hair behind on the central figure is + easily distinguished in the vignette on p. 266 of this + volume. + + ** The details of colour and ornamentation, not furnished by + the Chaldan monuments, are given in the wall-painting at + Beni-Nasan representing the arrival of Asiatics in Egypt, + which belongs to a period contemporary with or slightly + anterior to the reign of Gudea. The resemblance of the + stuffs in which they are clothed to those of the Chaldan + garments, and the identity of the patterns on them with the + geometrical decoration of painted cones on the palace at + Uruk, have been pointed out with justice by H. G. Tomkins + + *** The high tiara is represented among others on the head + of Mardukna-dinakhe, King of Babylon: cf. what is said of + the conical mitre, the headdress of Sin, on pp. 14, 169 of + this volume. + +[Illustration: 262.jpg FEMALE SERVANT BARE TO THE WAIST.(left)] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from the bronze figure in the + Louvre, published by Heuzey-Sarzec, _Dcouvertes en + Chalde_, pl. 14. + +The royal wardrobe, jewels, arms, and insignia formed so many distinct +departments, and each was further divided into minor sections for +body-linen, washing, or for this or that kind of headdress or sceptre. +The dress of the women, which was singularly like that of the men, +required no less a staff of attendants. The female servants, as well +as the male, went about bare to the waist, at all events while working +indoors. When they went out, they wore the same sort of tunic or +loin-cloth, but longer and more resembling a petticoat; they had the +same "abayah" drawn round the shoulders or rolled about the body like +a cloak, but with the women it nearly touched the ground; sometimes an +actual dress seems to have been substituted for the "abayah," drawn in +to the figure by a belt and cut out of the same hairy material as that +of which the mantles were made. The boots were of soft leather, laced, +and without heels; the women's ornaments were more numerous than those +of the men, and comprised necklaces, bracelets, ankle, finger, and ear +rings; their hair was separated into bands and kept in place on the +forehead by a fillet, falling in thick plaits or twisted into a coil on +the nape of the neck. + +[Illustration: 262.jpg COSTUME OF A CHALDN LADY (right)] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from the alabaster statuette in the + Louvre, published in Heuzey. She holds in her hand the jar + full of water, analogous to the streaming vase mentioned + above. + +A great deal of the work was performed by foreign or native slaves, +generally under the command of eunuchs, to whom the king and royal +princes entrusted most of the superintendence of their domestic +arrangements; they guarded and looked after the sleeping apartments, +they fanned and kept the flies from their master, and handed him his +food and drink. Eunuchs in Egypt were either unknown or but little +esteemed: they never seem to have been used, even in times when +relations with Asia were of daily occurrence, and when they might have +been supplied from the Babylonian slave-markets. + +All these various officials closely attached to the person of the +sovereign--heads of the wardrobe, chamberlains, cupbearers, bearers of +the royal sword or of the flabella, commanders of the eunuchs or of +the guards--had, by the nature of their duties, daily opportunities of +gaining a direct influence over their master and his government, +and from among them he often chose the generals of his army or the +administrators of his domains. Here, again, as far as the few +monuments and the obscurity of the texts permit of our judging, we find +indications of a civil and military organization analogous to that +of Egypt: the divergencies which contemporaries may have been able to +detect in the two national systems are effaced by the distance of +time, and we are struck merely by the resemblances. As all business +transactions were carried on by barter or by the exchange of merchandise +for weighed quantities of the precious metals, the taxes were +consequently paid in kind: the principal media being corn and other +cereals, dates, fruits, stuffs, live animals and slaves, as well as +gold, silver, lead, and copper, either in its native state or melted +into bars fashioned into implements or ornamented vases. Hence we +continually come across fiscal storehouses, both in town and country, +which demanded the services of a whole troop of functionaries and +workmen: administrators of corn, cattle, precious metals, wine and oil; +in fine, as many administrators as there were cultures or industries in +the country presided over the gathering of the products into the +central depots and regulated their redistribution. A certain portion +was reserved for the salaries of the employs and the pay of the workmen +engaged in executing public works: the surplus accumulated in the +treasury and formed a reserve, which was not drawn upon except in cases +of extreme necessity. Every palace, in addition to its living-rooms, +contained within its walls large store-chambers filled with provisions +and weapons, which made it more or less a fortress, furnished with +indispensable requisites for sustaining a prolonged siege either against +an enemy's troops or the king's own subjects in revolt. The king always +kept about him bodies of soldiers who perhaps were foreign mercenaries, +like the Mazai of the armies of the Pharaohs, and who formed his +permanent body-guard in times of peace. When a war was imminent, a +military levy was made upon his domains, but we are unable to find out +whether the recruits thus raised were drawn indiscriminately from the +population in general, or merely from a special class, analogous to that +of the warriors which we find in Egypt, who were paid in the same way by +grants of land. The equipment of these soldiers was of the rudest kind: +they had no cuirass, but carried a rectangular shield, and, in the case +of those of higher rank at all events, a conical metal helmet, probably +of beaten copper, provided with a piece to protect the back of the neck; +the heavy infantry were armed with a pike tipped with bronze ox-copper, +an axe or sharp adze, a stone-headed mace, and a dagger; the light +troops were provided only with the bow and sling. As early as the third +millennium b.c., the king went to battle in a chariot drawn by onagers, +or perhaps horses; he had his own peculiar weapon, which was a curved +bton probably terminating in a metal point, and resembling the sceptre +of the Pharaohs. Considerable quantities of all these arms were stored +in the arsenals, which contained depots for bows, maces, and pikes, and +even the stones needed for the slings had their special department for +storage. At the beginning of each campaign, a distribution of weapons +to the newly levied troops took place; but as soon as the war was at an +end, the men brought back their accoutrements, which were stored till +they were again required. The valour of the soldiers and their chiefs +was then rewarded; the share of the spoil for some consisted of cattle, +gold, corn, a female slave, and vessels of value; for others, lands or +towns in the conquered country, regulated by the rank of the recipients +or the extent of the services they had rendered. + +[Illustration: 266.jpg A SOLDIER BRINGING PRISONERS AND SPOIL.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from the Chaldan intaglio in the + British. Museum. + +Property thus given was hereditary, and privileges were often added to +it which raised the holder to the rank of a petty prince: for instance, +no royal official was permitted to impose a tax upon such lands, or take +the cattle off them, or levy provisions upon them; no troop of soldiers +might enter them, not even for the purpose of arresting a fugitive. Most +of the noble families possessed domains of this kind, and constituted in +each kingdom a powerful and wealthy feudal aristocracy, whose relations +to their sovereign were probably much the same as those which bound +the nomarchs to the Pharaoh. The position of these nobles was not more +stable than that of the dynasties under which they lived: while some +among them gained power by marriages or by continued acquisitions of +land, others fell into disgrace and were ruined. As the soil belonged to +the gods, it is possible that these nobles were supposed, in theory, 'to +depend upon the gods; but as the kings were the vicegerents of the gods +upon earth, it was to the king, as a matter of fact, that they owed +their elevation. Every state, therefore, comprised two parts, each +subject to a distinct rgime: one being the personal domain of the +suzerain, which he managed himself, and from which he drew the revenues; +the other was composed of fiefs, whose lords paid tribute and owed +certain obligations to the king, the nature of which we are as yet +unable to define. + +The Chaldan, like the Egyptian scribe, was the pivot on which the +machinery of this double royal and seignorial administration turned. +He does not appear to have enjoyed as much consideration as his +fellow-official in the Nile Valley: the Chaldan princes, nobles, +priests, soldiers, and temple or royal officials, did not covet the +title of scribe, or pride themselves upon holding that office side +by side with their other dignities, as we see was the case with their +Egyptian contemporaries. The position of a scribe, nevertheless, was an +important one. We continually meet with it in all grades of society--in +the palace, in the temples, in the storehouses, in private dwellings; in +fine, the scribe was ubiquitous, at court, in the town, in the country, +in the army, managing affairs both small and great, and seeing that they +were carried on regularly. His education differed but little from that +given to the Egyptian scribe; he learned the routine of administrative +or judicial affairs, the formularies for correspondence either with +nobles or with ordinary people, the art of writing, of calculating +quickly, and of making out bills correctly. We may well ask whether he +ever employed papyrus or prepared skins for these purposes. It would, +indeed, seem strange that, after centuries of intercourse, no caravan +should have brought into Chaldan any of those materials which were in +such constant use for literary purposes in Africa;* yet the same clay +which furnished the architect with such an abundant building material +appears to have been the only medium for transmitting the language which +the scribes possessed. They were always provided with slabs of a fine +plastic clay, carefully mixed and kept sufficiently moist to take easily +the impression of an object, but at the same time sufficiently firm to +prevent the marks once made from becoming either blurred or effaced. +When a scribe had a text to copy or a document to draw up, he chose out +one of his slabs, which he placed flat upon his left palm, and taking in +the right hand a triangular stylus of flint, copper, bronze, or bone,** +he at once set to work. The instrument, in early times, terminated in a +fine point, and the marks made by it when it was gently pressed upon +the clay were slender and of uniform thickness; in later times, the +extremity of the stylus was cut with a bevel, and the impression then +took the shape of a metal nail or a wedge. + + * On the Assyrian monuments we frequently see scribes taking + a list of the spoil, or writing letters on tablets and some + other soft material, either papyrus or prepared skin. Sayce + has given good reasons for believing that the Chaldanns of + the early dynasties knew of the papyrus, and either made it + themselves, or had it brought from Egypt. + + ** See the triangular stylus of copper or bronze reproduced + by the side of the measuring-rule, and the plan on the + tablet of Gudea, p. 248 of this volume. The Assyrian Museum + in the Louvre possesses several large, flat styli of bone, + cut to a point at one end, which appear to have belonged to + the Assyrian scribes. Taylor discovered in a tomb at Eridu a + flint tool, which may have served for the same purpose as + the metal or bone styli. + +[Illustration: 268.jpg MANUSCRIPT ON PAPYRUS IN HEIROGLYPHICS] + +They wrote from left to right along the upper part of the tablet, and +covered both sides of it with closely written lines, which sometimes ran +over on to the edges. When the writing was finished, the scribe sent his +work to the potter, who put it in the kiln and baked it, or the writer +may have had a small oven at his own disposition, as a clerk with us +would have his table or desk. The shape of these documents varied, and +sometimes strikes us as being peculiar: besides the tablets and the +bricks, we find small solid cones, or hollow cylinders of considerable +size, on which the kings related their exploits or recorded the history +of their wars or the dedication of their buildings. This method had a +few inconveniences, but many advantages. These clay books were heavy to +hold and clumsy to handle, while the characters did not stand out well +from the brown, yellow, and whitish background of the material; but, on +the other hand, a poem, baked and incorporated into the page itself, +ran less danger of destruction than if scribbled in ink on sheets of +papyrus. Fire could make no impression on it; it could withstand water +for a considerable length of time; even if broken, the pieces were still +of use: as long as it was not pulverized, the entire document could be +restored, with the exception, perhaps, of a few signs, or 'some +scraps of a sentence. The inscriptions which have been saved from the +foundations of the most ancient temples, several of which date back +forty or fifty centuries, are for the most part as clear and legible +as when they left the hands of the writer who engraved them or of the +workmen who baked them. It is owing to the material to which they were +committed that we possess the principal works of Chaldan literature +which have come down to us--poems, annals, hymns, magical incantations; +how few fragments of these would ever have reached us had their authors +confided them to parchment or paper, after the manner of the Egyptian +scribes! The greatest danger that they ran was that of being left +forgotten in the corner of the chamber in which they had been kept, +or buried under the rubbish of a building after a fire or some violent +catastrophe; even then the _dbris_ were the means of preserving them, +by falling over them and covering them up. Protected under the ruins, +they would lie there for centuries, till the fortunate explorer should +bring them to light and deliver them over to the patient study of the +learned. + +The cuneiform character in itself is neither picturesque nor decorative. +It does not offer that delightful assemblage of birds and snakes, of men +and quadrupeds, of heads and limbs, of tools, weapons, stars, trees, +and boats, which succeed each other in perplexing order on the Egyptian +monuments, to give permanence to the glory of Pharaoh and the greatness +of his gods. Cuneiform writing is essentially composed of thin short +lines, placed in juxtaposition or crossing each other in a somewhat +clumsy fashion; it has the appearance of numbers of nails scattered +about at haphazard, and its angular configuration, and its stiff and +spiny appearance, gives the inscriptions a dull and forbidding aspect +which no artifice of the engraver can overcome. + +[Illustration: 271.jpg Page image] + +[Illustration: 272.jpg Page Image] + +Yet, in spite of their seemingly arbitrary character, this mass of +strokes had its source in actual hieroglyphs. As in the origin of the +Egyptian script the earliest writers had begun by drawing on stone or +clay the outline of the object of which they desired to convey the idea. +But, whereas in Egypt the artistic temperament of the race, and the +increasing skill of their sculptors, had by degrees brought the drawing +of each sign to such perfection that it became a miniature portrait of +the being or object to be reproduced, in Chalda, on the contrary, +the signs became degraded from their original forms on account of the +difficulty experienced in copying them with the stylus on the clay +tablets: they lost their original vertical position, and were placed +horizontally, retaining finally but the very faintest resemblance to the +original model. For instance, the Chaldaean conception of the sky was +that of a vault divided into eight segments by diameters running from +the four cardinal points and from their principal subdivisions [symbol] +the external circle was soon omitted, the transverse lines alone +remaining [symbol], which again was simplified into a kind of irregular +cross [symbol]. The figure of a man standing, indicated by the lines +resembling his contour, was placed on its side [symbol] and reduced +little by little till it came to be merely a series of ill-balanced +lines [symbol] [symbol]. We may still recognize in [symbol] the five +fingers and palm of a human hand [symbol]; but who would guess at the +first glance that [symbol] stands for the foot which the scribes strove +to place beside each character the special hieroglyph from which it had +been derived. Several fragments of these still exist, a study of which +seems to show that the Assyrian scribes of a more recent period were at +times as much puzzled as we are ourselves when they strove to get at the +principles of their own script: they had come to look on it as nothing +more than a system of arbitrary combinations, whose original form had +passed all the more readily into oblivion, because it had been borrowed +from a foreign race, who, as far as they were concerned, had ceased to +have a separate existence. The script had been invented by the Sumerians +in the very earliest times, and even they may have brought it in an +elemental condition from their distant fatherland. The first articulate +sounds which, being attached to the hieroglyphs, gave to each +an unalterable pronunciation, were words in the Sumerian tongue; +subsequently, when the natural progress of human thought led +thi Chaldans to replace, as in Egypt, the majority of the signs +representing ideas by those representing sounds, the syllabic values +which were developed side by side with the ideographic values were +purely Sumerian. The group [symbol] throughout all its forms, +designates in the first place the sky, then the god of the sky, and +finally the concept of divinity in general. In its first two senses it +is read ana, but in the last it becomes dingir, dimir; and though it +never lost its double force, it was soon separated from the ideas which +it evoked, to be used merely to denote the syllable an wherever it +occurred, even in cases where it had no connection with the sky or +heavenly things. The same process was applied to other signs with +similar results: after having merely denoted ideas, they came to stand +for the sounds corresponding to them, and then passed on to be mere +syllables--complex syllables in which several consonants may be +distinguished, or simple syllables composed of only one consonant and +one vowel, or vice versa. The Egyptians had carried this system still +further, and in many cases had kept only one part of the syllable, +namely, a mute consonant: they detached, for example, the final u from +pu and bu, and gave only the values b and p to the human leg J and the +mat Q. The peoples of the Euphrates stopped halfway, and admitted actual +letters for the vowel sounds a, i, and u only. Their system remained a +syllabary interspersed with ideograms, but excluded an alphabet. + +[Illustration: 274.jpg Page image] + +It was eminently wanting in simplicity, but, taken as a whole, it would +not have presented as many difficulties as the script of the Egyptians, +had it not been forced, at a very early period, to adapt itself to the +exigencies of a language for which it had not been made. When it came to +be appropriated by the Semites, the ideographs, which up till then had +been read in Sumerian, did not lose the sounds which they possessed in +that tongue, but borrowed others from the new language. For example, +"god" was called ilu, and "heaven" called shami: [symbol], when +encountered in inscriptions by the Semites, were read [symbol] when +the context showed the sense to be "god," and shami when the character +evidently meant "heaven." They added these two vocables to the preceding +ana, an, dingir, dimir; but they did not stop there: they confounded +the picture of the star [symbol] with that of the sky, and sometimes +attributed to [symbol], the pronunciation kakkabu, and the meaning of +star. The same process was applied to all the groups, and the Semitic +values being added to the Sumerian, the scribes soon found themselves in +possession of a double set of syllables both simple and compound. This +multiplicity of sounds, this polyphonous character attached to their +signs, became a cause of embarrassment even to them. For instance, +[symbol] when found in the body of a word, stood for the syllables hi +or hat, mid, mit, til, ziz; as an ideogram it was used for a score of +different concepts: that of lord or master, inu, bilu; that of blood, +dam; for a corpse, pagru, shalamtu; for the feeble or oppressed, kahtu, +nagpu; as the hollow and the spring, nakbu; for the state of old age, +labaru; of dying, mtu; of killing, mtu; of opening, ptu; besides +other meanings. Several phonetic complements were added to it; it was +preceded by ideograms which determined the sense in which it was to be +read, but which, like the Egyptian determinatives, were not pronounced, +and in this manner they succeeded in limiting the number of mistakes +which it was possible to make. With a final [symbol] it would always +mean [symbol] bilu, the master, but with an initial [symbol] (thus +[symbol]) it denoted the gods Bel or Ea; with [symbol]. which indicates +a man [symbol], it would be the corpse, pagru and shalamtu; with +[symbol] prefixed, it meant [symbol]--mutanu, the plague or death and +so on. In spite of these restrictions and explanations, the obscurity of +the meaning was so great, that in many cases the scribes ran the risk of +being unable to make out certain words and understand certain passages; +many of the values occurred but rarely, and remained unknown to those +who did not take the trouble to make a careful study of the syllabary +and its history. It became necessary to draw up tables for their use, +in which all the signs were classified and arranged, with their meanings +and phonetic transcriptions. These signs occupied one column, and in +three or four corresponding columns would be found, first, the name +assigned to it; secondly, the spelling, in syllables, of the phonetic +values which the signs expressed, thirdly, the Sumerian and Assyrian +words which they served to render, and sometimes glosses which completed +the explanation. + +[Illustration: 276.jpg Tables] + +Even this is far from exhausting the matter. Several of these +dictionaries went back to a very early date, and tradition ascribes to +Sargon of Agade the merit of having them drawn up or of having collected +them in his palace. The number of them naturally increased in the course +of centuries; in the later times of the Assyrian empire they were so +numerous as to form nearly one-fourth of the works in the library at +Nineveh under Assurbanipal. Other tablets contained dictionaries of +archaic or obsolete terms, grammatical paradigms, extracts from laws +or ancient hymns analyzed sentence by sentence and often word by word, +interlinear glosses, collections of Sumerian formulas translated into +Semitic speech--a child's guide, in fact, which the savants of those +times consulted with as much advantage as those of our own day have +done, and which must have saved them from many a blunder. + +When once accustomed to the difficulties and intricacies of their +calling, the scribes were never at a standstill. The stylus was plied +in Chalda no less assiduously than was the calamus in Egypt, and the +indestructible clay, which the Chaldans were as a rule content to use, +proved a better medium in the long run than the more refined material +employed by their rivals: the baked or merely dried clay tablets have +withstood the assaults of time in surprising quantities, while the +majority of papyri have disappeared without leaving a trace behind. +If at Babylon we rarely meet with those representations, which we find +everywhere in the tombs of Saqqara or Gzeh, of the people themselves +and their families, their occupations, amusements, and daily +intercourse, we possess, on the other hand, that of which the ruins of +Memphis have furnished us but scanty instances up to the present time, +namely, judicial documents, regulating the mutual relations of the +people and conferring a legal sanction on the various events of their +life. Whether it were a question of buying lands or contracting a +marriage, of a loan on interest, or the sale of slaves, the scribe was +called in with his soft tablets to engross the necessary agreement. In +this he would insert as many details as possible--the day of the month, +the year of the reigning sovereign, and at times, to be still more +precise, an allusion to some important event which had just taken place, +and a memorial of which was inserted in official annals, such as the +taking of a town, the defeat of a neighbouring king, the dedication of +a temple, the building of a wall or fortress, the opening of a canal, or +the ravages of an inundation: the names of the witnesses and magistrates +before whom the act was confirmed were also added to those of the +contracting parties. The method of sanctioning it was curious. An +indentation was made with the finger-nail on one of the sides of the +tablet, and this mark, followed or preceded by the mention of a name, +"Nail of Zabudamik," "Nail of Abzii," took the place of our more or less +complicated sign-manuals. In later times, only the buyer and witnesses +approved by a nail-mark, while the seller appended his seal; an +inscription incised above the impress indicating the position of the +signatory. Every one of any importance possessed a seal, which he wore +attached to his wrist or hung round his neck by a cord; he scarcely +ever allowed it to be separated from his person during his lifetime, and +after death it was placed with him in the tomb in order to prevent any +improper use being made of it. It was usually a cylinder, sometimes +a truncated cone with a convex base, either of marble, red or green +jasper, agate, cornelian, onyx or rock crystal, but rarely of metal. +Engraved upon it in intaglio was an emblem or subject chosen by +the owner, such as the single figure of a god or goddess, an act of +adoration, a sacrifice, or an episode in the story of Gilgames, followed +sometimes by the inscription of a name and title. The cylinder was +rolled, or, in the case of the cone, merely pressed on the clay, in the +space reserved for it. In several localities the contracting parties had +recourse to a very ingenious procedure to prevent the agreements being +altered or added to by unscrupulous persons. When the document had been +impressed on the tablet, it was enveloped in a second coating of clay, +upon which an exact copy of the original was made, the latter thus +becoming inaccessible to forgers: if by chance, in course of time, any +disagreement should take place, and an alteration of the visible text +should be suspected, the outer envelope was broken in the presence of +witnesses, and a comparison was made to see if the exterior corresponded +exactly with the interior version. Families thus had their private +archives, to which additions were rapidly made by every generation; +every household thus accumulated not only the evidences of its own +history, but to some extent that of other families with whom they had +formed alliances, or had business or friendly relations.* + + * The tablets of Tell-Sifr come from one of these family + collections. They all, in number about one hundred, rested + on three enormous bricks, and they had been covered with a + mat of which the half-decayed remains were still visible: + three other crude bricks covered the heap. The documents + contained in them relate for the most part to the families + of Sininana and Amililni, and form part of their archives. + +[Illustration: 279.jpg THE TABLET OF TELL-SIFR, BROKEN TO SHOW THE TWO +TEXTS.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from Loftus. + + +[Illustration: 280.jpg TABLET BEARING THE IMPRESS OF A SEAL] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a sketch by Layard. + +The constitution of the family was of a complex character. It would +appear that the people of each city were divided into clans, all of +whose members claimed to be descended from a common ancestor, who had +flourished at a more or less remote period. The members of each clan +were by no means all in the same social position, some having gone down +in the world, others having raised themselves; and amongst them we find +many different callings--from agricultural labourers to scribes, and +from merchants to artisans. No mutual tie existed among the majority +of these members except the remembrance of their common origin, perhaps +also a common religion, and eventual rights of succession or claims upon +what belonged to each one individually. The branches which had become +gradually separated from the parent stock, and which, taken all +together, formed the clan, possessed each, on the contrary, a very +strict organization. It is possible that, at the outset, the woman +occupied the more important position, but at an early date the man +became the head of the family,* and around him were ranged the wives, +children, servants, and slaves, all of whom had their various duties and +privileges. + + * The change in the condition of women would be due to the + influence of Semitic ideas and customs in Chalda. + +He offered the household worship to the gods of his race, in accordance +with special rites which had come down to him from his father; he made +at the tombs of his ancestors, at such times as were customary, the +offerings and prayers which assured their repose in the other world, and +his powers were as extensive in civil as in religious matters. He had +absolute authority over all the members of his household, and anything +undertaken by them without his consent was held invalid in the eyes of +the law; his sons could not marry unless he had duly authorized them +to do so. For this purpose he appeared before the magistrate with the +future couple, and the projected union could not be held as an actual +marriage, until he had affixed his seal or made his nail-mark on the +contract tablet. It amounted, in fact, to a formal deed of sale, and the +parents of the girl parted with her only in exchange for a proportionate +gift from the bridegroom. One girl would be valued at a silver shekel by +weight, while another was worth a mina, another much less;* the handing +over of the price was accompanied with a certain solemnity. When the +young man possessed no property as yet of his own, his family advanced +him the sum needed for the purchase. On her side, the maiden did not +enter upon her new life empty handed; her father, or, in the case of +his death, the head of the family at the time being, provided her with +a dowry suited to her social position, which was often augmented by +considerable presents from her grandmother, aunts, and cousins.** + + * Shamashnazir receives, as the price of his daughter, ten + shekels of silver, which appears to have been an average + price in the class of life to which he belonged. + + ** The nature of the dowry in ancient times is clear from + the Sumero-Assyrian tablets in which the old legal texts are + explained, and again from the contents of the contracts of + Tell-Sifr, and the documents on stone, such as the Micliaux + stone, in which we see women bringing their possessions into + the community by marriage, and yet retaining the entire + disposition of them. + +The dowry would consist of a carefully marked out field of corn, a grove +of date-palms, a house in the town, a trousseau, furniture, slaves, or +ready money; the whole would be committed to clay, of which there +would be three copies at least, two being given by the scribe to the +contracting parties, while the third would be deposited in the hands of +the magistrate. When the bride and bridegroom both belonged to the same +class, or were possessed of equal fortunes, the relatives of the woman +could exact an oath from the man that he would abstain from taking +a second wife during her lifetime; a special article of the marriage +agreement permitted the woman to go free should the husband break his +faith, and bound him to pay an indemnity as a compensation for the +insult he had offered her. This engagement on the part of the man, +however, did not affect his relations with his female servants. In +Chalda, as in Egypt, and indeed in the whole of the ancient world, +they were always completely at the mercy of their purchaser, and the +permission to treat them as he would had become so much of a custom +that the begetting of children by their master was desired rather than +otherwise: the complaints of the despised slave, who had not been taken +into her master's favour, formed one of the themes of popular poetry at +a very early period. When the contract tablet was finally sealed, one +of the witnesses, who was required to be a free man, joined the hands +of the young couple; nothing then remained to be done but to invite the +blessing of the gods, and to end the day by a feast, which would unite +both families and their guests. The evil spirits, however, always in +quest of an easy prey, were liable to find their way into the nuptial +chamber, favoured by the confusion inseparable from all household +rejoicing: prudence demanded that their attempts should be frustrated, +and that the newly married couple should be protected from their +attacks. The companions of the bridegroom took possession of him, and, +hand to hand and foot to foot, formed as it were a rampart round him +with their bodies, and carried him off solemnly to his expectant bride. +He then again repeated the words which he had said in the morning: "I +am the son of a prince, gold and silver shall fill thy bosom; thou, even +thou, shalt be my wife, I myself will be thy husband;" and he continued: +"As the fruits borne by an orchard, so great shall be the abundance +which I shall pour out upon this woman."* The priest then called down +upon him benedictions from on high: "Therefore, O ye (gods), all that is +bad and that is not good in this man, drive it far from him and give him +strength. As for thee, O man, exhibit thy manhood, that this woman may +be thy wife; thou, O woman, give that which makes thy womanhood, that +this man may be thy husband." On the following morning, a thanksgiving +sacrifice celebrated the completion of the marriage, and by purifying +the new household drove from it the host of evil spirits.** + + * This part of the ceremony is described on a Sumero- + Assyrian tablet, of which two copies exist, discovered and + translated by Pinches. The interpretation appears to me to + result from the fact that mention is made, at the + commencement of the column, of impious beings without gods, + who might approach the man; in other places magical + exorcisms indicate how much those spirits were dreaded "who + deprived the bride of the embraces of the man." As Pinches + remarks, the formula is also found in the part of the poem + of Gilgames, where Ishtar wishes to marry the hero, which + shows that the rite and its accompanying words belong to a + remote past. + + ** The text that describes these ceremonies was discovered + and published by Pinches. As far as I can judge, it + contained an exorcism against the "knotting of the tag," and + the mention of this subject called up that of the marriage + rites. The ceremony commanded on the day following the + marriage was probably a purification: as late as the time of + Herodotus, the union of man and woman rendered both impure, + and they had to perform an ablution before recommencing + their occupations. + +The woman, once bound, could only escape from the sovereign power of her +husband by death or divorce; but divorce for her was rather a trial to +which she submitted than a right of which she could freely make use. Her +husband could repudiate her at will without any complicated ceremonies. +It was enough for him to say: "Thou art not my wife!" and to restore +to her a sum of money equalling in value the dowry he had received with +her;* he then sent her back to her father, with a letter informing +him of the dissolution of the conjugal tie.** But if in a moment of +weariness or anger she hurled the fatal formula at him: "Thou are not +my husband!" her fate was sealed: she was thrown into the river and +drowned.*** + + * The sum is fixed at half a mina by the text of the + Sumerian laws; but it was sometimes less, e.g. ten shekels, + and sometimes more, e.g. a whole mina. + + ** Repudiation of a wife, and the ceremonial connected with + it, are summarized, as far as ancient times are concerned, + by a passage in the Sumero-Assyrian tablet, published by + Rawlinson, and translated by Oppert-Menant. Bertin, on the + contrary, takes the same text to be a description of the + principal marriage-rites, and from it he draws the + conclusion that the possibility of divorce was not admitted + in Chalda between persons of noble family. Meissner very + rightly returns to Oppert's interpretation, a few details in + which he corrects. + + *** This fact was evident from the text of the so-called + _Sumerian Laws concerning the Organization of the Family_, + according to the generally received interpretation: + according to that proposed by Oppert-Menant, it was the + woman who had the right of causing the husband who had + wronged her to be thrown into the river. The publication of + the contracts of Iltani and of Bashtum appear to have shown + conclusively the correctness of the ordinary translation: + uncertainty with regard to one word prevents us from knowing + whether the guilty wife were strangled before being thrown + into the water, or if she were committed to the river alive. + +The adulteress was also punished with death, but with death by the +sword: and when the use of iron became widespread, the blade was to be +of that metal. Another ancient custom only spared the criminal to devote +her to a life of infamy: the outraged husband stripped her of her fleecy +garments, giving her merely the loin-cloth in its place, which left her +half naked, and then turned-her out of the house into the street, where +she was at the mercy of the first passer-by. Women of noble or wealthy +families found in their fortune a certain protection from the abuse of +marital authority. The property which they brought with them by their +marriage contract, remained at their own disposal.* They had the entire +management of it, they farmed it out, they sold it, they spent the +income from it as they liked, without interference from any one: the man +enjoyed the comforts which it procured, but he could not touch it, and +his hold upon it was so slight that his creditors could not lay their +hands on it. + + * In the documents of the New Chaldan Empire we find + instances of married women selling their property + themselves, and even of their being present, seated, at the + conclusion of the sale, or of their ceding to a married + daughter some property in their own possession, thus + renouncing the power of disposing of it, and keeping merely + the income from it; we have also instances of women + reclaiming valuables of gold which their husbands had given + away without their authorisation, and also obtaining an + indemnity for the wrong they had suffered; also of their + lending money to the mother-in-law of their brother; in + fine, empowered to deal with their own property in every + respect like an ordinary proprietor. + +If by his own act he divorced his wife, he not only lost all benefit +from her property, but he was obliged to make her an allowance or to pay +her an indemnity;* at his death, the widow succeeded to these, without +prejudice to what she was entitled to by her marriage contract or the +will of the deceased. The woman with a dowry, therefore, became more or +less emancipated by virtue of her money. As her departure deprived the +household of as much as, and sometimes more than, she had brought into +it, every care was taken that she should have no cause to retire from +it, and that no pretext should be given to her parents for her recall +to her old home; her wealth thus obtained for her the consideration and +fair treatment which the law had, at the outset, denied to her. + + * The restitution of the dowry after divorce is ascertained, + as far as later times are concerned, from documents similar + to that published by Kohler-Peiser, in which we see the + second husband of a divorced wife claiming the dowry from + the first husband. The indemnity was fixed beforehand at six + silver min, in the marriage contract published by Oppert. + +When, however, the wife was poor, she had to bear without complaint the +whole burden of her inferior position. Her parents had no other resource +than to ask the highest possible price for her, according to the rank +in which they lived, or in virtue of the personal qualities she was +supposed to possess, and this amount, paid into their hands when they +delivered her over to the husband, formed, if not an actual dowry for +her, at least a provision for her in case of repudiation or widowhood: +she was not, however, any less the slave of her husband--a privileged +slave, it is true, and one whom he could not sell like his other +slaves,* but of whom he could easily rid himself when her first youth +was passed, or when she ceased to please him.** + + * It appears, however, in certain cases not clearly + specified, that the husband could sell his wife, if she were + a shrew, as a slave. + + ** This form of marriage, which was of frequent occurrence + in ancient times, fell into disuse among the upper classes, + at least of Babylonian society. A few examples, however, are + found in late times. It continued in use among the lower + classes, and Herodotus affirms that in his time marriage + markets were held regularly, as in our own time fairs are + held for hiring male and female servants. + +In many cases the fiction of purchase was set aside, and mutual consent +took the place of all other formalities, marriage then becoming merely +cohabitation, terminating at will. The consent of the father was not +required for this irregular union, and many a son contracted a marriage +after this fashion, unknown to his relatives, with some young girl +either in his own or in an inferior station: but the law refused to +allow her any title except that of concubine, and forced her to wear a +distinctive mark, perhaps that of servitude, namely, the representation +of an olive in some valuable stone or in terra-cotta, bearing her own +and her husband's name, with the date of their union, which she kept +hung round her neck by a cord. Whether they were legitimate wives +or not, the women of the lower and middle classes enjoyed as much +independence as did the Egyptian women of a similar rank. As all the +household cares fell to their share, it was necessary that they should +be free to go about at all hours of the day: and they could be seen +in the streets and the markets, with bare feet, their head and face +uncovered, wearing their linen loin-cloth or their long draped garments +of hairy texture.* Their whole life was expended in a ceaseless toil for +their husbands and children: night and morning they went to fetch water +from the public well or the river, they bruised the corn, made the +bread, spun, wove, and clothed the entire household in spite of the +frequent demands of maternity.** The Chaldan women of wealth or noble +birth, whose civil status gave them a higher position, did not enjoy so +much freedom. They were scarcely affected by the cares of daily life, +and if they did any work within their houses, it was more from a natural +instinct, a sense of duty, or to relieve the tedium of their existence, +than from constraint or necessity; but the exigencies of their rank +reduced them to the state of prisoners. All the luxuries and comforts +which money could procure were lavished on them, or they obtained them +for themselves, but all the while they were obliged to remain shut in +the harem within their own houses; when they went out, it was only to +visit their female friends or their relatives, to go to some temple +or festival, and on such occasions they were surrounded with servants, +eunuchs, and pages, whose serried ranks shut out the external world. + + * For the long garment of the women, see the statue + represented on p. 263 of the present work; for the loin- + cloth, which left the shoulders and bust exposed, see the + bronze figure on p. 262. The latter was no doubt the garment + worn at home by respectable women; we see by the punishment + inflicted on adulteresses that it was an outdoor garment for + courtesans, and also, doubtless, for slaves and women of the + lower classes. + + ** Women's occupations are mentioned in several texts and on + several ancient monuments. On the seal, an impress of which + is given on p. 233 of this volume, we see above, on the + left, a woman kneeling and crushing the corn, and before her + a row of little disks, representing, no doubt, the loaves + prepared for baking. The length of time for suckling a child + is fixed at three years by the Sumero-Assyrian tablet + relating the history of the foundling; protracted suckling + was customary also in Egypt. + +There was no lack of children in these houses when the man had several +mistresses, either simultaneously or successively. Maternity was before +all things a woman's first duty: should she delay in bearing children, +or should anything happen to them, she was considered as accursed or +possessed, and she was banished from the family lest her presence should +be a source of danger to it.* In spite of this many households remained +childless, either because a clause inserted in the contract prevented +the dismissal of the wife if barren, or because the children had died +when the father was stricken in years, and there was little hope of +further offspring. In such places adoption filled the gaps left by +nature, and furnished the family with desired heirs. For this purpose +some chance orphan might be brought into the household--one of those +poor little creatures consigned by their mothers to the river, as in +the case of Shargani, according to the ancient legend; or who had been +exposed at the cross-roads to excite the pity of passers-by,** like the +foundling whose story is given us in an old ballad. "He who had neither +father nor mother,--he who knew not his father or mother, but whose +earliest memory is of a well--whose entry into the world was in the +street," his benefactor "snatched him from the jaws of dogs--and took +him from the beaks of ravens.--He seized the seal before witnesses--and +he marked him on the sole of the foot with the seal of the +witness,--then he entrusted him to a nurse,--and for three years he +provided the nurse with flour, oil, and clothing." When the weaning was +accomplished, "he appointed him to be his child,--he brought him up +to be his child,--he inscribed him as his child,--and he gave him the +education of a scribe." The rites of adoption in these cases did not +differ from those attendant upon birth. On both occasions the newly born +infant was shown to witnesses, and it was marked on the soles of its +feet to establish its identity; its registration in the family archives +did not take place until these precautions had been observed, and +children adopted in this manner were regarded thenceforward in the eyes +of the world as the legitimate heirs of the family. + + * Divorce for sterility was customary in very early times. + Complete sterility or miscarriage was thought to be + occasioned by evil spirits; a woman thus possessed with a + devil came to be looked on as a dangerous being whom it was + necessary to exorcise. + + + ** Many of these children were those of courtesans or women + who had been repudiated, as we learn from the Sumero- + Assyrian tablet of Rawlinson: "She will expose her child + alone in the street, where the serpents in the road may bite + it, and its father and mother will know it no more." + +People desiring to adopt a child usually made inquiries among their +acquaintances, or poor friends, or cousins who might consent to give up +one of their sons, in the hope of securing a better future for him. When +he happened to be a minor, the real father and mother, or, in the case +of the death of one, the surviving parent, appeared before the scribe, +and relinquished all their rights in favour of the adopting parents; the +latter, in accepting this act of renunciation, promised henceforth to +treat the child as if he were of their own flesh and blood, and often +settled upon him, at the same time, a certain sum chargeable on their +own patrimony. When the adopted son was of age, his consent to the +agreement was required, in addition to that of his parents. The adoption +was sometimes prompted by an interested motive, and not merely by the +desire for posterity or its semblance. Labour was expensive, slaves were +scarce, and children, by working for their father, took the place of +hired servants, and were content, like them, with food and clothing. The +adoption of adults was, therefore, most frequent in ancient times. The +introduction of a person into a fresh household severed the ties which +bound him to the old one; he became a stranger to those who had borne +him; he had no filial obligations to discharge to them, nor had he +any right to whatever property they might possess, unless, indeed, any +unforeseen circumstance prevented the carrying out of the agreement, and +legally obliged him to return to the status of his birth. In return, he +undertook all the duties and enjoyed the privileges of his new position; +he owed to his adopted parents the same amount of work, obedience, and +respect that he would have given to his natural parents; he shared +in their condition, whether for good or ill, and he inherited their +possessions. Provision was made for him in case of his repudiation by +those who had adopted him, and they had to make him compensation: he +received the portion which would have accrued to him after their death, +and he then left them. Families appear to have been fairly united, in +spite of the elasticity of the laws which governed them, and of the +divers elements of which they were sometimes composed. No doubt polygamy +and frequently divorce exercised here as elsewhere a deleterious +influence; the harems of Babylon were constantly the scenes of endless +intrigues and quarrels among the women and children of varied condition +and different parentage who filled them. Among the people of the middle +classes, where restricted means necessarily prevented a man having +many wives, the course of family life appears to have been as calm +and affectionate as in Egypt, under the unquestioned supremacy of the +father: and in the event of his early death, the widow, and later the +son or son-in-law, took the direction of affairs. Should quarrels arise +and reach the point of bringing about a complete rupture between parents +and children, the law intervened, not to reconcile them, but to repress +any violence of which either side might be guilty towards the other. +It was reckoned as a misdemeanour for any father or mother to disown a +child, and they were punished by being kept shut up in their own house, +as long, doubtless, as they persisted in disowning it; but it was a +crime in a son, even if he were an adopted son, to renounce his parents, +and he was punished severely. If he had said to his father, "Thou art +not my father!" the latter marked him with a conspicuous sign and sold +him in the market. If he had said to his mother, "As for thee, thou art +not my mother!" he was similarly branded, and led through the streets or +along the roads, where with hue and cry he was driven from the town and +province.* + + * I have adopted the generally received meaning of this + document as a whole, but I am obliged to state that Oppert- + Menant admit quite a different interpretation. According to + them, it would appear to be a sweeping renunciation of + children by parents, and of parents by children, at the + close of a judicial condemnation. Oppert has upheld this + interpretation against Haupt, and still keeps to his + opinion. The documents published by Meissner show that the + text of the ancient Sumerian laws applied equally to adopted + children, but made no distinction between the insult offered + to the father and that offered to the mother: the same + penalty was applicable in both cases. + +The slaves were numerous, but distributed in unequal proportion among +the various classes of the population: whilst in the palace they might +be found literally in crowds, it was rare among the middle classes to +meet with any family possessing more than two or three at a time. They +were drawn partly from foreign races; prisoners who had been wounded and +carried from the field of battle, or fugitives who had fallen into the +hands of the victors after a defeat, or Elamites or Gutis who had been +surprised in their own villages during some expedition; not to mention +people of every category carried off by the Bedouin during their raids +in distant parts, such as Syria or Egypt, whom they were continually +bringing for sale to Babylon and Uru, and, indeed, to all those cities +to which they had easy access. The kings, the vicegerents, the temple +administration, and the feudal lords, provided employment for vast +numbers in the construction of their buildings or in the cultivation of +their domains; the work was hard and the mortality great, but gaps were +soon filled up by the influx of fresh gangs. The survivors intermarried, +and their children, brought up to speak the Chaldan tongue and +conforming to the customs of the country, became assimilated to the +ruling race; they formed, beneath the superior native Semite and +Sumerian population,an inferior servile class, spread alike throughout +the towns and country, who were continually reinforced by individuals of +the native race, such as foundlings, women and children sold by husband +or father, debtors deprived by creditors of their liberty, and criminals +judicially condemned. The law took no individual account of them, +but counted them by heads, as so many cattle: they belonged to their +respective masters in the same fashion as did the beasts of his flock or +the trees of his garden, and their life or death was dependent upon +his will, though the exercise of his rights was naturally restrained +by interest and custom. He could use them as pledges or for payment of +debt, could exchange them or sell them in the market. The price of a +slave never rose very high: a woman might be bought for four and a half +shekels of silver by weight, and the value of a male adult fluctuated +between ten shekels and the third of a mina. The bill of sale was +inscribed on clay, and given to the purchaser at the time of payment: +the tablets which were the vouchers of the rights of the former +proprietor were then broken, and the transfer was completed. The +master seldom ill-treated his slaves, except in cases of reiterated +disobedience, rebellion, or flight; he could arrest his runaway slaves +wherever he could lay his hands on them; he could shackle their ankles, +fetter their wrists, and whip them mercilessly. As a rule, he permitted +them to marry and bring up a family; he apprenticed their children, +and as soon as they knew a trade, he set them up in business in his own +name, allowing them a share in the profits. The more intelligent among +them were trained to be clerks or stewards; they were taught to read, +write, and calculate, the essential accomplishments of a skilful scribe; +they were appointed as superintendents over their former comrades, or +overseers of the administration of property, and they ended by becoming +confidential servants in the household. The savings which they had +accumulated in their earlier years furnished them with the means of +procuring some few consolations: they could hire themselves out for +wages, and could even acquire slaves who would go out to work for them, +in the same way as they themselves had been a source of income to their +proprietors. If they followed a lucrative profession and were successful +in it, their savings sometimes permitted them to buy their own freedom, +and, if they were married, to pay the ransom of their wife and children. +At times, their master, desirous of rewarding long and faithful service, +liberated them of his own accord, without waiting till they had saved +up the necessary money or goods for their enfranchisement: in such cases +they remained his dependants, and continued in his service as freemen +to perform the services they had formerly rendered as slaves. They then +enjoyed the same rights and advantages as the old native race; they +could leave legacies, inherit property, claim legal rights, and acquire +and possess houses and lands. Their sons could make good matches among +the daughters of the middle classes, according to their education and +fortune; when they were intelligent, active, and industrious, there was +nothing to prevent them from rising to the highest offices about the +person of the sovereign. + +[Illustration: 294.jpg AN EGYPTIAN SLAVE MERCHANT] + +[Illustration: 294-text.jpg] + +If we knew more of the internal history of the great Chaldan cities, we +should no doubt come to see what an important part the servile element +played in them; and could we trace it back for a few generations, we +should probably discover that there were few great families who did +not reckon a slave or a freedman among their ancestors. It would be +interesting to follow this people, made up of such complex elements, in +all their daily work and recreation, as we are able to do in the case +of contemporary Egyptians; but the monuments which might furnish us with +the necessary materials are scarce, and the positive information to be +gleaned from them amounts to but little. We are tolerably safe, however, +in supposing the more wealthy cities to have been, as a whole, very +similar in appearance to those existing at the present day in the +regions which as yet have been scarcely touched by the advent of +European civilization. Sinuous, narrow, muddy streets, littered with +domestic refuse and organic detritus, in which flocks of ravens and +wandering packs of dogs perform with more or less efficiency the duties +of sanitary officers; whole quarters of the town composed of huts made +of reeds and puddled clay, low houses of crude brick, surmounted perhaps +even in those times with the conical domes we find later on the Assyrian +bas-reliefs; crowded and noisy bazaars, where each trade is located in +its special lanes and blind alleys; silent and desolate spaces occupied +by palaces and gardens, in which the private life of the wealthy +was concealed from public gaze; and looking down upon this medley of +individual dwellings, the palaces and temples with their ziggurats +crowned with gilded and painted sanctuaries. In the ruins of Uru, +Eridu, and Uruk, the remains of houses belonging doubtless to well-to-do +families have been brought to light. They are built of fine bricks, +whose courses are cemented together with a thin layer of bitumen, but +they they are only lighted internally by small appertures pierced at +irregular distances in the upper part of the walls: the low arched +doorway, closed by a heavy two-leaved door, leads into a blind passage, +which opens as a rule on the courtyard in the centre of the building. + + +[Illustration: 208a.jpg Chaldean houses at Uru.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from the sketch by Taylor. + +[Illustration: 208b plans of houses excavated at Eridu and Ubu.] + + These plans were drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from sketches by + Taylor. The houses reproduced to the left of the plan were + those uncovered in the ruins of Uru; those on the right + belong to the ruins of Eridu. On the latter, the niches + mentioned in the text will be found indicated. + +In the interior may still be distinguished the small oblong rooms, +sometimes vaulted, sometimes roofed with a flat, ceiling supported by +trunks of palm trees;* the walls are often of a considerable thickness, +in which are found narrow niches here and there. The majority of the +rooms were merely store-chambers, and contained the family provisions +and treasures; others served as living-rooms, and were provided with +furniture. The latter, in the houses of the richer citizens no less +than in those of the people, was of a very simple kind, and was mostly +composed of chairs and stools, similar to those in the royal palaces; +the bedrooms contained the linen chests and the beds with their thin +mattresses, coverings, and cushions, and perhaps wooden head-rests, +resembling those found in Africa,** but the Chaldans slept mostly on +mats spread on the ground. + + * Taylor, _Notes on the Ruins of Mugeyer_, in the _Journ. of + the Royal As. Soc_, vol. xv. p. 266, found the remains of + the palm-tree beams which formed the terrace still existing. + He thinks (_Notes on Tel-el-Lahm_, etc., in the _Journ, of + the Royal As. Soc._, vol. xv. p. 411) with Loftus that some + of the chambers were vaulted. Cf. upon the custom of + vaulting in Chaldan houses, Piereot-Cupiez, _Histoire de + l'Art_, vol. ii. p. 163, et seq. + + ** The dressing of the hair in coils and elaborate + erections, as seen in the various figures engraved upon + Chaldan intaglios (cf. what is said of the different ways + of arranging the hair on p. 262 of this volume), appears to + have necessitated the use of these articles of furniture; + such complicated erections of hair must have lasted several + days at least, and would not have kept in condition so long + except for the use of the head-rest. + +An oven for baking occupied a corner of the courtyard, side by side with +the stones for grinding the corn; the ashes on the hearth were always +aglow, and if by chance the fire went out, the fire-stick was always +at hand to relight it, as in Egypt. The kitchen utensils and household +pottery comprised a few large copper pans and earthenware pots rounded +at the base, dishes, water and wine jars, and heavy plates of coarse +ware; metal had not as yet superseded stone, and in the same house we +meet with bronze axes and hammers side by side with the same implements +in cut flint, besides knives, scrapers, and mace-heads.* + + * Implements in flint and other kinds of stone have been + discovered by Taylor, and are now in the British Museum. The + bronze implements come partly from the tombs of Mugher, and + partly from the ruins explored by Loftus at Tell-Sifr--that + is to say, the ancient cities of Uru and Larsam: the name of + Tell-Sifr, the "mound of copper," comes from the quantity of + objects in copper which have been discovered there. + +[Illustration: 300.jpg CHALDAN HOUSEHOLD UTENSILS IN TERRA-COTTA] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from the sketch by G. Rawlinson, and + the heliogravure in Heuzey-Sarzec. + + +At the present day the women of the country of the Euphrates spend a +great part of their time on the roofs of their dwellings.* They install +themselves there in the morning, till they are driven away by the heat; +as soon as the sun gets low in the heavens, they return to their post, +and either pass the day on neighbouring roofs whilst they bake, cook, +wash and dry the linen; or, if they have slaves to attend to such menial +occupations, they sew and embroider in the open air. + + * Olivier, _Voyage dans l'Empire Othoman,_ vol. ii. pp. 356, + 357, 381, 382, 392, 393. + +They come down into the interior of the house during the hottest hours +of the day. In most of the wealthy houses, the coolest room is one below +the level of the courtyard, into which but little light can penetrate. +It is paved with plaques of polished gypsum, which resembles our finest +grey-and-white marble, and the walls are covered with a coat of delicate +plastering, smooth to the touch and agreeable to the eye. This is +watered several times during the day in hot weather, and the evaporation +from it cools the air. The few ruined habitations which have as yet been +explored seem to bear witness to a considerable similarity between the +requirements and customs of ancient times and those of to-day. Like the +modern women of Bagdad and Mosul, the Chaldan women of old preferred +an existence in the open air, in spite of its publicity, to a seclusion +within stuffy rooms or narrow courts. The heat of the sun, cold, rain, +and illness obliged them at times to seek a refuge within four walls, +but as soon as they could conveniently escape from them, they climbed up +on to their roof to pass the greater part of their time there. + +Many families of the lower and middle classes owned the houses which +they occupied. They constituted a patrimony which the owners made every +effort to preserve intact through all reverses of fortune.* The head +of the family bequeathed it to his widow or his eldest son, or left it +undivided to his heirs, in the assurance, no doubt, that one of them +would buy up the rights of the others. + + * A house could be let for various lengths of time--for + three months, for a year, for five years, for an indefinite + term, but with a minimum of six months, since the rent is + payable at the beginning and in the middle of each year. + +The remainder of his goods, farms, gardens, corn-lands, slaves, +furniture, and jewels, were divided among the brothers or natural +descendants, "from the mouth to the gold;" that is to say, from the +moment of announcing the beginning of the business, to that when +each one received his share. In order to invest this act with greater +solemnity, it took place usually in the presence of a priest. Those +interested repaired to the temple, "to the gate of the god;" they placed +the whole of the inheritance in the hands of the chosen arbitrator, +and demanded of him to divide it justly; or the eldest brother perhaps +anticipated the apportionment, and the priest had merely to sanction +the result, or settle the differences which might arise among the lawful +recipients in the course of the operation. When this was accomplished, +the legatees had to declare themselves satisfied; and when no further +claims arose, they had to sign an engagement before the priestly +arbitrator that they would henceforth refrain from all quarrelling on +the subject, and that they would never make a complaint one against the +other. By dint of these continual redistributions from one generation +to another, the largest fortunes soon became dispersed: the individual +shares became smaller and smaller, and scarcely sufficed to keep a +family, so that the slightest reverse obliged the possessor to +have recourse to usurers. The Chaldans, like the Egyptians, were +unacquainted with the use of money, but from the earliest times the +employment of precious metals for purposes of exchange was practised +among them to an enormous extent. Though copper and gold were both used, +silver was the principal medium in these transactions, and formed the +standard value of all purchaseable objects. It was never cut into flat +rings or twists of wire, as was the case with the Egyptian "tabnu;" it +was melted into small unstamped ingots, which were passed from hand +to hand by weight, being tested in the scales at each transaction. +"To weigh" was in the ordinary language the equivalent for "payment in +metal," whereas "to measure" denoted that the payment was in grain. +The ingots for exchange were, therefore, designated by the name of +the weights to which they corresponded. The lowest unit was a shekel, +weighing on an average nearly half an ounce, sixty shekels making a +mina, and sixty minas a talent. It is a question whether the Chaldanns +possessed in early times, as did the Assyrians of a later period, two +kinds of shekels and minas, one heavy and the other light. Whether the +loan were in metal, grain, or any other substance, the interest was very +high.* A very ancient law fixed it in certain cases at twelve drachmas +per mina, per annum--that is to say, at twenty per cent.--and more +recent texts show us that, when raised to twenty-five per cent., it did +not appear to them abnormal. + + * We find several different examples, during the Second + Chaldann Empire, of an exchange of corn for provisions and + liquids, or of beams for dates. As a fact, exchange has + never completely died out in these regions, and at the + present day, in Chalda, as in Egypt, corn is used in many + cases either to pay Government taxes or to discharge + commercial debts. + +The commerce of the chief cities was almost entirely concentrated in the +temples. The large quantities of metals and cereals constantly brought +to the god, either as part of the fixed temple revenue, or as daily +offerings, accumulated so rapidly, that they would have overflowed the +storehouses, had not a means been devised of utilizing them quickly: the +priests treated them as articles of commerce and made a profit out of +them.* Every bargain necessitated the calling in of a public scribe. The +bill, drawn up before witnesses on a clay tablet, enumerated the sums +paid out, the names of the parties, the rate per cent., the date +of repayment, and sometimes a penal clause in the event of fraud or +insolvency; the tablet remained in the possession of the creditor until +the debt had been completely discharged. The borrower often gave as a +pledge either slaves, a field, or a house, or certain of his friends +would pledge on his behalf their own personal fortune; at times he would +pay by the labour of his own hands the interest which he would otherwise +have been unable to meet, and the stipulation was previously made in the +contract of the number of days of corve which he should periodically +fulfil for his creditor. If, in spite of all this, the debtor was unable +to procure the necessary funds to meet his engagements, the principal +became augmented by a fixed sum--for instance, one-third--and continued +to increase at this rate until the total value of the amount reached +that of the security:** the slave, the field, or the house then ceased +to belong to their former, master, subject to a right of redemption, of +which he was rarely able to avail himself for lack of means.*** + + * It was to the god himself--Shamash, for example--that the + loan was supposed to be made, and it is to him that the + contracts stipulate that the capital and interest shall be + paid. It is curious to lind among the most successful money- + lenders several princesses consecrated to the sun-god. + + ** It is easy to foresee, from the contracts of the New + Assyrian or Babylonian Empire, how in this manner the + original sum lent became doubled and trebled; generally the + interest accumulated till it was quadrupled, after which, no + doubt, the security was taken by the creditor. They probably + calculated that the capital and compound interest was by + then equal in value to the person or object given as a + security. + + *** The creditors protected themselves against this right of + redemption by a maledictory formula inserted at the end of + the contracts against those who should avail themselves of + it; it is generally inscribed on the boundary stones of the + First Chaldan Empire. + +The small tradesman or free workman, who by some accident had become +involved in debt, seldom escaped this progressive impoverishment except +by strenuous efforts and incessant labour. Foreign commerce, it is true, +entailed considerable risk, but the chances of acquiring wealth were so +great that many individuals launched upon it in preference to more +sure but less lucrative undertakings. They would set off alone or in +companies for Elam or the northern regions, for Syria, or even for so +distant a country as Egypt, and they would bring back in their caravans +all that was accounted precious in those lands. Overland routes were not +free from dangers; not only were nomad tribes and professional bandits +constantly hovering round the traveller, and obliging him to exercise +ceaseless vigilance, but the inhabitants of the villages through which +he passed, the local lords and the kings of the countries which he +traversed, had no scruple in levying blackmail upon him in obliging him +to pay dearly for right of way through their marches or territory.** +There were less risks in choosing a sea route: the Euphrates on one +side, the Tigris, the Ula, and the Uknu on the other, ran through a +country peopled with a rich industrial population, among whom Chaldan +merchandise was easily and profitably sold or exchanged for commodities +which would command a good price at the end of the voyage. The vessels +generally were keleks or "kufas," but the latter were of immense size. + + * We have no information from Babylonian sources relating to + the state of the roads, and the dangers which merchants + encountered in foreign lands; the Egyptian documents partly + supply what is here lacking. The "instructions" contained in + the _Sallier Papyrus,_ No. ii., show what were the miseries + of the traveller, and the _Adventures of Sinuht_ allude to + the insecurity of the roads in Syria, by the very care with + which the hero relates all the precautions which he took for + his protection. These two documents are of the XIIth or + XIIIth dynasty--that is to say, contemporaneous with the + kings, of Uru and with Gudea. + +Several individuals, as a rule, would club together to hire one of these +boats and freight it with a suitable cargo.* The body of the boat +was very light, being made of osier or willow covered with skins sewn +together; a layer of straw was spread on the bottom, on which were piled +the bales or chests, which were again protected by a rough thatch of +straw. The crew was composed of two oarsmen at least, and sometimes a +few donkeys: the merchants then pursued their way up stream till they +had disposed of their cargo, and taken in a sufficient freight for their +return voyage. The dangers, though apparently not so great as those by +the land route, were not the less real. The boat was liable to sink +or run aground near the bank, the dwellers in the neighbourhood of the +river might intercept it and pillage its contents, a war might break out +between two contiguous kingdoms and suspend all commerce: the merchants' +career continually vacillated between servitude, death, and fortune. + + * The payment demanded was something considerable: the only + contract which I know of existing for such a transaction is + of the time of Darius I., and exacts a silver shekel per day + for the hire of boat and crew. + +Business carried on at home in the towns was seldom the means of +enriching a man, and sometimes scarcely afforded him a means of +livelihood. Rent was high for those who had not a house of their own; +the least they could expect to pay was half a silver shekel per annum, +but the average price was a whole shekel. On taking possession they paid +a deposit which sometimes amounted to one-third of the whole sum, the +remainder being due at the end of the year. The leases lasted, as a +rule, merely a twelvemonth, though sometimes they were extended for +terms of greater length, such as two, three, or even eight years. The +cost of repairs and of keeping the house in good condition fell usually +upon the lessee, who was also allowed to build upon the land he had +leased, in which case it was declared free of all charges for a period +of about ten years, but the house, and, as a rule, all he had built, +then reverted to the landlord. Most possessors of shops made their own +goods for sale, assisted by slaves or free apprentices. Every workman +taught his own trade to his children, and these in their turn would +instruct theirs; families which had an hereditary profession, or from +generation to generation had gathered bands of workmen about them, +formed themselves into various guilds, or, to use the customary term, +into tribes, governed by chiefs and following specified customs. A +workman belonged to the tribe of the weavers, or of the blacksmiths, or +of the corn-merchants, and the description of an individual would not +have been considered as sufficiently exact, if the designation of his +tribe were not inserted after his name in addition to his paternal +affiliation. The organization was like that of Egypt, but more fully +developed. The various trades, moreover, were almost the same among the +two peoples, the exceptions being such as are readily accounted for by +the differences in the nature of the soil and physical constitution of +the respective countries. We do not meet on the banks of the Euphrates +with those corporations of stone-cutters and marble workers which were +so numerous in the valley of the Nile. The vast Chaldan plain, in the +absence of mountains or accessible quarries, would have furnished no +occupation for them: the Chaldans had to go a long way in quest of +the small quantities of limestone, alabaster, or diorite which they +required, and which they reserved only for details of architectural +decoration for which a small number of artisans and sculptors were amply +sufficient. The manufacture of bricks, on the other hand, made great +progress; the crude bricks were larger than those of Egypt, and they +were more enduring, composed of finer clay and better executed; the +manufacture of burnt brick too was carried to a degree of perfection to +which Memphis or Thebes never attained. An ancient legend ascribes +the invention of the bricks, and consequently the construction of the +earliest cities, jointly to Sin, the eldest son of Bel, and Ninib his +brother: this event was said to have taken place in May-June, and from +that time forward the third month of the year, over which the twins +presided, was called, Murga in Sumerian, Simanu in the Semitic speech, +the month of brick. This was the season which was especially devoted to +the processes of their manufacture: the flood in the rivers, which was +very great in the preceding months, then began to subside, and the clay +which was deposited by the waters during the weeks of overflow, washed +and refined as it was, lent itself readily to the operation. The sun, +moreover, gave forth sufficient heat to dry the clay blocks in a uniform +and gradual manner: later, in July and August, they would crack under +the ardour of his rays, and become converted externally into a friable +mass, while their interior would remain too moist to allow them to be +prudently used in carefully built structures. The work of brick-making +was inaugurated with festivals and sacrifices to Sin, Merodach, Nebo, +and all the deities who were concerned in the art of building: further +religious ceremonies were observed at intervals during the month to +sanctify the progress of the work. The manufacture did not cease on the +last day of the month, but was continued with more or less activity, +according to the heat of the sun, and the importance of the orders +received, until the return of the inundation: but the bricks intended +for public buildings, temples, or palaces, could not be made outside a +prescribed limit of time. The shades of colour produced naturally in the +process of burning--red or yellow, grey or brown--were not pleasant to +the eye, and they were accustomed, therefore, to coat the bricks with an +attractive enamel which preserved them from the disintegrating effects +of sun and rain. The paste was laid on the edges or sides while +the brick was in a crude state, and was incorporated with it by +vitrification in the heat of the kiln. The process was known from an +early date in Egypt, but was rarely employed there in the decoration +of buildings, while in Chalda the use of such enamelled plaques was +common. The substructures of palaces and the exterior walls of temples +were left unadorned, but the shrines which crowned the "ziggurat," +the reception-halls, and the headings of doors were covered with these +many-coloured tiles. Fragments of them are found to-day in the ruins of +the cities, and the analysis of these pieces shows the marvellous skill +of the ancient workers in enamel; the shades of colour are pure and +pleasant to the eye, while the material is so evenly put on and so +solid, that neither centuries of burial in a sodden soil, nor the wear +and tear of transport, nor the exposure to the damp of our museums, have +succeeded in diminishing their brilliance and freshness. + +To get a clear idea of the industrial operations of the country, it +would be necessary to see the various corporations at their work, as we +are able to do, in the case of Egypt in the scenes of the mastabas of +Saqqra, or of the rock-chambers of Beni-Hasan. The manufacture of stone +implements gave considerable employment, and the equipment of the dead +in the tombs of Uru would have been a matter of small moment, if we were +to exclude its flint implements, its knives, cleavers, scrapers, adzes, +axes, and hammers. The cutting of these objects is bold, and the final +touches show skill, but we rarely meet with that purity of contour and +intensity of polish which distinguish similar objects among Western +peoples. A few examples, it is true, are of fairly artistic shape, and +bear engraved inscriptions: one of these, a flint hammer of beautiful +form, belonged to a god, probably Eamman, and seems to have come from a +temple in which one of its owners had deposited it. + +[Illustration: 311a.jpg CHALDAN STONE IMPLEMENTS.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from the sketches published by + Taylor and by 'G. Rawlinson. On the left a scraper and two + knives one above the other, an axe in the middle, on the + right an axe and a hammer. All these objects were found in + Taylor's excavations, and are now in the British Museum. + +It is an exception, and a remarkable exception. Stone was the material +of the implements of the poor--implements which were coarse in shape, +and cost little: if much care were given to their execution, they would +come to be so costly that no one would buy them, or, if sold for a +moderate sum, the seller would obtain no profit from the transaction. +Beyond a certain price, it was more advantageous to purchase metal +implements, of copper in the early ages, afterwards of bronze, and +lastly of iron. Among the metal-founders and smiths all kinds of +examples of these were to be found--axes of an elegant and graceful +design, hammers and knives, as well as culinary and domestic utensils, +cups, cauldrons, dishes, mountings of doors and coffers, statuettes of +men, bulls, monsters, and gods--which could be turned to weapons of +all descriptions--arrow and lance heads, swords, daggers, and rounded +helmets with neck-piece or visor. + +[Illustration: 311b.jpg CHALDAN STONE HAMMER BEARING AN INSCRIPTION.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from the illustration published by + Fr. Lenormant. + +[Illustration: CHALDN IMPLEMENTS OF BRONZE] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from Rawlinson's _Five Great + Monarchies_. On the right two axes, in the middle a hammer, + on the left a knife, and below the head of a lance. + +Some of the metal objects manufactured by the Chaldaeans attained large +dimensions; for instance, the "brazen seas" which were set up before +each sanctuary, either for the purpose of receiving the libations, or +for the prescribed rites of purification. As is often the case among +half-civilized peoples, the goldsmiths worked in the precious metals +with much facility and skill. We have not, succeeded up to the present +in finding any of those golden images which the kings were accustomed +to dedicate in the temples out of their own possessions, or the spoil +obtained from the enemy; but a silver vase dedicated to Ningirsu by +Entena, vicegerent of Lagash, gives us some idea of this department +of the temple furniture. It stands upright on a small square bronze +pedestal with four feet. A piously expressed inscription runs round +the neck, and the bowl of the vase is divided horizontally into two +divisions, framed above and below by twisted cord-work. Four two-headed +eagles, with outspread wings and tail, occupy the lower division; they +are in the act of seizing with their claws two animals, placed back +to back, represented in the act of walking: the intervals between the +eagles are filled up alternatively by two lions, two wild goats, and +two stags. Above, and close to the rise of the neck, are disposed seven +heifers lying down and all looking in the same direction: they are all +engraved upon the flat metal, and are without relief or incrustation. +The whole composition is harmoniously put together, the posture of the +animals and their general form are well conceived and boldly rendered, +but the details of the mane of the lions and the feathers of the eagles +are reproduced with a realism and attention to minutio which belong to +the infancy of art. This single example of ancient goldsmiths'work would +be sufficient to prove that the early Chaldns were not a whit behind +the Egyptians in this handicraft, even if we had not the golden +ornaments, the bracelets, ear and finger rings to judge from, with which +the tombs have furnished us in considerable numbers. + +[Illustration: VASE OF SILVER. AND BULL OF COPPER.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from Heuzey-Sarzec + +Alongside the goldsmiths there must have been a whole army of lapidaries +and gem-cutters occupied in the engraving of cylinders. Numerous and +delicate operations were required to metamorphose a scrap of crude +rock, marble, granite, agate, onyx, green and red jasper, crystal or +lapis-lazuli, into one of those marvellous seals which are now found by +the hundred scattered throughout the museums of Europe. They had to be +rounded, reduced to the proper proportions, and polished, before the +subject or legend could be engraved upon them with the burin. To drill a +hole through them required great dexterity, and some of the lapidaries, +from a dread of breaking the cylinder, either did not pierce it at all, +or merely bored a shallow hole into each extremity to allow it to +roll freely in its metallic mounting. The tools used in engraving were +similar to those employed at the present day, but of a rougher kind. The +burin, which was often nothing more than a flint point, marked out the +area of the design, and sketched out the figures; the saw was largely +employed to cut away the depressions when these required no detailed +handling; and lastly, the drill, either worked with the hand or in +a kind of lathe, was made to indicate the joints and muscles of the +individual by a series of round holes. The object thus summarily dealt +with might be regarded as sufficiently worked for ordinary clients; but +those who were willing to pay for them could obtain cylinders from which +every mark of the tool had been adroitly removed, and where the beauty +of the workmanship vied with the costliness of the material. + +[Illustration: 315.jpg CHALDAN CYLINDER EXHIBITING TRACES OF THE +DIFFERENT TOOLS USED BY THE ENGRAVER] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a heliogravure in Mnant's + _Catalogue de la collection de M. de Clercq_ + + +The seal of Shargani, King of Agad, that of Bingani-shar-ali, and many +others which have been picked up by chance in the excavations, are +true bas-reliefs, reduced and condensed, so to speak, to the space of +something like a square inch of surface, but conceived with an artistic +ingenuity and executed with a boldness which modern engravers have +rarely equalled and never surpassed. There are traces on them, it is +true, of some of the defects which disfigured the latter work of the +Assyrians--heaviness of form, exaggerated prominence of muscles +and hardness of outline--but there are also all the qualities which +distinguish an original and forcible art. + +The countries of the Euphrates were renowned in classic times for the +beauty of the embroidered and painted stuffs which they manufactured.* +Nothing has come down to us of these Babylonian tissues of which the +Greek and Latin writers extolled the magnificence, but we may form some +idea, from the statues and the figures engraved on cylinders, of what +the weavers and embroiderers of this ancient time were capable. The loom +which they made use of differed but slightly from the horizontal loom +commonly employed in the Nile Valley, and everything tends to show that +their plain linen cloths were of the kind represented in the swathings +and fragments of clothing still to be found in the sepulchral chambers +of Memphis and Thebes. The manufacture of fleecy woollen garments so +much affected by men and women alike indicates a great dexterity. When +once the threads of the woof had been stretched, those of the warp +were attached to them by knots in as many parallel lines--at regular +intervals--as there were rows of fringe to be displayed on the surface +of the cloth, the loops thus formed being allowed to hang down in their +respective places: sometimes these loops were retained just as they +stood, sometimes they were cut and the ends frayed out so as to give the +appearance of a shaggy texture. + + * Most modern writers understand by tapestry what the + ancients were accustomed to call needle embroidery or + painting on stuffs: I can find no indication on the most + ancient monuments of Chaldan or Egypt of the manufacturing + of real tapestry. + +[Illustration: 316.jpg Egyptian Manuscript] + + Part of an Egyptian Manuscript found in the Swathing of a + Mummy + +[Illustration: 316-text.jpg Egyptian Manuscript] + + +Most of these stuffs preserved their original white or creamy +colour--especially those woven at home by the women for the requirements +of their own toilet, and for the ordinary uses of the household. The +Chaldans, however, like many other Asiatic peoples, had a strong +preference for lively colours, and the outdoor garments and gala attire +of the rich were distinguished by a profusion of blue patterns on a red +ground, or red upon blue, arranged in stripes, zigzags, checks, and +dots or circles. There must, therefore, have been as much occupation +for dyers as there was for weavers; and it is possible that the two +operations were carried out by the same hands. We know nothing of the +bakers, butchers, carriers, masons, and other artisans who supplied the +necessities of the cities: they were doubtless able to make two ends +meet and nothing more, and if we should succeed some day in obtaining +information about them, we shall probably find that their condition was +as miserable as that of their Egyptian contemporaries. The course +of their lives was monotonous enough, except when it was broken at +prescribed intervals by the ordinary festivals in honour of the gods +of the city, or by the casual suspensions of work occasioned by the +triumphant return of the king from some warlike expedition, or by his +inauguration of a new temple. + +The gaiety of the people on such occasions was the more exuberant in +proportion to the undisturbed monotony or misery of the days which +preceded them. As soon, for instance, as Gudea had brought to completion +Ininnu, the house of his patron Ningirsu, "he felt relieved from the +strain and washed his hands. For seven days, no grain was bruised in the +quern, the maid was the equal of her mistress, the servant walked in the +same rank as his master, the strong and the weak rested side by side in +the city." The world seemed topsy-turvy as during the Roman Saturnalia; +the classes mingled together, and the inferiors were probably accustomed +to abuse the unusual licence which they momentarily enjoyed: when the +festival was over, social distinctions reasserted themselves, and each +one fell back into his accustomed position. Life was not so pleasant +in Chalda as in Egypt. The innumerable promissory notes, the receipted +accounts, the contracts of sale and purchase--these cunningly drawn up +deeds which have been deciphered by the hundred--reveal to us a people +greedy of gain, exacting, litigious, of artisans in Egypt. This is taken +from a source belonging to the XIIth or possibly the XIIIth dynasty. We +may assume, from the fact that the two civilizations were about on +the same level, that the information supplied in this respect by the +Egyptian monuments is generally applicable to the condition of Chaldan +workmen of the same period. + +(Unreadable) and almost exclusively absorbed by material concerns. +The climate, too, variable and oppressive in summer and winter alike, +imposed upon the Chaldan painful exactions, and obliged him to work +with an energy of which the majority of Egyptians would not have felt +themselves capable. The Chaldan, suffering greater and more prolonged +hardships, earned more doubtless, but was not on this account the +happier. However lucrative his calling might be, it was not sufficiently +so to supply him always with domestic necessities, and both tradespeople +and operatives were obliged to run into debt to supplement their +straitened means. When they had once fallen into the hands of the +usurer, the exorbitant interest which they had to pay kept them a long +time in his power. If when the bill fell due there was nothing to meet +it, it had to be renewed under still more disastrous conditions; as the +pledge given was usually the homestead, or the slave who assisted in the +trade, or the garden which supplied food for the family, the mortgagor +was reduced to the extreme of misery if he could not satisfy his +creditors, This plague of usury was not, moreover, confined to the +towns; it raged with equal violence in the country, and the farmers also +became its victims. + +If, theoretically, the earth belonged to the gods, and under them to +the kings, the latter had made, and continued daily to make, such large +concessions of it to their vassals, that the greater part of their +domains were always in the hands of the nobles or private individuals. +These could dispose of their landed property at pleasure, farm it out, +sell it or distribute it among their heirs and friends. + +They paid on account of it a tax which varied at different epochs, but +which was always burthensome; but when they had once satisfied this +exaction, and paid the dues which the temples might claim on behalf +of the gods, neither the State nor any individual had the right to +interfere in their administration of it, or put any restrictions upon +them. Some proprietors cultivated their lands themselves--the poor by +their own labour, the rich by the aid of some trustworthy slave whom +they interested in the success of his farming by assigning him a certain +percentage on the net return. Sometimes the lands were leased out in +whole or in part to free peasants who relieved the proprietors of all +the worry and risks of managing it themselves. A survey of the area of +each state had been made at an early age, and the lots into which it had +been divided were registered on clay tablets containing the name of +the proprietor as well as those of his neighbours, together with such +indications of the features of the land, dykes, canals, rivers, +and buildings as would serve to define its boundaries: rough plans +accompanied the description, and in the most complicated instances +interpreted it to the eye. This survey was frequently repeated, and +enabled the sovereign to arrange his scheme of taxation on a solid +basis, and to calculate the product of it without material error. +Gardens and groves of date-palms, together with large regions devoted +to rough attempts at vegetable culture, were often to be met with, +especially in the neighbourhood of towns; these paid their contributions +to the State, as well as the owners'rent, in kind--in fruit, vegetables, +and fresh or dried dates. The best soil was reserved, for the growth of +wheat and other cereals, and its extent was measured in terms of corn; +corn was also the standard in which the revenue was reckoned both in +public and private contracts. Such and such a field required about fifty +litres of seed to the arura. Another needed sixty-two or seventy-five +according to the fertility of the land and its locality. Landed property +was placed under the guardianship of the gods, and its transfer or +cession was accompanied by formalities of a half-religious, half-magical +character: the party giving delivery of it called down upon the head +of any one who would dare in the future to dispute the validity of the +deed, imprecations of which the text was inserted on a portion of the +surface of an egg-shaped nodule of flint, basalt, or other hard stone. +These little monuments display on their cone-shaped end a series +of figures, sometimes arranged in two parallel divisions, sometimes +scattered over the surface, which represent the deities invoked to watch +over the sanctity of the contract. It was a kind of representation in +miniature of the aspect which the heavens presented to the Chaldans. +The disks of the sun and moon, together with Venus-Ashtar, are the +prominent elements in the scene: the zodiacal figures, or the symbols +employed to represent them, are arranged in an apparent orbit around +these--such as the Scorpion, the Bird, the Dog, the Thunderbolt of +Ramman, the mace, the horned monsters, half hidden by the temples they +guard, and the enormous Dragon who embraces in his folds half the entire +firmament. "If ever, in the course of days, any one of the brothers, +children, family, men or women, slaves or servants of the house, or any +governor or functionary whatsoever, arises and intends to steal this +field, and remove this landmark, either to make a gift of it to a god, +or to assign it to a competitor, or to appropriate it to himself; if he +modifies the area of it, the limits and the landmark; if he divides it +into portions, and if he says: 'The field has no owner, since there has +been no donation of it; '--if, from dread of the terrible imprecations +which protect this stele and this field, he sends a fool, a deaf or +blind person, a wicked wretch, an idiot, a stranger, or an ignorant one, +and should cause this stele to be taken away,* and should throw it +into the water, cover it with dust, mutilate it by scratching it with a +stone, burn it in the fire and destroy it, or write anything else upon +it, or carry,it away to a place where it will be no longer seen,--this +man, may Anu, Bel, Ea, the exalted lady, the great gods, cast upon him +looks of wrath, may they destroy his strength, may they exterminate his +race." All the immortals are associated in this excommunication, and +each one promises in his turn the aid of his power. + + * All the people enumerated in this passage might, in + ignorance of what they were doing, be induced to tear up the + stone, and unconsciously commit a sacrilege from which every + Chaldan in his senses would have shrunk back. The formula + provides for such cases, and it secures that the curse shall + fall not only on the irresponsible instruments, but reach + the instigator of the crime, even when he had taken no + actual part in the deed. + +[Illustration: 322.jpg THE MICHAUX STONE (left)] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin. The original is in the medal cabinet + of the Bibliothque Nationale. + +[Illustration: 323.jpg THE OTHER SIDE OF THE MICHAUX STONE (right)] + +Merodach, by whose spells the sick are re stored, will inflict upon the +guilty one a dropsy which no incantation can cure. Shamas, the supreme +judge, will send forth against him one of his inexorable judgments. Sin, +the inhabitant of the brilliant heavens, will cover him with leprosy as +with a garment. Adar, the warrior, will break his weapons; and Zamama, +the king of strifes, will not stand by him on the field of battle. +Eamman will let loose his tempest upon his fields, and will overwhelm +them. The whole band of the invisibles hold themselves ready to defend +the rights of the proprietor against all attacks. In no part of the +ancient world was the sacred character of property so forcibly laid +down, or the possession of the soil more firmly secured by religion. + +In instruments of agriculture and modes of cultivation Chalda was no +better off than Egypt. The rapidity with which the river rose in the +spring, and its variable subsidence from year to year, furnished little +inducement to the Chaldans to entrust to it the work of watering their +lands; on the contrary, they were compelled to protect themselves from +it, and to keep at a distance the volume of waters it brought down. +Each property, whether of square, triangular, or any other shape, was +surrounded with a continuous earth-built barrier which bounded it +on every side, and served at the same time as a rampart against the +inundation. + +[Illustration: 324.jpg TWO ROWS OF SHADUFS ON THE BANK OF A RIVER.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from an Assyrian bas-relief from + Koyunjik. + +Rows of shadufs installed along the banks of the canals or streams +provided for the irrigation of the lands.* The fields were laid out like +a chess-board, and the squares, separated from each other by earthen +ridges, formed as it were so many basins: when the elevation of the +ground arrested the flow of the waters, these were collected into +reservoirs, whence by the use of other shadufs they were raised to a +higher level. + + * In Mesopotamia and Chalda there may still be seen + "everywhere ruins of ancient canals; and there are also to + be met with, in many places, ridges of earth, which stretch + for considerable distances in a straight line, and surround + lands perfectly level." (Olivier). + +The plough was nothing more than an obliquely placed mattock, whose +handle was lengthened in order to harness oxen to it. Whilst the +ploughman pressed heavily on the handle, two attendants kept incessantly +goading the beasts, or urging them forward with voice and whip, and +a third scattered the seed in the furrow. A considerable capital was +needed to ensure success in agricultural undertakings: contracts were +made for three years, and stipulated that payments should be made partly +in metal and partly in the products of the soil. + +[Illustration: 325.jpg CHALDAN FARMING OPERATIONS.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a Chaldan intaglio reproduced + in Layard. The original is in the cabinet of medals in the + Bibliothque Nationale. + +The farmer paid a small sum when entering into possession, and the +remainder of the debt was gradually liquidated at the end of each +twelve months, the payment being in silver one year, and in corn the two +following. The rent varied according to the quality of the soil and the +facilities which it afforded for cultivation: a field, for instance, of +three bushels was made to pay nine hundred measures, while another of +ten bushels had only eighteen hundred to pay. In many instances the +peasant preferred to take the proprietor into partnership, the latter +in such case providing all the expenses of cultivation, on the +understanding that he should receive two-thirds of the gross product. +The tenant was obliged to administer the estate as a careful householder +during the term of his lease: he was to maintain the buildings and +implements in good repair, to see that the hedges were kept up, to keep +the shadufs in working order, and to secure the good condition of the +watercourses. He had rarely enough slaves to manage the business with +profit: those he had purchased were sufficient, with the aid of his +wives and children, to carry on ordinary operations, but when any +pressure arose, especially at harvest-time, he had to seek elsewhere the +additional labourers he required. The temples were the chief sources for +the supply of these. The majority of the supplementary labourers were +free men, who were hired out by their family, or engaged themselves for +a fixed term, during which they were subject to a sort of slavery, the +conditions of which were determined by law. The workman renounced his +liberty for fifteen days, or a month, or for a whole year; he disposed, +so to speak, of a portion of his life to the provisional master of his +choice, and if he did not enter upon his work at the day agreed upon, +or if he showed himself inactive in the duties assigned to him, he was +liable to severe punishment. He received in exchange for his labour +his food, lodging, and clothing; and if an accident should occur to +him during the term of his service, the law granted him an indemnity in +proportion to the injury he had sustained. + +[Illustration: 327.jpg THE FARM OXEN] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a green marble cylinder in the + Louvre. + +His average wage was from four to six shekels of silver per annum. He +was also entitled by custom to another shekel in the form of a retaining +fee, and he could claim his pay, which was given to him mostly in corn, +in monthly instalments, if his agreement were for a considerable time, +and daily if it were for a short period. + +The mercenary never fell into the condition of the ordinary serf: he +retained his rights as a man, and possessed in the person of the patron +for whom he laboured, or whom he himself had selected, a defender of his +interests. When he came to the end of his engagement, he returned to +his family, and resumed his ordinary occupation until the next occasion. +Many of the farmers in a small way earned thus, in a few weeks, +sufficient means to supplement their own modest personal income. Others +sought out more permanent occupations, and hired themselves out as +regular farm-servants. + +The lands which neither the rise of the river nor the irrigation system +could reach so as to render fit for agriculture, were reserved for the +pasture of the flocks in the springtime, when they were covered with +rich grass. The presence of lions in the neighbourhood, however, obliged +the husbandmen to take precautions for the safety of their flocks. They +constructed provisional enclosures into which the animals were driven +every evening, when the pastures were too far off to allow of the flocks +being brought back to the sheepfold. The chase was a favourite pastime +among them, and few days passed without the hunter's bringing back with +him a young gazelle caught in a trap, or a hare killed by an arrow. +These formed substantial additions to the larder, for the Chaldans +do not seem to have kept about them, as the Egyptians did, such tamed +animals as cranes or herons, gazelles or deer: they contented themselves +with the useful species, oxen, asses, sheep, and goats. Some of the +ancient monuments, cylinders, and clay tablets reproduce in a rough +manner scenes from pastoral life. The door of the fold opens, and we see +a flock of goats sallying forth to the cracking of the herdsman's whip: +when they reach the pasture they scatter over the meadows, and while the +shepherd keeps his eye upon them, he plays upon his reed to the delight +of his dog. In the mean time the farm-people are engaged in the careful +preparation of the evening meal: two individuals on opposite sides of +the hearth watch the pot boiling between them, while a baker makes his +dough into round cakes. + +[Illustration: 329a.jpg COOKING: A QUARREL.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from one of the terra-cotta plaques + discovered by Loftus. + +Sometimes a quarrel breaks out among the comrades, and leads to a +stand-up fight with the fists; or a lion, perhaps, in quest of a meal, +surprises and kills one of the bulls: the shepherd runs up, his axe in +his hand, to contend bravely with the marauder for the possession of his +beast. The shepherd was accustomed to provide himself with assistance +in the shape of enormous dogs, who had no more hesitation in attacking +beasts of prey than they had in pursuing game. In these combats the +natural courage of the shepherd was stimulated by interest: for he was +personally responsible for the safety of his flock, and if a lion should +find an entrance into one of the enclosures. + +[Illustration: 329b.jpg SCENES OF PASTORAL LIFE IN CHALDA.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a Chaldan intaglio from + Layard. Another cylinder of the same kind is reproduced at + p. 233 of the present work; it represents Etana arising to + heaven by the aid of his friend the eagle, while the + pastoral scene below resembles in nearly all particulars + that given above. + +[Illustration: 330.jpg FIGHT WITH A LION] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from one of the terra-cotta tablets + discovered by Loftus. + +Fishing was not so much a pastime as a source of livelihood; for fish +occupied a high place in the bill of fare of the common folk. Caught by +the line, net, or trap, it was dried,in the sun, smoked, or salted. The +chase was essentially the pastime of the great noble--the pursuit of +the lion and the bear in the wooded covers or the marshy thickets of the +river-bank; the pursuit of the gazelle, the ostrich, and bustard on +the elevated plains or rocky tablelands of the desert. The onager of +Mesopotamia is a very beautiful animal, with its grey glossy coat, and +its lively and rapid action. + +[Illustration: 331.jpg THE DOG IN TUB LEASH] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a terra-cotta tablet discovered + by Sir H. Rawlinson in the ruins of Babylon, and now in the + British Museum + +If it is disturbed, it gives forth a cry, kicks up its heels, and dashes +off: when at a safe distance, it stops, turns round, and faces its +pursuer: as soon as he approaches, it starts off again, stops, and takes +to its heels again, continuing this procedure as long as it is followed. +The Chaldans found it difficult to catch by the aid of dogs, but they +could bring it down by arrows, or perhaps catch it alive by stratagem. +A running noose was thrown round its neck, and two men held the ends of +the ropes. The animal struggled, made a rush, and attempted to bite, but +its efforts tended only to tighten the noose still more firmly, and +it at length gave in, half strangled; after alternating struggles and +suffocating paroxysms, it became somewhat calmer, and allowed itself to +be led. It was finally tamed, if not to the extent of becoming useful +in agriculture, at least for the purposes of war: before the horse was +known in Chalda, it was used to draw the chariot. The original habitat +of the horse was the great table-lands of Central Asia: it is doubtful +whether it was brought suddenly into the region of the Tigrus and +Euphrates by some barbaric invasion, or whether it was passed on from +tribe to tribe, and thus gradually reached that country. It soon became +acclimatized, and its cross-breeding with the ass led for centuries to +the production of magnificent mules. The horse was known to the kings +of Lagash, who used it in harness. The sovereigns of neighbouring cities +were also acquainted with it, but it seems to have been employed solely +by the upper classes of society, and never to have been generally used +in the war-chariot or as a charger in cavalry operations. + +[Illustration: 332.jpg CHALDAN CARRYING A FISH. (left)] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from one of the terra-cotta tablets + discovered by Loftus. + +The Chaldans carried agriculture to a high degree of perfection, and +succeeded in obtaining from the soil everything it could be made to +yield. + +[Illustration: 333.jpg THE ONAGER TAKEN WITH THE LASSO.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from the Assyrian bas-relief of + Nimrud. See p. 35 of the present work for an illustration of + onagers pierced by arrows in the chase. + +Their methods, transmitted in the first place to the Greeks, and +afterwards to the Arabs, were perpetuated long after their civilization +had disappeared, and were even practised by the people of Iraq under the +Abbasside Caliphs. Agricultural treatises on clay, which contained an +account of these matters, were deposited in one or other of the sacred +libraries in which the priests of each city were long accustomed to +collect together documents from every source on which they could lay +their hands. There were to be found in each of these collections a +certain number of works which were unique, either because the authors +were natives of the city, or because all copies of them had been +destroyed in the course of centuries--the Epic of Grilgames, for +instance, at Uruk; a history of the Creation, and of the battles of +the gods with the monsters at Kutha: all of them had their special +collections of hymns or psalms, religious and magical formulas, their +lists of words and grammatical phraseology, their glossaries and +syllabaries, which enabled them to understand and translate texts drawn +up in Sumerian, or to decipher those whose writing presented more than +ordinary difficulty. In these libraries there was, we find, as in +the inscriptions of Egypt, a complete literature, of which only some +shattered fragments have come down to us. The little we are able to +examine has produced upon our modern investigators a complex impression, +in which astonishment rather than admiration contends with a sense +of tedious-ness. There may be recognized here and there, among the +wearisome successions of phrases, with their rugged proper names, +episodes which seem something like a Chaldaean "Genesis" or "Veda;" now +and then a bold flight of fancy, a sudden exaltation of thought, or a +felicitous expression, arrests the attention and holds it captive for +a time. In the narrative of the adventures of Grilgames, for instance, +there is a certain nobility of character, and the sequence of events, in +their natural and marvellous development, are handled with gravity and +freedom: if we sometimes encounter episodes which provoke a smile or +excite our repugnance, we must take into account the rudeness of the age +with which they deal, and remember that the men and gods of the later +Homeric epic are not a whit behind the heroes of Babylonian story in +coarseness. The recognition of divine omnipotence, and the keenly felt +afflictions of the soul, awakened in the Chaldan psalmist feelings of +adoration and penitence which still find, in spite of the differences of +religion, an echo in our own hearts; and the unknown scribe, who related +the story of the descent of Ishtar to the infernal regions, was able to +express with a certain gloomy energy the miseries of the "Land without +return. "These instances are to be regarded, however, as exceptional: +the bulk of Chaldan literature seems nothing more than a heap of +pretentious trash, in which even the best-equipped reader can see no +meaning, or, if he can, it is of such a character as to seem unworthy +of record. His judgment is natural in the circumstances, for the ancient +East is not, like Greece and Italy, the dead of yesterday whose soul +still hovers around us, and whose legacies constitute more than the half +of our patrimony: on the contrary, it was buried soul and body, gods +and cities, men and circumstances, ages ago, and even its heirs, in the +lapse of years, have become extinct. In proportion as we are able to +bring its civilization to light, we become more and more conscious that +we have little or nothing in common with it. Its laws and customs, its +methods of action and its modes of thought, are so far apart from those +of the present day, that they seem to us to belong to a humanity utterly +different from our own. The names of its deities do not appeal to our +imagination like those of the Olympian cycle, and no traditional respect +serves to do away with the sense of uncouthness which we experience +from the jingle of syllables which enter into them. Its artists did not +regard the world from the same point of view as we do, and its writers, +drawing their inspiration from an entirely different source, made use of +obsolete methods to express their feelings and co-ordinate their ideas. +It thus happens that while we understand to a shade the classical +language of the Greeks and Romans, and can read their works almost +without effort, the great primitive literatures of the world, the +Egyptian and Chaldan, have nothing to offer us for the most part but a +sequence of problems to solve or of enigmas to unriddle with patience. +How many phrases, how many words at which we stumble, require a +painstaking analysis before we can make ourselves master of their +meaning! And even when we have determined to our satisfaction their +literal signification, what a number of excursions we must make in the +domain of religious, ethical, and political history before we can compel +them to render up to us their full import, or make them as intelligible +to others as they are to ourselves! When so many commentaries are +required to interpret the thought of an individual or a people, some +difficulty must be experienced in estimating the value of the expression +which they have given to it. Elements of beauty were certainly, and +perhaps are still, within it; but in proportion as we clear away +the rubbish which encumbers it, the mass of glossaries necessary to +interpret it fall in and bury it so as to stifle it afresh. + +While the obstacles to our appreciation of Chaldann literature are of +such a serious character, we are much more at home in our efforts to +estimate the extent and depth of their scientific knowledge. They +were as well versed as the Egyptians, but not more, in arithmetic +and geometry in as far as these had an application to the affairs of +everyday life: the difference between the two peoples consisted chiefly +in their respective numerical systems--the Egyptians employing almost +exclusively the decimal system of notation, while the Chaldans combined +its use with the duodecimal. + +[Illustration: 337.jpg Page image] + +To express the units, they made use of so many vertical "nails" +placed one after, or above, each other, thus [symbols] etc.; tens were +represented by bent brackets [symbols], up to 60; beyond this figure +they had the choice of two methods of notation: they could express the +further tens by the continuous additions of brackets thus, [symbols] +or they could represent 50 by a vertical "nail," and add for every +additional ten a bracket to the right of it, thus: [symbols]. The +notation of a hundred was represented by the vertical "nail" with +a horizontal stroke to the right thus [symbols], and the number of +hundreds by the symbols placed before this sign, thus [symbols], etc.: +a thousand was written [symbols] i.e. ten times one hundred, and the +series of thousands by the combination of different notations which +served to express units, tens, and hundreds. They subdivided the unit, +moreover, into sixty equal parts, and each of these parts into sixty +further equal subdivisions, and this system of fractions was used in all +kinds of quantitive measurements. The fathom, the foot and its square, +talents and bushels, the complete system of Chaldan weights and +measures, were based on the intimate alliance and parallel use of +the decimal and duodecimal systems of notation. The sixtieth was more +frequently employed than the hundredth when large quantities were in +question: it was called a "soss," and ten sosses were equal to a "ner," +while sixty ners were equivalent to a "sar;" the series, sosses, +ners, and sars, being employed in all estimations of values. Years and +measures of length were reckoned in sosses, while talents and bushels +were measured in sosses and sars. The fact that these subdivisions were +all divisible by 10 or 12, rendered calculations by means of them easy +to the merchant and workmen as well as to the mathematical expert. The +glimpses that we have been able to obtain up to the present of Chaldaean +scientific methods indicate that they were on a low level, but they +were sufficiently advanced to furnish practical rules for application in +everyday affairs: helps to memory of different kinds, lists of figures +with their names phonetically rendered in Sumerian and Semitic speech, +tables of squares and cubes, and rudimentary formulas and figures for +land-surveying, furnished sufficient instructions to enable any one +to make complicated calculations in a ready manner, and to work out in +figures, with tolerable accuracy, the superficial area of irregularly +shaped plots of land. The Chaldaeans could draw out, with a fair amount +of exactness, plans of properties or of towns, and their ambition +impelled them even to attempt to make maps of the world. The latter +were, it is true, but rough sketches, in which mythological beliefs +vitiated the information which merchants and soldiers had collected in +their journeys. The earth was represented as a disk surrounded by the +ocean stream: Chalda took up the greater part of it, and foreign +countries did not appear in it at all, or held a position out in the +cold at its extremities. Actual knowledge was woven in an extraordinary +manner with mystic considerations, in which the virtues of numbers, +their connections with the gods, and the application of geometrical +diagrams to the prediction of the future, played an important part. +We know what a brilliant fortune these speculations attained in +after-years, and the firm hold they obtained for centuries over Western +nations, as formerly over the Bast. It was not in arithmetic and +geometry alone, moreover, that the Chaldaeans were led away by such +deceits: each branch of science in its turn was vitiated by them, +and, indeed, it could hardly be otherwise when we come to consider the +Chaldan outlook upon the universe. Its operations, in their eyes, were +not carried on under impersonal and unswerving laws, but by voluntary +and rational agents, swayed by an inexorable fate against which they +dared not rebel, but still free enough and powerful enough to avert by +magic the decrees of destiny, or at least to retard their execution. +From this conception of things each subordinate science was obliged to +make its investigations in two perfectly distinct regions: it had at +first to determine the material facts within its competence--such as the +position of the stars, for instance, or the symptoms of a malady; it +had then to discover the beings which revealed themselves through these +material manifestations, their names and their characteristics. When +once it had obtained this information, and could lay its hands upon +them, it could compel them to work on its behalf: science was thus +nothing else than the application of magic to a particular class of +phenomena. + +The number of astronomical facts with which the Chaldans had made +themselves acquainted was considerable. + +[Illustration: 340.jpg CHALDAN MAP OF THE WORLD.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a sketch by Peiser. + +It was a question in ancient times whether they or the Egyptians had +been the first to carry their investigations into the infinite depths +of celestial space: when it came to be a question as to which of the two +peoples had made the greater progress in this branch of knowledge, all +hesitation vanished, and the pre-eminence was accorded by the ancients +to the priests of Babylon rather than to those of Heliopolis and +Memphis.* + +* Clement of Alexandria, Lucien, Diogenes Laertius, Macrobius, attribute +the origin of astronomy to the Egyptians, and Diodorus Sioulus asserts +that they were the teachers of the Babylonians; Josephus maintains, on +the contrary, that the Egyptians were the pupils of the Chaldans. + +[Illustration: 340.jpg ASTRONOMICAL TABLE] + +The Chaldaeans had conducted astronomical observations from remote +antiquity.* Callisthenes collected and sent to his uncle Aristotle a +number of these observations, of which the oldest had been made nineteen +hundred and three years before his time--that is, about the middle of +the twenty-third century before our era: he could have transcribed +many of a still earlier date if the archives of Babylon had been fully +accessible to him. + + * Epigenes asserts that their observations extended back to + 720,000 years before the time of Alexander, while Berossus + and Critodemus limit their antiquity to 490,000 years, which + was further reduced to 473,000 years by Diodorus, to 470,000 + by Cicero, and to 270,000 by Hipparchus. + +The Chaldan priests had been accustomed from an early date to record on +their clay tablets the aspect of the heavens and the changes which took +place in them night after night, the appearance of the constellations, +their comparative brilliancy, the precise moments of their rising and +setting and culmination, together with the more or less rapid movements +of the planets, and their motions towards or from one another. To their +unaided eyes, sharpened by practice and favoured by the transparency +of the air, many stars were visible, as to the Egyptians, which we can +perceive only by the aid of the telescope. These thousands of brilliant +bodies, scattered apparently at random over the face of the sky, moved, +however, with perfect regularity, and the period between their departure +from and their return to the same point in the heavens was determined +at an early date: their position could be predicted at any hour, their +course in the firmament being traced so accurately that its various +stages were marked out and indicated beforehand. The moon, they +discovered, had to complete two hundred and twenty-three revolutions of +twenty-nine days and a half each, before it returned to the point from +which it had set out. This period of its career being accomplished, it +began a second of equal length, then a third, and so on, in an infinite +series, during which it traversed the same celestial houses and repeated +in them the same acts of its life: all the eclipses which it had +undergone in one period would again afflict it in another, and would +be manifest in the same places of the earth in the same order of time.* +Whether they ascribed these eclipses to some mechanical cause, or +regarded them as so many unfortunate attacks made upon Sin by the seven, +they recognized their periodical character, and they were acquainted +with the system of the two hundred and twenty-three lunations by which +their occurrence and duration could be predicted. Further observations +encouraged the astronomers to endeavour to do for the sun what they had +so successfully accomplished in regard to the moon. + + * This period of two hundred and twenty-three lunations is + that described by Ptolemy in the fourth book of his + "Astronomy," in which he deals with the average motion of + the moon. The Chaldans seem not to have been able to make a + skilful use of it, for their books indicate the occurrence + of lunar eclipses outside the predicted periods. + +No long experience was needed to discover the fact that the majority of +solar eclipses were followed some fourteen days and a half after by an +eclipse of the moon; but they were unable to take sufficient advantage +of this experience to predict with certainty the instant of a future +eclipse of the sun, although they had been so struck with the connection +of the two phenomena as to believe that they were in a position to +announce it approximately.* They were frequently deceived in their +predictions, and more than one eclipse which they had promised did not +take place at the time expected:** but their successful prognostications +were sufficiently frequent to console them for their failures, and to +maintain the respect of the people and the rulers for their knowledge. +Their years were vague years of three hundred and sixty days. The twelve +equal months of which they were composed bore names which were borrowed, +on the one hand, from events in civil life, such as "Simanu," from the +making of brick, and "Addaru," from the sowing of seed, and, on the +other, from mythological occurrences whose origin is still obscure, such +as "Nisanu," from the altar of Ea, and "Elul," from a message of Ishtar. +The adjustment of this year to astronomical demands was roughly carried +out by the addition of a month every six years, which was called a +second Adar, Blul, or Nisan, according to the place in which it was +intercalated. + + * Tannery is of opinion that the Chaldans must have + predicted eclipses of the sun by means of the period of two + hundred and twenty-three lunations, and shows by what a + simple means they could have arrived at it. + + ** An astronomer mentions, in the time of Assurbanipal, that + on the 28th, 29th, and 30th of the month he prepared for the + observation of an eclipse; but the sun continued brilliant, + and the eclipse did not take place. + +The neglect of the hours and minutes in their calculation of the length +of the year became with them, as with the Egyptians, a source of serious +embarrassment, and we are still ignorant as to the means employed +to meet the difficulty. The months had relations to the signs of the +zodiac, and the days composing them were made up of twelve double hours +each. The Chaldns had invented two instruments, both of them of a +simple character, to measure time--the clepsydra and the solar clock, +the latter of which in later times became the source of the Greek +"polos." The sun-dial served to determine a number of simple facts +which were indispensable in astronomical calculations, such as the +four cardinal points, the meridian of the place, the solstitial and +equinoctial epochs, and the elevation of the pole at the position of +observation. The construction of the sundial and clepsydra, if not of +the polos also, is doubtless to be referred back to a very ancient date, +but none of the texts already brought to light makes mention of the +employment of these instruments.* + + * Herodotus (ii. 109) formally attributes the invention of + the sun-dial and polos to the Babylonians. The "polos" was a + solar clock. It consisted of a concave hemisphere with a + style rising from its centre: the shadow of the style + described every day an arc of a circle parallel to the + equator, and the daily parallels were divided into twelve or + twenty-four equal parts. Smith discovered, in the palace of + Sennacherib at Koyunjik, a portion of an astrolabe, which is + now in the British Museum. + +All these discoveries, which constitute in our eyes the scientific +patrimony of the Chaldans, were regarded by themselves as the least +important results of their investigations. Did they not know, thanks to +these investigations, that the stars shone for other purposes than to +lighten up the nights--to rule, in fact, the destinies of men and kings, +and, in ruling that of kings, to determine the fortune of empires? Their +earliest astronomers, by their assiduous contemplation of the nightly +heavens, had come to the conclusion that the vicissitudes of the +heavenly bodies were in fixed relations with mundane phenomena and +events. If Mercury, for instance, displayed an unusual brilliancy at +his rising, and his disk appeared as a two-edged sword, riches and +abundance, due to the position of the luminous halo which surrounded +him, would be scattered over Chalda, while discords would cease +therein, and justice would triumph over iniquity. The first observer who +was struck by this coincidence noted it down; his successors confirmed +his observations, and at length deduced, in the process of the years, +from their accumulated knowledge, a general law. Henceforward, each time +that Mercury assumed the same aspect it was of favourable augury, and +kings and their subjects became the recipients of his bounty. As long as +he maintained this appearance no foreign ruler could install himself in +Chalda, tyranny would be divided against itself, equity would prevail, +and a strong monarch bear sway; while the landholders and the king +would be confirmed in their privileges, and obedience, together with +tranquillity, would rule everywhere in the land. The number of these +observations increased to such a degree that it was found necessary to +classify them methodically to avoid confusion. Tables of them were drawn +up, in which the reader could see at one and the same moment the aspect +of the heavens on such and such a night and hour, and the corresponding +events either then happening, or about to happen, in Chaldan, Syria, +or some foreign land. If, for instance, the moon displayed the same +appearance on the 1st and 27th of the month, Elam was threatened; but +"if the sun, at his setting, appears double his usual size, with +three groups of bluish rays, the King of Chalda is ruined." To the +indications of the heavenly bodies, the Chaldans added the portents +which could be deduced from atmospheric phenomena: if it thundered on +the 27th of Tammuz, the wheat-harvest would be excellent and the produce +of the ears magnificent; but if this, should occur six days later, that +is, on the 2nd of Abu, floods and rains were to be apprehended in a +short time, together with the death of the king and the division of +his empire. It was not for nothing that the sun and moon surrounded +themselves in the evening with blood-red vapours or veiled themselves +in dark clouds; that they grew suddenly pale or red after having been +intensely bright; that unexpected fires blazed out on the confines of +the air, and that on certain nights the stars seemed to have become +detached from the firmament and to be falling upon the earth. These +prodigies were so many warnings granted by the gods to the people +and their kings before great crises in human affairs: the astronomer +investigated and interpreted them, and his predictions had a greater +influence than we are prepared to believe upon the fortunes of +individuals and even of states. The rulers consulted and imposed upon +the astronomers the duty of selecting the most favourable moment for +the execution of the projects they had in view. From an early date each +temple contained a library of astrological writings, where the people +might find, drawn up as in a. code, the signs which bore upon their +destinies. One of these libraries, consisting of not less than seventy +clay tablets, is considered to have been first drawn up in the reign +of Sargon of Agad, but to have been so modified and enriched with new +examples from time to time that the original is well-nigh lost. This was +the classical work on the subject in the VIIth century before our era, +and the astronomers-royal, to whom applications were accustomed to be +made to explain a natural phenomenon or a prodigy, drew their answers +ready-made from it. Astronomy, as thus understood, was not merely the +queen of sciences, it was the mistress of the world: taught secretly +in the temples, its adepts--at least, those who had passed through the +regular curriculum of study which it required--became almost a +distinct class in society. The occupation was a lucrative one, and +its accomplished professors had numerous rivals whose educational +antecedents were unknown, but who excited the envy of the experts in +their trading upon the credulity of the people. These quacks went about +the country drawing up horoscopes, and arranging schemes of birthday +prognostications, of which the majority were without any authentic +warranty. The law sometimes took note of the fact that they were +competing with the official experts, and interfered with their business: +but if they happened to be exiled from one city, they found some +neighbouring one ready to receive them. + +Chalda abounded with soothsayers and necromancers no less than with +astrologers; she possessed no real school of medicine, such as we find +in Egypt, in which were taught rational methods of diagnosing maladies +and of curing them by the use of simples. The Chaldaeans were content +to confide the care of their bodies to sorcerers and exorcists, who were +experts in the art of casting out demons and spirits, whose presence in +a living being brought about those disorders to which humanity is prone. +The facial expression of the patient during the crisis, the words which +escaped from him in delirium, were, for these clever individuals, so +many signs revealing the nature and sometimes the name of the enemy +to be combated--the Fever-god, the Plague-god, the Headache-god. +Consultations and medical treatment were, therefore, religious offices, +in which were involved purifications, offerings, and a whole ritual of +mysterious words and gestures. The magician lighted a fire of herbs +and sweet-smelling plants in front of his patient, and the clear flame +arising from this put the spectres to flight and dispelled the malign +influences, a prayer describing the enchantments and their effects being +afterwards recited. "The baleful imprecation like a demon has fallen +upon a man;--wail and pain have fallen upon him,--direful wail has +fallen upon him,--the baleful imprecation, the spell, the pains in +the head!--This man, the baleful imprecation slaughters him like a +sheep,--for his god has quitted his body--his goddess has withdrawn +herself in displeasure from him,--a wail of pain has spread itself as a +garment upon him and has overtaken him!" The harm done by the magician, +though terrible, could be repaired by the gods, and Merodach was moved +to compassion betimes. Merodach cast his eyes on the patient, Merodach +entered into the house of his father Ea, saying: "My father, the baleful +curse has fallen like a demon upon the man!" Twice he thus speaks, +and then adds: "What this man ought to do, I know not; how shall he be +healed?" Ea replies to his son Merodach: "My son, what is there that I +could add to thy knowledge?--Merodach, what is there that I could add +to thy knowledge?--That which I know, thou knowest it:--go then, my son, +Merodach,--lead him to the house of purification of the god who prepares +remedies,--and break the spell that is upon him, draw away the charm +which is upon him,--the ill which afflicts his body,--which he suffers +by reason of the curse of his father,--or the curse of his mother,--or +the curse of his eldest brother,--or by the curse of a murderess who is +unknown to the man.--The curse, may it be taken from him by the charm +of Ea,--like a clove of garlic which is stripped skin by skin,--like a +cluster of dates may it be cut off,--like a bunch of flowers may it be +uprooted! The spell, may heaven avert it,--may the earth avert it!" The +god himself deigned to point out the remedy: the sick man was to take +a clove of garlic, some dates, and a stalk bearing flowers, and was to +throw them into the fire, bit by bit, repeating appropriate prayers at +each stage of the operation. "In like manner as this garlic is peeled +and thrown into the fire,--and the burning flame consumes it,--as +it will never be planted in the vegetable garden, it will never draw +moisture from the pond or from the ditch,--its root will never again +spread in the earth,--its stalk will not pierce the ground and behold +the sun,--it will not serve as food for the gods or the king,--so may it +remove the baleful curse, so may it loose the bond--of sickness, of sin, +of shortcomings, of perversity, of crime!--The sickness which is in my +body, in my flesh, in my muscles,--like this garlic may it be stripped +off,--and may the burning flame consume it in this day;--may the spell +of the sorcerer be cast out, that I may behold the light!" The ceremony +could be prolonged at will: the sick person pulled to pieces the cluster +of dates, the bunch of flowers, a fleece of wool, some goats' hair, a +skein of dyed thread, and a bean, which were all in turn consumed in +the fire. At each stage of the operation he repeated the formula, +introducing into it one or two expressions characterizing the nature of +the particular offering; as, for instance, "the dates will no more hang +from their stalks, the leaves of the branch will never again be united +to the tree, the wool and the hair will never again lie on the back +of the animal on which they grew, and will never be used for weaving +garments." The use of magical words was often accompanied by remedies, +which were for the most part both grotesque and disgusting in their +composition: they comprised bitter or stinking wood-shavings, raw meat, +snake's flesh, wine and oil, the whole reduced to a pulp, or made into +a sort of pill and swallowed on the chance of its bringing relief. The +Egyptian physicians employed similar compounds, to which they +attributed wonderful effects, but they made use of them in exceptional +circumstances only. The medical authorities in Chalda recommended them +before all others, and their very strangeness reassured the patient as +to their efficacy: they filled the possessing spirits with disgust, and +became a means of relief owing to the invincible horror with which +they inspired the persecuting demons. The Chaldans were not, however, +ignorant of the natural virtues of herbs, and at times made use of them; +but they were not held in very high esteem, and the physicians preferred +the prescriptions which pandered to the popular craving for the +supernatural. Amulets further confirmed the effect produced by the +recipes, and prevented the enemy, once cast out, from re-entering the +body; these amulets were made of knots of cord, pierced shells, bronze +or terra-cotta statuettes, and plaques fastened to the arms or worn +round the neck. On each of the latter kind were roughly drawn the most +terrible images that they could conceive, a shortened incantation +was scrawled on its surface, or it was covered with extraordinary +characters, which when the spirits perceived they at once took flight, +and the possessor of the talisman escaped the threatened illness. + +However laughable, and at the same time deplorable, this hopeless medley +of exact knowledge and gross superstition may appear to us at the +present day, it was the means of bringing a prosperity to the cities of +Chalda which no amount of actual science would ever have produced. The +neighbouring barbaric peoples were imbued with the same ideas as the +Chaldns regarding the constitution of the world and the nature of the +laws which governed it. They lived likewise in perpetual fear of those +invisible beings whose changeable and arbitrary will actuated all +visible phenomena; they attributed all the reverses and misfortunes +which overtook them to the direct action of these malevolent beings; +they believed firmly in the influence of stars on the course of events; +they were constantly on the look out for prodigies, and were greatly +alarmed by them, since they had no certain knowledge of the number and +nature of their enemies, and the means they had invented for protecting +themselves from them or of overcoming them too often proved inefficient. +In the eyes of these barbarians, the Chaldeans seemed to be possessed of +the very powers which they themselves lacked. The magicians of Chalda +had forced the demons to obey them and to unmask themselves before them; +they read with ease in the heavens the present and future of men and +nations; they interpreted the will of the immortals in its smallest +manifestations, and with them this faculty was not a limited and +ephemeral power, quickly exhausted by use: the rites and formulas known +to them enabled them to exercise it freely at all times, in all places, +alike upon the most exalted of the gods and the most dreaded of mortals, +without its ever becoming weakened. + +[Illustration:352.jpg A CHALDAN AMULET.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a sketch by Loftus. The + original is in the British Museum. + +A race so endowed with wisdom was, indeed, destined to triumph over +its neighbours, and the latter would have no chance of resisting such +a nation unless they borrowed from it its manners, customs, industry, +writing, and all the arts and sciences which had brought about their +superiority. Chaldann civilization spread into Elam and took possession +of the inhabitants of the shores of the Persian Gulf, and then, since +its course was impeded on the south by the sea, on the west by the +desert, and on the east by the mountains, it turned in the direction of +the great northern plains and proceeded up the two rivers, beside whose +lower waters it had been cradled. It was at this very time that the +Pharaohs of the XIIIth dynasty had just completed the conquest of +Nubia. Greater Egypt, made what she was by the efforts of twenty +generations, had become an African power. The sea formed her northern +boundary, the desert and the mountains enclosed her on all sides, and +the Nile appeared the only natural outlet into a new world: she followed +it indefatigably from one cataract to another, colonizing as she passed +all the lands fertilized by its waters. Every step which she made in +this direction increased the distance between her capitals and the +Mediterranean, and brought her armies further south. Asia would have +practically ceased to exist, as far as Egypt was concerned, had not the +repeated incursions of the Bedouin obliged her to make advances from +time to time in that direction; still she crossed the frontier as seldom +as possible, and recalled her troops as soon as they had reduced the +marauders to order: Ethiopia alone attracted her, and it was there that +she firmly established her empire. The two great civilized peoples of +the ancient world, therefore, had each their field of action clearly +marked out, and neither of them had ever ventured into that of the +other. There had been no lack of intercourse between them, and the +encounter of their armies, if it ever really had taken place, had been +accidental, had merely produced passing results, and up till then had +terminated without bringing to either side a decisive advantage. + +[Illustration: 354.jpg MAGIC NAIL OF TERRA COTTA] + +[Illustration: 355.jpg EGYPTIAN CORNICE BEARING THE CARTOUCHES OF RAMSES +I.] + + + + +APPENDIX--THE PHARAOHS OF THE ANCIENT AND MIDDLE EMPIRES + +(Dynasties I.-XIV.) + + +The lists of the Pharaohs of the Memphite period appear to have been +drawn up in much the same order as we now possess them, as early as +the XIIth dynasty: it is certain that the sequence was definitely fixed +about the time of the XXth dynasty, since it was under this that the +Canon of Turin was copied. The lists which have come down to us appear +to follow two traditions, which differ completely in certain cases: +one has been preserved for us by the abbreviators of Manetho, while +the other was the authority followed by the compilers of the tables of +Abydos and Saqqra, as well as by the author of the Turin Papyrus. + +There appear to have been in the first five dynasties a certain number +of kings whose exact order and filiation were supposed to be well known +to the compilers; but, at the same time, there were others whose names +were found on the monuments, but whose position with regard to their +predecessors was indicated neither by historical documents nor by +popular romance. We find, therefore, in these two traditional lists +a series of sovereigns always occupying the same position, and others +hovering around them, who have no decided place. The hieroglyphic lists +and the Royal Canon appear to have been chiefly concerned with the +former; but the authorities followed by Manetho have studiously +collected the names of the latter, and have intercalated them in +different places, sometimes in the middle, but mostly at the end of the +dynasty, where they form a kind of _caput mortuum_. The most striking +example of this arrangement is afforded us in the IVth dynasty. The +contemporary monuments show that its kings formed a compact group, to +which are appended the first three sovereigns of the Vth dynasty, +always in the same order: Menkar succeeded Khfr, Shopsiskaf followed +Menkar, Usirkaf followed Shopsiskaf, and so on to the end. The lists +of Manetho suppress Shopsiskaf, and substitute four other individuals +in his place, namely, Katises, Bikheris, Seberkheres, Thamphthis, whose +reigns must have occupied more than half a century; these four were +doubtless aspirants to the throne, or local kings belonging to the time +between the IVth and Vth dynasties, whom Manetho's authorities inserted +between the compact groups made up of Kheops and his sons on the one +hand, and of Usirkaf and his two real of supposed brothers on the other, +omitting Shopsiskaf, and having no idea that Usirkaf was his immediate +successor, with or without rivals to the throne. + +In a course of lectures given at the _Collge de France_ (1893-95), I +have examined at length the questions raised by a study of the various +lists, and I may be able, perhaps, some day to publish the result of +my researches: for the present I must confine myself merely to what +is necessary to the elucidation of the present work, namely, the +Manethonian tradition on the one hand, and the tradition of the +monumental tables on the other. The text which I propose to follow for +the latter, during the first five dynasties, is that of the second table +of Abydos; the names placed between brackets [ ] are taken either from +the table of Saqqra or from the Royal Canon of Turin. The numbers of +the years, months, and days are those furnished by the last-mentioned +document. + +[Illustration: 357.jpg LISTS OF THE PHARAOHS OF THE ANCIENT EMPIRE] + +[Illustration: 358.jpg LISTS ON THE MONUMENTS] + +From the VIth to the XIIth dynasty, the lists of Manetho are at fault: +they give the origin and duration of the dynasties, without furnishing +us with the names of the kings. + +[Illustration: 359.jpg LISTS ON THE MONUMENTS] + +This blank is partially filled by the table of Abydos, by the fragments +of the Turin Papyrus, and by information supplied by the monuments. No +such definitely established sequence appears to have existed for this +period, as for the preceding ones. The Heracleopolitan dynasties +figure, perhaps, in the Canon of Turin only; as for the later Memphite +dynasties, the table of Abydos gives one series of Pharaohs, while the +Canon adopts a different one. After the close of the VIth dynasty, and +before the accession of the IXth, there was, doubtless, a period when +several branches of the royal family claimed the supremacy and ruled in +different parts of Egypt: this is what we know to have taken place later +between the XXIInd and the XXIVth dynasties. The tradition of Abydos +had, perhaps, adopted one of these contemporaneous dynasties, while +the Turin Papyrus had chosen another: Manetho, on the other hand, +had selected from among them, as representatives of the legitimate +succession, the line reigning at Memphis which immediately followed +the sovereigns of the VIth dynasty. The following table gives both the +series known, as far as it is possible for the present to re-establish +the order:-- + +[Illustration: 360.jpg LISTS ON THE MONUMENTS] + +The XIth (Theban) dynasty contains but a small number of kings according +to the official lists. The tables on the monuments recognize only two, +Nibkhrur and Snkhkar, but the Turin Canon admits at least half a +dozen. These differences probably arose from the fact that, the second +Heracleopolitan dynasty having reigned at the same time as the earlier +Theban princes, the tables on the monuments, while rejecting the +Heracleopolitans, recognized as legitimate Pharaohs only those of the +Theban kings who had ruled over the whole of Egypt, namely, the first +and last of the series; the Canon, on the contrary, replaced the later +Heracleopolitans by those among the contemporary Thebans who had +assumed the royal titles. Whatever may have been the cause of these +combinations, we find the lists again harmonizing with the accession of +the XIIth (Theban) dynasty. + +For the succeeding dynasties we possess merely the names enumerated on +the fragments of the Turin Papyrus, several of which, however, are +also found either in the royal chamber at Karnak, or on contemporary +monuments. The order of the names is not always certain: it is, perhaps, +best to transcribe the sequence as we are able to gather it from the +fragments of the Royal Papyrus, without attempting to distinguish +between those which belong to the XIIIth and those which must be. +relegated to the following dynasties. + +[Illustration: 361.jpg LISTS ON THE MONUMENTS] + +About fifty names still remain, but so mutilated and scattered over +such small fragments of papyrus, that their order is most uncertain. We +possess monuments of about one-fifth of these kings, and the lengths of +their reigns, as far as we know them, all appear to have been short: +we have no reason to doubt that they did really govern, and we can only +hope that in time the progress of excavation will yield us records of +them one after another. They bring us down to the period of the invasion +of the Shepherds, and it is possible that some among them may be found +to be contemporaries of the XVth and XVIth dynasties. + +[Illustration: 362.jpg Tailpiece] + + + + + +End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of History Of Egypt, Chalda, Syria, +Babylonia, and Assyria, Volume 3 (of 12), by G. 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Thus, we do not necessarily +keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition. + + +Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility: + + https://www.gutenberg.org + +This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm, +including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary +Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to +subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks. diff --git a/17323-8.zip b/17323-8.zip Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..eb6d289 --- /dev/null +++ b/17323-8.zip diff --git a/17323-h.zip b/17323-h.zip Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..be9e62b --- /dev/null +++ b/17323-h.zip diff --git a/17323-h/17323-h.htm b/17323-h/17323-h.htm new file mode 100644 index 0000000..fbed579 --- /dev/null +++ b/17323-h/17323-h.htm @@ -0,0 +1,11191 @@ +<?xml version="1.0" encoding="iso-8859-1"?> + +<!DOCTYPE html + PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN" + "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd" > + +<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" lang="en"> + <head> + <title> + History of Egypt Chaldea, Syria, Babylonia, and Assyria, by G. Maspero, + Volume 3 + </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%; } + blockquote {font-size: 97%; font-style: italic; margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%;} + .mynote {background-color: #DDE; color: #000; padding: .5em; margin-left: 20%; margin-right: 20%; font-family: sans-serif; font-size: 95%;} + .toc { margin-left: 10%; margin-bottom: .75em;} + .toc2 { margin-left: 20%;} + .figleft {float: left; margin-left: 0%; margin-right: 1%;} + .figright {float: right; margin-right: 0%; margin-left: 1%;} + div.fig { display:block; margin:0 auto; text-align:center; } + pre { font-family: Times; font-style: italic; font-size: 90%; margin-left: 10%;} + +</style> + </head> + <body> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + +The Project Gutenberg EBook of History Of Egypt, Chalda, Syria, +Babylonia, and Assyria, Volume 3 (of 12), by G. Maspero + +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: History Of Egypt, Chalda, Syria, Babylonia, and Assyria, Volume 3 (of 12) + +Author: G. Maspero + +Editor: A.H. Sayce + +Translator: M.L. McClure + +Release Date: December 16, 2005 [EBook #17323] +Last Updated: September 7, 2016 + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HISTORY OF EGYPT, CHALDA *** + + + + +Produced by David Widger + + + + + +</pre> + + <p> + <br /> <br /> <br /> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img alt="spines (125K)" src="images/spines.jpg" width="100%" /> + </div> + <p> + <br /> <br /> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img alt="cover (168K)" src="images/cover.jpg" width="100%" /> + </div> + <p> + <br /> <br /> + </p> + <h1> + HISTORY OF EGYPT <br /> <br /> CHALDEA, SYRIA, BABYLONIA, AND ASSYRIA + </h1> + <h2> + By G. MASPERO, + </h2> + <h4> + Honorable Doctor of Civil Laws, and Fellow of Queen’s College, Oxford;<br /> + Member of the Institute and Professor at the College of France. + </h4> + <p> + <br /> + </p> + <h4> + Edited by A. H. SAYCE,<br /> Professor of Assyriology, Oxford. + </h4> + <h4> + Translated by M. L. McCLURE,<br /> Member of the Committee of the Egypt + Exploration Fund + </h4> + <p> + <br /> + </p> + <h3> + CONTAINING OVER TWELVE HUNDRED COLORED PLATES AND ILLUSTRATIONS + </h3> + <h4> + Volume III. + </h4> + <h4> + LONDON <br /> THE GROLIER SOCIETY <br /> PUBLISHERS + </h4> + <p> + <br /> <br /> + </p> + <hr /> + <p> + <br /> <br /> <a name="linkimage-0001" id="linkimage-0001"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/frontispiece3.jpg" width="100%" + alt="Frontispiece El Hammam (the Bath) " /> + </div> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Drawn by Boudier, after J. Dieulafoy. The vignette, which is + by Faucher-Gudin, is reproduced from an intaglio in the + Cabinet des Mdailles. +</pre> + <p> + <br /> <br /> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img alt="titlepage (103K)" src="images/titlepage.jpg" width="100%" /> + </div> + <p> + <br /> <br /> <br /> <br /> + </p> + <hr /> + <p> + <br /> <br /> + </p> + <blockquote> + <p class="toc"> + <big><b>CONTENTS</b></big> + </p> + <p> + <br /> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#link2HCH0001"> CHAPTER I—ANCIENT CHALDA </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkB2HCH0001"> CHAPTER II—THE TEMPLES AND THE GODS OF + CHALDA </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkC2HCH0001"> CHAPTER III—CHALDAN CIVILIZATION </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkC2H_APPE"> APPENDIX—THE PHARAOHS OF THE ANCIENT AND + MIDDLE EMPIRES </a> + </p> + <p> + <br /> <br /> + </p> + <hr /> + <p> + <br /> <br /> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <big><b>List of Illustrations</b></big> + </p> + <p> + <br /> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkimage-0001"> Frontispiece.jpg El Hammam (the Bath) </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkimage-0004"> 006.jpg One of the Eagle-headed Genii. </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkimage-0005"> 009.jpg Bel-merodach, Armed With the + Thunderbolt, Does Battle With the Tumultuous Tiamat. </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkimage-0006"> 011.jpg a Kufa Laden With Stones, and Manned + by A Crew Of Four Men. </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkimage-0007"> 012.jpg the World As Conceived by The + Chaldans </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkimage-0008"> 017.jpg a God-fish </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkimage-0009"> 025.jpg Gigantic Chaldan Reeds </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkimage-0010"> 027.jpg the Marshes About The Confluence of + The Kerkha And Tigris. </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkimage-0011"> 030.jpg the Gathering of The Spathes Of The + Male Palm Tree </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkimage-0012"> 032.jpg a Winged Genius Holding in his Hand + the Spathe Of The Male Date-palm. </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkimage-0013"> 033.jpg the Heavily Maned Lion Wounded by an + Arrow And Vomiting Blood. </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkimage-0014"> 034.jpg the Urus in Act of Charging </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkimage-0015"> 035.jpg a Herd of Onagers Pursued by Dogs and + Wounded By Arrows. </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkimage-0016"> 036.jpg the Chief Domestic Animals Op The + Regions of The Euphrates. </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkimage-0017"> 037.jpg the Sow and Her Litter Making Their + Way Through A Bed of Reeds. </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkimage-0018"> 040.jpg Map of Chalda </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkimage-0019"> 042.jpg Two Fish-like Deities of the + Chaldans. </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkimage-0020"> 045.jpg Page With One of the Tablets Of The + Deluge Series. </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkimage-0021"> 048.jpg Shamashnapishtim Shut Into the Ark. + </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkimage-0022"> 051.jpg the Jud Mountains Sometimes + Identified With Tub Ntsib Mountains. </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkimage-0023"> 057.jpg Gilgames Strangles a Lion. </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkimage-0024"> 060.jpg Gilgames Fights, on the Left With a + Bull, On The Right With Eabani. </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkimage-0025"> 068.jpg Gilgames and Eabani Fighting With + Monsters. </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkimage-0026"> 071.jpg the Scorpion-men of The Mountains Of + Mshu."</a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkimage-0027"> 073.jpg Gilgames and Arad-ea Navigating Their + Vessel. </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkimage-0028"> 082.jpg Gilgames Struggles With a Lion </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkimage-0029"> 084.jpg Chronologic Table </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkimage-0030"> 085.jpg Table </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkimage-0031"> 086.jpg Table </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkimage-0032"> 087.jpg Table </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkimage-0033"> 96.jpg the Seal of Shargani-shar-ali: + Gilgames Waters The Celestial Ox. </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkimage-0034"> 096a.jpg Painting in Color of Charioteer </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkimage-0035"> 097.jpg Page Image </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkimage-0036"> 098.jpg Page Image: the Arms Op The City and + Kings Of Lagash </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkimage-0037"> 099.jpg Fragment of Bas-relief by Urnin, + King Of Lagash. </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkimage-0038"> 101.jpg Idingiranagin Holding the Totem of + Lagash. </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkimage-0039"> 102.jpg Idingiranagin in his Chariot Leading + His Troops. </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkimage-0040"> 103.jpg Page Image. Vultures Feeding Upon the + Dead. </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkimage-0041"> 104.jpg Piling up the Mound of The Dead After + The Battle. </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkimage-0042"> 105.jpg King Urnina and his Family. </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkimage-0043"> 108.jpg the Sacrifice </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkimage-0044"> 109.jpg Sitting Statue of Gudea </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkimage-0045"> 111.jpg Plan of the Ruins Of Mugher </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkimage-0046"> 112.jpg Statues from Telloh. And Head of One + Of The Statue of Gudea. </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkimage-0047"> 114.jpg Plan of the Ruins Of Abu-shahreyn + </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkimage-0048"> 115.jpg an Arab Crossing the Tigris in a + “kufa.” </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkimage-0049"> 117.jpg an Assyrian Kelek Laden With + Building-stone. </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkBimage-0001"> 001.jpg El Hammam (the Bath) </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkBimage-0005"> 124.jpg Chapter II </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkBimage-0006"> 126.jpg Plan of the Ruins Of Wakka </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkBimage-0007"> 128.jpg a Chaldan Stamped Brick. </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkBimage-0008"> 134.jpg the Temple of Nannar at Uru, + Approximately Restored. </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkBimage-0009"> 135.jpg the Temple of Uru in Its Present + State, According To Taylor </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkBimage-0010"> 136.jpg Further View of the Temple Of Uru + </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkBimage-0011"> 137.jpg Lion-headed Genius. </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkBimage-0012"> 138.jpg the South-west Wind </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkBimage-0013"> 141.jpg Sin Delivered by Merodach from the + Assault of The Seven Evil Spirits. </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkBimage-0014"> 142.jpg Struggle Between a Good and an Evil + Genius. </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkBimage-0015"> 145.jpg the God Ningibsu, Patron of Lagash. + </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkBimage-0016"> 152.jpg the Adoration of The Mace and The + Whip. </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkBimage-0017"> 153.jpg a Protecting Amulet. </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkBimage-0018"> 169.jpg the God Sun Receives The Homage of + Two Worshippers. </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkBimage-0019"> 170.jpg Shamash Sets Out, in the Morning, + from The Interior of the Heaven by The Eastern Gate. </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkBimage-0020"> 171.jpg Shamash in his Shrine, His Emblem + Before Him On The Altar. </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkBimage-0021"> 173.jpg Ishtar Holding Her Star Before Sin. + </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkBimage-0022"> 177.jpg the Birds of The Tempest </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkBimage-0023"> 178.jpg Ramman Armed With an Axe. </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkBimage-0024"> 179.jpg Ramman, the God of Tempests and + Thunder. </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkBimage-0025"> 186.jpg Shamash Fights With zu and the Storm + Birds. </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkBimage-0026"> 186a.jpg the Plenisphere Taken from The + Temple Of Tentyra </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkBimage-0027"> 186b.jpg Text of the Plenisphere </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkBimage-0028"> 190.jpg Ishtar As a Warrior-goddess </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkBimage-0029"> 191.jpg Nebo </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkBimage-0030"> 203.jpg a Votary Led to the God To Receive + The Reward Of The Sacrifice </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkBimage-0031"> 204.jpg the Sacrifice: a Goat Presented to + Ishtar. </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkBimage-0032"> 205.jpg the God Shamash Seizes With his Left + Hand The Smoke of the Sacrifice. </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkBimage-0033"> 208.jpg Decorated Wrappings from a Mummy + (color) </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkBimage-0034"> 209.jpg Chald.an Coffin in the Form of a Jar + </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkBimage-0035"> 209a.jpg a Vaulted Tomb in Uru </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkBimage-0036"> 210.jpg Chaldan Tomb With Domed Roof. </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkBimage-0037"> 111.jpg Chaldean Tomb With Flat Roof. </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkBimage-0038"> 213.jpg the Interior of The Tomb </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkBimage-0039"> 220.jpg the Goddess Allat Passes Through The + Nether Regions in Her Bark. </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkBimage-0040"> 221.jpg Nergal, the God of Hades; Back View. + </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkBimage-0041"> 226.jpg Ishtar Despoiled of Her Garments in + Hades </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkBimage-0042"> 229.jpg Dumuzi Rejuvenated on the Knees of + Ishtar. </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkBimage-0043"> 233.jpg Etana Carried to Heaven by an Eagle. + </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkBimage-0044"> 230.jpg Endplate </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkCimage-0005"> 239.jpg Chapter III. </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkCimage-0006"> 244.jpg the King Urnina Bearing The “kufa.” + </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkCimage-0007"> 248.jpg the Plan of a Palace Built by Gudea. + </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkCimage-0008"> 249.jpg Terra-cotta Barrel-right </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkCimage-0009"> 250.jpg Plan of the Existing Buildings Of + Telloh. </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkCimage-0010"> 251.jpg Decoration of Coloured Cones on the + Faade at Uruk </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkCimage-0011"> 252.jpg Pilasters of the Facade Of Gudea’s + Palace </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkCimage-0012"> 255.jpg Stone Socket of One Of the Doors in + The Palace Of Gudea.( Right) </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkCimage-0013"> 258.jpg Stand of Black Stone from the Palace + Of Telloh. </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkCimage-0014"> 262.jpg Female Servant Bare to the + Waist.(left) </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkCimage-0015"> 262.jpg Costume of a Chaldn Lady (right) + </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkCimage-0016"> 266.jpg a Soldier Bringing Prisoners and + Spoil. </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkCimage-0017"> 268.jpg Manuscript on Papyrus in + Heiroglyphics </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkCimage-0018"> 271.jpg Page Image </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkCimage-0019"> 272.jpg Page Image </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkCimage-0020"> 274.jpg Page Image </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkCimage-0021"> 276.jpg Tables </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkCimage-0022"> 279.jpg the Tablet of Tell-sifr, Broken to + Show The Two Texts. </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkCimage-0023"> 280.jpg Tablet Bearing the Impress of a Seal + </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkCimage-0024"> 294.jpg an Egyptian Slave Merchant </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkCimage-0026"> 208a.jpg Chaldean Houses at Uru. </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkCimage-0027"> 208b Plans of Houses Excavated at Eridu and + Ubu. </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkCimage-0028"> 300.jpg Chaldan Household Utensils in + Terra-cotta </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkCimage-0029"> 311a.jpg Chaldan Stone Implements. </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkCimage-0030"> 311b.jpg Chaldan Stone Hammer Bearing an + Inscription. </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkCimage-0031"> 312.jpg Chaldn Implements of Bronze </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkCimage-0032"> 313.jpg Vase of Silver. And Bull Of Copper. + </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkCimage-0033"> 315.jpg Chaldan Cylinder Exhibiting Traces + of The Different Tools Used by the Engraver </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkCimage-0034"> 318.jpg Egyptian Manuscript </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkCimage-0035"> 318-text.jpg Egyptian Manuscript </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkCimage-0036"> 322.jpg the Michaux Stone (left) </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkCimage-0037"> 323.jpg the Other Side of The Michaux Stone + (right) </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkCimage-0038"> 324.jpg Two Rows of Shadufs on the Bank Of a + River. </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkCimage-0039"> 325.jpg Chaldan Farming Operations. </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkCimage-0040"> 327.jpg the Farm Oxen </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkCimage-0041"> 329a.jpg Cooking: a Quarrel. </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkCimage-0042"> 329b.jpg Scenes of Pastoral Life in Chalda. + </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkCimage-0043"> 330.jpg Fight With a Lion </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkCimage-0044"> 331.jpg the Dog in Tub Leash </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkCimage-0045"> 332.jpg Chaldan Carrying a Fish. (left) + </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkCimage-0046"> 333.jpg the Onager Taken With The Lasso. + </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkCimage-0047"> 337.jpg Page Image </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkCimage-0048"> 340.jpg Chaldan Map of the World. </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkCimage-0049"> 341.jpg Astronomical Table </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkCimage-0050"> 352.jpg a Chaldan Amulet. </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkCimage-0051"> 354.jpg Magic Nail of Terra Cotta </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkCimage-0052"> 355.jpg Egyptian Cornice Bearing the + Cartouches of Ramses I. </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkCimage-0053"> 357.jpg Lists of the Pharaohs Of The Ancient + Empire </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkCimage-0054"> 358.jpg Lists on the Monuments </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkCimage-0055"> 359.jpg Lists on the Monuments </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkCimage-0056"> 360.jpg Lists on the Monuments </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkCimage-0057"> 361.jpg Lists on the Monuments </a> + </p> + <p class="toc"> + <a href="#linkCimage-0058"> 362.jpg Tailpiece </a> + </p> + </blockquote> + <p> + <br /> <br /> + </p> + <hr /> + <p> + <br /> <br /> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img alt="preface1 (124K)" src="images/preface1.jpg" width="100%" /> + </div> + <p> + <br /> <br /> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img alt="preface2 (90K)" src="images/preface2.jpg" width="100%" /> + </div> + <p> + <br /> <br /> <br /> <br /> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img alt="003 (150K)" src="images/003.jpg" width="100%" /> + </div> + <p> + <br /> <br /> <a name="link2HCH0001" id="link2HCH0001"> + <!-- H2 anchor --> </a> + </p> + <div style="height: 4em;"> + <br /><br /><br /><br /> + </div> + <h2> + CHAPTER I—ANCIENT CHALDA + </h2> + <p> + The Creation, the Deluge, the history of the gods—The country, its + cities its inhabitants, its early dynasties. + </p> + <p> + “In the time when nothing which was called heaven existed above, and when + nothing below had as yet received the name of earth,* Apsu, the Ocean, who + first was their father, and Chaos-Timat, who gave birth to them all, + mingled their waters in one, reeds which were not united, rushes which + bore no fruit.” ** Life germinated slowly in this inert mass, in which the + elements of our world lay still in confusion: when at length it did spring + up, it was but feebly, and at rare intervals, through the hatching of + divine couples devoid of personality and almost without form. “In the time + when the gods were not created, not one as yet, when they had neither been + called by their names, nor had their destinies been assigned to them by + fate, gods manifested themselves. Lakhmu and Lakhamu were the first to + appear, and waxed great for ages; then Anshar and Kishar were produced + after them. Days were added to days, and years were heaped upon years: + Anu, Inlil, and Ea were born in their turn, for Anshar and Kishar had + given them birth.” As the generations emanated one from the other, their + vitality increased, and the personality of each became more clearly + defined; the last generation included none but beings of an original + character and clearly marked individuality. Anu, the sunlit sky by day, + the starlit firmament by night; Inlil-Bel, the king of the earth; Ea, the + sovereign of the waters and the personification of wisdom.*** Each of them + duplicated himself, Anu into Anat, Bel into Belit, Ea into Damkina, and + united himself to the spouse whom he had deduced from himself. Other + divinities sprang from these fruitful pairs, and the impulse once given, + the world was rapidly peopled by their descendants. Sin, Shamash, and + Kamman, who presided respectively over the moon, the sun, and the air, + were all three of equal rank; next came the lords of the planets, Ninib, + Merodach, Nergal, the warrior-goddess Ishtar, and Nebo; then a whole army + of lesser deities, who ranged themselves around Anu as round a supreme + master. Timat, finding her domain becoming more and more restricted owing + to the activity of the others, desired to raise battalion against + battalion, and set herself to create unceasingly; but her offspring, made + in her own image, appeared like those incongruous phantoms which men see + in dreams, and which are made up of members borrowed from a score of + different animals. They appeared in the form of bulls with human heads, of + horses with the snouts of dogs, of dogs with quadruple bodies springing + from a single fish-like tail. Some of them had the beak of an eagle or a + hawk; others, four wings and two faces; others, the legs and horns of a + goat; others, again, the hind quarters of a horse and the whole body of a + man. Timat furnished them with terrible weapons, placed them under the + command of her husband Kingu, and set out to war against the gods. + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + * In Chalda, as in Egypt, nothing was supposed to have a + real existence until it had received its name: the sentence + quoted in the text means practically, that at that time + there was neither heaven nor earth. + + ** Apsu has been transliterated kiracruv [in Greek], by the + author an extract from whose works has been preserved by + Damascius. He gives a different version of the tradition, + according to which the amorphous goddess Mummu-Timat + consisted of two persons. The first, Tauth, was the wife of + Apasn; the second, Moymis, was the son of Apasn and of + Tauth. The last part of the sentence is very obscure in the + Assyrian text, and has been translated in a variety of + different ways. It seems to contain a comparison between + Aps and Mummu-Timat on the one hand, and the reeds and + clumps of rushes so common in Chalda on the other; the two + divinities remain inert and unfruitful, like water-plants + which have not yet manifested their exuberant growth. + + *** The first fragments of the Chaldan account of the + Creation were discovered by G. Smith, who described them in + the <i>Daily Telegraph</i> (of March 4, 1875), and published them + in the <i>Transactions of the Society of Biblical Archology</i>, + and translated in his Chaldan account of Genesis all the + fragments with which he was acquainted; other fragments have + since been collected, but unfortunately not enough to enable + us to entirely reconstitute the legend. It covered at least + six tablets, possibly more. Portions of it have been + translated after Smith, by Talbot, by Oppert, by Lenormant, + by Schrader, by Sayce, by Jensen, by Winckler, by Zimmern, + and lastly by Deltzsch. Since G. Smith wrote <i>The Chaldan + Account</i>, a fragment of a different version has been + considered to be a part of the dogma of the Creation, as it + was put forth at Kutha. +</pre> + <p> + <a name="linkimage-0004" id="linkimage-0004"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/006.jpg" width="100%" + alt="006.jpg One of the Eagle-headed Genii. " /> + </div> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin from an Assyrian bas-relief from + Khorsabad +</pre> + <p> + At first they knew not whom to send against her. Anshar despatched his son + Anu; but Anu was afraid, and made no attempt to oppose her. He sent Ea; + but Ea, like Anu, grew pale with fear, and did not venture to attack her. + Merodach, the son of Ea, was the only one who believed himself strong + enough to conquer her. The gods, summoned to a solemn banquet in the + palace of Anshar, unanimously chose him to be their champion, and + proclaimed him king. “Thou, thou art glorious among the great gods, thy + will is second to none, thy bidding is Anu; Marduk (Merodach), thou art + glorious among the great gods, thy will is second to none,* thy bidding is + Anu.** From this day, that which thou orderest may not be changed, the + power to raise or to abase shall be in thy hand, the word of thy mouth + shall endure, and thy commandment shall not meet with opposition. None of + the gods shall transgress thy law; but wheresoever a sanctuary of the gods + is decorated, the place where they shall give their oracles shall be thy + place.*** Marduk, it is thou who art our avenger! We bestow on thee the + attributes of a king; the whole of all that exists, thou hast it, and + everywhere thy word shall be exalted. Thy weapons shall not be turned + aside, they shall strike thy enemy. O master, who trusts in thee, spare + thou, his life; but the god who hath done evil, put out his life like + water. They clad their champion in a garment, and thus addressed him: ‘Thy + will, master, shall be that of the gods. Speak the word, ‘Let it be so,’ + it shall be so. Thus open thy mouth, this garment shall disappear; say + unto it, ‘Return,’ and the garment shall be there.” He spoke with his + lips, the garment disappeared; he said unto it, “Return,” and the garment + was restored. + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + * The Assyrian runs, “thy destiny is second to none.” This + refers not to the <i>destiny</i> of the god himself, but to the + fate which he allots to others. I have substituted, here and + elsewhere, for the word “destiny,” the special meaning of + which would not have been understood, the word “will,” + which, though it does not exactly reproduce the Assyrian + expression, avoids the necessity for paraphrases or formulas + calculated to puzzle the modern reader. + + ** Or, to put it less concisely, “When thou commandest, it + is Anu himself who commands,” and the same blind obedience + must be paid to thee as to Anu. + + *** The meaning is uncertain. The sentence seems to convey + that henceforth Merodach would be at home in all temples + that were constructed in honour of the other gods. +</pre> + <p> + Merodach having been once convinced by this evidence that he had the power + of doing everything and of undoing everything at his pleasure, the gods + handed to him the sceptre, the throne, the crown, the insignia of supreme + rule, and greeted him with their acclamations: “Be King!—Go! Cut + short the life of Timat, and let the wind carry her blood to the hidden + extremities of the universe.” * He equipped himself carefully for the + struggle. “He made a bow and placed his mark upon it;” ** he had a spear + brought to him and fitted a point to it; the god lifted the lance, + brandished it in his right hand, then hung the bow and quiver at his side. + He placed a thunderbolt before him, filled his body with a devouring + flame, then made a net in which to catch the anarchic Timat; he placed + the four winds in such a way that she could not escape, south and north, + east and west, and with his own hand he brought them the net, the gift of + his father Anu. “He created the hurricane, the evil wind, the storm, the + tempest, the four winds, the seven winds, the waterspout, the wind that is + second to none; then he let loose the winds he had created, all seven of + them, in order to bewilder the anarchic Timat by charging behind her. And + the master of the waterspout raised his mighty weapon, he mounted his + chariot, a work without its equal, formidable; he installed himself + therein, tied the four reins to the side, and darted forth, pitiless, + torrent-like, swift.” + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + * Sayce was the first, I believe, to cite, in connection + with this mysterious order, the passage in which Berossus + tells how the gods created men from a little clay, moistened + with the blood of the god Blos. Here there seems to be a + fear lest the blood of Timat, mingling with the mud, should + produce a crop of monsters similar to those which the + goddess had already created; the blood, if carried to the + north, into the domain of the night, would there lose its + creative power, or the monsters who might spring from it + would at any rate remain strangers to the world of gods and + men. + + ** “Literally, he made his weapon known; “perhaps it would + be better to interpret it, “and he made it known that the + bow would henceforth be his distinctive weapon.” + </pre> + <p> + <a name="linkimage-0005" id="linkimage-0005"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/009.jpg" width="100%" + alt="009.jpg Bel-merodach, Armed With the Thunderbolt, Does Battle With the Tumultuous Tiamat. " /> + </div> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin from the bas-relief from Nimrd + preserved in the British Museum. +</pre> + <p> + He passed through the serried ranks of the monsters and penetrated as far + as Timat, and provoked her with his cries. “‘Thou hast rebelled against + the sovereignty of the gods, thou hast plotted evil against them, and hast + desired that my fathers should taste of thy malevolence; therefore thy + host shall be reduced to slavery, thy weapons shall be torn from thee. + Come, then, thou and I must give battle to one another!’ Timat, when she + heard him, flew into a fury, she became mad with rage; then Timat howled, + she raised herself savagely to her full height, and planted her feet + firmly on the earth. She pronounced an incantation, recited her formula, + and called to her aid the gods of the combat, both them and their weapons. + They drew near one to another, Timat and Marduk, wisest of the gods: They + flung themselves into the combat, they met one another in the struggle. + Then the master unfolded his net and seized her; he caused the hurricane + which waited behind him to pass in front of him, and, when Timat opened + her mouth to swallow him, he thrust the hurricane into it so that the + monster could not close her jaws again. The mighty wind filled her paunch, + her breast swelled, her maw was split. Marduk gave a straight thrust with + his lance, burst open the paunch, pierced the interior, tore the breast, + then bound the monster and deprived her of life. When he had vanquished + Timat, who had been their leader, her army was disbanded, her host was + scattered, and the gods, her allies, who had marched beside her, trembled, + were scared, and fled.” He seized hold of them, and of Kingu their chief, + and brought them bound in chains before the throne of his father. + </p> + <p> + He had saved the gods from ruin, but this was the least part of his task; + he had still to sweep out of space the huge carcase which encumbered it, + and to separate its ill-assorted elements, and arrange them afresh for the + benefit of the conquerors. He returned to Timat whom he had bound in + chains. He placed his foot upon her, with his unerring knife he cut into + the upper part of her; then he cut the blood-vessels, and caused the blood + to be carried by the north wind to the hidden places. And the gods saw his + face, they rejoiced, they gave themselves up to gladness, and sent him a + present, a tribute of peace; then he recovered his calm, he contemplated + the corpse, raised it and wrought marvels. + </p> + <p> + <a name="linkimage-0006" id="linkimage-0006"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/011.jpg" width="100%" + alt="010.jpg a Kufa Laden With Stones, and Manned by A Crew Of Four Men. " /> + </div> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a bas-relief at Koyunjik. + Behind the <i>kufa</i> may be seen a fisherman seated astride on + an inflated skin with his fish-basket attached to his neck. +</pre> + <p> + He split it in two as one does a fish for drying; then he hung up one of + the halves on high, which became the heavens; the other half he spread out + under his feet to form the earth, and made the universe such as men have + since known it. As in Egypt, the world was a kind of enclosed chamber + balanced on the bosom of the eternal waters.* The earth, which forms the + lower part of it, or floor, is something like an overturned boat in + appearance, and hollow underneath, not like one of the narrow skiffs in + use among other races, but a kufa, or kind of semicircular boat such as + the tribes of the Lower Euphrates have made use of from earliest antiquity + down to our own times. + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + * The description of the Egyptian world will be found in + vol. i. p. 21 of the present work. So far the only + systematic attempt to reconstruct the Chaldan world, since + Lenormant, has been made by Jensen, who, after examining all + the elements which went to compose it, one after another, + sums up in a few pages, and reproduces in a plate, the + principal results of his inquiry. It will be seen at a + glance how much I have taken from his work, and in what + respects the drawing here reproduced differs from his. +</pre> + <p> + <a name="linkimage-0007" id="linkimage-0007"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/012.jpg" width="100%" + alt="012.jpg the World As Conceived by The Chaldans " /> + </div> + <p> + The earth rises gradually from the extremities to the centre, like a great + mountain, of which the snow-region, where the Euphrates finds its source, + approximately marks the summit. It was at first supposed to be divided + into seven zones, placed one on the top of the other along its sides, like + the stories of a temple; later on it was divided into four “houses,” each + of which, like the “houses” of Egypt, corresponded with one of the four + cardinal points, and was under the rule of particular gods. Near the foot + of the mountain, the edges of the so-called boat curve abruptly outwards, + and surround the earth with a continuous wall of uniform height having no + opening. The waters accumulated in the hollow thus formed, as in a ditch; + it was a narrow and mysterious sea, an ocean stream, which no living man + might cross save with permission from on high, and whose waves rigorously + separated the domain of men from the regions reserved to the gods. The + heavens rose above the “mountain of the world” like a boldly formed dome, + the circumference of which rested on the top of the wall in the same way + as the upper structures of a house rest on its foundations. Merodach + wrought it out of a hard resisting metal which shone brilliantly during + the day in the rays of the sun, and at night appeared only as a dark blue + surface, strewn irregularly with luminous stars. He left it quite solid in + the southern regions, but tunnelled it in the north, by contriving within + it a huge cavern which communicated with external space by means of two + doors placed at the east and the west.* The sun came forth each morning by + the first of these doors; he mounted to the zenith, following the internal + base of the cupola from east to south; then he slowly descended again to + the western door, and re-entered the tunnel in the firmament, where he + spent the night,** Merodach regulated the course of the whole universe on + the movements of the sun. He instituted the year and divided it into + twelve months. To each month he assigned three decans, each of whom + exercised his influence successively for a period of ten days; he then + placed the procession of the days under the authority of Nibiru, in order + that none of them should wander from his track and be lost. “He lighted + the moon that she might rule the night, and made her a star of night that + she might indicate the days:*** ‘From month to month, without ceasing, + shape thy disk,**** and at the beginning of the month kindle thyself in + the evening, lighting up thy horns so as to make the heavens + distinguishable; on the seventh day, show to me thy disk; and on the + fifteenth, let thy two halves be full from month to month.’” He cleared a + path for the planets, and four of them he entrusted to four gods; the + fifth, our Jupiter, he reserved for himself, and appointed him to be + shepherd of this celestial flock; in order that all the gods might have + their image visible in the sky, he mapped out on the vault of heaven + groups of stars which he allotted to them, and which seemed to men like + representations of real or fabulous beings, fishes with the heads of rams, + lions, bulls, goats and scorpions. + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + * Jensen has made a collection of the texts which speak of + the interior of the heavens (Kirib shami) and of their + aspect. The expressions which have induced many + Assyriologists to conclude that the heavens were divided + into different parts subject to different gods may be + explained without necessarily having recourse to this + hypothesis; the “heaven of Ami,” for instance, is an + expression which merely affirms Anu’s sovereignty in the + heavens, and is only a more elegant way of designating the + heavens by the name of the god who rules them. The gates of + heaven are mentioned in the account of the Creation. + + ** It is generally admitted that the Chaldans believed that + the sun passed over the world in the daytime, and underneath + it during the night. The general resemblance of their theory + of the universe to the Egyptian theory leads me to believe + that they, no less than the Egyptians (cf. vol. i. pp. 24, + 25, of the present work), for along time believed that the + sun and moon revolved round the earth in a horizontal plane. + + *** This obscure phrase seems to be explained, if we + remember that the Chaldan, like the Egyptian day, dated + from the rising of one moon to the rising of the following + moon; for instance, from six o’clock one evening to about + six o’clock the next evening. The moon, the star of night, + thus marks the appearance of each day and “indicates the + days.” + + **** The word here translated by “disk” is literally the + royal cap, decorated with horns, “Agu,” which Sin, the moon- + god, wears on his head. +</pre> + <p> + The heavens having been put in order,* he set about peopling the earth, + and the gods, who had so far passively and perhaps powerlessly watched him + at his work, at length made up their minds to assist him. They covered the + soil with verdure, and all collectively “made living beings of many kinds. + The cattle of the fields, the wild beasts of the fields, the reptiles of + the fields, they fashioned them and made of them creatures of life.” ** + According to one legend, these first animals had hardly left the hands of + their creators, when, not being able to withstand the glare of the light, + they fell dead one after the other. Then Merodach, seeing that the earth + was again becoming desolate, and that its fertility was of no use to any + one, begged his father Ea to cut off his head and mix clay with the blood + which welled from the trunk, then from this clay to fashion new beasts and + men, to whom the virtues of this divine blood would give the necessary + strength to enable them to resist the air and light. At first they led a + somewhat wretched existence, and “lived without rule after the manner of + beasts. But, in the first year, appeared a monster endowed with human + reason named Oannes, who rose from out of the Erythraean sea, at the point + where it borders Babylonia. He had the whole body of a fish, but above his + fish’s head he had another head which was that of a man, and human feet + emerged from beneath his fish’s tail; he had a human voice, and his image + is preserved to this day. He passed the day in the midst of men without + taking any food; he taught them the use of letters, sciences and arts of + all kinds, the rules for the founding of cities, and the construction of + temples, the principles of law and of surveying; he showed them how to sow + and reap; he gave them all that contributes to the comforts of life. Since + that time nothing excellent has been invented. At sunset this monster + Oannes plunged back into the sea, and remained all night beneath the + waves, for he was amphibious. He wrote a book on the origin of things and + of civilization, which he gave to men.” These are a few of the fables + which were current among the races of the Lower Euphrates with regard to + the first beginnings of the universe. That they possessed many other + legends of which we now know nothing is certain, but either they have + perished for ever, or the works in which they were recorded still await + discovery, it may be under the ruins of a palace or in the cupboards of + some museum. + </p> + <p> + * The arrangement of the heavens by Merodach is described at the end of + the fourth and beginning of the fifth tablets. The text, originally + somewhat obscure, is so mutilated in places that it is not always possible + to make out the sense with certainty. + </p> + <p> + ** The creation of the animals and then of man is related on the seventh + tablet, and on a tablet the place of which, in the series, is still + undetermined. I have been obliged to translate the text rather freely, so + as to make the meaning clear to the modern reader. + </p> + <p> + <a name="linkimage-0008" id="linkimage-0008"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="figleft" style="width:30%;"> + <img width="100%" src="images/017.jpg" alt="017.jpg a God-fish " /> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> +Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from an +Assyrian bas-relief from Nimrd. +</pre> + </div> + <p> + They do not seem to have conceived the possibility of an absolute + creation, by means of which the gods, or one of them, should have evolved + out of nothing all that exists: the creation was for them merely the + setting in motion of pre-existing elements, and the creator only an + organizer of the various materials floating in chaos. Popular fancy in + different towns varied the names of the creators and the methods employed + by them; as centuries passed on, a pile of vague, confused, and + contradictory traditions were amassed, no one of which was held to be + quite satisfactory, though all found partisans to support them. Just as in + Egypt, the theologians of local priesthoods endeavoured to classify them + and bring them into a kind of harmony: many they rejected and others they + recast in order to better reconcile their statements: they arranged them + in systems, from which they undertook to unravel, under inspiration from + on high, the true history of the universe. That which I have tried to set + forth above is very ancient, if, as is said to be the case, it was in + existence two or even three thousand years before our era; but the + versions of it which we possess were drawn up much later, perhaps not till + about the VIIth century B.C.* It had been accepted by the inhabitants of + Babylon because it flattered their religious vanity by attributing the + credit of having evolved order out of chaos to Merodach, the protector of + their city.** He it was whom the Assyrian scribes had raised to a position + of honour at the court of the last kings of Nineveh:*** it was Merodach’s + name which Berossus inscribed at the beginning of his book, when he set + about relating to the Greeks the origin of the world according to the + Chaldeans, and the dawn of Babylonian civilization. + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + * The question as to whether the text was originally written + in Sumerian or in the Semitic tongue has frequently been + discussed; the form in which we have it at present is not + very old, and does not date much further back than the reign + of Assurbanipal, if it is not even contemporary with that + monarch. According to Sayce, the first version would date + back beyond the XXth century, to the reign of Khammurabi; + according to Jensen, beyond the XXXth century before our + era. + + ** Sayce thinks that the myth originated at Eridu, on the + shores of the Persian Gulf, and afterwards received its + present form at Babylon, where the local schools of theology + adapted it to the god Merodach. + + *** The tablets in which it is preserved for us come partly + from the library of Assurbanipal at Nineveh, partly from + that of the temple of Nebo at Borsippa; these latter are + more recent than the others, and seem to have been written + during the period of the Persian supremacy. +</pre> + <p> + Like the Egyptian civilization, it had had its birth between the sea and + the dry land on a low, marshy, alluvial soil, flooded annually by the + rivers which traverse it, devastated at long intervals by tidal waves of + extraordinary violence. The Euphrates and the Tigris cannot be regarded as + mysterious streams like the Nile, whose source so long defied exploration + that people were tempted to place it beyond the regions inhabited by man. + The former rise in Armenia, on the slopes of the Niphates, one of the + chains of mountains which lie between the Black Sea and Mesopotamia, and + the only range which at certain points reaches the line of eternal snow. + At first they flow parallel to one another, the Euphrates from east to + west as far as Malatiyeh, the Tigris from the west towards the east in the + direction of Assyria. Beyond Malatiyeh, the Euphrates bends abruptly to + the south-west, and makes its way across the Taurus as though desirous of + reaching the Mediterranean by the shortest route, but it soon alters its + intention, and makes for the south-east in search of the Persian Gulf. The + Tigris runs in an oblique direction towards the south from the point where + the mountains open out, and gradually approaches the Euphrates. Near + Bagdad the two rivers are only a few leagues apart. However, they do not + yet blend their waters; after proceeding side by side for some twenty or + thirty miles, they again separate and only finally; unite at a point some + eighty leagues lower down. At the beginning of our geological period their + course was not such a long one. The sea then penetrated as far as lat. + 33, and was only arrested by the last undulations of the great plateau of + secondary formation, which descend from the mountain group of Armenia: the + two rivers entered the sea at a distance of about twenty leagues apart, + falling into a gulf bounded on the east by the last spurs of the mountains + of Iran, on the west by the sandy heights which border the margin of the + Arabian Desert.* They filled up this gulf with their alluvial deposit, + aided by the Adhem, the Diyleh, the Kerkha, the Karun, and other rivers, + which at the end of long independent courses became tributaries of the + Tigris. The present beds of the two rivers, connected by numerous canals, + at length meet near the village of Kornah and form one single river, the + Shatt-el-Arab, which carries their waters to the sea. The mud with which + they are charged is deposited when it reaches their mouth, and accumulates + rapidly; it is said that the coast advances about a mile every seventy + years.** In its upper reaches the Euphrates collects a number of small + affluents, the most important of which, the Kara-Su, has often been + confounded with it. Near the middle of its course, the Sadjur on the right + bank carries into it the waters of the Taurus and the Amanus, on the left + bank the Balikh and the Khabur contribute those of the Karadja-Dagh; from + the mouth of the Khabur to the sea the Euphrates receives no further + affluent. The Tigris is fed on the left by the Bitlis-Khai, the two Zabs, + the Adhem, and the Diyleh. The Euphrates is navigable from Sumeisat, the + Tigris from Mossul, both of them almost as soon as they leave the + mountains. They are subject to annual floods, which occur when the winter + snow melts on the higher ranges of Armenia. The Tigris, which rises from + the southern slope of the Niphates and has the more direct course, is the + first to overflow its banks, which it does at the beginning of March, and + reaches its greatest height about the 10th or 12th of May. The Euphrates + rises in the middle of March, and does not attain its highest level till + the close of May. From June onwards it falls with increasing rapidity; by + September all the water which has not been absorbed by the soil has + returned to the river-bed. The inundation does not possess the same + importance for the regions covered by it, that the rise of the Nile does + for Egypt. In fact, it does more harm than good, and the river-side + population have always worked hard to protect themselves from it and to + keep it away from their lands rather than facilitate its access to them; + they regard it as a sort of necessary evil to which they resign + themselves, while trying to minimize its effects.*** + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + * This fact has been established by Ross and Lynch in two + articles in the <i>Journal of the Royal Geographical Society</i>, + vol. ix. pp. 446, 472. The Chaldans and Assyrians called + the gulf into which the two rivers debouched, Nr Marrtum, + or “salt river,” a name which they extended to the Chaldan + Sea, i.e. to the whole Persian Gulf. + + ** Loftus estimated, about the middle of the last century, + the progress of alluvial deposit at about one English mile + in every seventy years; H. Rawlinson considers that the + progress must have been more considerable in ancient times, + and estimates it at an English mile in thirty years. Kiepert + thinks, taking the above estimate as a basis, that in the + sixth century before our era the fore-shore came from about + ten to twelve German miles (47 to 56 English) higher up than + the present fore-shore. G. Rawlinson estimates on his part + that between the thirtieth and twentieth centuries B.C., a + period in which he places the establishment of the first + Chaldan Empire, the fore-shore was more than 120 miles + above the mouth of Shatt-el-Arab, to the north of the + present village of Kornah. + + *** Fr. Lenormant has energetically defended this hypothesis + in the majority of his works: it is set forth at some length + in his work on <i>La Langue primitive de la Chalde</i>. Hommel, + on the other hand, maintains and strives to demonstrate + scientifically the relationship of the non-Semitic tongue + with Turkish. +</pre> + <p> + The traveller Olivier noticed this, and writes as follows: “The land there + is rather less fertile [than in Egypt], because it does not receive the + alluvial deposits of the rivers with the same regularity as that of the + Delta. It is necessary to irrigate it in order to render it productive, + and to protect it sedulously from the inundations which are too + destructive in their action and too irregular.” + </p> + <p> + The first races to colonize this country of rivers, or at any rate the + first of which we can find traces, seem to have belonged to three + different types. The most important were the Semites, who spoke a dialect + akin to Aramaic, Hebrew, and Phoenician. It was for a long time supposed + that they came down from the north, and traces of their occupation have + been pointed out in Armenia in the vicinity of Ararat, or halfway down the + course of the Tigris, at the foot of the Gordysean mountains. It has + recently been suggested that we ought rather to seek for their place of + origin in Southern Arabia, and this view is gaining ground among the + learned. Side by side with these Semites, the monuments give evidence of a + race of ill-defined character, which some have sought, without much + success, to connect with the tribes of the Urall or Alta; these people + are for the present provisionally called Sumerians.* They came, it would + appear, from some northern country; they brought with them from their + original home a curious system of writing, which, modified, transformed, + and adopted by ten different nations, has preserved for us all that we + know in regard to the majority of the empires which rose and fell in + Western Asia before the Persian conquest. Semite or Sumerian, it is still + doubtful which preceded the other at the mouths of the Euphrates. The + Sumerians, who were for a time all-powerful in the centuries before the + dawn of history, had already mingled closely with the Semites when we + first hear of them. Their language gave way to the Semitic, and tended + gradually to become a language of ceremony and ritual, which was at last + learnt less for everyday use, than for the drawing up of certain royal + inscriptions, or for the interpretation of very ancient texts of a legal + or sacred character. Their religion became assimilated to the religion, + and their gods identified with the gods, of the Semites. The process of + fusion commenced at such an early date, that nothing has really come down + to us from the time when the two races were strangers to each other. We + are, therefore, unable to say with certainty how much each borrowed from + the other, what each gave, or relinquished of its individual instincts and + customs. We must take and judge them as they come before us, as forming + one single nation, imbued with the same ideas, influenced in all their + acts by the same civilization, and possessed of such strongly marked + characteristics that only in the last days of their existence do we find + any appreciable change. In the course of the ages they had to submit to + the invasions and domination of some dozen different races, of whom some—Assyrians + and Chaldans—were descended from a Semitic stock, while the others—Elamites, + Cossaaans, Persians, Macedonians, and Parthians—either were not + connected with them by any tie of blood, or traced their origin in some + distant manner to the Sumerian branch. They got quickly rid of a portion + of these superfluous elements, and absorbed or assimilated the rest; like + the Egyptians, they seem to have been one of those races which, once + established, were incapable of ever undergoing modification, and remained + unchanged from one end of their existence to the other. + </p> + <p> + * The name <i>Accadian</i> proposed by H. Rawlinson and by Hincks, and + adopted by Sayce, seems to have given way to <i>Sumerian</i>, the title + put forward by Oppert. The existence of the Sumerian or Sumero-Accadian + has been contested by Halvy in a number of noteworthy works. M. Halvy + wishes to recognize in the so-called Sumerian documents the Semitic tongue + of the ordinary inscriptions, but written in a priestly syllabic character + subject to certain rules; this would be practically a <i>cryptogram</i>, + or rather an <i>allogram</i>. M. Halvy won over Messrs. Guyard and Pognon + in France, Delitzsch and a part of the Delitzsch school in Germany, to his + view of the facts. The controversy, which has been carried on on both + sides with a somewhat unnecessary vehemence, still rages; it has been + simplified quite recently by Delitzcsh’s return to the Sumerian theory. + Without reviewing the arguments in detail, and while doing full justice to + the profound learning displayed by M. Halvy, I feel forced to declare + with Tiele that his criticisms “oblige scholars to carefully reconsider + all that has been taken as proved in these matters, but that they do not + warrant us in rejecting as untenable the hypothesis, still a very probable + one, according to which the difference in the graphic systems corresponds + to a real difference in. idiom.” + </p> + <p> + Their country must have presented at the beginning very much the same + aspect of disorder and neglect which it offers to modern eyes. It was a + flat interminable moorland stretching away to the horizon, there to begin + again seemingly more limitless than ever, with, no rise or fall in the + ground to break the dull monotony; clumps of palm trees and slender + mimosas, intersected by lines of water gleaming in the distance, then long + patches of wormwood and mallow, endless vistas of burnt-up plain, more + palms and more mimosas, make up the picture of the land, whose uniform + soil consists of rich, stiff, heavy clay, split up by the heat of the sun + into a network of deep narrow fissures, from which the shrubs and wild + herbs shoot forth each year in spring-time. By an almost imperceptible + slope it falls gently away from north to south towards the Persian Gulf, + from east to west towards the Arabian plateau. The Euphrates flows through + it with unstable and changing course, between shifting banks which it + shapes and re-shapes from season to season. + </p> + <p> + <a name="linkimage-0009" id="linkimage-0009"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/025.jpg" width="100%" + alt="025.jpg Gigantic Chaldan Reeds " /> + </div> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from an Assyrian bas-relief of the + palace of Nimrd. +</pre> + <p> + The slightest impulse of its current encroaches on them, breaks through + them, and makes openings for streamlets, the majority of which are clogged + up and obliterated by the washing away of their margins, almost as rapidly + as they are formed. Others grow wider and longer, and, sending out + branches, are transformed into permanent canals or regular rivers, + navigable at certain seasons. They meet on the left bank detached + offshoots of the Tigris, and after wandering capriciously in the space + between the two rivers, at last rejoin their parent stream: such are the + Shatt-el-Ha and the Shatt-en-Nil. The overflowing waters on the right + bank, owing to the fall of the land, run towards the low limestone hills + which shut in the basin of the Euphrates in the direction of the desert; + they are arrested at the foot of these hills, and are diverted on to the + low-lying ground, where they lose themselves in the morasses, or hollow + out a series of lakes along its borders, the largest of which, + Bahr--Nedjf, is shut in on three sides by steep cliffs, and rises or + falls periodically with the floods. A broad canal, which takes its origin + in the direction of Hit at the beginning of the alluvial plain, bears with + it the overflow, and, skirting the lowest terraces of the Arabian chain, + runs almost parallel to the Euphrates. In proportion as the canal proceeds + southward the ground sinks still lower, and becomes saturated with the + overflowing waters, until, the banks gradually disappearing, the whole + neighbourhood is converted into a morass. The Euphrates and its branches + do not at all times succeed in reaching the sea: they are lost for the + most part in vast lagoons to which the tide comes up, and in its ebb bears + their waters away with it. Reeds grow there luxuriantly in enormous beds, + and reach sometimes a height of from thirteen to sixteen feet; banks of + black and putrid mud emerge amidst the green growth, and give off deadly + emanations. Winter is scarcely felt here: snow is unknown, hoar-frost is + rarely seen, but sometimes in the morning a thin film of ice covers the + marshes, to disappear under the first rays of the sun.* + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + * Loftus attributes the lowering of the temperature during + the winter to the wind blowing over a soil impregnated with + saltpetre. “We were,” he says, “in a kind of immense + freezing chamber.” + </pre> + <p> + <a name="linkimage-0010" id="linkimage-0010"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/027.jpg" width="100%" + alt="027.jpg the Marshes About The Confluence of The Kerkha And Tigris. " /> + </div> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a sketch by J. Dieulafoy. +For six weeks in November and December there is much rain: after this +period there are only occasional showers, occurring at longer and longer +intervals until May, when they entirely cease, and the summer sets in, +to last until the following November. There are almost six continuous +months of depressing and moist heat, which overcomes both men and +animals and makes them incapable of any constant effort.* Sometimes +a south or east wind suddenly arises, and bearing with it across the +fields and canals whirlwinds of sand, burns up in its passage the little +verdure which the sun had spared. Swarms of locusts follow in its train, +and complete the work of devastation. A sound as of distant rain is at +first heard, increasing in intensity as the creatures approach. Soon +their thickly concentrated battalions fill the heavens on all sides, +flying with slow and uniform motion at a great height. They at length +alight, cover everything, devour everything, and, propagating their +species, die within a few days: nothing, not a blade of vegetation, +remains on the region where they alighted. + + * Loftus says that he himself had witnessed in the + neighbourhood of Bagdad during the daytime birds perched on + the palm trees in an exhausted condition, and panting with + open beaks. The inhabitants of Bagdad during the summer pass + their nights on the housetops, and the hours of day in + passages within, expressly constructed to protect them from + the heat. +</pre> + <p> + Notwithstanding these drawbacks, the country was not lacking in resources. + The soil was almost as fertile as the loam of Egypt, and, like the latter, + rewarded a hundredfold the labour of the inhabitants.* Among the wild + herbage which spreads over the country in the spring, and clothes it for a + brief season with flowers, it was found that some plants, with a little + culture, could be rendered useful to men and beasts. There were ten or + twelve different species of pulse to choose from—beans, ‘lentils, + chick-peas, vetches, kidney beans, onions, cucumbers, egg-plants, “gombo,” + and pumpkins. From the seed of the sesame an oil was expressed which + served for food, while the castor-oil plant furnished that required for + lighting. The safflower and henna supplied the women with dyes for the + stuffs which they manufactured from hemp and flax. Aquatic plants were + more numerous than on the banks of the Nile, but they did not occupy such + an important place among food-stuffs. The “lily bread” of the Pharaohs + would have seemed meagre fare to people accustomed from early times to + wheaten bread. Wheat and barley are considered to be indigenous on the + plains of the Euphrates; it was supposed to be here that they were first + cultivated in Western Asia, and that they spread from hence to Syria, + Egypt, and the whole of Europe.** “The soil there is so favourable to the + growth of cereals, that it yields usually two hundredfold, and in places + of exceptional fertility three hundredfold. The leaves of the wheat and + barley have a width of four digits. As for the millet and sesame, which in + altitude are as great as trees, I will not state their height, although I + know it from experience, being convinced that those who have not lived in + Babylonia would regard my statement with incredulity.” Herodotus in his + enthusiasm exaggerated the matter, or perhaps, as a general rule, he + selected as examples the exceptional instances which had been mentioned to + him: at present wheat and barley give a yield to the husbandman of some + thirty or forty fold. + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + * Olivier, who was a physician and naturalist, and had + visited Egypt as well as Mesopotamia, thought that Babylonia + was somewhat less fertile than Egypt. Loftus, who was + neither, and had not visited Egypt, declares, on the + contrary, that the banks of the Euphrates are no less + productive than those of the Nile. + + ** Native traditions collected by Berossus confirm this, and + the testimony of Olivier is usually cited as falling in with + that of the Chaldan writer. Olivier is considered, indeed, + to have discovered wild cereals in Mesopotamia. Pie only + says, however, that on the banks of the Euphrates above Anah + he had met with “wheat, barley, and spelt in a kind of + ravine;” from the context it clearly follows that these were + plants which had reverted to a wild state—instances of + which have been observed several times in Mesopotamia. A. de + Oandolle admitted the Mesopotamian origin of the various + species of wheat and barley. +</pre> + <p> + <a name="linkimage-0011" id="linkimage-0011"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/030.jpg" width="100%" + alt="030.jpg the Gathering of The Spathes Of The Male Palm Tree " /> + </div> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a cylinder in the Museum at the + Hague. The original measures almost an inch in height. +</pre> + <p> + “The date palm meets all the other needs of the population; they make from + it a kind of bread, wine, vinegar, honey, cakes, and numerous kinds of + stuffs; the smiths use the stones of its fruit for charcoal; these same + stones, broken and macerated, are given as a fattening food to cattle and + sheep.” Such a useful tree was tended with a loving care, the vicissitudes + in its growth were observed, and its reproduction was facilitated by the + process of shaking the flowers of the male palm over those of the female: + the gods themselves had taught this artifice to men, and they were + frequently represented with a bunch of flowers in their right hand, in the + attitude assumed by a peasant in fertilizing a palm tree. Fruit trees were + everywhere mingled with ornamental trees—the fig, apple, almond, + walnut, apricot, pistachio, vine, with the plane tree, cypress, tamarisk, + and acacia; in the prosperous period of the country the plain of the + Euphrates was a great orchard which extended uninterruptedly from the + plateau of Mesopotamia to the shores of the Persian Gulf. + </p> + <p> + The flora would not have been so abundant if the fauna had been sufficient + for the supply of a large population. A considerable proportion of the + tribes on the Lower Euphrates lived for a long time on fish only. They + consumed them either fresh, salted, or smoked: they dried them in the sun, + crushed them in a mortar, strained the pulp through linen, and worked it + up into a kind of bread or into cakes. The barbel and carp attained a + great size in these sluggish waters, and if the Chalans, like the Arabs + who have succeeded them in these regions, clearly preferred these fish + above others, they did not despise at the same time such less delicate + species as the eel, murena, silurus, and even that singular gurnard whose + habits are an object of wonder to our naturalists. This fish spends its + existence usually in the water, but a life in the open air has no terrors + for it: it leaps out on the bank, climbs trees without much difficulty, + finds a congenial habitat on the banks of mud exposed by the falling tide, + and basks there in the sun, prepared to vanish in the ooze in the + twinkling of an eye if some approaching bird should catch sight of it. + Pelicans, herons, cranes, storks, cormorants, hundreds of varieties of + seagulls, ducks, swans, wild geese, secure in the possession of an + inexhaustible supply of food, sport and prosper among the reeds. The + ostrich, greater bustard, the common and red-legged partridge and quail, + find their habitat on the borders of the desert; while the thrush, + blackbird, ortolan, pigeon, and turtle-dove abound on every side, in spite + of daily onslaughts from eagles, hawks, and other birds of prey. + </p> + <p> + <a name="linkimage-0012" id="linkimage-0012"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/032.jpg" width="100%" + alt="032.jpg a Winged Genius Holding in his Hand the Spathe Of The Male Date-palm. " /> + </div> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a bas-relief from Nimrd, in + the British Museum. +</pre> + <p> + <a name="linkimage-0013" id="linkimage-0013"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/033.jpg" width="100%" + alt="033.jpg the Heavily Maned Lion Wounded by an Arrow And Vomiting Blood. " /> + </div> + <p> + <a name="linkimage-0014" id="linkimage-0014"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="figright" style="width:50%;"> + <img width="100%" src="images/034.jpg" + alt="034.jpg the Urus in Act of Charging " /> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> +Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from an Assyrian +bas-relief from Nimrd (Layard, Monuments +of Nineveh, 1st series, pl. 11). +</pre> + </div> + <p> + Snakes are found here and there, but they are for the most part of + innocuous species: three poisonous varieties only are known, and their + bite does not produce such terrible consequences as that of the horned + viper or Egyptian uraeus. There are two kinds of lion—one without + mane, and the other hooded, with a heavy mass of black and tangled hair: + the proper signification of the old Chaldan name was “the great ‘dog,” + and they have, indeed, a greater resemblance to large dogs than to the red + lions of Africa.* They fly at the approach of man; they betake themselves + in the daytime to retreats among the marshes or in the thickets which + border the rivers, sallying forth at night, like the jackal, to scour the + country. Driven to bay, they turn upon the assailant and fight + desperately. The Chaldan kings, like the Pharaohs, did not shrink from + entering into a close conflict with them, and boasted of having rendered a + service to their subjects by the destruction of many of these beasts. + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> +* The Sumerian name of the lion is ur-malch “the great dog.” The best +description of the first-mentioned species is still that of Olivier, who +saw in the house o the Pasha of Bagdad five of them in captivity; cf. +Layard, Nineveh and Babylon, p. 487. Father Scheil tells me the lions +have disappeared completely since the last twenty years. +</pre> + <p> + <a name="linkimage-0015" id="linkimage-0015"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/035.jpg" width="100%" + alt="035.jpg a Herd of Onagers Pursued by Dogs and Wounded By Arrows. " /> + </div> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a bas-relief in the British + Museum. +</pre> + <p> + The elephant seems to have roamed for some time over the steppes of the + middle Euphrates;* there is no indication of its presence after the XIIIth + century before our era, and from that time forward it was merely an object + of curiosity brought at great expense from distant countries. This is not + the only instance of animals which have disappeared in the course of + centuries; the rulers of Nineveh were so addicted to the pursuit of the + urus that they ended by exterminating it. Several sorts of panthers and + smaller felid had their lairs in the thickets of Mesopotamia. The wild + ass and onager roamed in small herds between the Balikh and the Tigris. + Attempts were made, it would seem, at a very early period to tame them and + make use of them to draw chariots; but this attempt either did not succeed + at all, or issued in such uncertain results, that it was given up as soon + as other less refractory animals were made the subjects of successful + experiment. + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + * The existence of the elephant in Mesopotamia and Northern + Syria is well established by the Egyptian inscription of + Amenemhabi in the XVth century before our era. +</pre> + <p> + <a name="linkimage-0016" id="linkimage-0016"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/036.jpg" width="100%" + alt="036.jpg the Chief Domestic Animals Op The Regions of The Euphrates. " /> + </div> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from an Assyrian bas-relief from + Kouyunjik. +</pre> + <p> + The wild boar, and his relative, the domestic hog, inhabited the morasses. + Assyrian sculptors amused themselves sometimes by representing long gaunt + sows making their way through the cane-brakes, followed by their + interminable offspring. The hog remained here, as in Egypt, in a + semi-tamed condition, and the people were possessed of only a small number + of domesticated animals besides the dog—namely, the ass, ox, goat, + and sheep; the horse and camel were at first unknown, and were introduced + at a later period.* + </p> + <p> + <a name="linkimage-0017" id="linkimage-0017"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/037.jpg" width="100%" + alt="037.jpg the Sow and Her Litter Making Their Way Through A Bed of Reeds. " /> + </div> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a bas-relief from Kouyunjik. + + * The horse is denoted in the Assyrian texts by a group of + signs which mean “the ass of the East,” and the camel by + other signs in which the character for “ass” also appears. + The methods of rendering these two names show that the + subjects of them were unknown in the earliest times; the + epoch of their introduction is uncertain. A chariot drawn by + horses appears on the “Stele of the Vultures.” Camels are + mentioned among the booty obtained from the Bedouin of the + desert. +</pre> + <p> + We know nothing of the efforts which the first inhabitants—Sumerians + and Semites—had to make in order to control the waters and to bring + the land under culture: the most ancient monuments exhibit them as already + possessors of the soil, and in a forward state of civilization.* Their + chief cities were divided into two groups: one in the south, in the + neighbourhood of the sea; the other in a northern direction, in the region + where the Euphrates and Tigris are separated from each other by merely a + narrow strip of land. The southern group consisted of seven, of which + Eridu lay nearest to the coast. This town stood on the left bank of the + Euphrates, at a point which is now called Abu-Shahrein. A little to the + west, on the opposite bank, but at some distance from the stream, the + mound of Mugher marks the site of Uru, the most important, if not the + oldest, of the southern cities. Lagash occupied the site of the modern + Telloh to the north of Eridu, not far from the Shatt-el-Ha; Nisin and + Mar, Larsam and Uruk, occupied positions at short distances from each + other on the marshy ground which extends between the Euphrates and the + Shatt-en-Nl. The inscriptions mention here and there other less important + places, of which the ruins have not yet been discovered—Zirlab and + Shurippak, places of embarkation at the mouth of the Euphrates for the + passage of the Persian Gulf; and the island of Dilmun, situated some forty + leagues to the south in the centre of the Salt Sea,—“Nar-Marratum.” + The northern group comprised Nipur, the “incomparable;” Barsip, on the + branch which flows parallel to the Euphrates and falls into the + Bahr--Nedjf; Babylon, the “gate of the god,” the “residence of life,” + the only metropolis of the Euphrates region of which posterity never lost + a reminiscence; Kishu, Kuta, Agade;** and lastly the two Sipparas, that of + Shamash and that of Anunit. The earliest Chaldan civilization was + confined almost entirely to the two banks of the Lower Euphrates: except + at its northern boundary, it did not reach the Tigris, and did not cross + this river. Separated from the rest of the world—on the east by the + marshes which border the river in its lower course, on the north by the + badly watered and sparsely inhabited table-land of Mesopotamia, on the + west by the Arabian desert—it was able to develop its civilization, + as Egypt had done, in an isolated area, and to follow out its destiny in + peace. The only point from which it might anticipate serious danger was on + the east, whence the Kashshi and the Elamites, organized into military + states, incessantly harassed it year after year by their attacks. The + Kashshi were scarcely better than half-civilized mountain hordes, but the + Elamites were advanced in civilization, and their capital, Susa, vied with + the richest cities of the Euphrates, Uru and Babylon, in antiquity and + magnificence. + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + * For an ideal picture of what may have been the beginnings + of that civilization, see Delitzsch, Die Entstehung des + ltesten Schriflssystems, p. 214, et seq. I will not enter + into the question as to whether it did or did not come by + sea to the mouths of the Euphrates and Tigris. The legend of + the fish-god Oannes (Berossus, frag. 1), which seems to + conceal some indication on the subject, is merely a + mythological tradition, from which it would be wrong to + deduce historical conclusions. + + ** Agade, or Agane, has been identified with one of the two + towns of which Sippara is made up, more especially with that + which was called Anunit Sippara; the reading Agadi, Agacle, + was especially assumed to lead to its identification with + the Accad of <i>Genesis x. 10</i>, and with the Akkad of native + tradition. This opinion has been generally abandoned by + Assyriologists, and Agane has not yet found a site. Was it + only a name for Babylon? +</pre> + <p> + <a name="linkimage-0018" id="linkimage-0018"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/040.jpg" width="100%" alt="040.jpg Map of Chalda " /> + </div> + <p> + There was nothing serious to fear from the Guti, on the branch of the + Tigris to the north-east, or from the Shuti to the north of these; they + were merely marauding tribes, and, however troublesome they might be to + their neighbours in their devastating incursions, they could not + compromise the existence of the country, or bring it into subjection. It + would appear that the Chaldseans had already begun to encroach upon these + tribes and to establish colonies among them—El-Ashshur on the banks + of the Tigris, Harran on the furthest point of the Mesopotamian plain, + towards the sources of the Balikh. Beyond these were vague and unknown + regions—Tidanum, Martu, the sea of the setting sun, the vast + territories of Milukhkha and Mgan.* Egypt, from the time they were + acquainted with its existence, was a semi-fabulous country at the ends of + the earth. + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + * The question concerning Milukhkha and Mgan has exercised + Assyriologists for twenty years. The prevailing opinion + appears to be that which identifies Mgan with the Sinaitic + Peninsula, and Milukhkha with the country to the north of + Mgan as far as the Wady Arish and the Mediterranean; others + maintain, not the theory of Delitzsch, according to whom + Mgan and Milukhkha are synonyms for Shumir and Akkad, and + consequently two of the great divisions of Babylonia, but an + analogous hypothesis, in which they are regarded as + districts to the west of the Euphrates, either in Chaldan + regions or on the margin of the desert, or even in the + desert itself towards the Sinaitic Peninsula. What we know + of the texts induces me, in common with H. Rawlinson, to + place these countries on the shores of the Persian Gulf, + between the mouth of the Euphrates and the Bahrein islands; + possibly the Makse and the Melangitso of classical + historians and geographers were the descendants of the + people of Mgan (Mkan) and Milukhkha (Melugga), who had + been driven towards the entrance to the Persian Gulf by some + such event as the increase in these regions of the Kashdi + (Chaldans). The names, emigrated to the western parts of + Arabia and to the Sinaitic Peninsula in after-times, as the + name of India passed to America in the XVIth century of our + era. +</pre> + <p> + How long did it take to bring this people out of savagery, and to build up + so many flourishing cities? The learned did not readily resign themselves + to a confession of ignorance on the subject. As they had depicted the + primordial chaos, the birth of the gods, and their struggles over the + creation, so they related unhesitatingly everything which had happened + since the creation of mankind, and they laid claim to being able to + calculate the number of centuries which lay between their own day and the + origin of things. The tradition to which most credence was attached in the + Greek period at Babylon, that which has been preserved for us in the + histories of Berossue, asserts that there was a somewhat long interval + between the manifestation of Oannes and the foundation of a dynasty. The + first king was Alros of Babylon, a Chaldan of whom nothing is related + except that he was chosen by the divinity himself to be a shepherd of the + people. He reigned for ten sari, amounting in all to 36,000 years; for the + saros is 3600 years, the ner 600 years, and the soss 60 years. + </p> + <p> + <a name="linkimage-0019" id="linkimage-0019"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/042.jpg" width="100%" + alt="042.jpg Two Fish-like Deities of the Chaldans. " /> + </div> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from an intaglio in the British Museum. +</pre> + <p> + After the death of Alros, his son Alaparos ruled for three sari, after + which Amillaros, of the city of Pantibibla, reigned thirteen sari. It was + under him that there issued from the Bed Sea a second Annedtos, + resembling Oannes in his semi-divine shape, half man and half fish. After + him Ammenon, also from Pantibibla, a Chaldaean, ruled for a term of twelve + sari; under him, they say, the mysterious Oannes appeared. Afterwards + Amelagaros of Pantibibla governed for eighteen sari; then Davos, the + shepherd from Pantibibla, reigned ten sari: under him there issued from + the Red Sea a fourth Annedtos, who had a form similar to the others, + being made up of man and fish. After him Bvedoranchos of Pantibibla + reigned for eighteen sari; in his time there issued yet another monster, + named Andaphos, from the sea. These various monsters developed carefully + and in detail that which Oannes had set forth in a brief way. Then + Amempsinos of Larancha, a Chalan, reigned ten sari; and Obartes, also a + Chaldan, of Larancha, eight sari. Finally, on the death of Obartes, his + son Xisuthros held the sceptre for eighteen sari. It was under him that + the great deluge took place. Thus ten kings are to be reckoned in all, and + the duration of their combined reigns amounts to one hundred and twenty + sari. From the beginning of the world to the Deluge they reckoned 691,200 + years, of which 259,200 had passed before the coming of Alros, and the + remaining 432,000 were generously distributed between this prince and his + immediate successors: the Greek and Latin writers had certainly a fine + occasion for amusement over these fabulous numbers of years which the + Chaldans assigned to the lives and reigns of their first kings. + </p> + <p> + Men in the mean time became wicked; they lost the habit of offering + sacrifices to the gods, and the gods, justly indignant at this negligence, + resolved to be avenged.* Now, Shamashnapishtim I was reigning at this time + in Shurippak, the “town of the ship:” he and all his family were saved, + and he related afterwards to one of his descendants how Ea had snatched + him from the disaster which fell upon his people.** “Shurippak, the city + which thou thyself knowest, is situated on the bank of the Euphrates; it + was already an ancient town when the hearts of the gods who resided in it + impelled them to bring the deluge upon it—the great gods as many as + they are; their father Anu, their counsellor Bel the warrior, their + throne-bearer Ninib, their prince Innugi. The master of wisdom, Ea, took + his seat with them,*** and, moved with pity, was anxious to warn + Shamashnapishtim, his servant, of the peril which threatened him;” but it + was a very serious affair to betray to a mortal a secret of heaven, and as + he did not venture to do so in a direct manner, his inventive mind + suggested to him an artifice. + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + * The account of Bcrossus implies this as a cause of the + Deluge, since he mentions the injunction imposed upon the + survivors by a mysterious voice to be henceforward + respectful towards the gods, [Greek word]. The Chalan + account considers the Deluge to have been sent as a + punishment upon men for their sins against the gods, since + it represents towards the end (cf. p. 52 of this History) Ea + as reproaching Bel for having confounded the innocent and + the guilty in one punishment. + + ** The name of this individual has been read in various + ways: Shamashnapishtim, “sun of life,” Sitnapishtim, “the + saved,” and Pirnapishtim. In one passage at least we find, + in place of Shamashnapishtim, the name or epithet of + Aclrakhasis, or by inversion Khasisadra, which appears to + signify “the very shrewd,” and is explained by the skill + with which he interpreted the oracle of Ea. Khasisadra is + most probably the form which the Greeks have transcribed by + Xisuthros, Sisuthros, Sisithes. + + *** The account of the Deluge covers the eleventh tablet of + the poem of Gilgames. The hero, threatened with death, + proceeds to rejoin his ancestor Shamashnapishtim to demand + from him the secret of immortality, and the latter tells him + the manner in which he escaped from the waters: he had saved + his life only at the expense of the destruction of men. The + text of it was published by Smith and by Haupt, fragment by + fragment, and then restored consecutively. The studies of + which it is the object would make a complete library. The + principal translations are those of Smith, of Oppert, of + Lenor-mant, of Haupt, of Jensen, of A. Jeremias, of + Sauveplane, and of Zimmern. +</pre> + <p> + <a name="linkimage-0020" id="linkimage-0020"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/045.jpg" width="100%" + alt="045.jpg Page With One of the Tablets Of The Deluge Series. " /> + </div> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Facsimile by Faucher-Gudin, from the photograph published by + G. Smith, Chaldan Account of the Deluge from terra-cotta + tablets found at Nineveh. +</pre> + <p> + He confided to a hedge of reeds the resolution that had been adopted:* + “Hedge, hedge, wall, wall! Hearken, hedge, and understand well, wall! Man + of Shurippak, son of Ubaratutu, construct a wooden house, build a ship, + abandon thy goods, seek life; throw away thy possessions, save thy life, + and place in the vessel all the seed of life. The ship which thou shalt + build, let its proportions be exactly measured, let its dimensions and + shape be well arranged, then launch it in the sea.” Shamashnapishtim heard + the address to the field of reeds, or perhaps the reeds repeated it to + him. “I understood it, and I said to my master Ea ‘The command, O my + master, which thou hast thus enunciated, I myself will respect it, and I + will execute it: but what shall I say to the town, the people and the + elders?’” Ea opened his mouth and spake; he said to his servant: “Answer + thus and say to them: ‘Because Bel hates me, I will no longer dwell in + your town, and upon the land of Bel I will no longer lay my head, but I + will go upon the sea, and will dwell with Ea my master. Now Bel will make + rain to fall upon you, upon the swarm of birds and the multitude of + fishes, upon all the animals of the field, and upon all the crops; but Ea + will give you a sign: the god who rules the rain will cause to fall upon + you, on a certain evening, an abundant rain. When the dawn of the next day + appears, the deluge will begin, which will cover the earth and drown all + living things.’” Shamashnapishtim repeated the warning to the people, but + the people refused to believe it, and turned him into ridicule. The work + went rapidly forward: the hull was a hundred and forty cubits long, the + deck one hundred and forty broad; all the joints were caulked with pitch + and bitumen. A solemn festival was observed at its completion, and the + embarkation began.** “All that I possessed I filled the ship with it all + that I had of silver, I filled it with it; all that I had of gold I filled + it with it, all that I had of the seed of life of every kind I filled it + with it; I caused all my family and my servants to go up into it; beasts + of the field, wild beasts of the field, I caused them to go up all + together. Shamash had given me a sign: ‘When the god who rules the rain, + in the evening shall cause an abundant rain to fall, enter into the ship + and close thy door.’ The sign was revealed: the god who rules the rain + caused to fall one night an abundant rain. The day, I feared its dawning; + I feared to see the daylight; I entered into the ship and I shut the door; + that the ship might be guided, I handed over to Buzur-Bel, the pilot, the + great ark and its fortunes.” + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + * The sense of this passage is far from being certain; I + have followed the interpretation proposed, with some + variations, by Pinches, by Haupt, and by Jensen. The + stratagem at once recalls the history of King Midas, and the + talking reeds which knew the secret of his ass’s ears. In + the version of Berossus, it is Kronos who plays the part + here assigned to Ea in regard to Xisuthros. + + ** The text is mutilated, and does not furnish enough + information to follow in every detail the building of the + ark. From what we can understand, the vessel of + Shamashnapishtim was a kind of immense kelek, decked, but + without masts or rigging of any sort. The text identifies + the festival celebrated by the hero before the embarkation + with the festival Akitu of Merodach, at Babylon, during + which “Nebo, the powerful son, sailed from Borsippa to + Babylon in the bark of the river Asmu, of beauty.” The + embarkation of Nebo and his voyage on the stream had + probably inspired the information according to which the + embarkation of Shamashnapishtim was made the occasion of a + festival Akitu, celebrated at Shurippak; the time of the + Babylonian festival was probably thought to coincide with + the anniversary of the Deluge. +</pre> + <p> + “As soon as the morning became clear, a black cloud arose from the + foundations of heaven. Bamman growled in its bosom; Nebo and Marduk ran + before it—ran like two throne-bearers over hill and dale. Nera the + Great tore up the stake to which the ark was moored. Ninib came up + quickly; he began the attack; the Anunnaki raised their torches and made + the earth to tremble at their brilliancy; the tempest of Ramman scaled the + heaven, changed all the light to darkness, flooded the earth like a lake.* + For a whole day the hurricane raged, and blew violently over the mountains + and over the country; the tempest rushed upon men like the shock of an + army, brother no longer beheld brother, men recognized each other no more. + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + * The progress of the tempest is described as the attack of + the gods, who had resolved on the destruction of men. Ramman + is the thunder which growls in the cloud; Nebo, Merodach, + Nera the Great (Nergal), and Ninib, denote the different + phases of the hurricane from the moment when the wind gets + up until it is at its height; the Anunnaki represent the + lightning which flashes carelessly across the heaven. +</pre> + <p> + <a name="linkimage-0021" id="linkimage-0021"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/048.jpg" width="100%" + alt="048.jpg Shamashnapishtim Shut Into the Ark. " /> + </div> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a Chalan intaglio. +</pre> + <p> + In heaven, the gods were afraid of the deluge;* they betook themselves to + flight, they clambered to the firmament of Anu; the gods, howling like + dogs, cowered upon the parapet.** Ishtar wailed like a woman in travail; + she cried out, “the lady of life, the goddess with the beautiful voice: + ‘The past returns to clay, because I have prophesied evil before the gods! + Prophesying evil before the gods, I have counselled the attack to bring my + men to nothing; and these to whom I myself have given birth, where are + they? Like the spawn of fish they encumber the sea! ‘The gods wept with + her over the affair of the Anunnaki;’ the gods, in the place where they + sat weeping, their lips were closed.” It was not pity only which made + their tears to flow: there were mixed up with it feelings of regret and + fears for the future. Mankind once destroyed, who would then make the + accustomed offerings? The inconsiderate anger of Bel, while punishing the + impiety of their creatures, had inflicted injury upon themselves. “Six + days and nights the wind continued, the deluge and the tempest raged. The + seventh day at daybreak the storm abated; the deluge, which had carried on + warfare like an army, ceased, the sea became calm and the hurricane + disappeared, the deluge ceased. I surveyed the sea with my eyes, raising + my voice; but all mankind had returned to clay, neither fields nor woods + could be distinguished.*** I opened the hatchway and the light fell upon + my face; I sank down, I cowered, I wept, and my tears ran down my cheeks + when I beheld the world all terror and all sea. At the end of twelve days, + a point of land stood up from the waters, the ship touched the land of + Nisir:**** the mountain of Nisir stopped the ship and permitted it to + float no longer. One day, two days, the mountain of Nisir stopped the ship + and permitted it to float no longer. + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + * The gods enumerated above alone took part in the drama of + the Deluge: they were the confederates and emissaries of + Bel. The others were present as spectators of the disaster, + and were terrified. + + ** The upper part of the mountain wall is here referred to, + upon which the heaven is supported. There was a narrow space + between the escarpment and the place upon which the vault of + the firmament rested: the Babylonian poet represented the + gods as crowded like a pack of hounds upon this parapet, and + beholding from it the outburst of the tempest and the + waters. + + ***The translation is uncertain: the text refers to a legend + which has not come down to us, in which Ishtar is related to + have counselled the destruction of men. + + **** The Anunnaki represent here the evil genii whom the + gods that produced the deluge had let loose, and whom + Ramman, Nebo, Merodach, Nergal, and Ninib, all the followers + of Bel, had led to the attack upon men: the other deities + shared the fears and grief of Ishtar in regard to the + ravages which these Anunnaki had brought about (cf. below, + pp. 141-143 of this History). +</pre> + <p> + Three days, four days, the mountain of Nisir* stopped the ship and + permitted it to float no longer. Five days, six days, the mountain of + Nisir stopped the ship and permitted it to float no longer. The seventh + day, at dawn, I took out a dove and let it go: the dove went, turned + about, and as there was no place to alight upon, came back. I took out a + swallow and let it go: the swallow went, turned about, and as there was no + place to alight upon, came back. I took out a raven and let it go: the + raven went, and saw that the water had abated, and came near the ship + flapping its wings, croaking, and returned no more.” Shamashnapishtim + escaped from the deluge, but he did not know whether the divine wrath was + appeased, or what would be done with him when it became known that he + still lived.** He resolved to conciliate the gods by expiatory ceremonies. + “I sent forth the inhabitants of the ark towards the four winds, I made an + offering, I poured out a propitiatory libation on the summit of the + mountain. I set up seven and seven vessels, and I placed there some + sweet-smelling rushes, some cedar-wood, and storax.” He thereupon + re-entered the ship to await there the effect of his sacrifice. + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + * I have adopted, in the translation of this difficult + passage, the meaning suggested by Haupt, according to which + it ought to be translated, “The field makes nothing more + than one with the mountain;” that is to say, “mountains and + fields are no longer distinguishable one from another.” I + have merely substituted for mountain the version wood, piece + of land covered with trees, which Jensen has suggested. + + ** The mountain of Nisir is replaced in the version of + Berossus by the Gordyan mountains of classical geography; a + passage of Assur-nazir-pal informs us that it was situated + between the Tigris and the Great Zab, according to Delitzsch + between 35 and 36 N. latitude. The Assyrian-speaking + people interpreted the name as <i>Salvation</i>, and a play upon + words probably decided the placing upon its slopes the + locality where those <i>saved</i> from the deluge landed on the + abating of the waters. Fr. Lenormant proposes to identify it + with the peak Rowandz. +</pre> + <p> + The gods, who no longer hoped for such a wind-fall, accepted the sacrifice + with a wondering joy. “The gods sniffed up the odour, the gods sniffed up + the excellent odour, the gods gathered like flies above the offering. + “When Ishtar, the mistress of life, came in her turn, she held up the + great amulet which Anu had made for her.” * She was still furious against + those who had determined upon the destruction of mankind, especially + against Bel: “These gods, I swear it on the necklace of my neck! I will + not forget them; these days I will remember, and will not forget them for + ever. Let the other gods come quickly to take part in the offering. Bel + shall have no part in the offering, for he was not wise: but he has caused + the deluge, and he has devoted my people to destruction.” Bel himself had + not recovered his temper: “When he arrived in his turn and saw the ship, + he remained immovable before it, and his heart was filled with rage + against the gods of heaven. ‘Who is he who has come out of it living? No + man must survive the destruction!’” The gods had everything to fear from + his anger: Ninib was eager to exculpate himself, and to put the blame upon + the right person. Ea did not disavow his acts: “he opened his mouth and + spake; he said to Bel the warrior: ‘Thou, the wisest among the gods, O + warrior, why wert thou not wise, and didst cause the deluge? The sinner, + make him responsible for his sin; the criminal, make him responsible for + his crime: but be calm, and do not cut off all; be patient, and do not + drown all. What was the good of causing the deluge? A lion had only to + come to decimate the people. What was the good of causing the deluge? A + leopard had only to come to decimate the people. What was the good of + causing the deluge? Famine had only to present itself to desolate the + country. What was the good of causing the deluge? Nera the Plague had only + to come to destroy the people. As for me, I did, not reveal the judgment + of the gods: I caused Khasisadra to dream a dream, and he became aware of + the judgment of the gods, and then he made his resolve.’” Bel was pacified + at the words of Ea: “he went up into the interior of the ship; he took + hold of my hand and made me go up, even me; he made my wife go up, and he + pushed her to my side; he turned our faces towards him, he placed himself + between us, and blessed us: ‘Up to this time Shamashnapishtim was a man: + henceforward let Shamashnapishtim and his wife be reverenced like us, the + gods, and let Shamashnapishtim dwell afar off, at the mouth of the seas, + and he carried us away and placed us afar off, at the mouth of the seas.’” + Another form of the legend relates that by an order of the god, Xisuthros, + before embarking, had buried in the town of Sippara all the books in which + his ancestors had set forth the sacred sciences—books of oracles and + omens, “in which were recorded the beginning, the middle, and the end. + When he had disappeared, those of his companions who remained on board, + seeing that he did not return, went out and set off in search of him, + calling him by name. He did not show himself to them, but a voice from + heaven enjoined upon them to be devout towards the gods, to return to + Babylon and dig up the books in order that they might be handed down to + future generations; the voice also informed them that the country in which + they were was Armenia. They offered sacrifice in turn, they regained their + country on foot, they dug up the books of Sippara and wrote many more; + afterwards they refounded Babylon.” It was even maintained in the time of + the Seleucido, that a portion of the ark existed on one of the summits of + the Gordyan mountains.** Pilgrimages were made to it, and the faithful + scraped off the bitumen which covered it, to make out of it amulets of + sovereign virtue against evil spells. + </p> + <p> + <a name="linkimage-0022" id="linkimage-0022"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/051.jpg" width="100%" + alt="051.jpg the Judi Mountains Sometimes Identified With Tub Ntsib Mountains. " /> + </div> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a sketch by G. Smith, <i>Assyrian + Discoveries</i>, p. 108. + + * We are ignorant of the object which the goddess lifted up: + it may have been the sceptre surmounted by a radiating star, + such as we see on certain cylinders. Several Assyriologists + translate it arrows or lightning. Ishtar is, in fact, an + armed goddess who throws the arrow or lightning made by her + father Anu, the heaven. + + ** Bekossus, fragm. xv. The legend about the remains of the + ark has passed into Jewish tradition concerning the Deluge. + Nicholas of Damascus relates, like Berossus, that they were + still to be seen on the top of Mount Baris. From that time + they have been continuously seen, sometimes on one peak and + sometimes on another. In the last century they were pointed + out to Chardin, and the memory of them has not died out in + our own century. Discoveries of charcoal and bitumen, such + as those made at Gebel Jud, upon one of the mountains + identified with Nisir, probably explain many of these local + traditions. +</pre> + <p> + The chronicle of these fabulous times placed, soon after the abating of + the waters, the foundation of a new dynasty, as extraordinary or almost as + extraordinary in character as that before the flood. According to Berossus + it was of Chaldan origin, and comprised eighty-six kings, who bore rule + during 34,080 years; the first two, Evechous and Khomasbelos, reigned 2400 + and 2700 years, while the later reigns did not exceed the ordinary limits + of human life. An attempt was afterwards made to harmonize them with + probability: the number of kings was reduced to six, and their combined + reigns to 225 years. This attempt arose from a misapprehension of their + true character; names and deeds, everything connected with them belongs to + myth and fiction only, and is irreducible to history proper. They supplied + to priests and poets material for scores of different stories, of which + several have come down to us in fragments. Some are short, and serve as + preambles to prayers or magical formulas; others are of some length, and + may pass for real epics. The gods intervene in them, and along with kings + play an important part. It is Nera, for instance, the lord of the plague, + who declares war against mankind in order to punish them for having + despised the authority of Anu. He makes Babylon to feel his wrath first: + “The children of Babel, they were as birds, and the bird-catcher, thou + wert he! thou takest them in the net, thou enclosest them, thou decimatest + them—hero Nera!” One after the other he attacks the mother cities of + the Euphrates and obliges them to render homage to him—even Uruk, + “the dwelling of Anu and Ishtar—the town of the priestesses, of the + <i>almehs</i>, and the sacred courtesans; “then he turns upon the foreign + nations and carries his ravages as far as Phoenicia. In other fragments, + the hero Etana makes an attempt to raise himself to heaven, and the eagle, + his companion, flies away with him, without, however, being able to bring + the enterprise to a successful issue. Nimrod and his exploits are known to + us from the Bible.* “He was a mighty hunter before the Lord: wherefore it + is said, Even as Nimrod the mighty hunter before the Lord. And the + beginning of his kingdom was Babel, and Erech, and Accad, and Calneh, in + the land of Shinar.” Almost all the characteristics which are attributed + by Hebrew tradition to Nimrod we find in G-ilgames, King of Uruk and + descendant of the Shamashnapishtim who had witnessed the deluge.** + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + * Genesis x. 9, 10. Among the Jews and Mussulmans a complete + cycle of legends have developed around Nimrod. He built the + Tower of Babel; he threw Abraham into a fiery furnace, and + he tried to mount to heaven on the back of an eagle. Sayce + and Grivel saw in Nimrod an heroic form of Merodach, the god + of Babylonia: the majority of living Assyriologists prefer + to follow Smith’s example, and identify him with the hero + Gilgames. + + ** The name of this hero is composed of three signs, which + Smith provisionally rendered Isdubar—a reading which, + modified into Gishdhubar, Gistubar, is still retained by + many Assyriologists. There have been proposed one after + another the renderings Dhubar, Namrdu, Anamarutu, Numarad, + Namrasit, all of which exhibit in the name of the hero that + of Nimrod. Pinches discovered, in 1890, what appears to be + the true signification of the three signs,Gilgamesh, + Gilgames; Sayce and Oppert have compared this name with that + of Gilgamos, a Babylonian hero, of whom. lian has preserved + the memory. A. Jeremias continued to reject both the reading + and the identification. +</pre> + <p> + Several copies of a poem, in which an unknown scribe had celebrated his + exploits, existed about the middle of the VIIth century before our era in + the Royal Library at Nineveh; they had been transcribed by order of + Assur-banipal from a more ancient copy, and the fragments of them which + have come down to us, in spite of their lacunae, enable us to restore the + original text, if not in its entirety, at least in regard to the + succession of events. They were divided into twelve episodes corresponding + with the twelve divisions of the year, and the ancient Babylonian author + was guided in his choice of these divisions by something more than mere + chance. Gilgames, at first an ordinary mortal under the patronage of the + gods, had himself become a god and son of the goddess Aruru: “he had seen + the abyss, he had learned everything that is kept secret and hidden, he + had even made known to men what had taken place before the deluge.” The + sun, who had protected him in his human condition, had placed him beside + himself on the judgment-seat, and delegated to him authority to pronounce + decisions from which there was no appeal: he was, as it were, a sun on a + small scale, before whom the kings, princes, and great ones of the earth + humbly bowed their heads.* The scribes had, therefore, some authority for + treating the events of his life after the model of the year, and for + expressing them in twelve chants, which answered to the annual course of + the sun through the twelve months. + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + * The identity of Gilgames with the Accadian fire-god, or + rather with the sun, was recognized from the first by H. + Rawlinson, and has been accepted since by almost all + Assyriologists. A tablet brought back by G. Smith, called + attention to by Fr. Delitzsch, and published by Haupt, + contains the remains of a hymn addressed to Gilgames, “the + powerful king, the king of the Spirits of the Earth.” + </pre> + <p> + The whole story is essentially an account of his struggles with Ishtar, + and the first pages reveal him as already at issue with the goddess. His + portrait, such as the monuments have preserved it for us, is singularly + unlike the ordinary type: one would be inclined to regard it as + representing an individual of a different race, a survival of some very + ancient nation which had held rule on the plains of the Euphrates before + the arrival of the Sumerian or Semitic* tribes. + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + * Smith (The Chaldan Account of Genesis, p. 194) remarked + the difference between the representations of Gilgames and + the typical Babylonian: he concluded from this that the hero + was of Ethiopian origin. Hommel declares that his features + have neither a Sumerian nor Semitic aspect, and that they + raise an insoluble question in ethnology. +</pre> + <p> + <a name="linkimage-0023" id="linkimage-0023"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="figleft" style="width:30%;"> + <img width="100%" src="images/057.jpg" + alt="057.jpg Gilgames Strangles a Lion. " /> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> +Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, +from an Assyrian bas-relief +from Khorsabad, in the +Museum of the Louvre +</pre> + </div> + <p> + His figure is tall, broad, muscular to an astonishing degree, and + expresses at once vigour and activity; his head is massive, bony, almost + square, with a somewhat flattened face, a large nose, and prominent + cheek-bones, the whole framed by an abundance of hair, and a thick beard + symmetrically curled. All the young men of Uruk, the well-protected, were + captivated by the prodigious strength and beauty of the hero; the elders + of the city betook themselves to Ishtar to complain of the state of + neglect to which the young generation had relegated them. “He has no + longer a rival in their hearts, but thy subjects are led to battle, and + Gilgames does not send one child back to his father. Night and day they + cry after him: ‘It is he the shepherd of Uruk, the well-protected, he is + its shepherd and master, he the powerful, the perfect and the wise.’” Even + the women did not escape the general enthusiasm: “he leaves not a single + virgin to her mother, a single daughter to a warrior, a single wife to her + master. Ishtar heard their complaint, the gods heard it, and cried with a + loud voice to Aruru: ‘It is thou, Aruru, who hast given him birth; create + for him now his fellow, that he may be able to meet him on a day when it + pleaseth him, in order that they may fight with each other and Uruk may be + delivered.‘When Aruru heard them, she created in her heart a man of Anu. + Aruru washed her hands, took a bit of clay, cast it upon the earth, + kneaded it and created Babani, the warrior, the exalted scion, the man of + Ninib, whose whole body is covered with hair, whose tresses are as long as + those of a woman; the locks of his hair bristle on his head like those on + the corn-god; he is clad in a vestment like that of the god of the fields; + he browses with the gazelles, he quenches his thirst with the beasts of + the field, he sports with the beasts of the waters.” Frequent + representations of Eabani are found upon the monuments; he has the horns + of a goat, the legs and tail of a bull.* He possessed not only the + strength of a brute, but his intelligence also embraced all things, the + past and the future: he would probably have triumphed over Gilgames if + Shamash had not succeeded in attaching them to one another by an + indissoluble tie of friendship. The difficulty was to draw these two + future friends together, and to bring them face to face without their + coming to blows; the god sent his courier Sadu, the hunter, to study the + habits of the monster, and to find out the necessary means to persuade him + to come down peaceably to Uruk. “Sadu, the hunter, proceeded to meet + Eabani near the entrance of the watering-place. One day, two days, three + days, Eabani met him at the entrance of the watering-place. He perceived + Sadu, and his countenance darkened: he entered the enclosure, he became + sad, he groaned, he cried with a loud voice, his heart was heavy, his + features were distorted, sobs burst from his breast. The hunter saw from a + distance that his face was inflamed with anger,” and judging it more + prudent not to persevere farther in his enterprise, returned to impart to + the god what he had observed. + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + * Smith was the first, I believe, to compare his form to + that of a satyr or faun; this comparison is rendered more + probable by the fact that the modern inhabitants of Chalda + believe in the existence of similar monsters. A. Jeremias + places Eabani alongside Priapus, who is generally a god of + the fields, and a clever soothsayer. Following out these + ideas, we might compare our Eabani with the Graico-Roman + Proteus, who pastures the flocks of the sea, and whom it was + necessary to pursue and seize by force or cunning words to + compel him to give oracular predictions. +</pre> + <p> + <a name="linkimage-0024" id="linkimage-0024"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/060.jpg" width="100%" + alt="060.jpg Gilgames Fights, on the Left With a Bull, On The Right With Eabani. " /> + </div> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a Chaldan intaglio in the + Museum at the Hague. The original measures about 1 7/10 inch + in height. +</pre> + <p> + “I was afraid,” said he, in finishing his narrative,* “and I did not + approach him. He had filled up the pit which I had dug to trap him, he + broke the nets which I had spread, he delivered from my hands the cattle + and the beasts of the field, he did not allow me to search the country + through.” Shamash thought that where the strongest man might fail by the + employment of force, a woman might possibly succeed by the attractions of + pleasure; he commanded Sadu to go quickly to Uruk and there to choose + from among the priestesses of Ishtar one of the most beautiful.** The + hunter presented himself before Grilgames, recounted to him his + adventures, and sought his permission to take away with him one of the + sacred courtesans. “‘Go, my hunter, take the priestess; when the beasts + come to the watering-place, let her display her beauty; he will see her, + he will approach her, and his beasts that troop around him will be + scattered.’”*** The hunter went, he took with him the priestess, he took + the straight road; the third day they arrived at the fatal plain. The + hunter and the priestess sat down to rest; one day, two days, they sat at + the entrance of the watering-place from whose waters Eabani drank along + with the animals, where he sported with the beasts of the water. + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + * Haupt, Das Babylonische Nimrodepos, p. 9, 11. 42-50. The + beginning of each line is destroyed, and the translation of + the whole is only approximate. + + ** The priestesses of Ishtar were young and beautiful women, + devoted to the service of the goddess and her worshippers. + Besides the title <i>qadishtu,</i> priestess, they bore various + names, <i>kizireti, ukhati, kharimti</i>; the priestess who + accompanied Sadu was an <i>ukhat</i>. + + *** As far as can be guessed from the narrative, interrupted + as it is by so many lacun, the power of Eabani over the + beasts of the field seems to have depended on his + continence. From the moment in which he yields to his + passions the beasts fly from him as they would do from an + ordinary mortal; there is then no other resource for him but + to leave the solitudes to live among men in towns. This + explains the means devised by Shamash against him: cf. in + the <i>Arabian Nights</i> the story of Shehabeddin. +</pre> + <p> + “When Eabani arrived, he who dwells in the mountains, and who browses upon + the grass like the gazelles, who drinks with the animals, who sports with + the beasts of the water, the priestess saw the satyr.” She was afraid and + blushed, but the hunter recalled her to her duty. “It is he, priestess. + Undo thy garment, show him thy form, that he may be taken with thy beauty; + be not ashamed, but deprive him of his soul. He perceives thee, he is + rushing towards thee, arrange thy garment; he is coming upon thee, receive + him with every art of woman; his beasts which troop around him will be + scattered, and he will press thee to his breast.” The priestess did as she + was commanded; she received him with every art of woman, and he pressed + her to his breast. Six days and seven nights, Eabani remained near the + priestess, his well-beloved. When he got tired of pleasure he turned his + face towards his cattle, and he saw that the gazelles had turned aside and + that the beasts of the field had fled far from him. Eabani was alarmed, he + fell into a swoon, his knees became stiff because his cattle had fled from + him. While he lay as if dead, he heard the voice of the priestess: he + recovered his senses, he came to himself full of love; he seated himself + at the feet of the priestess, he looked into her face, and while the + priestess spoke his ears listened. For it was to him the priestess spoke—to + him, Eabani. “Thou who art superb, Eabani, as a god, why dost thou live + among the beasts of the field? Come, I will conduct thee to Uruk the + well-protected, to the glorious house, the dwelling of Anu and Ishtar—to + the place where is Gilgames, whose strength is supreme, and who, like a + Urus, excels the heroes in strength.” While she thus spoke to him, he hung + upon her words, he the wise of heart, he realized by anticipation a + friend. Eabani said to the priestess: “Let us go, priestess; lead me to + the glorious and holy abode of Anu and Ishtar—to the place where is + Gilgames, whose strength is supreme, and who, like a Urus, prevails over + the heroes by his strength. I will fight with him and manifest to him my + power; I will send forth a panther against Uruk, and he must struggle with + it.” * The priestess conducted her prisoner to Uruk, but the city at that + moment was celebrating the festival of Tammuz, and Gilgames did not care + to interrupt the solemnities in order to face the tasks to which Eabani + had invited him: what was the use of such trials since the gods themselves + had deigned to point out to him in a dream the line of conduct he was to + pursue, and had taken up the cause of their children. Shamash, in fact, + began the instruction of the monster, and sketched an alluring picture of + the life which awaited him if he would agree not to return to his mountain + home. Not only would the priestess belong to him for ever, having none + other than him for husband, but Gilgames would shower upon him riches and + honours. “He will give thee wherein to sleep a great bed cunningly + wrought; he will seat thee on his divan, he will give thee a place on his + left hand, and the princes of the earth shall kiss thy feet, the people of + Uruk shall grovel on the ground before thee.” It was by such flatteries + and promises for the future that Gilgames gained the affection of his + servant Eabani, whom he loved for ever. + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + * I have softened down a good deal the account of the + seduction, which is described with a sincerity and precision + truly primitive. +</pre> + <p> + Shamash had reasons for being urgent. Khumbaba, King of Elam, had invaded + the country of the Euphrates, destroyed the temples, and substituted for + the national worship the cult of foreign deities;* the two heroes in + concert could alone check his advance, and kill him. They collected their + troops, set out on the march, having learned from a female magician that + the enemy had concealed himself in a sacred grove. They entered it in + disguise, “and stopped in rapture for a moment before the cedar trees; + they contemplated the height of them, they contemplated the thickness of + them; the place where Khumbaba was accustomed to walk up and down with + rapid strides, alleys were made in it, paths kept up with great care. They + saw at length the hill of cedars, the abode of the gods, the sanctuary of + Irnini, and before the hill, a magnificent cedar, and pleasant grateful + shade.” They surprised Khumbaba at the moment when he was about to take + his outdoor exercise, cut off his head, and came back in triumph to + Uruk.** “Gilgames brightened his weapons, he polished his weapons. He put + aside his war-harness, he put on his white garments, he adorned himself + with the royal insignia, and bound on the diadem: Gilgames put his tiara + on his head, and bound on his diadem.” + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + * Khumbaba contains the name of the Elamite god, Khumba, + whichenters into the composition of names of towns, like Ti- + Khumbi; or into those of princes, as Khumbanigash, + Khumbasundasa, Khumbasidh. The comparison between Khumbaba + and Combabos, the hero of a singular legend, current in the + second century of our era, does not seem to be admissible, + at least for the present. The names agree well in sound, + but, as Oppert has rightly said, no event in the history of + Combabos finds a counterpart in anything we know of that of + Khumbaba up to the present. + + ** G. Smith places at this juncture Gilgames’s accession to + the throne; this is not confirmed by the fragments of the + text known up to the present, and it is not even certain + that the poem relates anywhere the exaltation and coronation + of the hero. It would appear even that Gilgames is + recognized from the beginning as King of Uruk, the well- + protected. +</pre> + <p> + Ishtar saw him thus adorned, and the same passion consumed her which + inflames mortals.* “To the love of Gilgames she raised her eyes, the + mighty Ishtar, and she said, ‘Come, Gilgames, be my husband, thou! Thy + love, give it to me, as a gift to me, and thou shalt be my spouse, and I + shall be thy wife. I will place thee in a chariot of lapis and gold, with + golden wheels and mountings of onyx: thou shalt be drawn in it by great + lions, and thou shalt enter our house with the odorous incense of + cedar-wood. When thou shalt have entered our house, all the country by the + sea shall embrace thy feet, kings shall bow down before thee, the nobles + and the great ones, the gifts of the mountains and of the plain they will + bring to thee as tribute. Thy oxen shall prosper, thy sheep shall be + doubly fruitful, thy mules shall spontaneously come under the yoke, thy + chariot-horse shall be strong and shall galop, thy bull under the yoke + shall have no rival.’” Gilgames repels this unexpected declaration with a + mixed feeling of contempt and apprehension: he abuses the goddess, and + insolently questions her as to what has become of her mortal husbands + during her long divine life. “Tammuz, the spouse of thy youth, thou hast + condemned him to weep from year to year.** Nilala, the spotted + sparrow-hawk, thou lovedst him, afterward thou didst strike him and break + his wing: he continues in the wood and cries: ‘O, my wings!’ *** Thou didst + afterwards love a lion of mature strength, and then didst cause him to be + rent by blows, seven at a time.**** Thou lovedst also a stallion + magnificent in the battle; thou didst devote him to death by the goad and + whip: thou didst compel him to galop for ten leagues, thou didst devote + him to exhaustion and thirst, thou didst devote to tears his mother + Silili. + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + * Ishtar’s declaration to Gilgames and the hero’s reply have + been frequently translated and summarized since the + discovery of the poem. Smith thought to connect this episode + with the “Descent of Ishtar to Hades,” which we shall meet + with further on in this History, but his opinion is no + longer accepted. The “Descent of Ishtar” in its present + condition is the beginning of a magical formula: it has + nothing to do with the acts of Gilgames. + + ** Tammuz-Adonis is the only one known to us among this long + list of the lovers of the goddess. The others must have been + fairly celebrated among the Chaldans, since the few words + devoted to each is sufficient to recall them to the memory + of the reader, but we have not as yet found anything + bearing upon their adventures in the table of the ancient + Chaldo-Assyrian classics, which had been copied out by a + Ninevite scribe for the use of Assur-bani-pal, the title of + the poems is wanting. + + *** The text gives <i>kapp</i>, and the legend evidently refers + to a bird whose cry resembles the word meaning “my + wings.” The spotted sparrow-hawk utters a cry which may be + strictly understood and interpreted in this way. + + **** This is evidently the origin of our fable of the + “Amorous Lion.” + </pre> + <p> + Thou didst also love the shepherd Tabulu, who lavished incessantly upon + thee the smoke of sacrifices, and daily slaughtered goats to thee; thou + didst strike him and turn him into a leopard; his own servants went in + pursuit of him, and his dogs followed his trail.* Thou didst love + Ishullanu, thy father’s gardener, who ceaselessly brought thee presents of + fruit, and decorated every day thy table. Thou raisedst thine eyes to him, + thou seizedst him: ‘My Ishullanu, we shall eat melons, then shalt thou + stretch forth thy hand and remove that which separates us.’ Ishullanu said + to thee: ‘I, what dost thou require from me? O my mother, prepare no food + for me, I myself will not eat: anything I should eat would be for me a + misfortune and a curse, and my body would be stricken by a mortal + coldness.’ Then thou didst hear him and didst become angry, thou didst + strike him, thou didst transform him into a dwarf, thou didst set him up + on the middle of a couch; he could not rise up, he could not get down from + where he was. Thou lovest me now, afterwards thou wilt strike me as thou + didst these.” ** + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + * The changing of a lover, by the goddess or sorceress + who loves him, into a beast, occurs pretty frequently in + Oriental tales; as to the man changed by Ishtar into a + brute, which she caused to be torn by his own hounds, we may + compare the classic story of Artemis surprised at her bath + by Actseon. + + ** As to the misfortune of Ishullanu, we may compare the + story in the <i>Abrabian Nights</i> of the Fisherman and the + Genie shut up in the leaden bottle. The king of the Black + Islands was transformed into a statue from the waist to the + feet by the sorceress, whom he had married and afterwards + offended; he remained lying on a bed, from which he could + not get down, and the unfaithful one came daily to whip him. +</pre> + <p> + “When Ishtar heard him, she fell into a fury, she ascended to heaven. The + mighty Ishtar presented herself before her father Anu, before her mother + Anatu she presented herself, and said: ‘My father, Grilgames has despised + me. Grilgames has enumerated my unfaithfulnesses, my unfaithfulnesses and + my ignominies.’ Anu opened his mouth and spake to the mighty Ishtar: + ‘Canst thou not remain quiet now that Gilgames has enumerated to thee thy + unfaithfulnesses, thy unfaithfulnesses and ignominies?’” But she refused + to allow the outrage to go unpunished. She desired her father to make a + celestial urus who would execute her vengeance on the hero; and, as he + hesitated, she threatened to destroy every living thing in the entire + universe by suspending the impulses of desire, and the effect of love. Anu + finally gives way to her rage: he creates a frightful urus, whose ravages + soon rendered uninhabitable the neighbourhood of Uruk the well-protected. + The two heroes, Gilgames and Eabani, touched by the miseries and terror of + the people, set out on the chase, and hastened to rouse the beast from its + lair on the banks of the Euphrates in the marshes, to which it resorted + after each murderous onslaught. + </p> + <p> + <a name="linkimage-0025" id="linkimage-0025"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/068.jpg" width="100%" + alt="068.jpg Gilgames and Eabani Fighting With Monsters. " /> + </div> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a Chaldan intaglio in the New + York Museum. The original is about an inch and a half in + height. +</pre> + <p> + A troop of three hundred valiant warriors penetrated into the thickets in + three lines to drive the animal towards the heroes. The beast with head + lowered charged them; but Eabani seized it with one hand by the right + horn, and with the other by the tail, and forced it to rear. Gilgames at + the same instant, seizing it by the leg, plunged his dagger into its + heart. The beast being despatched, they celebrated their victory by a + sacrifice of thanksgiving, and poured out a libation to Sharnash, whose + protection had not failed them in this last danger. Ishtar, her projects + of vengeance having been defeated, “ascended the ramparts of Uruk the + well-protected. She sent forth a loud cry, she hurled forth a malediction: + ‘Cursed be Gilgames, who has insulted me, and who has killed the celestial + urus.’ Eabani heard these words of Ishtar, he tore a limb from the + celestial urus and threw it in the face of the goddess: ‘Thou also I will + conquer, and I will treat thee like him: I will fasten the curse upon thy + sides.’ Ishtar assembled her priestesses, her female votaries, her + frenzied women, and together they intoned a dirge over the limb of the + celestial urus. Gilgames assembled all the turners in ivory, and the + workmen were astonished at the enormous size of the horns; they were worth + thirty <i>mim</i> of lapis, their diameter was a half-cubit, and both of + them could contain six measures of oil.” He dedicated them to Shamash, and + suspended them on the corners of the altar; then he washed his hands in + the Euphrates, re-entered Uruk, and passed through the streets in triumph. + A riotous banquet ended the day, but on that very night Eabani felt + himself haunted by an inexplicable and baleful dream, and fortune + abandoned the two heroes. Gilgames had cried in the intoxication of + success to the women of Uruk: “Who shines forth among the valiant? Who is + glorious above all men? Gilgames shines forth among the valiant, Gilgames + is glorious above all men.” Ishtar made him feel her vengeance in the + destruction of that beauty of which he was so proud; she covered him with + leprosy from head to foot, and made him an object of horror to his friends + of the previous day. A life of pain and a frightful death—he alone + could escape them who dared to go to the confines of the world in quest of + the Fountain of Youth and the Tree of Life which were said to be there + hidden; but the road was rough, unknown, beset by dangers, and no one of + those who had ventured upon it had ever returned. Gilgames resolved to + brave every peril rather than submit to his fate, and proposed this fresh + adventure to his friend Eabani, who, notwithstanding his sad forebodings, + consented to accompany him. They killed a tiger on the way, but Eabani was + mortally wounded in a struggle in which they engaged in the neighbourhood + of Nipur, and breathed his last after an agony of twelve days’ duration. + </p> + <p> + “Gilgames wept bitterly over his friend Eabani, grovelling on the bare + earth.” The selfish fear of death struggled in his spirit with regret at + having lost so dear a companion, a tried friend in so many encounters. “I + do not wish to die like Eabani: sorrow has entered my heart, the fear of + death has taken possession of me, and I am overcome. But I will go with + rapid steps to the strong Shamashnapishtim, son of Ubaratutu, to learn + from him how to become immortal.” He leaves the plain of the Euphrates, he + plunges boldly into the desert, he loses himself for a whole day amid + frightful solitudes. “I reached at nightfall a ravine in the mountain, I + beheld lions and trembled, but I raised my face towards the moon-god, and + I prayed: my supplication ascended even to the father of the gods, and he + extended over me his protection.” A vision from on high revealed to him + the road he was to take. With axe and dagger in hand, he reached the + entrance of a dark passage leading into the mountain of Mshu,* “whose + gate is guarded day and night by supernatural beings.” + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + * The land of Mshu is the land to the west of the + Euphrates, coterminous on one part with the northern regions + of the Red Sea, on the other with the Persian Gulf; the name + appears to be preserved in that of the classic Mesene, and + possibly in the land of Massa of the Hebrews. +</pre> + <p> + <a name="linkimage-0026" id="linkimage-0026"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/071.jpg" width="100%" + alt="071.jpg the Scorpion-men of The Mountains Of Mshu. " /> + </div> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from an Assyrian intaglio. +</pre> + <p> + “The scorpion-men, of whom the stature extends upwards as far as the + supports of heaven, and of whom the breasts descend as low as Hades, guard + the door. The terror which they inspire strikes down like a thunderbolt; + their look kills, their splendour confounds and overturns the mountains; + they watch over the sun at his rising and setting. Grilgames perceived + them, and his features were distorted with fear and horror; their savage + appearance disturbed his mind. The scorpion-man said to his wife: ‘He who + comes towards us, his body is marked by the gods.‘* The scorpion-woman + replied to him: ‘In his mind he is a god, in his mortal covering he is a + man.’ The scorpion-man spoke and said: ‘It is as the father of the gods, + has commanded, he has travelled over distant regions before joining us, + thee and me.’” Gilgames learns that the guardians are not evilly disposed + towards him, and becomes reassured, tell them his misfortunes and implores + permission to pass beyond them so as to reach “Sha-mashnapishtim, his + father, who was translated to the gods, and who has at his disposal both + life and death.” The scorpion-man in vain shows to him the perils before + him, of which the horrible darkness enveloping the Mshu mountains is not + the least: Gilgames proceeds through the depths of the darkness for long + hours, and afterwards comes out in the neighbourhood of a marvellous + forest upon the shore of the ocean which encircles the world. One tree + especially excites his wonder: “As soon as he sees it he runs towards it. + Its fruits are so many precious stones, its boughs are splendid to look + upon, for the branches are weighed down with lapis, and their fruits are + superb.” When his astonishment had calmed down, Gilgames begins to grieve, + and to curse the ocean which stays his steps. “Sabitu, the virgin who is + seated on the throne of the seas,” perceiving him from a distance, retires + at first to her castle, and barricades herself within it. He calls out to + her from the strand, implores and threatens her in turn, adjures her to + help him in his voyage. “If it can be done, I will cross the sea; if it + cannot be done, I will lay me down on the land to die.” The goddess is at + length touched by his tears. “Gilgames, there has never been a passage + hither, and no one from time immemorial has been able to cross the sea. + Shamash the valiant crossed the sea; after Shamash, who can cross it? The + crossing is troublesome, the way difficult, perilous the Water of Death, + which, like a bolt, is drawn between thee and thy aim. Even if, Gilgames, + thou didst cross the sea, what wouldest thou do on arriving at the Water + of Death?” Arad-Ea, Shamashnapishtim’s mariner, can alone bring the + enterprise to a happy ending: “if it is possible, thou shalt cross the sea + with him; if it is not possible, thou shalt retrace thy steps.” + </p> + <p> + * We must not forget that Gilgames is covered with leprosy; this is the + disease with which the Chaldan gods mark their enemies when they wish to + punish them in a severe fashion. + </p> + <p> + <a name="linkimage-0027" id="linkimage-0027"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/073.jpg" width="100%" + alt="073.jpg Gilgames and Arad-ea Navigating Their Vessel. " /> + </div> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a Chaldan intaglio in the + British Museum. The original measures a little over an inch. +</pre> + <p> + Arad-Ea and the hero took ship: forty days’ tempestuous cruising brought + them to the Waters of Death, which with a supreme effort they passed. + Beyond these they rested on their oars and loosed their girdles: the happy + island rose up before them, and Shamashnapishtim stood upon the shore, + ready to answer the questions of his grandson. + </p> + <p> + None but a god dare enter his mysterious paradise: the bark bearing an + ordinary mortal must stop at some distance from the shore, and the + conversation is carried on from on board. Gilgames narrated once more the + story of his life, and makes known the object of his visit; + Shamashnapishtim answers him stoically that death follows from an + inexorable law, to which it is better to submit with a good grace. + “However long the time we shall build houses, however long the time we + shall put our seal to contracts, however long the time brothers shall + quarrel with each other, however long the time there shall be hostility + between kings, however long the time rivers shall overflow their banks, we + shall not be able to portray any image of death. When the spirits salute a + man at his birth, then the genii of the earth, the great gods, Mamitu the + moulder of destinies, all of them together assign a fate to him, they + determine for him his life and death; but the day of his death remains + unknown to him.” Gilgames thinks, doubtless, that his forefather is + amusing himself at his expense in preaching resignation, seeing that he + himself had been able to escape this destiny. “I look upon thee, + Shamashnapishtim, and thy appearance has not changed: thou art like me and + not different, thou art like me and I am like thee. Thou wouldest be + strong enough of heart to enter upon a combat, to judge by thy appearance; + tell me, then, how thou hast obtained this existence among the gods to + which thou hast aspired?” Shamashnapishtim yields to his wish, if only to + show him how abnormal his own case was, and indicate the merits which had + marked him out for a destiny superior to that of the common herd of + humanity. He describes the deluge to him, and relates how he was able to + escape from it by the favour of Ea, and how by that of Bel he was made + while living a member of the army of the gods. “‘And now,’ he adds, ‘as + far as thou art concerned, which one of the Gods will bestow upon thee the + strength to obtain the life which thou seekest? Come, go to sleep!’ Six + days and seven nights he is as a man whose strength appears suspended, for + sleep has fallen upon him like a blast of wind. Shamashnapishtim spoke to + his wife: ‘Behold this man who asks for life, and upon whom sleep has + fallen like a blast of wind.’ The wife answers Shamashnapishtim, the man + of distant lands: ‘Cast a spell upon him, this man, and he will eat of the + magic broth; and the road by which he has come, he will retrace it in + health of body; and the great gate through which he has come forth, he + will return by it to his country.’ Shamashnapishtim spoke to his wife: + ‘The misfortunes of this man distress thee: very well, cook the broth, and + place it by his head.’ And while Gilgames still slept on board his vessel, + the material for the broth was gathered; on the second day it was picked, + on the third it was steeped, on the fourth Shamashnapishtim prepared his + pot, on the fifth he put into it ‘Senility,’ on the sixth the broth was + cooked, on the seventh he cast his spell suddenly on his man, and the + latter consumed the broth. Then Gilgames spoke to Shamashnapishtim, the + inhabitant of distant lands: ‘I hesitated, slumber laid hold of me; thou + hast cast a spell upon me, thou hast given me the broth.’” The effect + would not have been lasting, if other ceremonies had not followed in + addition to this spell from the sorcerer’s kitchen: Gilgames after this + preparation could now land upon the shore of the happy island and purify + himself there. Shamashnapishtim confided this business to his mariner + Arad-Ea: “‘The man whom thou hast brought, his body is covered with + ulcers, the leprous scabs have spoiled the beauty of his body. Take him, + Arad-Ea, lead him to the place of purification, let him wash his ulcers + white as snow in the water, let him get rid of his scabs, and let the sea + bear them away so that at length his body may appear healthy. He will then + change the fillet which binds his brows, and the loin-cloth which hides + his nakedness: until he returns to his country, until he reaches the end + of his journey, let him by no means put off the loin-cloth, however + ragged; then only shall he have always a clean one.’ Then Arad-Ea took him + and conducted him to the place of purification: he washed his ulcers white + as snow in the water, he got rid of his scabs, and the sea carried them + away, so that at length his body appeared healthy. He changed the fillet + which bound his brows, the loincloth which hid his nakedness: until he + should reach the end of his journey, he was not to put off the loin-cloth, + however ragged; then alone was he to have a clean one.” The cure effected, + Gilgames goes again on board his bark, and returns to the place where + Shamashnapishtim was awaiting him. + </p> + <p> + Shamashnapishtim would not send his descendant back to the land of the + living without making him a princely present. “His wife spoke to him, to + him Shamashnapishtim, the inhabitant of distant lands: ‘Gilgames has come, + he is comforted, he is cured; what wilt thou give to him, now that he is + about to return to his country?’ He took the oars, Gilgames, he brought + the bark near the shore, and Shamashnapishtim spoke to him, to Gilgames: + ‘Gilgames, thou art going from here comforted; what shall I give thee, now + that thou art about to return to thy country? I am about to reveal to + thee, Gilgames, a secret, and the judgment of the gods I am about to tell + it thee. There is a plant similar to the hawthorn in its flower, and whose + thorns prick like the viper. If thy hand can lay hold of that plant + without being torn, break from it a branch, and bear it with thee; it will + secure for thee an eternal youth.‘Gilgames gathers the branch, and in his + joy plans with Arad-Ea future enterprises: ‘Arad-Ea, this plant is the + plant of renovation, by which a man obtains life; I will bear it with me + to Uruk the well-protected, I will cultivate a bush from it, I will cut + some of it, and its name shall be, “the old man becomes young by it;” I + will eat of it, and I shall repossess the vigour of my youth.’” He + reckoned without the gods, whose jealous minds will not allow men to + participate in their privileges. The first place on which they set foot on + shore, “he perceived a well of fresh water, went down to it, and whilst he + was drawing water, a serpent came out of it, and snatched from him the + plant, yea—the serpent rushed out and bore away the plant, and while + escaping uttered a malediction. That day Gilgames sat down, he wept, and + his tears streamed down his cheeks he said to the mariner Arad-Ba: ‘What + is the use, Arad-Ea, of my renewed strength; what is the use of my heart’s + rejoicing in my return to life? It is not myself I have served; it is this + earthly lion I have served. Hardly twenty leagues on the road, and he for + himself alone has already taken possession of the plant. As I opened the + well, the plant was lost to me, and the genius of the fountain took + possession of it: who am I that I should tear it from him?’” He re-embarks + in sadness, he re-enters Uruk the well-protected, and at length begins to + think of celebrating the funeral solemnities of Eabani, to whom he was not + able to show respect at the time of his death. He supervises them, fulfils + the rites, intones the final chant: “The temples, thou shalt enter them no + more; the white vestments, thou shalt no longer put them on; the + sweet-smelling ointments, thou shalt no longer anoint thyself with them to + envelop thee with their perfume. Thou shalt no longer press thy bow to the + ground to bend it, but those that the bow has wounded shall surround thee; + thou no longer holdest thy sceptre in thy hand, but spectres fascinate + thee; thou no longer adornest thy feet with wings, thou no longer givest + forth a sound upon the earth. Thy wife whom thou lovedst thou embracest + her no more; thy wife whom thou hatedst thou beatest her no more. Thy + daughter whom thou lovedst thou embracest her no more; thy daughter whom + thou hatedst, thou beatest her no more. The resounding earth lies heavy + upon thee, she who is dark, she who is dark, Tjinazu the mother, she who + is dark, whose side is-not veiled with splendid vestments, whose bosom, + like a new-born animal, is not covered. Eabani has descended from the + earth to Hades; it is not the messenger of Nergal the implacable who has + snatched him away, it is not the plague which has carried him off, it is + not consumption that has carried him off, it is the earth which has + carried him off; it is not the field of battle which has carried him off, + it is the earth which has carried him off!” Gilgames dragged himself along + from temple to temple, repeating his complaint before Bel and before Sin, + and at length threw himself at the feet of the god of the Dead, Nergal: + “‘Burst open the sepulchral cavern, open the ground, that the spirit of + Eabani may issue from the soil like a blast of wind.’ As soon as Nergal + the valiant heard him, he burst open the sepulchral vault, he opened the + earth, he caused the spirit of Eabani to issue from the earth like a blast + of wind.” Gilgames interrogates him, and asks him with anxiety what the + state of the dead may be: “‘Tell, my friend, tell, my friend, open the + earth and what thou seest tell it.’—‘I cannot tell it thee, my + friend, I cannot tell it thee; if I should open the earth before thee, if + I were to tell to thee that which I have seen, terror would overthrow + thee, thou wouldest faint away, thou wouldest weep.’—‘Terror will + overthrow me, I shall faint away, I shall weep, but tell it to me.’” And + the ghost depicts for him the sorrows of the abode and the miseries of the + shades. Those only enjoy some happiness who have fallen with arms in their + hands, and who have been solemnly buried after the fight; the manes + neglected by their relatives succumb to hunger and thirst.* “On a sleeping + couch he lies, drinking pure water, he who has been killed in battle. + ‘Thou hast seen him?’—‘I have seen him; his father and his mother + support his head, and his wife bends over him wailing.’ ‘But he whose body + remains forgotten in the fields,—thou hast seen him?’—‘I have + seen him; his soul has no rest at all in the earth.’ ‘He whose soul no one + cares for,—thou hast seen him?’—‘I have seen him; the dregs of + the cup, the remains of a repast, that which is thrown among the refuse of + the street, that is what he has to nourish him.’” This poem did not + proceed in its entirety, or at one time, from the imagination of a single + individual. Each episode of it answers to some separate legend concerning + Gilgames, or the origin of Uruk the well-protected: the greater part + preserves under a later form an air of extreme antiquity, and, if the + events dealt with have not a precise bearing on the life of a king, they + paint in a lively way the vicissitudes of the life of the people.** These + lions, leopards, or gigantic uruses with which Grilgames and his faithful + Eabani carry on so fierce a warfare, are not, as is sometimes said, + mythological animals. + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + * Cf. vol. i. pp. 160, 161 of this History for analogous + ideas among the Egyptians as to the condition of the dead + who were neglected by their relatives: the Egyptian double + had to live on the same refuse as the Chaldan soul. + + ** G. Smith, identifying Gilgames with Nimrod, believes, on + the other hand, that Nimrod was a real king, who reigned in + Mesopotamia about 2250 B.C.; the poem contains, according to + him, episodes, more or less embellished, in the life of the + sovereign. +</pre> + <p> + Similar monsters, it was believed, appeared from time to time in the + marshes of Chalda, and gave proof of their existence to the inhabitants + of neighbouring villages by such ravages as real lions and tigers commit + in India or the Sahara. It was the duty of chiefs on the border lands of + the Euphrates, as on the banks of the Nile, as among all peoples still + sunk in semi-barbarism, to go forth to the attack of these beasts + single-handed, and to sacrifice themselves one after the other, until one + of them more fortunate or stronger than the rest should triumph over these + mischievous brutes. The kings of Babylon and Nineveh in later times + converted into a pleasure that which had been an official duty of their + early predecessors: Gilgames had not yet arrived at that stage, and the + seriousness, not to speak of the fear, with which he entered on the fight + with such beasts, is an evidence of the early date of the portions of his + history which are concerned with his hunting exploits. The scenes are + represented on the seals of princes who reigned prior to the year 3000 + B.C., and the work of the ancient engraver harmonizes so perfectly with + the description of the comparatively modern scribe that it seems like an + anticipated illustration of the latter; the engravings represent so + persistently and with so little variation the images of the monsters, and + those of Gilgames and his faithful Eabani, that the corresponding episodes + in the poem must have already existed as we know them, if not in form, at + least in their main drift. Other portions of the poem are more recent, and + it would seem that the expedition against Khumbaba contains allusions to + the Elamite* invasions from which Chalda had suffered so much towards the + XXth century before our era. The traditions which we possess of the times + following the Deluge, embody, like the adventures of Gilganes, very + ancient elements, which the scribes or narrators wove together in a more + or less skilful manner around the name of some king or divinity. + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + * Smith thought he could restore from the poem a part of + Chaldan history: he supposed Izdubar-Nimrod to have been, + about 2250, the liberator of Babylon, oppressed by Elam, and + the date of the foundation of a great Babylonian empire to + have coincided with his victory over the Elamites. The + annals of Assurbanipal show us, in fact, that an Elamite + king, Kudurnankhundi, had pillaged Uruk about 2280 B.C., and + had transported to Susa a statue of the goddess Ishtar. +</pre> + <p> + <a name="linkimage-0028" id="linkimage-0028"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/082.jpg" width="100%" + alt="082.jpg Gilgames Struggles With a Lion " /> + </div> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a Chaldan intaglio in the + British Museum. The original measures about 1 2/5 inch in + height. +</pre> + <p> + The fabulous chronicle of the cities of the Euphrates existed, therefore, + in a piecemeal condition—in the memory of the people or in the books + of the priests—before even their primitive history began; the + learned who collected it later on had only to select some of the materials + with which it furnished them, in order to form out of them a connected + narrative, in which the earliest ages were distinguished from the most + recent only in the assumption of more frequent and more direct + interpositions of the powers of heaven in the affairs of men. Every city + had naturally its own version, in which its own protecting deities, its + heroes and princes, played the most important parts. That of Babylon threw + all the rest into the shade; not that it was superior to them, but because + this city had speedily become strong enough to assert its political + supremacy over the whole region of the Euphrates. Its scribes were + accustomed to see their master treat the lords of other towns as subjects + or vassals. They fancied that this must have always been the case, and + that from its origin Babylon had been recognized as the queen-city to + which its contemporaries rendered homage. They made its individual annals + the framework for the history of the entire country, and from the + succession of its princely families on the throne, diverse as they were in + origin, they constructed a complete canon of the kings of Chalda. + </p> + <p> + But the manner of grouping the names and of dividing the dynasties varied + according to the period in which the lists were drawn up, and at the + present time we are in possession of at least two systems which the + Babylonian historians attempted to construct. Berossus, who communicated + one of them to the Greeks about the beginning of the IInd century B.C., + would not admit more than eight dynasties in the period of thirty-six + thousand years between the Deluge and the Persian invasion. The lists, + which he had copied from originals in the cuneiform character, have + suffered severely at the hands of his abbreviators, who omitted the + majority of the names which seemed to them very barbarous in form, while + those who copied these abbreviated lists have made such further havoc with + them that they are now for the most part unintelligible. Modern criticism + has frequently attempted to restore them, with varying results; the + reconstruction here given, which passes for the most probable, is not + equally certain in all its parts:—* + </p> + <p> + <a name="linkimage-0029" id="linkimage-0029"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/084.jpg" width="100%" alt="084.jpg Chronologic Table " /> + </div> + <p> + It was not without reason that Berossus and his authorities had put the + sum total of reigns at thirty-six thousand years; this number falls in + with a certain astrological period, during which the gods had granted to + the Chaldans glory, prosperity, and independence, and whose termination + coincided with the capture of Babylon by Cyrus.** Others before them had + employed the same artifice, but they reckoned ten dynasties in the place + of the eight accepted by Berossus:— + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + * After the example of G. B. Niebuhr, Gutschmid admitted + here, as Oppert did, 45 Assyrians; he based his view on + Herodotus, in which it is said that the Assyrians held sway + in Asia for 520 years, until its conquest by the Medes. Upon + the improbability of this opinion, see Schrader’s + demonstration. + + ** The existence of this astronomical or astrological scheme + on which Berossus founded his chronology, was pointed out by + Brandis, afterwards by Gutschmid; it is now generally + accepted. +</pre> + <p> + <a name="linkimage-0030" id="linkimage-0030"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/085.jpg" width="100%" alt="085.jpg Table " /> + </div> + <p> + Attempts have been made to bring the two lists* into harmony, with varying + results; in my opinion, a waste of time and labour. For even comparatively + recent periods of their history, the Chaldans, like the Egyptians, had to + depend upon a collection of certain abbreviated, incoherent, and often + contradictory documents, from which they found it difficult to make a + choice: they could not, therefore, always come to an agreement when they + wished to determine how many dynasties had succeeded each other during + these doubtful epochs, how many kings were included in each dynasty, and + what length of reign was to be assigned to each king. We do not know the + motives which influenced Berossus in his preference of one tradition over + others; perhaps he had no choice in the matter, and that of which he + constituted himself the interprter was the only one which was then known. + In any case, the tradition he followed forms a system which we cannot, + modify without misinterpreting the intention of those who drew it up or + who have handed it down to us. We must accept or reject it just as it is, + in its entirety and without alteration: to attempt to adapt it to the + testimony of the monuments would be equivalent to the creation of a new + system, and not to the correction simply of the old one. The right course + is to put it aside for the moment, and confine ourselves to the original + lists whose fragments have come down to us: they do not furnish us, it is + true, with a history of Chalda such as it unfolded itself from age to + age, but they teach us what the later Chaldans knew, or thought they + knew, of that history. Still it is wise to treat them with some reserve, + and not to forget that if they agree with each other in the main, they + differ frequently in details. Thus the small dynasties, which are called + the VIth and VIIth, include the same number of kings on both the tablets + which establish their existence, but the number of years assigned to the + names of the kings and the total years of each dynasty vary a little from + one another:— + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + * The first document having claim to the title of Royal + Canon was found among the tablets of the British Museum, and + was published by G. Smith. The others were successively + discovered by Pinches; some erroneous readings in them have + been corrected by Fr. Delitzsch, and an exact edition has + been published by Knudtzon. Smith’s list is the fragment of + a chronicle in which the VIth, VIIth, and VIIIth dynasties + only are almost complete. One of Pinches’s lists consists + merely of a number of royal names not arranged in any + consistent order, and containing their non-Semitic as well + as their Semitic forms. The other two lists are actual + canons, giving the names of the kings and the years of their + reigns; unfortunately they are much mutilated, and the + lacun in them cannot yet be filled up. All of them have + been translated by Sayce. +</pre> + <p> + <a name="linkimage-0031" id="linkimage-0031"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/086.jpg" width="100%" alt="086.jpg Table " /> + </div> + <p> + <a name="linkimage-0032" id="linkimage-0032"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/087.jpg" width="100%" alt="087.jpg Table " /> + </div> + <p> + Is the difference in the calculations the fault of the scribes, who, in + mechanically copying and recopying, ended by fatally altering the figures? + Or is it to be explained by some circumstance of which we are ignorant—an + association on the throne, of which the duration is at one time neglected + with regard to one of the co-regents, and at another time with regard to + the other; or was it owing to a question of legitimacy, by which, + according to the decision arrived at, a reign was prolonged or + abbreviated? Cotemporaneous monuments will some day, perhaps, enable us to + solve the problem which the later Chaldans did not succeed in clearing + up. While awaiting the means to restore a rigorously exact chronology, we + must be content with the approximate information furnished by the tablets + as to the succession of the Babylonian kings. + </p> + <p> + Actual history occupied but a small space in the lists—barely twenty + centuries out of a whole of three hundred and sixty: beyond the historic + period the imagination was given a free rein, and the few facts which were + known disappeared almost completely under the accumulation of mythical + narratives and popular stories. It was not that the documents were + entirely wanting, for the Chaldans took a great interest in their past + history, and made a diligent search for any memorials of it. Each time + they succeeded in disinterring an inscription from the ruins of a town, + they were accustomed to make-several copies of it, and to deposit them + among the archives, where they would be open to the examination of their + archaeologists.* When a prince undertook the rebuilding of a temple, he + always made excavations under the first courses of the ancient structure + in order to recover the documents which preserved the memory of its + foundation: if he discovered them, he recorded on the new cylinders, in + which he boasted of his own work, the name of the first builder, and + sometimes the number of years which had elapsed since its erection.** + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + * We have a considerable number of examples of copies of + ancient texts made in this manner. For instance, the + dedication of a temple at Uruk by King Singashid, copied by + the scribe Nabubalatsuikbi, son of Mizira (“the Egyptian + “), for the temple of Ezida; the legendary history of King + Sargon of Agad, copied from the inscription on the base of + his statue, of which there will be further mention (pp. 91- + 93 of this History); a dedication of the King Khammurabi; + the inscription of Agumkakrimi, which came from the library + of Assurbanipal. + + ** Nabonidos, for instance, the last king of Babylon before + the Persian conquest, has left us a memorial of his + excavations. He found in this manner the cylinders of + Shagashaltiburiash at Sippara, those of Khammurabi, and + those of Naramsin. +</pre> + <p> + We act in a similar way to-day, and our excavations, like those of the + Chaldaeans, end in singularly disconnected results: the materials which + the earth yields for the reconstruction of the first centuries consist + almost entirely of mutilated records of local dynasties, isolated names of + sovereigns, dedications of temples to gods, on sites no longer + identifiable, of whose nature we know nothing, and too brief allusions to + conquests or victories over vaguely designated nations.* The population + was dense and life active in the plains of the Lower Euphrates. The cities + in this region formed at their origin so many individual and, for the most + part, petty states, whose kings and patron gods claimed to be independent + of all the neighbouring kings and gods: one city, one god, one lord—this + was the rule here as in the ancient feudal districts from which the nomes + of Egypt arose. The strongest of these principalities imposed its laws + upon the weakest: formed into unions of two or three under a single ruler, + they came to constitute a dozen kingdoms of almost equal strength on the + banks of the Euphrates. On the north we are acquainted with those of + Agad, Babylon, Kuta, Kharsag-Kalama, and that of Kishu, which comprised a + part of Mesopotamia and possibly the distant fortress of Harran: petty as + these States were, their rulers attempted to conceal their weakness by + assuming such titles as “Kings of the Four Houses of the World,” “Kings of + the Universe,” “Kings of Shumir and Akkad.” Northern Babylonia seems to + have possessed a supremacy amongst them. We are probably wise in not + giving too much credit to the fragmentary tablet which assigns to it a + dynasty of kings, of which we have no confirmatory information from other + sources—Amilgula, Shamashnazir, Amilsin, and several others: this + list, however, places among these phantom rulers one individual at least, + Shargina-Sharrukin, who has left us material evidences of his existence. + This Sargon the Elder, whose complete name is Shargani-shar-ali, was the + son of a certain Ittibel, who does not appear to have been king. At first + his possessions were confined to the city of Agad and some undetermined + portions of the environs of Babylon, but he soon succeeded in annexing + Babylon itself, Sippara, Kshu, Uruk, Kuta, and Nipur: the contemporary + records attest his conquest of Elam, Guti, and even of the far-off land of + Syria, which was already known to him under the name of Amuru. His + activity as a builder was in no way behind his warlike zeal. He built + Ekur, the sanctuary of Bel in Nipur, and the great temple Eulbar in Agad, + in honour of Anunit, the goddess presiding over the morning star. He + erected in Babylon a palace which afterwards became a royal burying-place. + He founded a new capital, a city which he peopled with families brought + from Kishu and Babylon: for a long time after his day it bore the name + which he bestowed upon it, Dur-Sharrukn. This sums up all the positive + knowledge we have about him, and the later Chaldseans seem not to have + been much better informed than ourselves. + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + * The earliest Assyriologists, H. Rawlinson, Oppert, + considered the local kings as having been, for the most + part, kings of all Chalda, and placed them in succession + one after the other in the framework of the most ancient + dynasties of Berossus. The merit of having established the + existence of series of local dynasties, and of having given + to Chaldan history its modern form, belongs to G. Smith. + Smith’s idea was adopted by Menant, by Delitzsch-Murdter, by + Tiele, by Winckler, and by all Assyriologists, with + modifications suggested by the progress of decipherment. +</pre> + <p> + They filled up the lacunae of his history with legends. As he seemed to + them to have appeared suddenly on the scene, without any apparent + connection with the king who preceded him, they assumed that he was a + usurper of unknown origin, irregularly introduced by the favour of the + gods into the lawful series of kings. An inscription engraved, it was + said, on one of his statues, and afterwards, about the VIIth century B.C., + copied and deposited in the library of Nineveh, related at length the + circumstances of his mysterious birth. “Sharrukn, the mighty king, the + king of Agad, am I. My mother was a princess; my father, I did not know + him; the brother of my father lived in the mountains. My town was + Azupirni, which is situated on the bank of the Euphrates. My mother, the + princess, conceived me, and secretly gave birth to me: she placed me in a + basket of reeds, she shut up the mouth of it with bitumen, she abandoned + me to the river, which did not overwhelm me. The river bore me; it brought + me to Akki, the drawer of water. Akki, the drawer of water, received me in + the goodness of his heart; Akki, the drawer of water, made me a gardener. + As gardener, the goddess Ishtar loved me, and during forty-four years I + held royal sway; I commanded the Black Heads,* and ruled them.” This is no + unusual origin for the founders of empires and dynasties; witness the + cases of Cyrus and Bomulus.* Sargon, like Moses, and many other heroes of + history or fable, is exposed to the waters: he owes his safety to a poor + fellah who works his shadouf on the banks of the Euphrates to water the + fields, and he passes his infancy in obscurity, if not in misery. Having + reached the age of manhood, Ishtar falls in love with him as she did with + his fellow-craftsman, the gardener Ishullanu, and he becomes king, we know + not by what means. + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + * The phrase “Black Heads,” <i>nishi salmat hahhadi</i>, has been + taken in an ethnological sense as designating one of the + races of Chalda, the Semitic; other Assyriologists consider + it as denoting mankind in general. The latter meaning seems + the more probable. + + ** Smith had already compared the infancy of Sargon with + that of Moses; the comparison with Cyrus, Bacchus, and + Romulus was made by Talbot. Traditions of the same kind are + frequent in history or folk-tales. +</pre> + <p> + The same inscription which reveals the romance of his youth, recounts the + successes of his manhood, and boasts of the uniformly victorious issue of + his warlike exploits. Owing to lacunae, the end of the account is in the + main wanting, and we are thus prevented from following the development of + his career, but other documents come to the rescue and claim to furnish + its most important vicissitudes. He had reduced the cities of the Lower + Euphrates, the island of Dilmun, Durlu, Elam, the country of Kazalla: he + had invaded Syria, conquered Phoenicia, crossed the arm of the sea which + separates Cyprus from the coast, and only returned to his palace after an + absence of three years, and after having erected his statues on the Syrian + coast. He had hardly settled down to rest when a rebellion broke out + suddenly; the chiefs of Chalda formed a league against him, and blockaded + him in Agad: Ishtar, exceptionally faithful to the end, obtains for him + the victory, and he comes out of a crisis, in which he might have been + utterly ruined, with a more secure position than ever. All these events + are regarded as having occurred sometime about 3800 B.C., at a period when + the VIth dynasty was flourishing in Egypt. Some of them have been proved + to be true by recent discoveries, and the rest are not at all improbable + in themselves, though the work in which they are recorded is a later + astrological treatise. The writer was anxious to prove, by examples drawn + from the chronicles, the use of portents of victory or defeat, of civic + peace or rebellion—portents which he deduced from the configuration + of the heavens on the various days of the month: by going back as far as + Sargon of Agad for his instances, he must have at once increased the + respect for himself on account of his knowledge of antiquity, and the + difficulty which the common herd must have felt in verifying his + assertions. His zeal in collecting examples was probably stimulated by the + fact that some of the exploits which he attributes to the ancient Sargon + had been recently accomplished by a king of the same name: the brilliant + career of Sargon of Agad would seem to have been in his estimation + something like an anticipation of the still more glorious life of the + Sargon of Nineveh.* What better proof of the high veneration in which the + learned men of Assyria held the memory of the ancient Chaldan conqueror? + Naramsin, who succeeded Sargon about 3750 B.C.** inherited his authority, + and to some extent his renown. + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + * Hommel (Gescamede, p. 307) believes that the life of our + Sargon was modelled, not on the Assyrian Sargon, but on a + second Sargon, whom he places about 2000 B.C. Tiele refuses + to accept the hypothesis, but his objections are not + weighty, in my opinion; Hilprecht and Sayce accepted the + authenticity of the facts in their details, and the recent + discoveries have shown that they were right in so doing. + There is a distant resemblance between the life of the + legendary Sargon and the account of the victories of Ramses + II. ending in a conspiracy on his return. +</pre> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + ** The date of Naramsin is given us by the cylinder of + Nabonidos, who is cited lower down. It was discovered by + Pinches. Its authenticity is maintained by Oppert, by + Latrille, by Tiele, by Hommel, who felt at first some + hesitation, by Delitzsch-Murdter; it has been called in + question, with hesitation, by Ed. Meyer, and more boldly by + Winckler. There is at present no serious reason to question + its accuracy, at least relatively, except the instinctive + repugnance of modern critics to consider as legitimate, + dates which carry them back further into the past than they + are accustomed to go. +</pre> + <p> + The astrological tablets assert that he attacked the city of Apirak, on + the borders of Elam, killed the Sing, Rish-ramman, and led the people away + into slavery. He conquered at least part, if not the whole of Elam, and + one of the few monuments which have come down to us was raised at Sippara + in commemoration of his prowess against the mountaineers of the Zagros. He + is represented on it overpowering their chief: his warriors follow after + him and charge up the hill, carrying everything before their steady + onslaught. Another of his warlike expeditions is said to have had as its + field of operations a district of Mgan, which, in the view of the writer, + undoubtedly represented the Sinaitic Peninsula and perhaps Egypt. This + expedition against Mgan no doubt took place, and one of the few monuments + of Naramsin which have reached us refers to it. Other inscriptions tell us + incidentally that Naramsin reigned over the “four Houses of the world,” + Babylon, Sippara, Nipur, and Lagash. Like his father, he had worked at the + building of the Ekur of Nipur and the Bulbar of Agad; he erected, + moreover, at his own cost, the temple of the Sun at Sippara.* The latter + passed through many and varied vicissitudes. Restored, enlarged, ruined on + several occasions, the date of its construction and the name of its + founder were lost in the course of ages. + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + * The text giving us this information is that in which + Nabonidos affirms that Naramsin, son of Sargon of Agad, had + founded the temple of the Sun at Sippara, 3200 years before + himself, which would give us 3750 B.C. for the reign of + Naramsin. +</pre> + <p> + The last independent King of Babylon, Nabonad [Nabonidos], at length + discovered the cylinders in which Naramsin, son of Sargon, had signified + to posterity all that he had done towards the erection of a temple worthy + of the deity to the god of Sippara: “for three thousand two hundred years + not one of the kings had been able to find them.” We have no means of + judging what these edifices were like for which the Chaldans themselves + showed such veneration; they have entirely disappeared, or, if anything + remains of them, the excavations hitherto carried out have not revealed + it. Many small objects, however, which have accidentally escaped + destruction give us a fair idea of the artists who lived in Babylon at + this time, and of their skill in handling the graving-tool and chisel. An + alabaster vase with the name of Naramsin, and a mace-head of exquisitely + veined marble, dedicated by Shargani-shar-ali to the sun-god of Sippara, + are valued only on account of the beauty of the material and the rarity of + the inscription; but a porphyry cylinder, which belonged to Ibnishar, + scribe of the above-named Shargani, must be ranked among the masterpieces + of Oriental engraving. It represents the hero Gilgames, kneeling and + holding with both hands a spherically shaped vase, from which flow two + copious jets forming a stream running through the country; an ox, armed + with a pair of gigantic crescent-shaped horns, throws back its head to + catch one of the jets as it falls. Everything in this little specimen is + equally worthy of admiration—the purity of outline, the skilful and + delicate cutting of the intaglio, the fidelity of the action, and the + accuracy of form. A fragment of a bas-relief of the reign of Naramsin + shows that the sculptors were not a bit behind the engravers of gems. This + consists now only of a single figure, a god, who is standing on the right, + wearing a conical head-dress and clothed in a hairy garment which leaves + his right arm free. The legs are wanting, the left arm and the hair are + for the most part broken away, while the features have also suffered; its + distinguishing characteristic is a sublety of workmanship which is lacking + in the artistic products of a later age. The outline stands out from the + background with a rare delicacy, the details of the muscles being in no + sense exaggerated: were it not for the costume and pointed beard, one + would fancy it a specimen of Egyptian work of the best Memphite period. + </p> + <p> + <a name="linkimage-0033" id="linkimage-0033"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/096.jpg" width="100%" + alt="96.jpg the Seal of Shargani-shar-ali: Gilgames Waters The Celestial Ox. " /> + </div> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from Menant. +</pre> + <p> + One is almost tempted to believe in the truth of the tradition which + ascribes to Naramsin the conquest of Egypt, or of the neighbouring + countries. + </p> + <p> + <a name="linkimage-0034" id="linkimage-0034"> + <!-- IMG --></a> <a href="images/096a.jpg">ENLARGE TO FULL SIZE</a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img alt="096a-th (125K)" src="images/096a-th.jpg" width="100%" /> + </div> + <p> + <br /> + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Drawn by Boudier, from a photograph published by Father + Schiel. +</pre> + <p> + <a name="linkimage-0035" id="linkimage-0035"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/097.jpg" width="100%" alt="097.jpg Page Image " /> + </div> + <p> + Did Sargon and Naramsin live at so early a date as that assigned to them + by Nabonidos? The scribes who assisted the kings of the second Babylonian + empire in their archaeological researches had perhaps insufficient reasons + for placing the date of these kings so far back in the misty past: should + evidence of a serious character A constrain us to attribute to them a + later origin, we ought not to be surprised. In the mean time our best + course is to accept the opinion of the Chaldans, and to leave Sargon and + Naramsin in the century assigned to them by Nabonidos, although from this + point they look down as from a high eminence upon all the rest of Chaldan + antiquity. Excavations have brought to light several personages of a + similar date, whether a little earlier, or a little later: + Bingani-sharali, Man-ish-turba, and especially Alusharshid, who lived at + Kishu and Nipur, and gained victories over Elam. + </p> + <p> + <a name="linkimage-0036" id="linkimage-0036"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/098.jpg" width="100%" + alt="098.jpg Page Image: the Arms Op The City and Kings Of Lagash " /> + </div> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a bas-relief from Lagash, now + in the Louvre +</pre> + <p> + After this glimpse of light on these shadowy kings darkness once more + closes in upon us, and conceals from us the majority of the sovereigns who + ruled afterwards in Babylon. The facts and names which can be referred + with certainty to the following centuries belong not to Babylon, but to + the southern States, Lagash, Uruk, Uru, Nishin, and Larsam. The national + writers had neglected these principalities; we possess neither a resume of + their chronicles nor a list of their dynasties, and the inscriptions which + speak of their the arms of the city gods and princes are still very rare + and kings of Lagash. Lagash, as far as our evidence goes, was, perhaps, + the most illustrious of all these cities.* It occupied the heart of the + country, and its site covered both sides of the Shatt-el-Ha; the Tigris + separated it on the east from Anshan, the westernmost of the Elamite + districts, with which it carried on a perpetual frontier war. + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + * We are indebted almost exclusively to the researches of M. + de Sarzec, and his discoveries at Telloh, for what we know + of it. The results of his excavations, acquired by the + French government, are now in the Louvre. The description of + the ruins, the text of the inscriptions, and an account of + the statues and other objects found in the course of the + work, have been published by Heuzey-Sakzec, <i>Dcouvertes en + Chalde</i>. The name of the ancient town has been read + Sirpurla, Zirgulla, etc. +</pre> + <p> + All parts of the country were not equally fertile: the fruitful and + well-cultivated district in the neighbourhood of the Shatt-el-Ha gave + place to impoverished lands ending to the eastward, finally in swampy + marshes, which with great difficulty furnished means of sustenance to a + poor and thinly scattered population of fisher-folk. + </p> + <p> + <a name="linkimage-0037" id="linkimage-0037"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/099.jpg" width="100%" + alt="099.jpg Fragment of Bas-relief by Urnina, King Of Lagash. " /> + </div> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a stone in the Louvre. +</pre> + <p> + The capital, built on the left bank of the river, stretched out to the + north-east and south-west a distance of some five miles. It was not so + much a city as an agglomeration of large villages, each grouped around a + temple or palace—Uruazagga, Gishgalla, G-irsu, Nina, and Lagash, + which latter imposed its name upon the whole. A branch of the river + Shatt-el-Ha protected it on the south, and supplied the village of Nin + with water; no trace of an inclosing wall has been found, and the temples + and palaces seem to have served as refuges in case of attack. It had as + its arms, or totem, a double-headed eagle standing on a lion passant, or + on two demi-lions placed back to back. Its chief god was called Ningirsu, + that is, the lord of Girsu, where his temple stood: his companion Bau, and + his associates Ninagal, Innanna and Ninsia, were the deities of the other + divisions of the city. The princes were first called kings, but afterwards + vicegerents—<i>patesi</i>—when they came under the suzerainty + of a more powerful king, the King of Uruk or of Babylon. + </p> + <p> + The earlier history of this remarkable town is made up of the scanty + memoirs of its rulers, together with those of the princes of Gishban—“the + land of the Bow,” of which Ishin seems to have been the principal town. A + very ancient document states, that, at the instigation of Inlil, the god + of Nipur, the local deities, Ningirsu and Kirsig, set up a boundary + between the two cities. In the course of time, Meshilim, a king of Kishu, + which, before the rise of Agad, was the chief town in those parts, + extended his dominion over Lagash and erected his stele at its border; + Ush, vicegerent of Gishban, however, removed it, and had to suffer defeat + before he would recognize the new order of things. After the lapse of some + years, of which we possess no records, we find the mention of a certain + Urukagina, who assumes the title of king: he restored or enlarged several + temples, and dug the canal which supplied the town of Nina with water. A + few generations later we find the ruling authority in the hands of a + certain Urnin, whose father Ninigaldun and grandfather Gurshar received + no titles—a fact which proves that they could not have been reigning + sovereigns. Urnin appears to have been of a peaceful and devout + disposition, as the inscriptions contain frequent references to the + edifices he had erected in honour of the gods, the sacred objects he had + dedicated to them, and the timber for building purposes which he had + brought from Mgan, but there is no mention in them of any war. His son + Akurgal was also a builder of temples, but his grandson Idingiranagin, who + succeeded Akurgal, was a warlike and combative prince. + </p> + <p> + <a name="linkimage-0038" id="linkimage-0038"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/101.jpg" width="100%" + alt="101.jpg Idingiranagin Holding the Totem of Lagash. " /> + </div> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from the bas-relief F2 in the + Louvre. +</pre> + <p> + It seems probable that, about that time, the kingdom of Gishban had become + a really powerful state. It had triumphed not only over Babylonia proper, + but over Kish, Uru, Uruk, and Larsam, while one of its sovereigns had + actually established his rule in some parts of Northern Syria. + Idingiranagin vanquished the troops of Gishban, and there is now in the + Louvre a trophy which he dedicated in the temple of Ninglrsu on his return + from the campaign. + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + * Hilpeecht, Bab. Expcd. of the Univ. of Pennsylvania, vol. + i., 2nd part, p. 47 sqq. +</pre> + <p> + <a name="linkimage-0039" id="linkimage-0039"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/102.jpg" width="100%" + alt="102.jpg Idingiranagin in his Chariot Leading His Troops. " /> + </div> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a bas-relief in the Louvre. The + attendant standing behind the king has been obliterated, but + we see clearly the contour of his shoulder, and his hands + holding the reins. It is a large stele of close-grained + white limestone, rounded at the top, and covered with scenes + and inscriptions on both its faces. One of these faces + treats only of religious subjects. Two warlike goddesses, + crowned with plumed head-dresses and crescent-shaped horns, + are placed before a heap of weapons and various other + objects, which probably represent some of the booty + collected in the campaign. It would appear that they + accompany a tall figure of a god or king, possibly that of + the deity Ningirsu, patron of Lagash and its kings. Ningirsu + raises in one hand an ensign, of which the staff bears at + the top the royal totem, the eagle with outspread wings + laying hold by his talons of two half-lions back to back; + with the other hand he brings a, club down heavily upon a + group of prisoners, who struggle at his feet in the meshes + of a large net. +</pre> + <p> + <a name="linkimage-0040" id="linkimage-0040"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/103.jpg" width="100%" + alt="103.jpg Page Image. Vultures Feeding Upon the Dead. " /> + </div> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from the fragment of a bas-relief in + the Louvre. This is the human sacrifice after the victory, + such as we find it in Egypt—the offering to the national + god of a tenth of the captives, who struggle in vain to + escape from fate. On the other stele the battle is at its + height. Idingiranagin, standing upright in his chariot, + which is guided by an attendant, charges the enemy at the + head of his troops, and the plain is covered with corpses + cut down by his fierce blows: a flock of vultures accompany + him, and peck at each other in their struggles over the + arms, legs, and decapitated heads of the vanquished. Victory + once secured, he retraces his steps to bestow funeral + honours upon the dead. +</pre> + <p> + <a name="linkimage-0041" id="linkimage-0041"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/104.jpg" width="100%" + alt="104.jpg Piling up the Mound of The Dead After The Battle. " /> + </div> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from the fragment of a bas-relief in + the Louvre. The bodies raised regularly in layers form an + enormous heap: priests or soldiers wearing loin-cloths mount + to its top, where they pile the offerings and the earth + which are to form the funerary mound. The sovereign, + moreover, has, in honour of the dead, consigned to execution + some of the prisoners, and deigns to kill with his own hand + one of the principal chiefs of the enemy. +</pre> + <p> + The design and execution of these scenes are singularly rude; men and + beasts—indeed, all the figures—have exaggerated proportions, + uncouth forms, awkward positions, and an uncertain and heavy gait. The war + ended in a treaty concluded with Enakalli, vicegerent of Grishban, by + which Lagash obtained considerable advantages. Idingiranagin replaced the + stele of Meshilim, overthrown by one of Enakalli’s predecessors, and dug a + ditch from the Euphrates to the provinces of Guedln to serve henceforth as + a boundary. He further levied a tribute of corn for the benefit of the + goddess Nina and her consort Ningirsu, and applied the spoils of the + campaign to the building of new sanctuaries for the patron-gods of his + city. + </p> + <p> + <a name="linkimage-0042" id="linkimage-0042"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="figright" style="width:50%;"> + <img width="100%" src="images/105.jpg" + alt="105.jpg King Urnina and his Family. " /> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> +Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from +a bas-relief in the Louvre. +</pre> + </div> + <p> + His reign was, on the whole, a glorious and successful one. He conquered + the mountain district of Elam, rescued Uruk and Uru, which had both fallen + into the hands of the people of Gishban, organized an expedition against + the town of Az and killed its vicegerent, in addition to which he burnt + Arsua, and devastated the district of Mishime. He next directed an attack + against Zuran, king of Udban, and, by vanquishing this Prince on the field + of battle, he extended his dominion over nearly the whole of Babylonia. + </p> + <p> + The prosperity of his dynasty was subjected to numerous and strange + vicissitudes. Whether it was that its resources were too feeble to stand + the exigencies and strain of war for any length of time, or that intestine + strife had been the chief cause of its decline, we cannot say. Its kings + married many wives and became surrounded with a numerous progeny: Urnin + had at least four sons. They often entrusted to their children or their + sons-in-law the government of the small towns which together made up the + city: these represented so many temporary fiefs, of which the holders were + distinguished by the title of “vicegerents.” This dismemberment of the + supreme authority in the interest of princes, who believed for the most + part that they had stronger claims to the throne than its occupant, was + attended with dangers to peace and to the permanence of the dynasty. The + texts furnish us with evidence of the existence of at least half a dozen + descendants of Akurgal—Inannatuma I., Intemena, his grandson + Inannatuma II, all of whom seem to have been vigorous rulers who + energetically maintained the supremacy of their city over the neighbouring + estates. Inannatuma I., however, proved no match in the end against + Urlamma, the vicegerent of Gishban, and lost part, at least, of the + territory acquired by Idingiranagin, but his son Intemena defeated Urlamma + on the banks of the Lumasirta Canal, and, having killed or deposed him, + gave the vicegerency of Gishban to a certain Hi, priest of Ninab, who + remained his loyal vassal to the end of his days. With his aid Intemena + restored the stelae and walls which had been destroyed during the war; he + also cleared out the old canals and dug new ones, the most important of + which was apparently an arm of the Shatt-el-Hai, and ran from the + Euphrates to the Tigris, through the very centre of the domains of Ghirsu. + </p> + <p> + Other kings and vicegerents of doubtful sequence were followed lastly by + Urbau and his son Gudea. These were all piously devoted to Ningirsu in + general, and in particular to the patron of their choice from among the + divinities of the country—Papsukal, Dunziranna, and Ningal. They + restored and enriched the temples of these gods: they dedicated to them + statues or oblation vases for the welfare of themselves and their + families. It would seem, if we are to trust the accounts which they give + of themselves, that their lives were passed in profound peace, without + other care than that of fulfilling their duties to heaven and its + ministers. Their actual condition, if we could examine it, would doubtless + appear less agreeable and especially less equable; revolutions in the + palace would not be wanting, nor struggles with the other peoples of + Chalda, with Susiana and even more distant nations. When Agad rose into + power in Northern Babylonia, they fell under its rule, and one of them, + Lugal-ushum-gal, acknowledged himself a dependant of Sargon. On the + decline of Agade, and when that city was superseded by Uru in the hegemony + of Babylonia proper, the vicegerents of Lagash were transferred with the + other great towns to the jurisdiction of Uru, and flourished under the + supremacy of the new dynasty. + </p> + <p> + Grudea, son of Urbau, who, if not the most powerful of its princes, is at + least the sovereign of whom we possess the greatest number of monuments, + captured the town of Anshan in Elam, and this is probably not the only + campaign in which he took part, for he speaks of his success in an + incidental manner, and as if he were in a hurry to pass to more + interesting subjects. + </p> + <p> + <a name="linkimage-0043" id="linkimage-0043"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/108.jpg" width="100%" alt="108.jpg the Sacrifice " /> + </div> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a stone in the Louvre. +</pre> + <p> + That which seemed to him important in his reign, and which especially + called forth the recognition of posterity, was the number of his pious + foundations, distinguished as they were by beauty and magnificence. The + gods themselves had inspired him in his devout undertakings, and had even + revealed to him the plans which he was to carry out. An old man of + venerable aspect appeared to him in a vision, and commanded him to build a + temple: as he did not know with whom he had to do, Nina his mother + informed him that it was his brother, the god Ningirsu. This having been + made clear, a young woman furnished with style and writing tablet was + presented to him—Nisaba, the sister of Nina; she made a drawing in + his presence, and put before him the complete model of a building. He set + to work on it <i>con amore</i>, and sent for materials to the most distant + countries—to Mgan, Amanus, the Lebanon, and into the mountains + which separate the valley of the Upper Tigris from that of the Euphrates. + </p> + <p> + <a name="linkimage-0044" id="linkimage-0044"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/109.jpg" width="100%" + alt="109.jpg Sitting Statue of Gudea " /> + </div> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin +</pre> + <p> + The sanctuaries which he decorated, and of which he felt so proud, are + to-day mere heaps of bricks, now returned to their original clay; but many + of the objects which he placed in them, and especially the statues, have + traversed the centuries without serious damage before finding a + resting-place in the Louvre. The sculptors of Lagash, after the time of + Idingi-ranagin, had been instructed in a good school, and had learned + their business. Their bas-reliefs are not so good as those of Naramsin; + the execution of them is not so refined, the drawing less delicate, and + the modelling of the parts not so well thought out. A good illustration of + their work is the fragment of a square stele which represents a scene of + offering or sacrifice. We see in the lower part of the picture a female + singer, who is accompanied by a musician, playing on a lyre ornamented + with the head of an ox, and a bull in the act of walking. In the upper + part an individual advances, clad in a fringed mantle, and bearing in his + right hand a kind of round paten, and in his left a short staff. An + acolyte follows him, his arms brought up to his breast, while another + individual marks, by clapping his hands, the rhythm of the ode which a + singer like the one below is reciting. The fragment is much abraded, and + its details, not being clearly exhibited, have rather to be guessed at; + but the defaced aspect which time has produced is of some service to it, + since it conceals in some respect the rudeness of its workmanship. The + statues, on the other hand, bear evidence of a precision of chiselling and + a skill beyond question. Not that there are no faults to be found in the + work. They are squat, thick, and heavy in form, and seem oppressed by the + weight of the woollen covering with which the Chaldeans enveloped + themselves; when viewed closely, they excite at once the wonder and + repulsion of an eye accustomed to the delicate grace, and at times + somewhat slender form, which usually characterized the good statues of the + ancient and middle empire of Egypt. But when we have got over the effect + of first impressions, we can but admire the audacity with which the + artists attacked their material. This is of hard dolerite, offering great + resistance to the tool—harder, perhaps, than the diorite out of + which the Memphite sculptor had to cut his Khephren: they succeeded in + mastering it, and in handling it as freely as if it were a block of + limestone or marble. + </p> + <p> + <a name="linkimage-0045" id="linkimage-0045"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/111.jpg" width="100%" + alt="111.jpg Plan of the Ruins Of Mugher " /> + </div> + <p> + The surface of the breast and back, the muscular development of the + shoulders and arms, the details of the hands and feet, all the nude + portions, are treated at once with a boldness and attention to minutiae + rarely met with in similar works. The pose is lacking in variety; the + individual, whether male or female, is sometimes represented standing and + sometimes sitting on a low seat, the legs brought together, the bust + rising squarely from the hips, the hands crossed upon the breast, in a + posture of submission or respectful adoration. The mantle passes over the + left shoulder, leaving the right free, and is fastened on the right + breast, the drapery displaying awkward and inartistic folds: the latter + widens in the form of a funnel from top to bottom, being bell-shaped + around the lower part of the body, and barely leaves the ankles exposed. + </p> + <p> + <a name="linkimage-0046" id="linkimage-0046"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/112.jpg" width="100%" + alt="112.jpg Statues from Telloh. And Head of One Of The Statue of Gudea. " /> + </div> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from Heuzey-Sarzec. +</pre> + <p> + All the large statues to be seen at the Louvre have lost their heads; + fortunately we possess a few separate heads. Some are completely shaven, + others wear a kind of turban affording shade to the forehead and eyes; + among them all we see the same qualities and defects which we find in the + bodies: a hardness of expression, heaviness, absence of vivacity, and yet + withal a vigour of reproduction and an accurate knowledge of human + anatomy. These are instances of what could be accomplished in a city of + secondary rank; better things were doubtless produced in the great cities, + such as Uru and Babylon. Chaldan art, as we are able to catch a glimpse + of it in the monuments of Lagash, had neither the litheness, nor + animation, nor elegance of the Egyptian, but it was nevertheless not + lacking in force, breadth, and originality. Urningirsu succeeded his + father Gudea, to be followed rapidly by several successive vicegerents, + ending, it would appear, in Gala-lama. Their inscriptions are short and + insignificant, and show that they did not enjoy the same resources or the + same favour which enabled Gudea to reign gloriously. The prosperity of + Lagash decreased steadily under their administration, and they were all + the humble vassals of the King of Uru, Dungi, son of Urbau; a fact which + tends to make us regard Urbau as having been the suzerain upon whom Gudea + himself was dependent. Uru, the only city among those of Lower Chalda + which stands on the right bank of the Euphrates, was a small but strong + place, and favourably situated for becoming one of the commercial and + industrial centres in these distant ages. The Wady Eummein, not far + distant, brought to it the riches of Central and Southern Arabia, gold, + precious stones, gums, and odoriferous resins for the exigencies of + worship. Another route, marked out by wells, traversed the desert to the + land of the semi-fabulous Mshu, and from thence perhaps penetrated as far + as Southern Syria and the Sinaitic Peninsula—Mgan and Milukhkha on + the shores of the Red Sea: this was not the easiest but it was the most + direct route for those bound for Africa, and products of Egypt were no + doubt carried along it in order to reach in the shortest time the markets + of Uru. The Euphrates now runs nearly five miles to the north of the town, + but from the regions bordering the Black Sea. + </p> + <p> + <a name="linkimage-0047" id="linkimage-0047"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/114.jpg" width="100%" + alt="114.jpg Plan of the Ruins Of Abu-shahreyn " /> + </div> + <p> + In ancient times it was not so distant, but passed almost by its gates. + The cedars, cypresses, and pines of Amamis and the Lebanon,the limestones, + marbles, and hard stones of Upper Syria, were brought down to it by boat; + and probably also metals— iron, copper and lead. + </p> + <p> + The Shatt-el-Ha, moreover, poured its waters into the Euphrates almost + opposite the city, and opened up to it commercial relations with the Upper + and Middle Tigris. And this was not all; whilst some of its boatmen used + its canals and rivers as highways, another section made their way to the + waters of the Persian Gulf and traded with the ports on its coast. Eridu, + the only city which could have barred their access to the sea, was a town + given up to religion, and existed only for its temples and its gods. It + was not long before it fell under the influence of its powerful neighbour, + becoming the first port of call for vessels proceeding up the Euphrates. + </p> + <p> + <a name="linkimage-0048" id="linkimage-0048"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/115.jpg" width="100%" + alt="115.jpg an Arab Crossing the Tigris in a ‘kufa.’ " /> + </div> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a sketch by Chesney. +</pre> + <p> + In the time of the Greeks and Romans the Chaldaeans were accustomed to + navigate the Tigris either in round flat-bottomed boats, of little draught—“kufas,” + in fact—or on rafts placed upon inflated skins, exactly similar in + appearance and construction to the “keleks” of our own day. These keleks + were as much at home on the sea as upon the river, and they may still be + found in the Persian Gulf engaged in the coasting trade. Doubtless many of + these were included among the vessels of Uru mentioned in the texts, but + there were also among the latter those long large rowing-boats with curved + stem and stern, Egyptian in their appearance, which are to be found + roughly incised on some ancient cylinders. These primitive fleets were not + disposed to risk the navigation of the open sea. They preferred to proceed + slowly along the shore, hugging it in all cases, except when it was + necessary to reach some group of neighbouring islands; many days of + navigation were thus required to make a passage which one of our smallest + sail-boats would effect in a few hours, and at the end of their longest + voyages they were not very distant from their point of departure. It would + be a great mistake to suppose them capable of sailing round Arabia and of + fetching blocks of stone by sea from the Sinaitic Peninsula; such an + expedition, which would have been dangerous even for Greek or Roman + Galleys, would have been simply impossible for them. If they ever crossed + the Strait of Ormuzd, it was an exceptional thing, their ordinary voyages + being confined within the limits of the gulf. The merchants of Uru were + accustomed to visit regularly the island of Dilmun, the land of Mgan, the + countries of Milukhkha and Gubn; from these places they brought cargoes + of diorite for their sculptors, building-timber for their architects, + perfumes and metals transported from Yemen by land, and possibly pearls + from the Bahrein Islands. They encountered serious rivalry from the + sailors of Dilmun and Mgan, whose maritime tribes were then as now + accustomed to scour the seas. The risk was great for those who set out on + such expeditions, perhaps never to return, but the profit was + considerable. + </p> + <p> + <a name="linkimage-0049" id="linkimage-0049"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/117.jpg" width="100%" + alt="117.jpg an Assyrian Kelek Laden With Building-stone. " /> + </div> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a bas-relief from “Kouyunjik” + (Layard, <i>The Monuments of Nineveh</i>, 2nd series, pi. 13; cf. + Place, <i>Ninive et l’Assyrie</i>, pl. 43, No. 1.) +</pre> + <p> + Uru, enriched by its commerce, was soon in a position to subjugate the + petty neighbouring states—Uruk, Larsam, Lagash, and Nipur. Its + territory formed a fairly extended sovereignty, whose lords entitled + themselves kings of Shumir and Akkad, and ruled over all Southern Chalda + for many centuries. + </p> + <p> + Several of these kings, the Lugalkigubnidudu and the Lugalkisalsi, of whom + some monuments have been preserved to us, seem to have extended their + influence beyond these limits prior to the time of Sargon the Elder; and + we can date the earliest of them with tolerable probability. Urbau reigned + some time about 2900 B.C. He was an energetic builder, and material traces + of his activity are to be found everywhere throughout the country. The + temple of the Sun at Larsam, the temple of Nina in Uruk, and the temples + of Inlilla and Ninlilla in Nipur were indebted to him for their origin or + restoration: he decorated or repaired all structures which were not of his + own erection: in Uru itself the sanctuary of the moon-god owes its + foundation to him, and the fortifications of the city were his work. + Dungi, his son, was an indefatigable bricklayer, like his father: he + completed the sanctuary of the moon-god, and constructed buildings in + Uruk, Lagash, and Kutha. There is no indication in the inscriptions of his + having been engaged in any civil struggle or in war with a foreign nation; + we should make a serious mistake, however, if we concluded from this + silence that peace was not disturbed in his time. The tie which bound + together the petty states of which Uru was composed was of the slightest. + The sovereign could barely claim as his own more than the capital and the + district surrounding it; the other cities recognized his authority, paid + him tribute, did homage to him in religious matters, and doubtless + rendered him military service also, but each one of them nevertheless + maintained its particular constitution and obeyed its hereditary lords. + These lords, it is true, lost their title of king, which now belonged + exclusively to their suzerain, and each one had to be content in his + district with the simple designation of “vicegerent;” but having once + fulfilled their feudal obligations, they had absolute power over their + ancient domains, and were able to transmit to their progeny the + inheritance they had received from their fathers. Gudea probably, and most + certainly his successors, ruled in this way over Lagash, as a fief + depending on the crown of Uru. After the manner of the Egyptian barons, + the vassals of the kings of Chaldaea submitted to the control of their + suzerain without resenting his authority as long as they felt the curbing + influence of a strong hand: but on the least sign of feebleness in their + master they reasserted themselves, and endeavoured to recover their + independence. A reign of any length was sure to be disturbed by rebellions + sometimes difficult to repress: if we are ignorant of any such, it is + owing to the fact that inscriptions hitherto discovered are found upon + objects upon which an account of a battle would hardly find a fitting + place, such as bricks from a temple, votive cones or cylinders of + terra-cotta, amulets or private seals. We are still in ignorance as to + Dungi’s successors, and the number of years during which this first + dynasty was able to prolong its existence. We can but guess that its + empire broke up by disintegration after a period of no long duration. Its + cities for the most part became emancipated, and their rulers proclaimed + themselves kings once more. We see that the kingdom of Amnanu, for + instance, was established on the left bank of the Euphrates, with Uruk as + its capital, and that three successive sovereigns at least—of whom + Singashid seems to have been the most active—were able to hold their + own there. Uru had still, however, sufficient prestige and wealth to make + it the actual metropolis of the entire country. No one could become the + legitimate lord of Shumir and Accad before he had been solemnly enthroned + in the temple at Uru. For many centuries every ambitious kinglet in turn + contended for its possession and made it his residence. The first of + these, about 2500 B.C., were the lords of Nishin, Libitanunit, Gamiladar, + Inedn, Bursn I., and Ismidgan: afterwards, about 2400 B.C., Gungunum of + Nipur made himself master of it. The descendants of Gungunum, amongst + others Bursn II., Gimilsn, Insin, reigned gloriously for a few years. + Their records show that they conquered not only a part of Elam, but part + of Syria. They were dispossessed in their turn by a family belonging to + Lrsam, whose two chief representatives, as far as we know, were Nurramman + and his son Sinidinnam (about 2300 B.C.). Naturally enough, Sinidinnam was + a builder or repairer of temples, but he added to such work the clearing + of the Shatt-el-Ha and the excavation of a new canal giving a more direct + communication between the Shatt and the Tigris, and in thus controlling + the water-system of the country became worthy of being considered one of + the benefactors of Chalda. + </p> + <p> + We have here the mere dust of history, rather than history itself: here an + isolated individual makes his appearance in the record of his name, to + vanish when we attempt to lay hold of him; there, the stem of a dynasty + which breaks abruptly off, pompous preambles, devout formulas, dedications + of objects or buildings, here and there the account of some battle, or the + indication of some foreign country with which relations of friendship or + commerce were maintained—these are the scanty materials out of which + to construct a connected narrative. Egypt has not much more to offer us in + regard to many of her Pharaohs, but we have in her case at least the + ascertained framework of her dynasties, in which each fact and each new + name falls eventually, and after some uncertainty, into its proper place. + The main outlines of the picture are drawn with sufficient exactitude to + require no readjustment, the groups are for the most part in their fitting + positions, the blank spaces or positions not properly occupied are + gradually restricted, and filled in from day to day; the expected moment + is in sight when, the arrangement of the whole being accomplished, it will + be necessary only to fill in the details. In the case of Chalda the + framework itself is wanting, and expedients must be resorted to in order + to classify the elements entering into its composition. Naramsn is in his + proper place, or nearly so; but as for Gudea, what interval separates him + from Naramsn, and at what distance from Gudea are we to place the kings + of Uru? The beginnings of Chalda have merely a provisional history: the + facts in it are certain, but the connection of the facts with one another + is too often a matter of speculation. The arrangement which is put forward + at present can be regarded only as probable, but it would be difficult to + propose a better until the excavations have furnished us with fresh + material; it must be accepted merely as an attempt, without pledging to it + our confidence on the one hand, or regarding it with scepticism on the + other. <br /> <br /> ========================= <a name="linkBimage-0001" + id="linkBimage-0001"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/frontispiece3.jpg" width="100%" + alt="Frontispiece El Hammam (the Bath) " /> + </div> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Drawn by Boudier, after J. Dieulafoy. The vignette, which is + by Faucher-Gudin, is reproduced from an intaglio in the + Cabinet des Mdailles. +</pre> + <p> + <br /> <br /> + </p> + <hr /> + <p> + <br /> <br /> + </p> + <p> + <i><b>THE CONSTRUCTION AND REVENUES OF THE TEMPLES—THE POPULAR GODS + AND THE THEOLOGICAL TRIADS——THE DEAD AND HADES</b></i>. + </p> + <p> + <i> Chaldan cities: the resemblance of their ruins to natural mounds + caused by their exclusive use of brick as a building material—Their + city walls: the temples and local gods; reconstruction of their history by + means of the stamped bricks of which they were built—The two types + of ziggurt: the arrangement of the temple of Nannar at Uru.</i> + </p> + <p> + <i>The tribes of the Chaldan gods—Genii hostile to men, their + monstrous shapes; the south-west wind; friendly genii—The Seven, and + their attacks on the moon-god; Gibil, the fire-god, overcomes them and + their snares—The Sumerian gods; Ningirsu: the difficulty of defining + them and of understanding the nature of them; they become merged in the + Semitic deities.</i> + </p> + <p> + <i>Characteristics and dispositions of the Chaldan gods—the + goddesses, like women of the harem, are practically nonentities; Mylitta + and her meretricious rites—The divine aristocracy and its principal + representatives: their relations to the earth, oracles, speaking statues, + household gods—The gods of each city do not exclude those of + neighbouring cities: their alliances and their borrowings from one another—The + sky-gods and the earth-gods, the sidereal gods: the moon and the sun.</i> + </p> + <p> + <i>The feudal gods: several among them unite to govern the world; the two + triads of Eridu—The supreme triad: Anu the heaven; Bel the earth and + his fusion with the Babylonian Merodach; Ea, the god of the waters—The + second triad: Sin the moon and Shamash the sun; substitution of Bamman for + Ishtar in this triad; the winds and the legend of Adapa, the attributes of + Ramman—The addition of goddesses to these two triads; the + insignificant position which they occupy.</i> + </p> + <p> + <i>The assembly of the gods governs the world: the bird Zu steals the + tablets of destiny—Destinies are written in the heavens and + determined by the movements of the stars; comets and their presiding + deities, Nebo and Ishtai—The numerical value of the gods—The + arrangement of the temples, the local priesthood, festivals, revenues of + the gods and gifts made to them—Sacrifices, the expiation of crimes—Death + and the future of the soul—Tombs and the cremation of the dead; the + royal sepulchres and funerary rites—Hades and its sovereigns: + Nergal, Allt, the descent of Ishtar into the infernal regions, and the + possibility of a resurrection The invocation of the dead—The + ascension of Etana.</i> + </p> + <p> + <br /> <br /> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img alt="122 (36K)" src="images/122.jpg" width="100%" /> + </div> + <p> + <br /> <br /> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img alt="123 (142K)" src="images/123.jpg" width="100%" /> + </div> + <p> + <br /> <br /> <a name="linkBimage-0005" id="linkBimage-0005"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/124.jpg" width="100%" alt="124.jpg Chapter II " /> + </div> + <p> + <br /> <br /> + </p> + <hr /> + <p> + <br /> <br /> <a name="linkB2HCH0001" id="linkB2HCH0001"> + <!-- H2 anchor --> </a> <br /> <br /> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img alt="125 (174K)" src="images/125.jpg" width="100%" /> + </div> + <p> + <br /> <br /> + </p> + <h2> + CHAPTER II—THE TEMPLES AND THE GODS OF CHALDA + </h2> + <p> + <i>The construction and revenues of the temples—Popular gods and + theological triads—The dead and Hades</i>. + </p> + <p> + The cities of the Euphrates attract no attention, like those of the Nile, + by the magnificence of their ruins, which are witnesses, even after + centuries of neglect, to the activity of a powerful and industrious + people: on the contrary, they are merely heaps of rubbish in which no + architectural outline can be distinguished—mounds of stiff and + greyish clay, cracked by the sun, washed into deep crevasses by the rain, + and bearing no apparent traces of the handiwork of man. + </p> + <p> + <a name="linkBimage-0006" id="linkBimage-0006"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/126.jpg" width="100%" + alt="126.jpg Plan of the Ruins Of Wakka " /> + </div> + <p> + In the estimation of the Chaldan architects, stone was a material of + secondary consideration: as it was necessary to bring it from a great + distance and at considerable expense, they used it very sparingly, and + then merely for lintels, uprights, thresholds, for hinges on which to hang + their doors, for dressings in some of their state apartments, in cornices + or sculptured friezes on the external walls of their buildings; and even + then its employment suggested rather that of a band of embroidery + carefully disposed on some garment to relieve the plainness of the + material. Crude brick, burnt brick, enamelled brick, but always and + everywhere brick was the principal element in their construction. The soil + of the marshes or of the plains, separated from the pebbles and foreign + substances which it contained, mixed with grass or chopped straw, + moistened with water, and assiduously trodden underfoot, furnished the + ancient builders with materials of incredible tenacity. This was moulded + into thin square bricks, eight inches to a foot across, and three to four + inches thick, but rarely larger: they were stamped on the flat side, by + means of an incised wooden block, with the name of the reigning sovereign, + and were then dried in the sun.* A layer of fine mortar or of bitumen was + sometimes spread between the courses, or handfuls of reeds would be strewn + at intervals between the brickwork to increase the cohesion: more + frequently the crude bricks were piled one upon another, and their natural + softness and moisture brought about their rapid agglutination.** As the + building proceeded, the weight of the courses served to increase still + further the adherence of the layers: the walls soon became consolidated + into a compact mass, in which the horizontal strata were distinguishable + only by the varied tints of the clay used to make the different relays of + bricks. + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + * The making of bricks for the Assyrian monuments of the + time of the Sargonids has been minutely described by Place, + <i>Ninive et l’Assyrie</i>, vol. i. pp. 211-214. The methods of + procedure were exactly the same as those used under the + earliest king known, as has been proved by the examination + of the bricks taken from the monuments of Uru and Lagash. + + ** This method of building was noticed by classical writers. + The word “Bowarieh,” borne by several ancient mounds in + Chaldoa, signifies, properly speaking, a mat of reeds; it is + applied only to such buildings as are apparently constructed + with alternate layers of brick and dried reeds. The + proportion of these layers differs in certain localities: in + the ruins of the ancient temple of Belos at Babylon, now + called the “Mujelibeh,” the lines of straw and reeds run + uninterruptedly between each course of bricks; in the ruins + of Akkerkuf, they only occur at wider intervals—according + to Niebuhr and Ives, every seventh or eighth course; + according to Raymond, every seventh course, or sometimes + every fifth or sixth course, but in these cases the layer of + reeds becomes 3 1/2 to 3 3/4 inches wide. H. Rawlin-son + thinks, on the other hand, that all the monuments in which + we find layers of straw and reeds between the brick courses + belong to the Parthian period. +</pre> + <p> + <a name="linkBimage-0007" id="linkBimage-0007"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/128.jpg" width="100%" + alt="128.jpg a Chaldan Stamped Brick. " /> + </div> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a brick preserved in the + Louvre. The bricks bearing historical inscriptions, which + are sometimes met with, appear to have been mostly ex-voto + offerings placed somewhere prominently, and not building + materials hidden in the masonry. +</pre> + <p> + Monuments constructed of such a plastic material required constant + attention and frequent repairs, to keep them in good condition: after a + few years of neglect they became quite disfigured, the houses suffered a + partial dissolution in every storm, the streets were covered with a + coating of fine mud, and the general outline of the buildings and + habitations grew blurred and defaced. Whilst in Egypt the main features of + the towns are still traceable above ground, and are so well preserved in + places that, while excavating them, we are carried away from the present + into the world of the past, the Chaldan cities, on the contrary, are so + overthrown and seem to have returned so thoroughly to the dust from which + their founders raised them, that the most patient research and the most + enlightened imagination can only imperfectly reconstitute their + arrangement. + </p> + <p> + The towns were not enclosed within those square or rectangular enclosures + with which the engineers of the Pharaohs fortified their strongholds. The + ground-plan of Uru was an oval, that of Larsam formed almost a circle upon + the soil, while Uruk and Eridu resembled in shape a sort of irregular + trapezium. The curtain of the citadel looked down on the plain from a + great height, so that the defenders were almost out of reach of the arrows + or slings of the besiegers: the remains of the ramparts at Uruk at the + present day are still forty to fifty feet high, and twenty or more feet in + thickness at the top. Narrow turrets projected at intervals of every fifty + feet along the face of the wall: the excavations have not been + sufficiently pursued to permit of our seeing what system of defence was + applied to the entrances. The area described by these cities was often + very large, but the population in them was distributed very unequally; the + temples in the different quarters formed centres around which were + clustered the dwellings of the inhabitants, sometimes densely packed, and + elsewhere thinly scattered. The largest and richest of these temples was + usually reserved for the principal deity, whose edifices were being + continually decorated by the ruling princes, and the extent of whose ruins + still attracts the traveller. The walls, constructed and repaired with + bricks stamped with the names of lords of the locality, contain in + themselves alone an almost complete history. Did Urbau, we may ask, found + the ziggurat of Nannar in Uru? We meet with his bricks at the base of the + most ancient portions of the building, and we moreover learn, from + cylinders unearthed not far from it, that “for Nannar, the powerful bull + of Anu, the son of Bel, his King, Urbau, the brave hero, King of Uru, had + built E-Timila, his favourite temple.” The bricks of his son Dungi are + found mixed with his own, while here and there other bricks belonging to + subsequent kings, with cylinders, cones, and minor objects, strewn between + the courses, mark restorations at various later periods. What is true of + one Chaldan city is equally true of all of them, and the dynasties of + Uruk and of Lagash, like those of Uru, can be reconstructed from the + revelations of their brickwork. The lords of heaven promised to the lords + of the earth, as a reward of their piety, both glory and wealth in this + life, and an eternal fame after death: they have, indeed, kept their word. + The majority of the earliest Chaldan heroes would be unknown to us, were + it not for the witness of the ruined sanctuaries which they built, and + that which they did in the service of their heavenly patrons has alone + preserved their names from oblivion. Their most extravagant devotion, + however, cost them less money and effort than that of the Pharaohs their + contemporaries. While the latter had to bring from a distance, even from + the remotest parts of the desert, the different kinds of stone which they + considered worthy to form part of the decoration of the houses of their + gods, the Chaldan kings gathered up outside their very doors the + principal material for their buildings: should they require any other + accessories, they could obtain, at the worst, hard stone for their statues + and thresholds in Mgan and Milukhkha, and beams of cedar and cypress in + the forests of the Amanus and the Upper Tigris. Under these conditions a + temple was soon erected, and its construction did not demand centuries of + continuous labour, like the great limestone and granite sanctuaries of + Egypt: the same ruler who laid the first brick, almost always placed the + final one, and succeeding generations had only to keep the building in + ordinary repair, without altering its original plan. The work of + construction was in almost every case carried out all at one time, + designed and finished from the drawings of one architect, and bears traces + but rarely of those deviations from the earlier plans which sometimes make + the comprehension of the Theban temples so difficult a matter: if the + state of decay of certain parts, or more often inadequate excavation, + frequently prevent us from appreciating their details, we can at least + reinstate their general outline with tolerable accuracy. + </p> + <p> + While the Egyptian temple was spread superficially over a large area, the + Chalan temple strove to attain as high an elevation as possible. The + “ziggurats,” whose angular profile is a special characteristic of the + landscapes of the Euphrates, were composed of several immense cubes, piled + up on one another, and diminishing in size up to the small shrine by which + they were crowned and wherein the god himself was supposed to dwell. There + are two principal types of these ziggurats. In the first, for which the + builders of Lower Chalda showed a marked preference, the vertical axis, + common to all the superimposed stories, did not pass through the centre of + the rectangle which served as the base of the whole building; it was + carried back and placed near to one of the narrow ends of the base, so + that the back elevation of the temple rose abruptly in steep narrow ledges + above the plain, while the terraces of the front broadened out into wide + platforms. The stories are composed of solid blocks of crude brick; up to + the present, at least, no traces of internal chambers have been found.* + The chapel on the summit could not contain more than one apartment: an + altar stood before the door, and access to it was obtained by a straight + external staircase, interrupted at each terrace by a more or less spacious + landing.** The second type of temple frequently found in Northern Chalda + was represented by a building on a square base with seven stories, all of + equal height, connected by one or two lateral staircases, having on the + summit, the pavilion of the god; this is the “terraced tower” which + excited the admiration of the Greeks at Babylon, and of which the temple + of Bel was the most remarkable example. The ruins of it still exist, but + it has been so frequently and so completely restored in the course of + ages, that it is impossible to say how much now remains of the original + construction. We know of several examples, however, of the other type of + ziggurat—one at Uru, another at Bridu, a third at Uruk, without + mentioning those which have not as yet been methodically explored. None of + them rises directly from the surface of the ground, but they are all built + on a raised platform, which consequently places the foundations of the + temple nearly on a level with the roofs of the surrounding houses. The + raised platform of the temple of Nannar at Uru still measures 20 feet in + height, and its four angles are orientated exactly to the four cardinal + points. Its faade was approached by an inclined plane, or by a flight of + low steps, and the summit, which was surrounded by a low balustrade, was + paved with enormous burnt bricks. On this terrace, processions at solemn + festivals would have ample space to perform their evolutions. The lower + story of the temple occupies a parallelogram of 198 feet in length by 173 + feet in width, and rises about 27 feet in height. + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + * Perrot-Ohipiez admit that between the first and second + story there was a sort of plinth seven feet in height which + corresponded to the foundation platform below the first + story. It appears to me, as it did to Loftus, that the slope + which now separates the two vertical masses of brickwork “is + accidental, and owes its existence to the destruction of the + upper portion of the second story.” Taylor mentions only two + stories, and evidently considers the slope in question to be + a bank of rubbish. + + ** Perrot-Chipiez place the staircase leading from the + ground-level to the terrace inside the building—“an + arrangement which would have the advantage of not + interfering with the outline of this immense platform, and + would not detract from the strength and solidity of its + appearance;” Reber proposes a different combination. At Uru, + the whole staircase projects in front of the platform and + “loads up to the edge of the basement of the second story,” + then continues as an inclined plane from the edge of the + first story to the terrace of the second, forming one single + staircase, perhaps of the same width as this second story, + leading from the base to the summit of the building. +</pre> + <p> + <a name="linkBimage-0008" id="linkBimage-0008"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/134.jpg" width="100%" + alt="134.jpg the Temple of Nannar at Uru, Approximately Restored. " /> + </div> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin. The restoration differs from that + proposed by Perrot-Chipiez. I have made it by working out + the description taken down on the spot by Taylor. +</pre> + <p> + The central mass of crude brick has preserved its casing of red tiles, + cemented with bitumen, almost intact up to the top; it is strengthened by + buttresses—nine on the longer and six on the shorter sides—projecting + about a foot, which relieve its rather bare surface. The second story + rises to the height of only 20 feet above, the first, and when intact + could not have been more than 26 to 30 feet high.* Many bricks bearing the + stamp of Dungi are found among the materials used in the latest + restoration, which took place about the VIth century before our era; they + have a smooth surface, are broken here and there by air-holes, and their + very simplicity seems to bear witness to the fact that Nabonidos confined + himself to the task of merely restoring things to the state in which the + earlier kings of Uru had left them.** + </p> + <p> + <a name="linkBimage-0009" id="linkBimage-0009"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/135.jpg" width="100%" + alt="135.jpg the Temple of Uru in Its Present State, According To Taylor " /> + </div> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Facsimile, by Faucher-Gudin, of the drawing published by + Taylor. +</pre> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + * At the present time 14 feet high, plus 5 feet of rubbish, + 119 feet long, 75 feet wide (Loftus, <i>Travels and Researches + in Olialdsea and Susiana</i>, p. 129). + + ** The cylinders of Nabonidos describing the restoration of + the temple were found at the four angles of the second story + by Taylor. +</pre> + <p> + Till within the last century, traces of a third story to this temple might + have been distinguished; unlike the lower ones, it was not of solid + brickwork, but contained at least one chamber: this was the Holy of + Holies, the sanctuary of Nannar. The external walls were covered with pale + blue enamelled tiles, having a polished surface. The interior was panelled + with cedar or cypress—rare woods procured as articles of commerce + from the peoples of the North and West; this woodwork was inlaid in parts + with thin leaves of gold, alternating with panels of mosaics composed of + small pieces of white marble, alabaster, onyx, and agate, cut and + polished. + </p> + <p> + <a name="linkBimage-0010" id="linkBimage-0010"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/136.jpg" width="100%" + alt="136.jpg Further View of the Temple Of Uru " /> + </div> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + In Its Present State, According To Loftus. Drawn by + Bouchier, from Loftus. +</pre> + <p> + Here stood the statue of Nannar, one of those stiff and conventionalized + figures in the traditional pose handed down from generation to generation, + and which lingered even in the Chaldan statues of Greek times. The spirit + of the god dwelt within it in the same way as the double resided in the + Egyptian idols, and from thence he watched over the restless movements of + the people below, the noise of whose turmoil scarcely reached him at that + elevation. The gods of the Euphrates, like those of the Nile, constituted + a countless multitude of visible and invisible beings, distributed into + tribes and empires throughout all the regions of the universe. A + particular function or occupation formed, so to speak, the principality of + each one, in which he worked with an indefatigable zeal, under the orders + of his respective prince or king; but, whereas in Egypt they were on the + whole friendly to man, or at the best indifferent in regard to him, in + Chalda they for the most part pursued him with an implacable hatred, and + only seemed to exist in order to destroy him. These monsters of alarming + aspect, armed with knives and lances, whom the theologians of Heliopolis + and Thebes confined within the caverns of Hades in the depths of eternal + darkness, were believed by the Chaldans to be let loose in broad daylight + over the earth,—such were the “gallu” and the “mas-kim,” the “lu” + and the “utukku,” besides a score of other demoniacal tribes bearing + curious and mysterious names. + </p> + <p> + <a name="linkBimage-0011" id="linkBimage-0011"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/137.jpg" width="100%" alt="137.jpg Lion-headed Genius. " /> + </div> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a small terra-cotta figure of + the Assyrian period, and now in the Louvre. It was one of + the figures buried under the threshold of one of the gates + of the town at Khorsabad, to keep off baleful influences. +</pre> + <p> + Some floated in the air and presided over the unhealthy winds. The + South-West Wind, the most cruel of them all, stalked over the solitudes of + Arabia, whence he suddenly issued during the most oppressive months of the + year: he collected round him as he passed the malarial vapours given off + by the marshes under the heat of the sun, and he spread them over the + country, striking down in his violence not only man and beast, but + destroying harvests, pasturage, and even trees. + </p> + <p> + <a name="linkBimage-0012" id="linkBimage-0012"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/138.jpg" width="100%" alt="138.jpg the South-west Wind " /> + </div> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from the bronze original now in the + Louvre. The latter museum and the British Museum possess + several other figures of the same demon. +</pre> + <p> + The genii of fevers and madness crept in silently everywhere, insidious + and traitorous as they were. The plague alternately slumbered or made + furious onslaughts among crowded populations. Imps haunted the houses, + goblins wandered about the water’s edge, ghouls lay in wait for travellers + in unfrequented places, and the dead quitting their tombs in the night + stole stealthily among the living to satiate themselves with their blood. + The material shapes attributed to these murderous beings were supposed to + convey to the eye their perverse and ferocious characters. They were + represented as composite creatures in whom the body of a man would be + joined grotesquely to the limbs of animals in the most unexpected + combinations. They worked in as best they could, birds’ claws, fishes’ + scales, a bull’s tail, several pairs of wings, the head of a lion, + vulture, hyaena, or wolf; when they left the creature a human head, they + made it as hideous and distorted as possible. The South-West Wind was + distinguished from all the rest by the multiplicity of the incongruous + elements of which his person was composed. His dog-like body was supported + upon two legs terminating in eagle’s claws; in addition to his arms, which + were furnished with sharp talons, he had four outspread wings, two of + which fell behind him, while the other two rose up and surrounded his + head; he had a scorpion’s tail, a human face with large goggle-eyes, bushy + eyebrows, fleshless cheeks, and retreating lips, showing a formidable row + of threatening teeth, while from his flattened skull protruded the horns + of a goat: the entire combination was so hideous, that it even alarmed the + god and put him to flight, when he was unexpectedly confronted with his + own portrait. There was no lack of good genii to combat this deformed and + vicious band. They too were represented as monsters, but monsters of a + fine and noble bearing,—griffins, winged lions, lion-headed men, and + more especially those splendid human-headed bulls, those “lamassi” crowned + with mitres, whose gigantic statues kept watch before the palace and + temple gates. Between these two races hostility was constantly displayed: + restrained at one point, it broke out afresh at another, and the evil + genii, invariably beaten, as invariably refused to accept their defeat. + Man, less securely armed against them than were the gods, was ever meeting + with them. “Up there, they are howling, here they lie in wait,—they + are great worms let loose by heaven—powerful ones whose clamour + rises above the city—who pour water in torrents from heaven, sons + who have come out of the bosom of the earth.—They twine around the + high rafters, the great rafters, like a crown;—they take their way + from house to house,—for the door cannot stop them, nor bar the way, + nor repulse them,—for they creep like a serpent under the door—they + insinuate themselves like the air between the folding doors,—they + separate the bride from the embraces of the bridegroom,—they snatch + the child from between the knees of the man,—they entice the unwary + from out of his fruitful house,—they are the threatening voice which + pursues him from behind.” Their malice extended even to animals: “They + force the raven to fly away on the wing,—and they make the swallow + to escape from its nest;—they cause the bull to flee, they cause the + lamb to flee—they, the bad demons who lay snares.” + </p> + <p> + The most audacious among them did not fear at times to attack the gods of + light; on one occasion, in the infancy of the world, they had sought to + dispossess them and reign in their stead. Without any warning they had + climbed the heavens, and fallen upon Sin, the moon-god; they had repulsed + Shamash, the Sun, and Eamman, both of whom had come to the rescue; they + had driven Ishtar and Anu from their thrones: the whole firmament would + have become a prey to them, had not Bel and Nusku, Ea and Merodach, + intervened at the eleventh hour, and succeeded in hurling them down to the + earth, after a terrible battle. They never completely recovered from this + reverse, and the gods raised up as rivals to them a class of friendly + genii—the “Igigi,” who were governed by five heavenly Anunnas. + </p> + <p> + <a name="linkBimage-0013" id="linkBimage-0013"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="figright" style="width:40%;"> + <img width="100%" src="images/141.jpg" + alt="141.jpg Sin Delivered by Merodach from the Assault of The Seven Evil Spirits." /> + </div> + <p> + The earthly Anunnas, the Anunnaki, had as their chiefs seven sons of Bel, + with bodies of lions, tigers, and serpents: “the sixth was a tempestuous + wind which obeyed neither god nor king,—the seventh, a whirlwind, a + desolating storm which destroys everything,”—“Seven, seven,—in + the depth of the abyss of waters they are seven,—and destroyers of + heaven they are seven.—They have grown up in the depths of the + abyss, in the palace;—males they are not, females they are not,—they + are storms which pass quickly.—They take no wife, they give birth to + no child,—they know neither compassion nor kindness,—they + listen to no prayer nor supplication.—As wild horses they are born + in the mountains,—they are the enemies of Ba,—they are the + agents of the gods;—they are evil, they are evil—and they are + seven, they are seven, they are twice seven.” Man, if reduced to his own + resources, could have no chance of success in struggling against beings + who had almost reduced the gods to submission. He invoked in his defence + the help of the whole universe, the spirits of heaven and earth, the + spirit of Bel and of Belit, that of Ninib and of Nebo, those of Sin, of + Ishtar, and of Bamman; but Gibir or Gibil, the Lord of Fire, was the most + powerful auxiliary in this incessant warfare. The offspring of night and + of dark waters, the Anunnaki had no greater enemy than fire; whether + kindled on the household hearth or upon the altars, its appearance put + them to flight and dispelled their power. + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + 1. Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from an Assyrian intaglio published + by Layard. +</pre> + <p> + <a name="linkBimage-0014" id="linkBimage-0014"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/142.jpg" width="100%" + alt="142.jpg Struggle Between a Good and an Evil Genius. " /> + </div> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from Layard. +</pre> + <p> + “Gibil, renowned hero in the land,—valiant, son of the Abyss, + exalted in the land,—Gibil, thy clear flame, breaking forth,—when + it lightens up the darkness,—assigns to all that bears a name its + own destiny. —The copper and tin, it is thou who dost mix them,—gold + and silver, it is thou who meltest them,—thou art the companion of + the goddess Ninkasi—thou art he who exposes his breast to the + nightly enemy!—Cause then the limbs of man, son of his god, to + shine,—make him to be bright like the sky,—may he shine like + the earth,—may he be bright like the interior of the heavens,—may + the evil word be kept far from him,” and with it the malignant spirits. + The very insistence with which help is claimed against the Anunnaki shows + how much their power was dreaded. The Chaldean felt them everywhere about + him, and could not move without incurring the danger of coming into + contact with them. He did not fear them so much during the day, as the + presence of the luminary deities in the heavens reassured him; but the + night belonged to them, and he was open to their attacks. If he lingered + in the country at dusk, they were there, under the hedges, behind walls + and trunks of trees, ready to rush out upon him at every turn. If he + ventured after sundown into the streets of his village or town, he again + met with them quarrelling with dogs over the offal on a rubbish heap, + crouched in the shelter of a doorway, lying hidden in corners where the + shadows were darkest. Even when barricaded within his house, under the + immediate protection of his domestic idols, these genii still threatened + him and left him not a moment’s repose.* The number of them was so great + that he was unable to protect himself adequately from all of them: when he + had disarmed the greater portion of them, there were always several + remaining against whom he had forgotten to take necessary precautions. + What must have been the total of the subordinate genii, when, towards the + IXth century before our era, the official census of the invisible beings + stated the number of the great gods in heaven and earth to be sixty-five + thousand!** + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + * The presence of the evil spirits everywhere is shown, + among other magical formulas, by the incantation in + Rawlinson, <i>Cun, Ins. W. As.</i>, vol. ii. pi. 18, where we + find enumerated at length the places from which they are to + be kept out. The magician closes the house to them, the + hedge which surrounds the house, the yoke laid upon the + oxen, the tomb, the prison, the well, the furnace, the + shade, the vase for libation, the ravines, the valleys, the + mountains, the door. + + ** Assurnazirpal, King of Assyria, speaks in one of his + inscriptions of these sixty-five thousand great gods of + heaven and earth. +</pre> + <p> + We are often much puzzled to say what these various divinities, whose + names we decipher on the monuments, could possibly have represented. The + sovereigns of Lagash addressed their prayers to Ningirsu, the valiant + champion of Inlil; to Ninursag, the lady of the terrestrial mountain: to + Ninsia, the lord of fate; to the King Ninagal; to Inzu, of whose real name + no one has an idea; to Inanna, the queen of battles; to Pasag, to Galalim, + to Dunshagana, to Ninmar, to Ningishzida. Gudea raised temples to them in + all the cities over which his authority extended, and he devoted to these + pious foundations a yearly income out of his domain land or from the + spoils of his wars. “Gudea, the ‘vicegerent’ of Lagash, after having built + the temple Ininnu for Ningirsu, constructed a treasury; a house decorated + with sculptures, such as no ‘vicegerent’ had ever before constructed for + Ningirsu; he constructed it for him, he wrote his name in it, he made in + it all that was needful, and he executed faithfully all the words from the + mouth of Ningirsu.” The dedication of these edifices was accompanied with + solemn festivals, in which the whole population took an active part. + “During seven years no grain was ground, and the maidservant was the equal + of her mistress, the slave walked beside his master, and in my town the + weak rested by the side of the strong.” Henceforward Gudea watched + scrupulously lest anything impure should enter and mar the sanctity of the + place. + </p> + <p> + <a name="linkBimage-0015" id="linkBimage-0015"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/145.jpg" width="100%" + alt="145.jpg the God Ningibsu, Patron of Lagash. " /> + </div> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from Heuzey-Sarzec. The attribution + of this figure to Ningirsu is very probable, but not wholly + certain. +</pre> + <p> + Those we have enumerated were the ancient Sumerian divinities, but the + characteristics of most of them would have been lost to us, had we not + learned, by means of other documents, to what gods the Semites assimilated + them, gods who are better known and who are represented under a less + barbarous aspect. Ningirsu, the lord of the division of Lagash which was + called Girsu, was identified with Ninib; Inlil is Bel, Ninursag is Beltis, + Inzu is Sin, Inanna is Ishtar, and so on with the rest. The cultus of + each, too, was not a local cultus, confined to some obscure corner of the + country; they all were rulers over the whole of Chalda, in the north as + in the south, at Uruk, at Urn, at Larsam, at Nipur, even in Babylon + itself. Inlil was the ruler of the earth and of Hades, Babbar was the sun, + Inzu the moon, Inanna-Antmit the morning and evening star and the goddess + or love, at a time when two distinct religious and two rival groups of + gods existed side by side on the banks of the Euphrates. The Sumerian + language is for us, at the present day, but a collection of strange names, + of whose meaning and pronunciation we are often ignorant. We may well ask + what beings and beliefs were originally hidden under these barbaric + combinations of syllables which are constantly recurring in the + inscriptions of the oldest dynasties, such as Pasag, Dunshagana, Dumuzi-. + Zuaba, and a score of others. The priests of subsequent times claimed to + define exactly the attributes of each of them, and probably their + statements are, in the main, correct. But it is impossible for us to gauge + the motives which determined the assimilation of some of these divinities, + the fashion in which it was carried out, the mutual concessions which + Semite and Sumerian must have made before they could arrive at an + understanding, and before the primitive characteristics of each deity were + softened down or entirely effaced in the process. Many of these divine + personages, such as Ea, Merodach, Ishtar, are so completely transformed, + that we may well ask to which of the two peoples they owed their origin. + The Semites finally gained the ascendency over their rivals, and the + Sumerian gods from thenceforward preserved an independent existence only + in connection with magic, divination, and the science of foretelling + events, and also in the formulas of exorcists and physicians, to which the + harshness of their names lent a greater weight. Elsewhere it was Bel and + Sin, Shamash and Eamman, who were universally worshipped, but a Bel, a + Sin, a Shamash, who still betrayed traces of their former connection with + the Sumerian Inlil and Inzu, with Babbar and Mermer. In whatever language, + however, they were addressed, by whatever name they were called upon, they + did not fail to hear and grant a favourable reply to the appeals of the + faithful. + </p> + <p> + Whether Sumerian or Semitic, the gods, like those of Egypt, were not + abstract personages, guiding in a metaphysical fashion the forces of + nature. Each of them contained in himself one of the principal elements of + which our universe is composed,—earth, water, sky, sun, moon, and + the stars which moved around the terrestrial mountain. The succession of + natural phenomena with them was not the result of unalterable laws; it was + due entirely to a series of voluntary acts, accomplished by beings of + different grades of intelligence and power. Every part of the great whole + is represented by a god, a god who is a man, a Chaldan, who, although of + a finer and more lasting nature than other Chaldans, possesses + nevertheless the same instincts and is swayed by the same passions. He is, + as a rule, wanting in that somewhat lithe grace of form, and in that + rather easy-going good-nature, which were the primary characteristics of + the Egyptian gods: the Chaldan divinity has the broad shoulders, the + thick-set figure and projecting muscles of the people over whom he rules; + he has their hasty and violent temperament, their coarse sensuality, their + cruel and warlike propensities, their boldness in conceiving undertakings, + and their obstinate tenacity in carrying them out. Their goddesses are + modelled on the tyra of the Chaldn women, or, more properly speaking, on + that of their queens. The majority of them do not quit the harem, and have + no other ambition than to become speedily the mother of a numerous + offspring. Those who openly reject the rigid constraints of such a life, + and who seek to share the rank of the gods, seem to lose all + self-restraint when they put off the veil: like Ishtar, they exchange a + life of severe chastity for the lowest debauchery, and they subject their + followers to the same irregular life which they themselves have led. + “Every woman born in the country must enter once during her lifetime the + enclosure of the temple of Aphrodite, must there sit down and unite + herself to a stranger. Many who are wealthy are too proud to mix with the + rest, and repair thither in closed chariots, followed by a considerable + train of slaves. The greater number seat themselves on the sacred + pavement, with a cord twisted about their heads,—and there is always + a great crowd there, coming and going; the women being divided by ropes + into long lanes, down which strangers pass to make their choice. A woman + who has once taken her place here cannot return home until a stranger has + thrown into her lap a silver coin, and has led her away with him beyond + the limits of the sacred enclosure. As he throws the money he pronounces + these words: ‘May the goddess Mylitta make thee happy! ‘—Now, among + the Assyrians, Aphrodite is called Mylitta. The silver coin may be of any + value, but none may refuse it, that is forbidden by the law, for, once + thrown, it is sacred. The woman follows the first man who throws her the + money, and repels no one. When once she has accompanied him, and has thus + satisfied the goddess, she returns to her home, and from thenceforth, + however large the sum offered to her, she will yield to no one. The women + who are tall or beautiful soon return to their homes, but those who are + ugly remain a long time before they are able to comply with the law; some + of them are obliged to wait three or four years within the enclosure.” * + This custom still existed in the Vth century before our era, and the + Greeks who visited Babylon about that time found it still in full force. + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + * Herodotus, i. 199: of. Stabo, xvi. p. 1058, who probably + has merely quoted this passage from Herodotus, or some + writer who copied from Herodotus. We meet with a direct + allusion to this same custom in the Bible, in the <i>Book of + Barueh</i>; “The women also, with cords about them, sitting in + the ways, burn bran for perfume; but if any of them, drawn + by some that passeth by, lie with him, she reproacheth her + fellow, that she was not thought as worthy as herself, nor + her cord broken.” + </pre> + <p> + The gods, who had begun by being the actual material of the element which + was their attribute, became successively the spirit of it, then its + ruler.* They continued at first to reside in it, but in the course of time + they were separated from it, and each was allowed to enter the domain of + another, dwell in it, and even command it, as they could have done in + their own, till finally the greater number of them were identified with + the firmament. + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + * Pk. Lbnoemant, <i>La Magie chez les Chaldens</i>, p. 144, et + seq., where the author shows how Anu, after having at + first been the Heaven itself, the starry vault stretched + above the earth, became successively the Spirit of Heaven + (<i>Zi-ana</i>), and finally the supreme ruler of the world: + according to Lenormant, it was the Semites in particular who + transformed the primitive spirit into an actual god-king. +</pre> + <p> + Bel, the lord of the earth, and Ea, the ruler of the waters, passed info + the heavens, which did not belong to them, and took their places beside + Ami: the pathways were pointed out which they had made for themselves + across the celestial vault, in order to inspect their kingdoms from the + exalted heights to which they had been raised; that of Bel was in the + Tropic of Cancer, that of Ea in the Tropic of Capricorn. They gathered + around them all the divinities who could easily be abstracted from the + function or object to which they were united, and they thus constituted a + kind of divine aristocracy, comprising all the most powerful beings who + guided the fortunes of the world. The number of them was considerable, for + they reckoned seven supreme and magnificent gods, fifty great gods of + heaven and earth, three hundred celestial spirits, and six hundred + terrestrial spirits. Each of them deputed representatives here below, who + received the homage of mankind for him, and signified to them his will. + The god revealed himself in dreams to his seers and imparted to them the + course of coming events,* or, in some cases, inspired them suddenly and + spoke by their mouth: their utterances, taken down and commented on by + their assistants, were regarded as infallible oracles. But the number of + mortal men possessing adequate powers, and gifted with sufficiently acute + senses to bear without danger the near presence of a god, was necessarily + limited; communications were, therefore, more often established by means + of various objects, whose grosser substance lessened for human + intelligence and flesh and blood the dangers of direct contact with an + immortal. The statues hidden in the recesses of the temples or erected on + the summits of the “ziggurats” became imbued, by virtue of their + consecration, with the actual body of the god whom they represented, and + whose name was written either on the base or garment of the statue.** The + sovereign who dedicated them, summoned them to speak in the days to come, + and from thenceforth they spoke: when they were interrogated according to + the rite instituted specially for each one, that part of the celestial + soul, which by means of the prayers had been attracted to and held captive + by the statue, could not refuse to reply.** Were there for this purpose + special images, as in Egypt, which were cleverly contrived so as to emit + sounds by the pulling of a string by the hidden prophet? Voices resounded + at night in the darkness of the sanctuaries, and particularly when a king + came there to prostrate himself for the purpose of learning the future: + his rank alone, which raised him halfway to heaven, prepared him to + receive the word from on high by the mouth of the image. + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + * A prophetic dream is mentioned upon, one of the statues of + Telloh. In the records of Assurbanipal we find mention of + several “seers”—<i>shabru</i>—one of whom predicts the + general triumph of the king over his enemies, and of whom + another announces in the name of Ishtar the victory over the + Elamites and encourages the Assyrian army to cross a torrent + swollen by rains, while a third sees in a dream the defeat + and death of the King of Elam. These “seers” are mentioned in + the texts of Gudea with the prophetesses “who tell the + message” of the gods. + + ** In a formula drawn up against evil spirits, for the + purpose of making talismanic figures for the protection of + houses, it is said of Merodach that he “inhabits the image” + —<i>ashibu salam</i>—which has been made of him by the magician. + + ** This is what Gudea says, when, describing his own statue + which he had placed in the temple of Telloh, he adds that + “he gave the order to the statue: ‘To the statue of my king, + speak!’” The statue of the king, inspired by that of the + god, would thenceforth speak when interrogated according to + the formularies. Cf. what is said of the divine or royal + statues dedicated in the temples of Egypt, vol. i. pp. 169, + 170. A number of oracles regularly obtained in the time of + Asarhaddon and Assurbanabal have been published by Knudtzon. +</pre> + <p> + <a name="linkBimage-0016" id="linkBimage-0016"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/152.jpg" width="100%" + alt="152.jpg the Adoration of The Mace and The Whip. " /> + </div> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from the Chaldan intaglio + reproduced in Heuzey-Sarzec, <i>Dcouvertes en Chalde</i>, pl. + 30bis, No. 13b. +</pre> + <p> + More frequently a priest, accustomed from childhood to the office, + possessed the privilege of asking the desired questions and of + interpreting to the faithful the various signs by means of which the + divine will was made known. The spirit of the god inspired, moreover, + whatever seemed good to him, and frequently entered into objects where we + should least have expected to find it. It animated stones, particularly + such as fell from heaven; also trees, as, for example, the tree of Eridu + which pronounced oracles; and, besides the battle-mace, with a granite + head fixed on a wooden handle, the axe of Ramman, lances made on the model + of Gilgames’ fairy javelin, which came and went at its master’s orders, + without needing to be touched. Such objects, when it was once ascertained + that they were imbued with the divine spirit, were placed upon the altar + and worshipped with as much veneration as were the statues themselves. + </p> + <p> + <a name="linkBimage-0017" id="linkBimage-0017"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="figright" style="width:20%;"> + <img width="100%" src="images/153.jpg" alt="153.jpg a Protecting Amulet. " /> + </div> + <p> + Animals never became objects of habitual worship as in Egypt: some of + them, however, such as the bull and lion, were closely allied to the gods, + and birds unconsciously betrayed by their flight or cries the secrets of + futurity.* In addition to all these, each family possessed its household + gods, to whom its members recited prayers and poured libations night and + morning, and whose statues set up over the domestic hearth defended it + from the snares of the evil ones.** The State religion, which all the + inhabitants of the same city, from the king down to the lowest slave, were + solemnly bound to observe, really represented to the Chaldans but a tithe + of their religious life: it included some dozen gods, no doubt the most + important, but it more or less left out of account all the others, whose + anger, if aroused by neglect, might become dangerous. The private devotion + of individuals supplemented the State religion by furnishing worshippers + for most of the neglected divinities, and thus compensated for what was + lacking in the official public worship of the community. + </p> + <p> + If the idea of uniting all these divine beings into a single supreme one, + who would combine within himself all their elements and the whole of their + powers, ever for a moment crossed the mind of some Chaldan theologian, it + never spread to the people as a whole. Among all the thousands of tablets + or inscribed stones on which we find recorded prayers and magical + formulas, we have as yet discovered no document treating of the existence + of a supreme god, or even containing the faintest allusion to a divine + unity. We meet indeed with many passages in which this or that divinity + boasts of his power, eloquently depreciating that of his rivals, and + ending his discourse with the injunction to worship him alone: “Man who + shall come after, trust in Nebo, trust in no other god!” The very + expressions which are used, commanding future races to abandon the rest of + the immortals in favour of Nebo, prove that even those who prided + themselves on being worshippers of one god realized how far they were from + believing in the unity of God. They strenuously asserted that the idol of + their choice was far superior to many others, but it never occurred to + them to proclaim that he had absorbed them all into himself, and that he + remained alone in his glory, contemplating the world, his creature. Side + by side with those who expressed this belief in Nebo, an inhabitant of + Babylon would say as much and more of Merodach, the patron of his + birthplace, without, however, ceasing to believe in the actual + independence and royalty of Nebo. “When thy power manifests itself, who + can withdraw himself from it?—Thy word is a powerful net which thou + spreadest in heaven and over the earth:—it falls upon the sea, and + the sea retires,—it falls upon the plain, and the fields make great + mourning,—it falls upon the upper waters of the Euphrates, and the + word of Merodach stirs up the flood in them.—O Lord, thou art + sovereign, who can resist thee?—Merodach, among the gods who bear a + name, thou art sovereign.” Merodach is for his worshippers the king of the + gods, he is not the sole god. Each of the chief divinities received in a + similar manner the assurance of his omnipotence, but, for all that, his + most zealous followers never regarded them as the only God, beside whom + there was none other, and whose existence and rule precluded those of any + other. The simultaneous elevation of certain divinities to the supreme + rank had a reactionary influence on the ideas held with regard to the + nature of each. Anu, Bel, and Ea, not to mention others, had enjoyed at + the outset but a limited and incomplete personality, confined to a single + concept, and were regarded as possessing only such attributes as were + indispensable to the exercise of their power within a prescribed sphere, + whether in heaven, or on the earth, or in the waters; as each in his turn + gained the ascendency over his rivals, he became invested with the + qualities which were exercised by the others in their own domain. His + personality became enlarged, and instead of remaining merely a god of + heaven or earth or of the waters, he became god of all three + simultaneously. Anu reigned in the province of Bel or of Ea as he ruled in + his own; Bel joined to his own authority that of Anu and Ea; Ea treated + Anu and Bel with the same absence of ceremony which they had shown to him, + and added their supremacy to his own. The personality of each god was + thenceforward composed of many divers elements: each preserved a nucleus + of his original being, but superadded to this were the peculiar + characteristics of all the gods above whom he had been successively + raised. Anu took to himself somewhat of the temperaments of Bel and of Ea, + and the latter in exchange borrowed from him many personal traits. The + same work of levelling which altered the characteristics of the Egyptian + divinities, and transformed them little by little into local variants of + Osiris and the Sun, went on as vigorously among the Chaldan gods: those + who were incarnations of the earth, the waters, the stars, or the heavens, + became thenceforth so nearly allied to each other that we are tempted to + consider them as being doubles of a single god, worshipped under different + names in different localities. Their primitive forms can only be clearly + distinguished when they are stripped of the uniform in which they are all + clothed. + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + * Animal forms are almost always restricted either to the + genii, the constellations, or the secondary forms of the + greater divinities: Ea, however, is represented by a man + with a fish’s tail, or as a man clothed with a fish-skin, + which would appear to indicate that at the outset he was + considered to be an actual fish. + + ** The images of these gods acted as amulets, and the fact + of their presence alone repelled the evil spirits. At + Khorsabad they were found buried under the threshold of the + city gates. A bilingual tablet in the British Museum has + preserved for us the formula of consecration which was + supposed to invest these protecting statuettes with divine + powers. + + 3. Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from the terra-cotta figurine of + Assyrian date now in the Louvre. + +</pre> + <p> + The sky-gods and the earth-gods had been more numerous at the outset than + they were subsequently. We recognize as such Anu, the immovable firmament, + and the ancient Bel, the lord of men and of the soil on which they live, + and into whose bosom they return after, death; but there were others, who + in historic times had partially or entirely lost their primitive + character,—such as Nergal, Ninib, Dumuzi; or, among the goddesses, + Damkina, Esharra, and even Ishtar herself, who, at the beginning of their + existence, had represented only the earth, or one of its most striking + aspects. For instance, Nergal and Ninib were the patrons of agriculture + and protectors of the soil, Dumuzi was the ground in spring whose garment + withered at the first approach of summer, Damkina was the leafy mould in + union with fertilizing moisture, Esharra was the field whence sprang the + crops, Ishtar was the clod which again grew green after the heat of the + dog days and the winter frosts. All these beings had been forced to submit + in a greater or less degree to the fate which among most primitive races + awaits those older earth-gods, whose manifestations are usually too vague + and shadowy to admit of their being grasped or represented by any precise + imagery without limiting and curtailing their spheres. New deities had + arisen of a more definite and tangible kind, and hence more easily + understood, and having a real or supposed province which could be more + easily realized, such as the sun, the moon, and the fixed or wandering + stars. The moon is the measure of time; it determines the months, leads + the course of the years, and the entire life of mankind and of great + cities depends upon the regularity of its movements: the Chaldans, + therefore, made it, or rather the spirit which animated it, the father and + king of the gods; but its suzerainty was everywhere a conventional rather + than an actual superiority, and the sun, which in theory was its vassal, + attracted more worshippers than the pale and frigid luminary. Some adored + the sun under its ordinary title of Shamash, corresponding to the Egyptian + R; others designated it as Merodach, Ninib, Nergal, Dumuzi, not to + mention other less usual appellations. Nergal in the beginning had nothing + in common with Ninib, and Merodach differed alike from Shamash, Ninib, + Nergal, and Dumuzi; but the same movement which instigated the fusion of + so many Egyptian divinities of diverse nature, led the gods of the + Chaldans to divest themselves little by little of their individuality and + to lose themselves in the sun. Each one at first became a complete sun, + and united in himself all the innate virtues of the sun—its + brilliancy and its dominion over the world, its gentle and beneficent + heat, its fertilizing warmth, its goodness and justice, its emblematic + character of truth and peace; besides the incontestable vices which darken + certain phases of its being—the fierceness of its rays at midday and + in summer, the inexorable strength of its will, its combative temperament, + its irresistible harshness and cruelty. By degrees they lost this uniform + character, and distributed the various attributes among themselves. If + Shamash continued to be the sun in general, Ninib restricted himself, + after the example of the Egyptian Harmakhis, to being merely the rising + and setting sun, the sun on the two horizons. Nergal became the feverish + and destructive summer sun.* Merodach was transformed into the youthful + sun of spring and early morning;** Dumuzi, like Merodach, became the sun + before the summer. Their moral qualities naturally were affected by the + process of restriction which had been applied to their physical being, and + the external aspect now assigned to each in accordance with their several + functions differed considerably from that formerly attributed to the + unique type from which they had sprung. Ninib was represented as valiant, + bold, and combative; he was a soldier who dreamed but of battle and great + feats of arms. Nergal united a crafty fierceness to his bravery: not + content with being lord of battles, he became the pestilence which breaks + out unexpectedly in a country, the death which comes like a thief, and + carries off his prey before there is time to take up arms against him. + Merodach united wisdom with courage and strength: he attacked the wicked, + protected the good, and used his power in the cause of order and justice. + A very ancient legend, which was subsequently fully developed among the + Canaanites, related the story of the unhappy passion of Ishtar for Dumuzi. + The goddess broke out yearly into a fresh frenzy, but the tragic death of + the hero finally moderated the ardour of her devotion. She wept + distractedly for him, went to beg the lords of the infernal regions for + his return, and brought him back triumphantly to the earth: every year + there was a repetition of the same passionate infatuation, suddenly + interrupted by the same mourning. The earth was united to the young sun + with every recurring spring, and under the influence of his caresses + became covered with verdure; then followed autumn and winter, and the sun, + grown old, sank into the tomb, from whence his mistress had to call him + up, in order to plunge afresh with him by a common impulse into the joys + and sorrows of another year. + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + * The solar character of Nergal, at least in later times, is + admitted, but with restrictions, by all Assyriologists. The + evident connection between him and Ninib, of which we have + proofs, was the ground of Delitzsch’s theory that he was + likewise the burning and destructive sun, and also of + Jensen’s analogous concept of a midday and summer sun. + + ** Pr. Lenormant seems to have been the first to distinguish + in Merodach, besides the god of the planet Jupiter, a solar + personage. This notion, which has been generally admitted by + most Assyriologists, has been defined with greater + exactitude by Jensen, who is inclined to see in Merodach + both the morning sun and the spring sun; and this is the + opinion held at present. +</pre> + <p> + The differences between the gods were all the more accentuated, for the + reason that many who had a common origin were often separated from one + another by, relatively speaking, considerable distances. Having divided + the earth’s surface between them, they formed, as in Egypt, a complete + feudal system, whose chiefs severally took up their residence in a + particular city. Anu was worshipped in Uruk, Enlil-Bel reigned in Nipur, + Eridu belonged to Ea, the lord of the waters. The moon-god, Sin, alone + governed two large fiefs, Uru in the extreme south, and Harran towards the + extreme north-west; Shamash had Larsam and one of the Sipparas for his + dominion, and the other sun-gods were not less well provided for, Nergal + possessing Kutha, Zamama having Kish, Ninib side by side with Bel reigning + in Nipur, while Merodach ruled at Babylon. Each was absolute master in his + own territory, and it is quite exceptional to find two of them co-regnant + in one locality, as were Ninib and Bel at Nipur, or Ea and Ishtar in Uruk; + not that they raised any opposition on principle to the presence of a + stranger divinity in their dominions, but they welcomed them only under + the titles of allies or subjects. Each, moreover, had fair play, and Nebo + or Shamash, after having filled the <i>rle</i> of sovereign at Borsippa + or at Larsam, did not consider it derogatory to his dignity to accept a + lower rank in Babylon or at Uru. Hence all the feudal gods played a double + part, and had, as it were, a double civil portion—that of suzerain + in one or two localities, and that of vassals everywhere else—and + this dual condition was the surest guarantee not only of their prosperity, + but of their existence. Sin would have run great risk of sinking into + oblivion if his resources had been confined to the subventions from his + domain temples of Harran and Uru. Their impoverishment would in such case + have brought about his complete failure: after having enjoyed an existence + amid riches and splendour in the beginning of history, he would have ended + his life in a condition of misery and obscurity. But the sanctuaries + erected to him in the majority of the other cities, the honours which + these bestowed upon him, and the offerings which they made to him, + compensated him for the poverty and neglect which he experienced in his + own domains; and he was thus able to maintain his divine dignity on a + suitable footing. All the gods were, therefore, worshipped by the + Chaldeans, and the only difference among them in this respect arose from + the fact that some exalted one special deity above the others. The gods of + the richest and most ancient principalities naturally enjoyed the greatest + popularity. The greatness of Uru had been the source of Sin’s prestige, + and Merodach owed his prosperity to the supremacy which Babylon had + acquired over the districts of the north. Merodach was regarded as the son + of Ba, as the star which had risen from the abyss to illuminate the world, + and to confer upon mankind the decrees of eternal wisdom. He was + proclaimed as lord—“blu”—<i>par excellence</i>, in comparison + with whom all other lords sank into insignificance, and this title soon + procured for him a second, which was no less widely recognized than the + first: he was spoken of everywhere as the Bel of Babylon, Bel-Merodach—before + whom Bel of Nipur was gradually thrown into the shade. The relations + between these feudal deities were not always pacific: jealousies arose + among them like those which disturbed the cities over which they ruled; + they conspired against each other, and on occasions broke out into open + warfare. Instead of forming a coalition against the evil genii who + threatened their rule, and as a consequence tended to bring everything + into jeopardy, they sometimes made alliances with these malign powers and + mutually betrayed each other. Their history, if we could recover it in its + entirety, would be marked by as violent deeds as those which distinguished + the princes and kings who worshipped them. Attempts were made, however, + and that too from an early date, to establish among them a hierarchy like + that which existed among the great ones of the earth. The faithful, who, + instead of praying to each one separately, preferred to address them all, + invoked them always in the same order: they began with Anu, the heaven, + and followed with Bel, Ea, Sin, Shamash, and Bamman. They divided these + six into two groups of three, one trio consisting of Anu, Bel, and Ea, the + other of Sin, Shamash, and Bamman. All these deities were associated with + Southern Chaldoa, and the system which grouped them must have taken its + rise in this region, probably at Uruk, whose patron Anu V occupied the + first rank among them. The theologians who classified them in this manner + seem never to have dreamt of explaining, like the authors of the + Heliopolitan Ennead, the successive steps in their creation: these triads + were not, moreover, copies of the human family, consisting of a father and + mother whose marriage brings into the world a new being. Others had + already given an account of the origin of things, and of Merodach’s + struggles with chaos; these theologians accepted the universe as it was, + already made, and contented themselves with summing up its elements by + enumerating the gods which actuated them.* They assigned the first place + to those elements which make the most forcible impression upon man—beginning + with Anu, for the heaven was the god of their city; following with Bel of + Nipur, the earth which from all antiquity has been associated with the + heaven; and concluding with Ea of Eridu, the terrestrial waters and + primordial Ocean whence Anu and Bel, together with all living creatures, + had sprung—Ea being a god whom, had they not been guided by local + vanity, they would have made sovereign lord of all. Anu owed his supremacy + to an historical accident rather than a religious conception: he held his + high position, not by his own merits, but because the prevailing theology + of an early period had been the work of his priesthood. + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + * I know of Sayce only who has endeavoured to explain the + historical formation of the triads. They are considered by + him as of Accadian origin, and probably began in an + astronomical triad, composed of the moon-god, the sun-god, + and the evening star, Sin, Shamash, and Ishtar; alongside + this elementary trinity, “the only authentic one to be found + in the religious faith of primitive Chalda,” the Semites + may have placed the cosmogonical trinity of Anu, Bel, and + Ea, formed by the reunion of the gods of Uruk, Nipur, and + Eridu. +</pre> + <p> + The characters of the three personages who formed the supreme triad can be + readily deduced from the nature of the elements which they represent. Anu + is the heaven itself—“ana”—the immense vault which spreads + itself above our heads, clear during the day when glorified by the sun, + obscure and strewn with innumerable star clusters during the night. + Afterwards it becomes the spirit which animates the firmament, or the god + which rules it: he resides in the north towards the pole, and the ordinary + route chosen by him when inspecting his domain is that marked out by our + ecliptic. He occupies the high regions of the universe, sheltered from + winds and tempests, in an atmosphere always serene, and a light always + brilliant. The terrestrial gods and those of middle-space take refuge in + this “heaven of Anu,” when they are threatened by any great danger, but + they dare not penetrate its depths, and stop, shortly after passing its + boundary, on the ledge which supports the vault, where they loll and howl + like dogs. It is but rarely that it may be entered, and then only by the + highly privileged—kings whose destiny marked them out for + admittance, and heroes who have fallen valiantly on the field of battle. + In his remote position on unapproachable summits Anu seems to participate + in the calm and immobility of his dwelling. If he is quick in forming an + opinion and coming to a conclusion, he himself never puts into execution + the plans which he has matured or the judgments which he has pronounced: + he relieves himself of the trouble of acting, by assigning the duty to + Bel-Merodach, Ea, or Eamman, and he often employs inferior genii to + execute his will. “They are seven, the messengers of Anu their king; it is + they who from town to town raise the stormy wind; they are the south wind + which drives mightily in the heavens; they are the destroying clouds which + overturn the heavens; they are the rapid tempests which bring darkness in + the midst of clear day, they roam here and there with the wicked wind and + the ill-omened hurricane.” Anu sends forth all the gods as he pleases, + recalls them again, and then, to make them his pliant instruments, + enfeebles their personality, reducing it to nothing by absorbing it into + his own. He blends himself with them, and their designations seem to be + nothing more than doublets of his own: he is Anu the Lakhmu who appeared + on the first days of creation; Ahu Ursh or Ninib is the sun-warrior of + Nipur; and Anu is also the eagle Alala whom Ishtar enfeebled by her + caresses. Anu regarded in this light ceases to be the god <i>par + excellence</i>: he becomes the only chief god, and the idea of authority + is so closely attached to his name that the latter alone is sufficient in + common speech to render the idea of God. Bel would have been entirely + thrown into the shade by him, as the earth-gods generally are by the + sky-gods, if it had not been that he was confounded with his namesake + Bel-Merodach of Babylon: to this alliance he owed to the end the safety of + his life, in presence of Anu. Ea was the most active and energetic member + of the triad.* As he represented the bottomless abyss, the dark waters + which had filled the universe until the day of the creation, there had + been attributed to him a complete knowledge of the past, present, and + future, whose germs had lain within him, as in a womb. The attribute of + supreme wisdom was revered in Ea, the lord of spells and charms, to which + gods and men were alike subject: no strength could prevail against his + strength, no voice against his voice: when once he opened his mouth to + give a decision, his will became law, and no one might gainsay it. If a + peril should arise against which the other gods found themselves impotent, + they resorted to him immediately for help, which was never refused. He had + saved Shamashnapishtirn from the Deluge; every day he freed his votaries + from sickness and the thousand demons which were the causes of it. He was + a potter, and had modelled men out of the clay of the plains. From him + smiths and workers in gold obtained the art of rendering malleable and of + fashioning the metals. Weavers and stone-cutters, gardeners, husbandmen, + and sailors hailed him as their teacher and patron. From his incomparable + knowledge the scribes derived theirs, and physicians and wizards invoked + spirits in his name alone by the virtue of prayers which he had + condescended to teach them. + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + * The name of this god was read “Nisrok” by Oppert, + “Nouah” by Hincks and Lenormant. The true reading is Ia, Ea, + usually translated “house,” “water-house”; this is a popular + interpretation which appears to have occurred to the + Chaldans from the values of the signs entering into the + name of the god. From the outset H. Rawlinson recognized in + Ea, which he read Hea, Hoa, the divinity presiding over the + abyss of waters; he compared him with the serpent of Holy + Scripture, in its relation to the Tree of Knowledge and the + Tree of Life, and deduced therefrom his character of lord of + wisdom. His position as lord of the primordial waters, from + which all things proceeded, clearly denned by Lenormant, is + now fully recognized. His name was transcribed As by + Damascius, a form which is not easily explained; the most + probable hypothesis is that of Hommel who considers Aos as a + shortened form of Ias = Ia, Ea. +</pre> + <p> + Subordinate to these limitless and vague beings, the theologians placed + their second triad, made up of gods of restricted power and invariable + form. They recognized in the unswerving regularity with which the moon + waxed and waned, or with which the sun rose and set every day, a proof of + their subjection to the control of a superior will, and they signalized + this dependence by making them sons of one or other of the three great + gods. Sin was the offspring of Bel, Shamash of Sin, Kamman of Anu. Sin was + indebted for this primacy among the subordinate divinities to the + preponderating influence which Uru exercised over Southern Chalda. Mar, + where Ramman was the chief deity, never emerged from its obscurity, and + Larsam acquired supremacy only many centuries after its neighbour, and did + not succeed in maintaining it for any length of time. The god of the + suzerain city necessarily took precedence of those of the vassal towns, + and when once his superiority was admitted by the people, he was able to + maintain his place in spite of all political revolutions. Sin was called + in Uru, “Uruki,” or “Nannar the glorious,” and his priests sometimes + succeeded in identifying him with Anu. “Lord, prince of the gods, who + alone in heaven and earth is exalted,—father Nannar, lord of the + hosts of heaven, prince of the gods,—father Nannar, lord, great Anu, + prince of the gods,—father Nannar, lord, moon-god, prince of the + gods,—father Nannar, lord of Uni, prince of the gods....—Lord, + thy deity fills the far-off heavens, like the vast sea, with reverential + fear! Master of the earth, thou who fixest there the boundaries [of the + towns] and assignest to them their names,—father, begetter of gods + and men, who establishest for them dwellings and institutest for them that + which is good, who proclaimest royalty and bestowest the exalted sceptre + on those whose destiny was determined from distant times,—chief, + mighty, whose heart is great, god whom no one can name, whose limbs are + steadfast, whose knees never bend, who preparest the paths of thy brothers + the gods....—In heaven, who is supreme? As for thee, it is thou + alone who art supreme! As for thee, thy decree is made known in heaven, + and the Igigi bow their faces!—As for thee, thy decree is made known + upon earth, and the spirits of the abyss kiss the dust!—As for thee, + thy decree blows above like the wind, and stall and pasture become + fertile!—As for thee, thy decree is accomplished upon earth below, + and the grass and green things grow!—As for thee, thy degree is seen + in the cattle-folds and in the lairs of the wild beasts, and it multiplies + living things!—As for thee, thy decree has called into being equity + and justice, and the peoples have promulgated thy law!—As for thee, + thy decree, neither in the far-off heaven, nor in the hidden depths of the + earth, can any one recognize it!—As for thee, thy decree, who can + learn it, who can try conclusions with it?—O Lord, mighty in heaven, + sovereign upon earth, among the gods thy brothers, thou hast no rival.” + Outside Uru and Harran, Sin did not obtain this rank of creator and ruler + of things; he was simply the moon-god, and was represented in human form, + usually accompanied by a thin crescent, upon which he sometimes stands + upright, sometimes appears with the bust only rising out of it, in royal + costume and pose. + </p> + <p> + <a name="linkBimage-0018" id="linkBimage-0018"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/169.jpg" width="100%" + alt="169.jpg the God Sun Receives The Homage of Two Worshippers. " /> + </div> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a heliogravure by Menant. +</pre> + <p> + His mitre is so closely associated with him that it takes his place on the + astrological tablets; the name he bears—“agu”—often indicates + the moon regarded simply as a celestial body and without connotation of + deity. Babbar-Shamash, “the light of the gods, his fathers,” “the + illustrious scion of Sin,” passed the night in the depths of the north, + behind the polished metal walls which shut in the part of the firmament + visible to human eyes. + </p> + <p> + <a name="linkBimage-0019" id="linkBimage-0019"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/170.jpg" width="100%" + alt="170.jpg Shamash Sets Out, in the Morning, from The Interior of the Heaven by The Eastern Gate. " /> + </div> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a Chaldan intaglio of green + jasper in the Louvre. The original measures about 1 3/10 + inch in height. +</pre> + <p> + As soon as the dawn had opened the gates for him, he rose in the east all + aflame, his club in his hand, and he set forth on his headlong course over + the chain of mountains which surrounds the world;* six hours later he had + attained the limit of his journey towards the south, he then continued his + journey to the west, gradually lessening his heat, and at length + re-entered his accustomed resting-place by the western gate, there to + remain until the succeeding morning. He accomplished his journey round the + earth in a chariot conducted by two charioteers, and drawn by two vigorous + onagers, “whose legs never grew weary;” the flaming disk which was seen + from earth was one of the wheels of his chariot.** + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + * His course along the embankment which runs round the + celestial vault was the origin of the title, <i>Line of Union + between Heaven and Earth</i>; he moved, in fact, where the + heavens and the earth come into contact, and appeared to + weld them into one by the circle of fire which he described. + Another expression of this idea occurs in the preamble of + Nergal and Ninib, who were called “the separators”; the + course of the sun might, in fact, be regarded as separating, + as well as uniting, the two parts of the universe. + + ** The disk has sometimes four, sometimes eight rays + inscribed on it, indicating wheels with four or eight spokes + respectively. Rawlinson supposed “that these two figures + indicate a distinction between the male and female power of + the deity, the disk with four rays symbolizing Shamash, the + orb with eight rays being the emblem of Ai, Gula, or + Anunit.” + </pre> + <p> + <a name="linkBimage-0020" id="linkBimage-0020"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/171.jpg" width="100%" + alt="171.jpg Shamash in his Shrine, His Emblem Before Him On The Altar. " /> + </div> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a photograph by Rassam. The + busts of the two deities on the front of the roof of the + shrine are the two charioteers of the sun; they uphold and + guide the rayed disk upon the altar. Cf. in the Assyrian + period the winged disk led with cords by two genii. +</pre> + <p> + As soon as he appeared he was hailed with the chanting of hymns: “O Sun, + thou appearest on the foundation of the heavens,—thou drawest back + the bolts which bar the scintillating heavens, thou openest the gate of + the heavens! O Sun, thou raisest thy head above the earth,—Sun, thou + extendest over the earth the brilliant vaults of the heavens.” The powers + of darkness fly at his approach or take refuge in their mysterious + caverns, for “he destroys the wicked, he scatters them, the omens and + gloomy portents, dreams, and wicked ghouls—he converts evil to good, + and he drives to their destruction the countries and men—who devote + themselves to black magic.” In addition to natural light, he sheds upon + the earth truth and justice abundantly; he is the “high judge” before whom + everything makes obeisance, his laws never waver, his decrees are never + set at naught. “O Sun, when thou goest to rest in the middle of the + heavens—may the bars of the bright heaven salute thee in peace, and + may the gate of heaven bless thee!—May Misharu, thy well-beloved + servant, guide aright thy progress, so that on Rbarra, the seat of thy + rule, thy greatness may rise, and that A, thy cherished spouse, may + receive thee joyfully! May thy glad heart find in her thy rest!—May + the food of thy divinity be brought to thee by her,—warrior, hero, + sun, and may she increase thy vigour;—lord of Ebarra, when thou + ap-proachest, mayest thou direct thy course aright!—-0 Sun, urge + rightly thy way along the fixed road determined for thee,—O Sun, + thou who art the judge of the land, and the arbiter of its laws!” + </p> + <p> + It would appear that the triad had begun by having in the third place a + goddess, Ishtar of Dilbat. Ishtar is the evening star which precedes the + appearance of the moon, and the morning star which heralds the approach of + the sun: the brilliance of its light justifies the choice which made it an + associate of the greater heavenly bodies. “In the days of the past.... Ea + charged Sin, Shamash, and Ishtar with the ruling of the firmament of + heaven; he distributed among them, with Anu, the command of the army of + heaven, and among these three gods, his children, he apportioned the day + and the night, and compelled them to work ceaselessly.” + </p> + <p> + <a name="linkBimage-0021" id="linkBimage-0021"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/173.jpg" width="100%" + alt="173.jpg Ishtar Holding Her Star Before Sin. " /> + </div> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from an intaglio at Rome. +</pre> + <p> + Ishtar was separated from her two companions, when the group of the + planets was definitely organized and claimed the adoration of the devout; + the theologians then put in her place an individual of a less original + aspect, Ramman. Ramman embraced within him the elements of many very + ancient genii, all of whom had been set over the atmosphere, and the + phenomena which are daily displayed in it—wind, rain, and thunder. + These genii occupied an important place in the popular religion which had + been cleverly formulated by the theologians of Uruk, and there have come + down to us many legends in which their incarnations play a part. They are + usually represented as enormous birds flocking on their swift wings from + below the horizon, and breathing flame or torrents of water upon the + countries over which they hovered. The most terrible of them was Zu, who + presided over tempests: he gathered the clouds together, causing them to + burst in torrents of rain or hail; he let loose the winds and lightnings, + and nothing remained standing where he had passed. He had a numerous + family: among them cross-breeds of extraordinary species which would + puzzle a modern naturalist, but were matters of course to the ancient + priests. His mother Siris, lady of the rain and clouds, was a bird like + himself; but Zu had as son a vigorous bull, which, pasturing in the + meadows, scattered abundance and fertility around him. The caprices of + these strange beings, their malice, and their crafty attacks, often + brought upon them vexatious misfortunes. Shutu, the south wind, one day + beheld Adapa, one of the numerous offspring of Ea, fishing in order to + provide food for his family. In spite of his exalted origin, Adapa was no + god; he did not possess the gift of immortality, and he was not at liberty + to appear in the presence of Anu in heaven. He enjoyed, nevertheless, + certain privileges, thanks to his familiar intercourse with his father Ea, + and owing to his birth he was strong enough to repel the assaults of more + than one deity. When, therefore, Shutu, falling upon him unexpectedly, had + overthrown him, his anger knew no bounds: “‘Shutu, thou hast overwhelmed + me with thy hatred, great as it is,—I will break thy wings! ‘Having + thus spoken with his mouth unto Shutu, Adapa broke his wings. For seven + days,—Shutu breathed no longer upon the earth.” Anu, being disturbed + at this quiet, which seemed to him not very consonant with the meddling + temperament of the wind, made inquiries as to its cause through his + messenger Ilabrt. “His messenger Ilabrt answered him: ‘My master,—Adapa, + the son of Ea, has broken Shutu’s wings.’—Anu, when he heard these + words, cried out: ‘Help!’” and he sent to Ea Barku, the genius of the + lightning, with an order to bring the guilty one before him. Adapa was not + quite at his ease, although he had right on his side; but Ea, the + cleverest of the immortals, prescribed a line of conduct for him. He was + to put on at once a garment of mourning, and to show himself along with + the messenger at the gates of heaven. Having arrived there, he would not + fail to meet the two divinities who guarded them,—Dumuzi and + Gishzida: “‘In whose honour this garb, in whose honour, Adapa, this + garment of mourning?’ ‘On our earth two gods have disappeared—it is + on this account I am as I am.’ Dumuzi and Gishzida will look at each + other,* they will begin to lament, they will say a friendly word—to + the god Anu for thee, they will render clear the countenance of Anu,—in + thy favour. When thou shalt appear before the face of Anu, the food of + death, it shall be offered to thee, do not eat it. The drink of death, it + shall be offered to thee, drink it not. A garment, it shall be offered to + the, put it on. Oil, it shall be offered to thee, anoint thyself with it. + The command I have given thee observe it well.’” + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + * Dumuzi and Gishzida are the two gods whom Adapa indicates + without naming them; insinuating that he has put on mourning + on their account, Adapa is secure of gaining their sympathy, + and of obtaining their intervention with the god Anu in his + favour. As to Dumuzi, see pp. 158, 159 of the present work; + the part played by Gishzida, as well as the event noted in + the text regarding him, is unknown. +</pre> + <p> + Everything takes place as Ea had foreseen. Dumuzi and Gishzida welcome the + poor wretch, speak in his favour, and present him: “as he approached, Anu + perceived him, and said to him: ‘Come, Adapa, why didst thou break the + wings of Shutu?’ Adapa answered Anu: ‘My lord,—for the household of + my lord Ea, in the middle of the sea,—-I was fishing, and the sea + was all smooth.—Shutu breathed, he, he overthrew me, and I plunged + into the abode of fish. Hence the anger of my heart,—that he might + not begin again his acts of ill will,—I broke his wings.’” Whilst he + pleaded his cause the furious heart of Anu became calm. The presence of a + mortal in the halls of heaven was a kind of sacrilege, to be severely + punished unless the god should determine its expiation by giving the + philtre of immortality to the intruder. Anu decided on the latter course, + and addressed Adapa: “‘Why, then, did Ea allow an unclean mortal to see—the + interior of heaven and earth?’ He handed him a cup, he himself reassured + him.—‘We, what shall we give him? The food of life—take some + to him that he may eat.’ The food of life, some was taken to him, but he + did not eat of it. The water of life, some was taken to him, but he drank + not of it. A garment, it was taken to him, and he put it on. Oil, some was + taken to him, and he anointed himself with it.” Anu looked upon him; he + lamented over him: “‘Well, Adapa, why hast thou not eaten—why hast + thou not drunk? Thou shalt not now have eternal life.’ Ea, my lord, has + commanded me: thou shalt not eat, thou shalt not drink.” Adapa thus lost, + by remembering too well the commands of his father, the opportunity which + was offered to him of rising to the rank of the immortals; Anu sent him + back to his home just as he had come, and Shutu had to put up with his + broken wings. + </p> + <p> + Bamman absorbed one after the other all these genii of tempest and + contention, and out of their combined characters his own personality of a + hundred diverse aspects was built up. + </p> + <p> + <a name="linkBimage-0022" id="linkBimage-0022"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="figleft" style="width:40%;"> + <img width="100%" src="images/177.jpg" + alt="177.jpg the Birds of The Tempest " /> + </div> + <p> + He was endowed with the capricious and changing disposition of the element + incarnate in him, and passed from tears to laughter, from anger to calm, + with a promptitude which made him one of the most disconcerting deities. + The tempest was his favourite rle. Sometimes he would burst suddenly on + the heavens at the head of a troop of savage subordinates, whose chiefs + were known as Matu, the squall, and Barku, the lightning; sometimes these + were only the various manifestations of his own nature, and it was he + himself who was called Matu and Barku. He collected the clouds, sent forth + the thunder-bolt, shook the mountains, and “before his rage and violence, + his bellowings, his thunder, the gods of heaven arose to the firmament—the + gods of the earth sank into the earth” in their terror. The monuments + represent him as armed for battle with club, axe, or the two-bladed + flaming sword which was usually employed to signify the thunderbolt. As he + destroyed everything in his blind rage, the kings of Chalda were + accustomed to invoke him against their enemies, and to implore him to + “hurl the hurricane upon the rebel peoples and the insubordinate nations.” + When his wrath was appeased, and he had returned to more gentle ways, his + kindness knew no limits. From having been the waterspout which overthrew + the forests, he became the gentle breeze which caresses and refreshes + them: with his warm showers he fertilizes the fields: he lightens the air + and tempers the summer heat. + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + 1. Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a Chaldan cylinder in the + Museum of New York. Lenormant, in a long article, which he + published under the pseudonym of Mansell, fancied he + recognized here the encounter between Sabitum and Gilgames + on the shores of the Ocean. +</pre> + <p> + He causes the rivers to swell and overflow their banks; he pours out the + waters over the fields, he makes channels for them, he directs them to + every place where the need of water is felt. + </p> + <p> + But his fiery temperament is stirred up by the slightest provocation, and + then “his flaming sword scatters pestilence over the land: he destroys the + harvest, brings the ingathering to nothing, tears up trees, and beats down + and roots up the corn.” + </p> + <p> + <a name="linkBimage-0024" id="linkBimage-0024"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/179.jpg" width="100%" + alt="179.jpg Ramman, the God of Tempests and Thunder. " /> + </div> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from Layard. Properly speaking, this + is a Susian deity brought by the soldiers of Assurbanipal + into Assyria, but it carries the usual insignia of Ramman. +</pre> + <p> + <a name="linkBimage-0023" id="linkBimage-0023"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="figright" style="width:30%;"> + <img width="100%" src="images/178.jpg" + alt="178.jpg Ramman Armed With an Axe. " /> + </div> + <p> + In a word, the second triad formed a more homogeneous whole when Ishtar + still belonged to it, and it is entirely owing to the presence of this + goddess in it that we are able to understand its plan and purpose; it was + essentially astrological, and it was intended that none should be enrolled + in it but the manifest leaders of the constellations. Ramman, on the + contrary, had nothing to commend him for a position alongside the moon and + sun; he was not a celestial body, he had no definitely shaped form, but + resembled an aggregation of gods rather than a single deity. By the + addition of Ramman to the triad, the void occasioned by the removal of + Ishtar was filled up in a blundering way. We must, however, admit that the + theologians must have found it difficult to find any one better fitted for + the purpose: when Venus was once set along with the rest of the planets, + there was nothing left in the heavens which was sufficiently brilliant to + replace her worthily. The priests were compelled to take the most powerful + deity they knew after the other five—the lord of the atmosphere and + the thunder.* + </p> + <p> + The gods of the triads were married, but their goddesses for the most part + had neither the liberty nor the important functions of the Egyptian + goddesses.** They were content, in their modesty, to be eclipsed behind + the personages of their husbands, and to spend their lives in the shade, + as the women of Asiatic countries still do. It would appear, moreover, + that there was no trouble taken about them until it was too late—when + it was desired, for instance, to explain the affiliation of the immortals. + Anu and Bel were bachelors to start with. When it was determined to assign + to them female companions, recourse was had to the procedure adopted by + the Egyptians in a similar case: there was added to their names the + distinctive suffix of the feminine gender, and in this manner two + grammatical goddesses were formed, Anat and Belit, whose dispositions give + some indications of this accidental birth. There was always a vague + uncertainty about the parts they had to play, and their existence itself + was hardly more than a seeming one. Anat sometimes represented a feminine + heaven, and differed from Anu only in her sex. At times she was regarded + as the antithesis of Anu, i.e. as the earth in contradistinction to the + heaven. Belit, as far as we can distinguish her from other persons to whom + the title “lady” was attributed, shared with Bel the rule over the earth + and the regions of darkness where the dead were confined. The wife of Ea + was distinguished by a name which was not derived from that of her + husband, but she was not animated by a more intense vitality than Anat or + Belit: she was called Damkina, the lady of the soil, and she personified + in an almost passive manner the earth united to the water which fertilized + it. The goddesses of the second triad were perhaps rather less artificial + in their functions. Ningal, doubtless, who ruled along with Sin at Uru, + was little more than an incarnate epithet. Her name means “the great + lady,” “the queen,” and her person is the double of that of her husband; + as he is the man-moon, she is the woman-moon, his beloved, and the mother + of his children Shamash and Ishtar. But A or Sirrida enjoyed an + indisputable authority alongside Shamash: she never lost sight of the fact + that she had been a sun like Shamash, a disk-god before she was + transformed into a goddess. Shamash, moreover, was surrounded by an actual + harem, of which Sirrid was the acknowledged queen, as he himself was its + king, and among its members Gula, the great, and Anunit, the daughter of + Sin, the morning star, found a place. Shala, the compassionate, was also + included among them; she was subsequently bestowed upon Ramman. They were + all goddesses of ancient lineage, and each had been previously worshipped + on her own account when the Sumerian people held sway in Chalda: as soon + as the Semites gained the upper hand, the powers of these female deities + became enfeebled, and they were distributed among the gods. There was but + one of them, Nana, the doublet of Ishtar, who had succeeded in preserving + her liberty: when her companions had been reduced to comparative + insignificance, she was still acknowledged as queen and mistress in her + city of Eridu. The others, notwithstanding the enervating influence to + which they were usually subject in the harem, experienced at times + inclinations to break into rebellion, and more than one of them, shaking + off the yoke of her lord, had proclaimed her independence: Anunit, for + instance, tearing herself away from the arms of Shamash, had vindicated, + as his sister and his equal, her claim to the half of his dominion. + Sippara was a double city, or rather there were two neighbouring Sippars, + one distinguished as the city of the Sun, “Sippara sha Shamash,” while the + other gave lustre to Anunit in assuming the designation of “Sippara sha + Anunitum.” Rightly interpreted, these family arrangements of the gods had + but one reason for their existence—the necessity of explaining + without coarseness those parental connections which the theological + classification found it needful to establish between the deities + constituting the two triads. In Chalda as in Egypt there was no + inclination to represent the divine families as propagating their species + otherwise than by the procedure observed in human families: the union of + the goddesses with the gods thus legitimated their offspring. + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + * Their embarrassment is shown in the way in which they have + classed this god. In the original triad, Ishtar, being the + smallest of the three heavenly bodies, naturally took the + third place. Ramman, on the contrary, had natural affinities + with the elemental group, and belonged to Anu, Bel, Ea, + rather than to Sin and Shamash. So we find him sometimes in + the third place, sometimes in the first of the second triad, + and this post of eminence is so natural to him, that + Assyriologists have preserved it from the beginning, and + describe the triad as composed, not of Sin, Shamash, and + Ramman, but of Ramman, Sin, and Shamash, or even of Sin, + Ramman, and Shamash. + + 1. Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a sketch by Loftus. The + original, a small stele of terra-cotta, is in the British + Museum. The date of this representation is uncertain. Ramman + stands upon the mountain which supports the heaven. + + ** The passive and almost impersonal character of the + majority of the Babylonian and Assyrian goddesses is well + known. The majority must have been independent at the + outset, in the Sumerian period, and were married later on, + under the influence of Semitic ideas. +</pre> + <p> + The triads were, therefore, nothing more than theological fictions. Each + of them was really composed of six members, and it was thus really a + council of twelve divinities which the priests of Uruk had instituted to + attend to the affairs of the universe; with this qualification, that the + feminine half of the assembly rarely asserted itself, and contributed but + an insignificant part to the common work. When once the great divisions + had been arranged, and the principal functionaries designated, it was + still necessary to work out the details, and to select v agents to + preserve an order among them. Nothing happens by chance in this world, and + the most insignificant events are determined by previsional arrangements, + and decisions arrived at a long time previously. The gods assembled every + morning in a hall, situated near the gates of the sun in the east, and + there deliberated on the events of the day. The sagacious Ea submitted to + them the fates which are about to be fulfilled, and caused a record of + them to be made in the chamber of destiny on tablets which Shamash or + Merodach carried with them to scatter everywhere on his way; but he who + should be lucky enough to snatch these tablets from him would make himself + master of the world for that day. This misfortune had arisen only once, at + the beginning of the ages. Zu, the storm-bird, who lives with his wife and + children on Mount Sabu under the protection of Bel, and who from this + elevation pounces down upon the country to ravage it, once took it into + his head to make himself equal to the supreme gods. He forced his way at + an early hour into the chamber of destiny before the sun had risen: he + perceived within it the royal insignia of Bel, “the mitre of his power, + the garment of his divinity,—the fatal tablets of his divinity, Zu + perceived them. He perceived the father of the gods, the god who is the + tie between heaven and earth,—and the desire of ruling took + possession of his heart;—yea, Zu perceived the father of the gods, + the god who is the tie between heaven and earth,—and the desire of + ruling took possession of his heart,—‘I will take the fatal tablets + of the gods, I myself,—and the oracles of all the gods, it is I who + will give them forth;—I will install myself on the throne, I will + send forth decrees,—I will manage the whole of the Igigi.’—And + his heart plotted warfare;—lying in wait on the threshold of the + hall, he watched for the dawn.—When Bel had poured out the shining + waters,—had installed himself on the throne, and donned the crown, + Zu took away the fatal tablets from his hand,—he seized power, and + the authority to give forth decrees,—the god Zu, he flew away and + concealed himself in the mountains.” Bel immediately cried out, he was + inflamed with anger, and ravaged the world with the fire of his wrath. + “Anu opened his mouth, he spake,—he said to the gods his offspring:—‘Who + will conquer the god Zu?—He will make his name great in every land.’—Bamman, + the supreme, the son of Anu, was called, and Anu himself gave to him his + orders;—yea, Bamman, the supreme, the son of Anu, was called, and + Anu himself gave to him his orders.—‘Go, my son Kamman, the valiant, + since nothing resists thy attack;—conquer Zu by thine arm, and thy + name shall be great among the great gods,—among the gods, thy + brothers, thou shalt have no equal: sanctuaries shall be built to thee, + and if thou buildest for thyself thy cities in the “four houses of the + world,” * —thy cities shall extend over all the terrestrial mountain! + ‘Be valiant, then, in the sight of the gods, and may thy name be strong.’ + Bamman answers, he addresses this bpeech to Anu his father:—‘Father, + who will go to the inaccessible mountains? Who is the equal of Zu among + the gods, thy offspring? He has carried off in his hand the fatal tablets,—he + has seized power and authority to give forth decrees,—Zu thereupon + flew away and hid himself in his mountain.—Now, the word of his + mouth is like that of the god who unites heaven and earth;—-my power + is no more than clay,—and all the gods must bow before him.’” Anu + sent for the god Bara, the son of Ishtar, to help him, and exhorted him in + the same language he had addressed to Ramman: Bara refused to attempt the + enterprise. Shamash, called in his turn, at length consented to set out + for Mount Sabu: he triumphed over the storm-bird, tore the fatal tablets + from him, and brought him before Ea as a prisoner. + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + * Literally, “Construct thy cities in the four regions of + the world (cf. pp. 12, 13 of the present work), and thy + cities will extend to the mountain of the earth.” Anu would + appear to have promised to Ramman a monopoly; if he wished + to build cities which would recognize him as their patron, + these cities will cover the entire earth. +</pre> + <p> + <a name="linkBimage-0025" id="linkBimage-0025"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/186.jpg" width="100%" + alt="186.jpg Shamash Fights With zu and the Storm Birds. " /> + </div> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from Layard. +</pre> + <p> + <a name="linkBimage-0026" id="linkBimage-0026"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/186a.jpg" width="100%" + alt="186a.jpg the Plenisphere Taken from The Temple Of Tentyra " /> + </div> + <p> + <a name="linkBimage-0027" id="linkBimage-0027"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/186a-text.jpg" width="100%" + alt="186a-text.jpg Text of the Plenisphere " /> + </div> + <p> + The sun of the complete day, the sun in the full possession of his + strength, could alone win back the attributes of power which the morning + sun had allowed himself to be despoiled of. From that time forth the + privilege of delivering immortal decrees to mortals was never taken out of + the hands of the gods of light. + </p> + <p> + Destinies once fixed on the earth became a law—“mamit”—a good + or bad fate, from which no one could escape, but of which any one might + learn the disposition beforehand if he were capable of interpreting the + formulas of it inscribed on the book of the sky. The stars, even those + which were most distant from the earth, were not unconcerned in the events + which took place upon it. They were so many living beings endowed with + various characteristics, and their rays as they passed across the + celestial spaces exercised from above an active control on everything they + touched. Their influences became modified, increased or weakened according + to the intensity with which they shed them, according to the respective + places they occupied in the firmament, and according to the hour of the + night and the month of the year in which they rose or set. Each division + of time, each portion of space, each category of existences—and in + each category each individual—was placed under their rule and was + subject to their implacable tyranny. The infant was born their slave, and + continued in this condition of slavery until his life’s end: the star + which was in the ascendent at the instant of his birth became his star, + and ruled his destiny. The Chaldans, like the Egyptians, fancied they + discerned in the points of light which illuminate the nightly sky, the + outline of a great number of various figures—men, animals, monsters, + real and imaginary objects, a lance, a bow, a fish, a scorpion, ears of + wheat, a bull, and a lion. The majority of these were spread out above + their heads on the surface of the celestial vault; but twelve of these + figures, distinguishable by their brilliancy, were arranged along the + celestial horizon in the pathway of the sun, and watched over his daily + course along the walls of the world. These divided this part of the sky + into as many domains or “houses,” in which they exercised absolute + authority, and across which the god could not go without having previously + obtained their consent, or having brought them into subjection beforehand. + This arrangement is a reminiscence of the wars by which Bel-Merodach, the + divine bull, the god of Babylon, had succeeded in bringing order out of + chaos: he had not only killed Timat, but he had overthrown and subjugated + the monsters which led the armies of darkness. He meets afresh, every year + and every day, on the confines of heaven and earth, the scorpion-men of + his ancient enemy, the fish with heads of men or goats, and many more. The + twelve constellations were combined into a zodiac, whose twelve signs, + transmitted to the Greeks and modified by them, may still be read on our + astronomical charts. The constellations, immovable, or actuated by a slow + motion, in longitude only, contain the problems of the future, but they + are not sufficient of themselves alone to furnish man with the solution of + these problems. The heavenly bodies capable of explaining them, the real + interpreters of destiny, were at first the two divinities who rule the + empires of night and day—the moon and the sun; afterwards there took + part in this work of explanation the five planets which we call Jupiter, + Venus, Saturn, Mars, and Mercury, or rather the five gods who actuate + them, and who have controlled their course from the moment of creation—Merodach, + Ishtar, Ninib, Nergal, and Nebo. The planets seemed to traverse the + heavens in every direction, to cross their own and each other’s paths, and + to approach the fixed stars or recede from them; and the species of + rhythmical dance in which they are carried unceasingly across the + celestial spaces revealed to men, if they examined it attentively, the + irresistible march of their own destinies, as surely as if they had made + themselves master of the fatal tablets of Shamash, and could spell them + out line by line. + </p> + <p> + The Chaldns were disposed to regard the planets as perverse sheep who had + escaped from the fold of the stars to wander wilfully in search of + pasture.* At first they were considered to be so many sovereign deities, + without other function than that of running through the heavens and + furnishing there predictions of the future; afterwards two of them + descended to the earth, and received upon it the homage of men* —Ishtar + from the inhabitants of the city of Dilbat, and Nebo* from those of + Borsippa. Nebo assumed the <i>rle</i> of a soothsayer and a prophet. He + knew and foresaw everything, and was ready to give his advice upon any + subject: he was the inventor of the method of making clay tablets, and of + writing upon them. Ishtar was a combination of contradictory + characteristics.**** + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + * Their generic name, read as “lubat,” in Sumero-Accadian, + “bibbu” in Semitic speech (Fr. Lenormant, <i>Essai de + Commentaire de Brose</i>, pp. 370, 371), denoted a quadruped, + the species of which Lenormant was not able to define; + Jensen (<i>Die Kosmologie</i>, pp. 95-99) identified it with the + sheep and the ram. At the end of the account of the + creation, Merodach-Jupiter is compared with a shepherd who + feeds the flock of the gods on the pastures of heaven (cf. + p. 15 of the present work). + + ** The site of Dilbat is unknown: it has been sought in the + neighbourhood of Kishu and Babylon (Delitzsch, <i>Wo lag das + Paradies?</i> p. 219); it is probable that it was in the + suburbs of Sippara. The name given to the goddess was + transcribed AeXckit (Hesychius, <i>sub voce</i>), and signifies + the herald, the messenger of the day. + + *** The rle of Nebo was determined by the early + Assyriologists (Rawlin-son, <i>On the Religion of the + Babylonians and Assyrians</i>, pp. 523-52G; Oppeet, <i>Expdition + en Msopotamie</i>, vol. ii. p. 257; Lenormant, <i>Essai de + Commentaire de Brose</i>, pp. 114-116). He owed his functions + partly to his alliance with other gods (Sayce, <i>Religion of + the Ancient Babylonians</i>, pp. 118, 119). + + **** See the chapter devoted by Sayce to the consideration + of Ishtar in his Religion of the Ancient Babylonians (IV. + Tammuz and Ishtar, p. 221, et seq.), and the observations + made by Jeremias on the subject in the sequel of his + Izdubar-Nimrod (Ishtar-Astarte im Izdubar-Epos), pp. 56-66. +</pre> + <p> + <a name="linkBimage-0028" id="linkBimage-0028"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/190.jpg" width="100%" + alt="190.jpg Ishtar As a Warrior-goddess " /> + </div> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a heliogravure in Mnant’s + <i>Recherches sur la Glyptique orientale</i>. +</pre> + <p> + In Southern Chalda she was worshipped under the name of Nan, the supreme + mistress.* The identity of this lady of the gods, “Blit-ilnit,” the + Evening Star, with Anunit, the Morning Star, was at first ignored, and + hence two distinct goddesses were formed from the twofold manifestation of + a single deity: having at length discovered their error, the Chaldans + merged these two beings in one, and their names became merely two + different designations for the same star under a twofold aspect. The + double character, however, which had been attributed to them continued to + be attached to the single personality. + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + * With regard to Nana, consult, with reserve, Fk. Lenormant, + Essai de Commentaire de Brose, pp. 100-103, 378, 379, where + the identity of Ishtar and Nana is still unrecognized. +</pre> + <p> + <a name="linkBimage-0029" id="linkBimage-0029"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="figleft" style="width:20%;"> + <img width="100%" src="images/191.jpg" alt="191.jpg Nebo " /> + </div> + <p> + The Evening Star had symbolized the goddess of love, who attracted the + sexes towards one another, and bound them together by the chain of desire; + the Morning Star, on the other hand, was regarded as the cold-blooded and + cruel warrior who despised the pleasures of love and rejoiced in warfare: + Ishtar thus combined in her person chastity and lasciviousness, kindness + and ferocity, and a peaceful and warlike disposition, but this incongruity + in her characteristics did not seem to disconcert the devotion of her + worshippers. The three other planets would have had a wretched part to + play in comparison with Nebo and Ishtar, if they had not been placed under + new patronage. The secondary solar gods, Merodach, Ninib, and Nergal, led, + if we examine their rle carefully, but an incomplete existence: they were + merely portions of the sun, while Shamash represented the entire orb. What + became of them apart from the moment in the day and year in which they + were actively engaged in their career? Where did they spend their nights, + the hours during which Shamash had retired into the firmament, and lay + hidden behind the mountains of the north? As in Egypt the Horuses + identified at first with the sun became at length the rulers of the + planets, so in Chalda the three suns of Ninib, Merodach, and Nergal + became respectively assimilated to Saturn, Jupiter, and Mars;* and this + identification was all the more easy in the case of Saturn, as he had been + considered from the beginning as a bull belonging to Shamash. + Henceforward, therefore, there was a group of five powerful gods—distributed + among the stars of heaven, and having abodes also in the cities of the + earth—whose function it was to announce the destinies of the + universe. Some, deceived by the size and brilliancy of Jupiter, gave the + chief command to Merodach, and this opinion naturally found a welcome + reception at Babylon, of which he was the feudal deity. Others, taking + into account only the preponderating influence exercised by the planets + over the fortunes of men, accorded the primacy to Ninib, placing Merodach + next, followed respectively by Ishtar, Nergal, and Nebo. The five planets, + like the six triads, were not long before they took to themselves + consorts, if indeed they had not already been married before they were + brought together in a collective whole. Ninib chose for wife, in the first + place, Bau, the daughter of Anu, the mistress of Uru, highly venerated + from the most remote times; afterwards Gula, the queen of physicians, + whose wisdom alleviated the ills of humanity, and who was one of the + goddesses sometimes placed in the harem of Shamash himself. Merodach + associated with him Zirbanit, the fruitful, who secures from generation to + generation the permanence and increase of living beings. Nergal + distributed his favours sometimes to Laz, and sometimes to Esharra, who + was, like himself, warlike and always victorious in battle. Nebo provided + himself with a mate in Tashmit, the great bride, or even in Ishtar + herself. But Ishtar could not be content with a single husband: after she + had lost Dumuzi-Tammuz, the spouse of her youth, she gave herself freely + to the impulses of her passions, distributing her favours to men as well + as gods, and was sometimes subject to be repelled with contempt by the + heroes upon whom she was inclined to bestow her love. The five planets + came thus to be actually ten, and advantage was taken of these alliances + to weave fresh schemes of affiliation: Nebo was proclaimed to be the son + of Merodach and Zirbanit, Merodach the son of Ba, and Ninib the offspring + of Bel and Esharra. + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + + 1. Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from an Assyrian statue in alabaster + in the British Museum. + + * Ishtar, Nebo, Sin, and Shamash being heavenly bodies, to + begin with, and the other great gods, Anu, Bel, Ea, and + Ramman having their stars in the heavens, the Chaldans + were led by analogy to ascribe to the gods which represented + the phases of the sun, Merodach, Ninib, and Nergal, three + stars befitting their importance, i.e. three planets. +</pre> + <p> + There were two councils, one consisting of twelve members, the other of + ten; the former was composed of the most popular gods of Southern Chalda, + representing the essential elements of the world, while the latter + consisted of the great deities of Northern Chalda, whose function it was + to regulate or make known the destinies of men. The authors of this + system, who belonged to Southern Chalda, naturally gave the position to + their patron gods, and placed the twelve above the ten. It is well known + that Orientals display a great respect for numbers, and attribute to them + an almost irresistible power; we can thus understand how it was that the + Chaldans applied them to designate their divine masters, and we may + calculate from these numbers the estimation in which each of these masters + was held. The goddesses had no value assigned to them in this celestial + arithmetic, Ishtar excepted, who was not a mere duplication, more or less + ingenious, of a previously existing deity, but possessed from the + beginning an independent life, and could thus claim to be called goddess + in her own right. The members of the two triads were arranged on a + descending scale, Anu taking the highest place: the scale was considered + to consist of a soss of sixty units in length, and each of the deities who + followed Anu was placed ten of these units below his predecessor, Bel at + 50 units, Ea at 40, Sin at 30, Shamash at 20, Ramman at 10 or 6. The gods + of the planets were not arranged in a regular series like those of the + triads, but the numbers attached to them expressed their proportionate + influence on terrestrial affairs: to Ninib was assigned the same number as + had been given to Bel, 50, to Merodach perhaps 25, to Ishtar 15, to Nergal + 12, and to Nebo 10. The various spirits were also fractionally estimated, + but this as a class, and not as individuals: the priests would not have + known how to have solved the problem if they had been obliged to ascribe + values to the infinity of existences.* As the Heliopolitans were obliged + to eliminate from the Ennead many feudal divinities, so the Chaldans had + left out of account many of their sovereign deities, especially goddesses, + Bau of Uru, Nana of Uruk, and Allt; or if they did introduce them into + their calculations, it was by a subterfuge, by identifying them with other + goddesses, to whom places had been already assigned; Bau being thus + coupled with Ohila, Nana with Ishtar, and Allt with Ninhl-Beltis. If + figures had been assigned to the latter proportionate to the importance of + the parts they played, and the number of their votaries, how comes it that + they were excluded from the cycle of the great gods? They were actually + placed alongside rather than below the two councils, and without + insistence upon the rank which they enjoyed in the hierarchy. But the + confusion which soon arose among divinities of identical or analogous + nature opened the way for inserting all the neglected personalities in the + framework already prepared for them. A sky-god, like Dagan, would mingle + naturally with Anu, and enjoy like honours with him. The gods of all ranks + associated with the sun or fire, Nusku, Gibil, and Dumuzi, who had not + been at first received among the privileged group, obtained a place there + by virtue of their assimilation to Shamash, and his secondary forms, + Bel-Merodach, Ninib, and Nergal. Ishtar absorbed all her companions, and + her name put in the plural, Ishtarati, “the Ishtars,” embraced all + goddesses in general, just as the name Hani took in all the gods. Thanks + to this compromise, the system flourished, and was widely accepted: local + vanity was always able to find a means for placing in a prominent place + within it the feudal deity, and for reconciling his pretensions to the + highest rank with the order of precedence laid down by the theologians of + Uruk. The local god was always the king of the gods, the father of the + gods, he who was worshipped above the others in everyday life, and whose + public cult constituted the religion of the State or city. + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + * As far as we can at present determine, the most ancient + series established was that of the planetary gods, whose + values, following each other irregularly, are not calculated + on a scheme of mathematical progression, but according to + the empirical importance, which a study of predictions had + ascribed to each planet. The regular series, that of the + great gods, bears in its regularity the stamp of its later + introduction: it was instituted after the example of the + former, but with corrections of what seemed capricious, and + fixing the interval between the gods always at the same + figure. +</pre> + <p> + The temples were miniature reproductions of the arrangement of the + universe. The “ziggurat” represented in its form the mountain of the + world, and the halls ranged at its feet resembled approximately the + accessory parts of the world: the temple of Merodach at Babylon comprised + them all up to the chambers of fate, where the sun received every morning + the tablets of destiny. The name often indicated the nature of the patron + deity or one of his attributes: the temple of Shamash at Larsam, for + instance was called E-Babbara, “the house of the sun,” and that of Nebo at + Borsippa, E-Zida, “the eternal house.” No matter where the sanctuary of a + specific god might be placed, it always bore the same name; Shamash, for + example, dwelt at Sippara as at Larsam in an E-Babbara. In Chalda, as in + Egypt, the king or chief of the State was the priest <i>par excellence</i>, + and the title of “vicegerent,” so frequent in the early period, shows that + the chief was regarded as representing the divinity among his own people; + but a priestly body, partly hereditary, partly selected, fulfilled for him + his daily sacerdotal functions, and secured the regularity of the + services. A chief priest—“ishshakku”—was at their head, and + his principal duty was the pouring out of the libation. Each temple had + its “ishshakku,” but he who presided over the worship of the feudal deity + took precedence of all the others in the city, as in the case of the chief + priests of Bel-Merodach at Babylon, of Sin at Uru, and of Shamash at + Larsam or Sippara. He presided over various categories of priests and + priestesses whose titles and positions in the hierarchy are not well + known. The “sangutu” appear to have occupied after him the most important + place, as chamberlains attached to the house of the god, and as his + liegemen. To some of these was entrusted the management of the harem of + the god, while others were overseers of the remaining departments of his + palace. The “kpu” and the “shatammu” were especially charged with the + management of his financial interests, while the “pashishu” anointed with + holy and perfumed oil his statues of stone, metal, or wood, the votive + stel set up in the chapels, and the objects used in worship and + sacrifice, such as the great basins, the “seas” of copper which contained + the water employed in the ritual ablutions, and the victims led to the + altar. After these came a host of officials, butchers and their + assistants, soothsayers, augurs, prophets,—in fact, all the + attendants that the complicated rites, as numerous in Chalda as in Egypt, + required, not to speak of the bands of women and men who honoured the god + in meretricious rites. Occupation for this motley crowd was never lacking. + Every day and almost every hour a fresh ceremony required the services of + one or other member of the staff, from the monarch himself, or his deputy + in the temple, down to the lowest sacristan. The 12th of the month Blul + was set apart at Babylon for the worship of Bel and Beltis: the sovereign + made a donation to them according as he was disposed, and then celebrated + before them the customary sacrifices, and if he raised his hand to plead + for any favour, he obtained it without fail. The 13th was dedicated to the + moon, the supreme god; the 14th to Beltis and Nergal; the 15th to Shamash; + the 16th was a fast in honour of Merodach and Zirbanit; the 17th was the + annual festival of Nebo and Tashmit; the 18th was devoted to the laudation + of Sin and Shamash; while the 19th was a “white day” for the great goddess + Gula. The whole year was taken up in a way similar to this casual specimen + from the calendar. The kings, in founding a temple, not only bestowed upon + it the objects and furniture required for present exigencies, such as + lambs and oxen, birds, fish, bread, liquors, incense, and odoriferous + essences; they assigned to it an annual income from the treasury, slaves, + and cultivated lands; and their royal successors were accustomed to renew + these gifts or increase them on every opportunity. Every victorious + campaign brought him his share in the spoils and captives; every fortunate + or unfortunate event which occurred in connection with the State or royal + family meant an increase in the gifts to the god, as an act of + thanksgiving on the one hand for the divine favour, or as an offering on + the other to appease the wrath of the god. Gold, silver, copper, + lapis-lazuli, gems and precious woods, accumulated in the sacred treasury; + fields were added to fields, flocks to flocks, slaves to slaves; and the + result of such increase would in a few generations have made the + possessions of the god equal to those of the reigning sovereign, if the + attacks of neighbouring peoples had not from time to time issued in the + loss of a part of it, or if the king himself had not, under financial + pressure, replenished his treasury at the expense of the priests. To + prevent such usurpations as far as possible, maledictions were hurled at + every one who should dare to lay a sacrilegious hand on the least object + belonging to the divine domain; it was predicted of such “that he would be + killed like an ox in the midst of his prosperity, and slaughtered like a + wild urus in the fulness of his strength!... May his name be effaced from + his stel in the temple of his god! May his god see pitilessly the + disaster of his country, may the god ravage his land with the waters of + heaven, ravage it with the waters of the earth. May he be pursued as a + nameless wretch, and his seed fall under servitude! May this man, like + every one who acts adversely to his master, find nowhere a refuge, afar + off, under the vault of the skies or in any abode of man whatsoever.” + These threats, terrible as they were, did not succeed in deterring the + daring, and the mighty men of the time were willing to brave them, when + their interests promoted them. Gulkishar, Lord of the “land of the sea,” + had vowed a wheat-field to Nina, his lady, near the town of Deri, on the + Tigris. Seven hundred years later, in the reign of Belnadinabal, + Ekarrakas, governor of Btsinmagir, took possession of it, and added it + to the provincial possessions, contrary to all equity. The priest of the + goddess appealed to the king, and prostrating himself before the throne + with many prayers and mystic formulas, begged for the restitution of the + alienated land. Belnadinabal acceded to the request, and renewed the + imprecations which had been inserted on the original deed of gift: “If + ever, in the course of days, the man of law, or the governor of a suzerain + who will superintend the town of Btsinmagir, fears the vengeance of the + god Zikum or the goddess Nina, may then Zikum and Nina, the mistress of + the goddesses, come to him with the benediction of the prince of the gods; + may they grant to him the destiny of a happy life, and may they accord to + him days of old age, and years of uprightness! But as for thee, who hast a + mind to change this, step not across its limits, do not covet the land: + hate evil and love justice.” If all sovereigns were not so accommodating + in their benevolence as Belnadinabal, the piety of private individuals, + stimulated by fear, would be enough to repair the loss, and frequent + legacies would soon make up for the detriment caused to the temple + possessions by the enemy’s sword or the rapacity of an unscrupulous lord. + The residue, after the vicissitudes of revolutions, was increased and + diminished from time to time, to form at length in the city an + indestructible fief whose administration was a function of the chief + priest for life, and whose revenue furnished means in abundance for the + personal exigencies of the gods as well as the support of his ministers. + </p> + <p> + This was nothing more than justice would prescribe. A loyal and universal + faith would not only acknowledge the whole world to be the creation of the + gods, but also their inalienable domain. It belonged to them at the + beginning; every one in the State of which the god was the sovereign lord, + all those, whether nobles or serfs, vicegerents or kings, who claimed to + have any possession in it, were but ephemeral lease-holders of portions of + which they fancied themselves the owners. Donations to the temples were, + therefore, nothing more than voluntary restitutions, which the gods + consented to accept graciously, deigning to be well pleased with the + givers, when, after all-, they might have considered the gifts as merely + displays of strict honesty, which merited neither recognition nor thanks. + They allowed, however, the best part of their patrimony to remain in the + hands of strangers, and they contented themselves with what the pretended + generosity of the faithful might see fit to assign to them. Of their + lands, some were directly cultivated by the priests themselves; others + were leased to lay people of every rank, who took off the shoulders of the + priesthood all the burden of managing them, while rendering at the same + time the profit that accrued from them; others were let at a fixed rent + according to contract. The tribute of dates, corn, and fruit, which was + rendered to the temples to celebrate certain commemorative ceremonies in + the honour of this or that deity, were fixed charges upon certain lands, + which at length usually fell entirely into the hands of the priesthood as + mortmain possessions. These were the sources of the fixed revenues of the + gods, by means of which they and their people were able to live, if not + luxuriously, at least in a manner befitting their dignity. The offerings + and sacrifices were a kind of windfall, of which the quantity varied + strangely with the seasons; at certain times few were received, while at + other times there was a superabundance. The greatest portion of them was + consumed on the spot by the officials of the sanctuary; the part which + could be preserved without injury was added to the produce of the domain, + and constituted a kind of reserve for a rainy day, or was used to produce + more of its kind. The priests made great profit out of corn and metals, + and the skill with which they conducted commercial operations in silver + was so notorious that no private person hesitated to entrust them with the + management of his capital: they were the intermediaries between lenders + and borrowers, and the commissions which they obtained in these + transactions was not the smallest or the least certain of their profits. + They maintained troops of slaves, labourers, gardeners, workmen, and even + women-singers and sacred courtesans of which mention has been made above, + all of whom either worked directly for them in their several trades, or + were let out to those who needed their services. The god was not only the + greatest cultivator in the State after the king, sometimes even excelling + him in this respect, but he was also the most active manufacturer, and + many of the utensils in daily use, as well as articles of luxury, + proceeded from his workshops. His possessions secured for him a paramount + authority in the city, and also an influence in the councils of the king: + the priests who represented him on earth thus became mixed up in State + affairs, and exercised authority on his behalf in the same measure as the + officers of the crown. + </p> + <p> + <a name="linkBimage-0030" id="linkBimage-0030"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/203.jpg" width="100%" + alt="203.jpg a Votary Led to the God To Receive The Reward Of The Sacrifice " /> + </div> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a Chaldan intaglio in the + Berlin Museum. +</pre> + <p> + He, had, indeed, as much need of riches and renown as the least of his + clients. As he was subject to all human failings, and experienced all the + appetites of mankind, he had to be nourished, clothed, and amused, and + this could be done only at great expense. The stone or wooden statues + erected to him in the sanctuaries furnished him with bodies, which he + animated with his breath, and accredited to his clients as the receivers + of all things needful to him in his mysterious kingdom. The images of the + gods were clothed in vestments, they were anointed with odoriferous oils, + covered with jewels, served with food and drink; and during these + operations the divinities themselves, above in the heaven, or down in the + abyss, or in the bosom of the earth, were arrayed in garments, their + bodies were perfumed with unguents, and their appetites fully satisfied: + all that was further required for this purpose was the offering of + sacrifices together with prayers and prescribed rites. The priest began by + solemnly inviting the gods to the feast: as soon as they sniffed from afar + the smell of the good cheer that awaited them, they ran “like a swarm of + flies” and prepared themselves to partake of it. + </p> + <p> + <a name="linkBimage-0031" id="linkBimage-0031"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/204.jpg" width="100%" + alt="204.jpg the Sacrifice: a Goat Presented to Ishtar. " /> + </div> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from an Assyrian intaglio + illustrated in A. Rich, <i>Narrative of a Journey to the Site + of Babylon in 1811</i>. The sacrifice of the goat, or rather + its presentation to the god, is not infrequently represented + on the Assyrian bas-reliefs. +</pre> + <p> + The supplications having been heard, water was brought to the gods for the + necessary ablutions before a repast. “Wash thy hands, cleanse thy hands,—may + the gods thy brothers wash their hands!—From a clean dish eat a pure + repast,—from a clean cup drink pure water.” The statue, from the + rigidity of the material out of which it was carved, was at a loss how to + profit by the exquisite things which had been lavished upon it: the + difficulty was removed by the opening of its mouth at the moment of + consecration, thus enabling it to partake of the good fare to its + satisfaction.* The banquet lasted a long time, and consisted of every + delicacy which the culinary skill of the time could prepare: the courses + consisted of dates, wheaten flour, honey, butter, various kinds of wines, + and fruits, together with roast and boiled meats. + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + * This operation, which was also resorted to in Egypt in the + case of the statues of the gods and deceased persons, is + clearly indicated in a text of the second Chaldan empire + published in <i>W. A. Insc</i>, vol. iv. pi. 25. The priest who + consecrates an image makes clear in the first place that + “its mouth not being open it can partake of no refreshment: + it neither eats food nor drinks water.” Thereupon he performs + certain rites, which he declares were celebrated, if not at + that moment, at least for the first time by Ea himself: “Ea + has brought thee to thy glorious place,—to thy glorious + place he has brought thee,—brought thee with his splendid + hand,—brought also butter and honey;—<i>he has poured + consecrated water into thy mouth—and by magic has opened + thy mouth.</i>” Henceforward the statue can eat and drink like + an ordinary living being the meat and beverages offered to + it during the sacrifice. +</pre> + <p> + <a name="linkBimage-0032" id="linkBimage-0032"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/205.jpg" width="100%" + alt="205.jpg the God Shamash Seizes With his Left Hand The Smoke of the Sacrifice. " /> + </div> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a Chaldan intaglio pointed out + by Heuzey-Sarzcc; the original is in the Louvre. The scene + depicted behind Shamash deals with a legend still unknown. A + goddess, pursued by a genius with a double face, has taken + refuge under a tree, which bows down to protect her; while + the monster endeavours to break down the obstacle branch by + branch, a god rises from the stem and hands to the goddess a + stone-headed mace to protect her against her enemy. +</pre> + <p> + In the most ancient times it would appear that even human sacrifices were + offered, but this custom was obsolete except on rare occasions, and lambs, + oxen, sometimes swine’s flesh, formed the usual elements of the sacrifice. + The gods seized as it arose from the altar the unctuous smoke, and fed on + it with delight. When they had finished their repast, the supplication of + a favour was adroitly added, to which they gave a favourable hearing. + Services were frequent in the temples: there was one in the morning and + another in the evening on ordinary days, in addition to those which + private individuals might require at any hour of the day. The festivals + assigned to the local god and his colleagues, together with the acts of + praise in which the whole nation joined, such as that of the New Year, + required an abundance of extravagant sacrifices, in which the blood of the + victims flowed like water. Days of sorrow and mourning alternated with + these days of joy, during which the people and the magnates gave + themselves up to severe fasting and acts of penitence. The Chaldeans had a + lively sense of human frailty, and of the risks entailed upon the sinner + by disobedience to the gods. The dread of sinning haunted them during + their whole life; they continually subjected the motives of their actions + to a strict scrutiny, and once self-examination had revealed to them the + shadow of an evil intent, they were accustomed to implore pardon for it in + a humble manner. “Lord, my sins are many, great are my misdeeds!—O + my god, my sins are many, great my misdeeds!—O my goddess, my sins + are many, great my misdeeds!—I have committed faults and I knew them + not; I have committed sin and I knew it not; I have fed upon misdeeds and + I knew them not; I have walked in omissions and I knew them not.—The + lord, in the anger of his heart, he has stricken me,—the god, in the + wrath of his heart, has abandoned me,—Ishtar is enraged against me, + and has treated me harshly!—I make an effort, and no one offers me a + hand,—I weep, and no one comes to me,—I cry aloud, and no one + hears me:—I sink under affliction, I am overwhelmed, I can no longer + raise up my head,—I turn to my merciful god to call upon him, and I + groan!... Lord reject not thy servant,—and if he is hurled into the + roaring waters, stretch to him thy hand;—the sins I have committed, + have mercy upon them,—the misdeeds I have committed, scatter them to + the winds—and my numerous faults, tear them to pieces like a + garment.” Sin in the eyes of the Chaldan was not, as with us, an + infirmity of the soul; it assaulted the body like an actual virus, and the + fear of physical suffering or death engendered by it, inspired these + complaints with a note of sincerity which cannot be mistaken. + </p> + <p> + Every individual is placed, from the moment of his birth, under the + protection of a god and goddess, of whom he is the servant, or rather the + son, and whom he never addresses otherwise than as his god and his + goddess. These deities accompany him night and day, not so much to protect + him from visible dangers, as to guard him from the invisible beings which + ceaselessly hover round him, and attack him on every side. If he is + devout, piously disposed towards his divine patrons and the deities of his + country, if he observes the prescribed rites, recites the prayers, + performs the sacrifices—in a word, if he acts rightly—their + aid is never lacking; they bestow upon him a numerous posterity, a happy + old age, prolonged to the term fixed by fate, when he must resign himself + to close his eyes for ever to the light of day. If, on the contrary, he is + wicked, violent, one whose word cannot be trusted, “his god cuts him down + like a reed,” extirpates his race, shortens his days, delivers him over to + demons who possess themselves of his body and afflict it with sicknesses + before finally despatching him. Penitence is of avail against the evil of + sin, and serves to re-establish a right course of life, but its efficacy + is not permanent, and the moment at last arrives in which death, getting + the upper hand, carries its victim away. The Chaldans had not such clear + ideas as to what awaited them in the other world as the Egyptians + possessed: whilst the tomb, the mummy, the perpetuity of the funeral + revenues, and the safety of the double, were the engrossing subjects in + Egypt, the Chaldan texts are almost entirely silent as to the condition + of the soul, and the living seem to have had no further concern about the + dead than to get rid of them as quickly and as completely as possible. + They did not believe that everything was over at the last breath, but they + did not on that account think that the fate of that which survived was + indissolubly associated with the perishable part, and that the disembodied + soul was either annihilated or survived, according as the flesh in which + it was sustained was annihilated or survived in the tomb. The soul was + doubtless not utterly unconcerned about the fate of the <i>larva</i> it + had quitted: its pains were intensified on being despoiled of its earthly + case if the latter were mutilated, or left without sepulture, a prey to + the fowls, of the air. This feeling, however, was not sufficiently + developed to create a desire for escape from corruption entirely, and to + cause a resort to the mummifying process of the Egyptians. + </p> + <p> + <a name="linkBimage-0033" id="linkBimage-0033"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/208.jpg" width="100%" + alt="208.jpg Decorated Wrappings from a Mummy (color) " /> + </div> + <p> + The Chaldans did not subject the body, therefore, to those injections, to + those prolonged baths in preserving fluids, to that laborious swaddling + which rendered it indestructible; whilst the family wept and lamented, old + women who exercised the sad function of mourners washed the dead body, + perfumed it, clad it in its best apparel, painted its cheeks, blackened + its eyelids, placed a collar on its neck, rings on its fingers, arranged + its arms upon its breast, and stretched it on a bed, setting up at its + head a little altar for the customary offerings of water, incense, and + cakes. + </p> + <p> + <a name="linkBimage-0034" id="linkBimage-0034"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/209a.jpg" width="100%" + alt="209a.jpg Chaldean Coffin in the Form of a Jar " /> + </div> + <p> + <a name="linkBimage-0035" id="linkBimage-0035"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/209b.jpg" width="100%" + alt="209b.jpg a Vaulted Tomb in Uru " /> + </div> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a sketch by Taylor. +</pre> + <p> + <a name="linkBimage-0036" id="linkBimage-0036"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/210.jpg" width="100%" + alt="210.jpg Chaldan Tomb With Domed Roof. " /> + </div> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a sketch by Taylor. +</pre> + <p> + Evil spirits, prowled incessantly around the dead bodies of the Chaldans, + either to feed upon them, or to use them in their sorcery: should they + succeed in slipping into a corpse, from that moment it could be + metamorphosed into a vampire, and return to the world to suck the blood of + the living. The Chaldans were, therefore, accustomed to invite by prayers + beneficent genii and gods to watch over the dead. Two of these would take + their invisible places at the head and foot of the bed, and wave their + hands in the act of blessing: these were the vassals of Ea, and, like + their master, were usually clad in fish-skins. Others placed themselves in + the sepulchral chamber, and stood ready to strike any one who dared to + enter: these had human figures, or lions’ heads joined to the bodies of + men. Others, moreover, hovered over the house in order to drive off the + spectres who might endeavour to enter through the roof. During the last + hours in which the dead body remained among its kindred, it reposed under + the protection of a legion of gods. + </p> + <p> + We must not expect to find on the plains of the Euphrates the rock-cut + tombs, the mastabas or pyramids, of Egypt. No mountain chain ran on either + side of the river, formed of rock soft enough to be cut and hollowed + easily into chambers or sepulchral halls, and at the same time + sufficiently hard to prevent the tunnels once cut from falling in. + </p> + <p> + <a name="linkBimage-0037" id="linkBimage-0037"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/211.jpg" width="100%" + alt="211.jpg Chaldean Tomb With Flat Roof. " /> + </div> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a sketch by Taylor. +</pre> + <p> + The alluvial soil upon which the Chaldan cities were built, far from, + preserving the dead body, rapidly decomposed it under the influence of + heat and moisture: vaults constructed in it would soon be invaded by water + in spite of masonry; paintings and sculpture would soon be eaten away by + nitre, and the funereal furniture and the coffin quickly destroyed. The + dwelling-house of the Chaldan dead could not, therefore, properly be + called, as those of Egypt, an “eternal house.” It was constructed of dried + or burnt brick, and its form varied much from the most ancient times. + Sometimes it was a great vaulted chamber, the courses forming the roof + being arranged corbel-wise, and contained the remains of one or two bodies + walled up within it.* At other times it consisted merely of an earthen + jar, in which the corpse had been inserted in a bent-up posture, or was + composed of two enormous cylindrical jars, which, when united and cemented + with bitumen, formed a kind of barrel around the body. Other tombs are + represented by wretched structures, sometimes oval and sometimes round in + shape, placed upon a brick base and covered by a flat or domed roof. The + interior was not of large dimensions, and to enter it was necessary to + stoop to a creeping posture. The occupant of the smallest chambers was + content to have with him his linen, his ornaments, some bronze arrowheads, + and metal or clay vessels. Others contained furniture which, though not as + complete as that found in Egyptian sepulchres, must have ministered to all + the needs of the spirit. The body was stretched, fully clothed, upon a mat + impregnated with bitumen, the head supported by a cushion or flat brick,** + the arms laid across the breast, and the shroud adjusted by bands to the + loins and legs. Sometimes the corpse was placed on its left side, with the + legs slightly bent, and the right hand, extending over the left shoulder, + was inserted into a vase, as if to convey the contents to the mouth. + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + * Vaulted chambers are confined chiefly to the ancient + cemeteries of Uru at Mugheir; they are rather over six to + seven feet long, with a breadth of five and a half feet. The + walls are not quite perpendicular, but are somewhat splayed + up to two-thirds of their height, where they begin to narrow + into the vaulted roof. + + ** The object placed under the head of the skeleton is the + dried brick mentioned in the text; the vessel to which the + hand is stretched out was of copper; the other vessels were + of earthenware, and contained water, or dates, of which the + stones were found. The small cylinders on the side were of + stone; the two large cylinders, between the copper vessel + and those of earthenware, were pieces of bamboo, of whose + use we are ignorant. +</pre> + <p> + <a name="linkBimage-0038" id="linkBimage-0038"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/213.jpg" width="100%" + alt="213.jpg the Interior of The Tomb " /> + </div> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a sketch by Taylor +</pre> + <p> + Clay jars and dishes, arranged around the body, contained the food and + drink required for the dead man’s daily fare—his favourite wine, + dates, fish, fowl, game, occasionally also a boar’s head—and even + stone representations of provisions, which, like those of Egypt, were + lasting substitutes for the reality. The dead man required weapons also to + enable him to protect his food-store, and his lance, javelins and baton of + office were placed alongside him, together with a cylinder bearing his + name, which he had employed as his seal in his lifetime. Beside the body + of a woman or young girl was arranged an abundance of spare ornaments, + flowers, scent-bottles, combs, cosmetic pencils, and cakes of the black + paste with which they were accustomed to paint the eyebrows and the edges + of the eyelids. + </p> + <p> + Cremation seems in many cases to have been preferred to burial in a tomb. + The funeral pile was constructed at some distance from the town, on a + specially reserved area in the middle of the marshes. The body, wrapped up + in coarse matting, was placed upon a heap of reeds and rushes saturated + with bitumen: a brick wall, coated with moist clay, was built around this + to circumscribe the action of the flames, and, the customary prayers + having been recited, the pile was set on fire, masses of fresh material, + together with the funerary furniture and usual viaticum, being added to + the pyre. When the work of cremation was considered to be complete, the + fire was extinguished, and an examination made of the residue. It + frequently happened that only the most accessible and most easily + destroyed parts of the body had been attacked by the flames, and that + there remained a black and disfigured mass which the fire had not + consumed. The previously prepared coating of mud was then made to furnish + a clay covering for the body, so as to conceal the sickening spectacle + from the view of the relatives and spectators. Sometimes, however, the + furnace accomplished its work satisfactorily, and there was nothing to be + seen at the end but greasy ashes and scraps of calcined bones. The remains + were frequently left where they were, and the funeral pile became their + tomb. They were, however, often collected and disposed of in a manner + which varied with their more or less complete combustion. Bodies + insufficiently burnt were interred in graves, or in public chapels; while + the ashes of those fully cremated, together with the scraps of bones and + the <i>dbris</i> of the offerings, were placed in long urns. The heat had + contorted the weapons and half melted the vessels of copper; and the + deceased was thus obliged to be content with the fragments only of the + things provided for him. These were, however, sufficient for the purpose, + and his possessions, once put to the test of the flames, now accompanied + him whither he went: water alone was lacking, but provision was made for + this by the construction on the spot of cisterns to collect it. For this + purpose several cylinders of pottery, some twenty inches broad, were + inserted in the ground one above the other from a depth of from ten to + twelve feet, and the last cylinder, reaching the level of the ground, was + provided with a narrow neck, through which the rainwater or infiltrations + from the river flowed into this novel cistern. Many examples of these are + found in one and the same chamber,* thus giving the soul an opportunity of + finding water in one or other of them. The tombs at Uruk, arranged closely + together with coterminous walls, and gradually covered by the sand or by + the accumulation and <i>dbris</i> of new tombs, came at length to form an + actual mound. In cities where space was less valuable, and where they were + free to extend, the tombs quickly disappeared without leaving any vestiges + above the surface, and it would now be necessary to turn up a great deal + of rubbish before discovering their remains. The Chalda of to-day + presents the singular aspect of a country almost without cemeteries, and + one would be inclined to think that its ancient inhabitants had taken + pains to hide them.** The sepulture of royal personages alone furnishes us + with monuments of which we can determine the site. At Babylon these were + found in the ancient palaces in which the living were no longer inclined + to dwell: that of Shargina, for instance, furnished a burying-place for + kings more than two thousand years after the death of its founder. The + chronicles devoutly indicate the spot where each monarch, when his earthly + reign was over, found a last resting-place; and where, as the subject of a + ceremonial worship similar to that of Egypt, his memory was preserved from + the oblivion which had overtaken most of his illustrious subjects. + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + * The German expedition of 1886-87 found four of these + reservoirs in a single chamber, and nine distributed in the + chambers of a house entirely devoted to the burial of the + dead. + + ** Various explanations have been offered to account for + this absence of tombs, Without mentioning the desperate + attempt to get rid of the difficulty by the assumption that + the dead bodies were cast into the river, Loftus thinks that + the Chaldans and Assyrians were accustomed to send them to + some sanctuary in Southern Chalda, especially to Uru and + Uruk, whose vast cemeteries, he contends, would have + absorbed during the centuries the greater part of the + Euphratean population; his opinion has been adopted by some + historians, and, as far only as the later period is + concerned, by Hommel. +</pre> + <p> + The dead man, or rather that part of him which survived—his “ekimmu”—dwelt + in the tomb, and it was for his comfort that there were provided, at the + time of sepulture or cremation, the provisions and clothing, the ornaments + and weapons, of which he was considered to stand in need. Furnished with + these necessities by his children and heirs, he preserved for the donors + the same affection which he had felt for them in his lifetime, and gave + evidence of it in every way he could, watching over their welfare, and + protecting them from malign influences. If they abandoned or forgot him, + he avenged himself for their neglect by returning to torment them in their + homes, by letting sickness attack them, and by ruining them with his + imprecations: he became thus no less hurtful than the “luminous ghost” of + the Egyptians, and if he were accidentally deprived of sepulture, he would + not be merely a plague to his relations, but a danger to the entire city. + The dead, who were unable to earn an honest living, showed little pity to + those who were in the same position as themselves: when a new-comer + arrived among them without prayers, libations, or offerings, they declined + to receive him, and would not give him so much as a piece of bread out of + their meagre store. The spirit of the unburied dead man, having neither + place of repose nor means of subsistence, wandered through the town and + country, occupied with no other thought than that of attacking and robbing + the living. He it was who, gliding into the house during the night, + revealed himself to its inhabitants with such a frightful visage as to + drive them distracted with terror. Always on the watch, no sooner does he + surprise one of his victims than he falls upon him, “his head against his + victim’s head, his hand against his hand, his foot against his foot.” He + who has been thus attacked, whether man or beast, would undoubtedly perish + if magic were not able to furnish its all-powerful defence against this + deadly embrace.* This human survival, who is so forcibly represented both + in his good and evil aspects, was nevertheless nothing more than a sort of + vague and fluid existence—a double, in fact, analogous in appearance + to that of the Egyptians. + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + * The majority of the spells employed against sickness + contain references to the spirits against which they + contend—“the wicked ekimmu who oppresses men during the + night,” or simply “the wicked ekimmu,” the ghost. +</pre> + <p> + With the faculty of roaming at will through space, and of going forth from + and returning to his abode, it was impossible to regard him as condemned + always to dwell in the case of terra-cotta in which his body lay + mouldering: he was transferred, therefore, or rather he transferred + himself, into the dark land—the Aralu—situated very far away—according + to some, beneath the surface of the earth; according to others, in the + eastern or northern extremities of the universe. A river which opens into + this region and separates it from the sunlit earth, finds its source in + the primordial waters into whose bosom this world of ours is plunged. This + dark country is surrounded by seven high walls, and is approached through + seven gates, each of which is guarded by a pitiless warder. Two deities + rule within it—Nergal, “the lord of the great city,” and + Beltis-Allat, “the lady of the great land,” whither everything which has + breathed in this world descends after death. A legend relates that Allt, + called in Sumerian Erishkigal, reigned alone in Hades, and was invited by + the gods to a feast which they had prepared in heaven. Owing to her hatred + of the light, she sent a refusal by her messenger Narntar, who acquitted + himself on this mission with such a bad grace, that Ann and Ea were + incensed against his mistress, and commissioned Nergal to descend and + chastise her; he went, and finding the gates of hell open, dragged the + queen by her hair from the throne, and was about to decapitate her, but + she mollified him by her prayers, and saved her life by becoming his wife. + The nature of Nergal fitted him well to play the part of a prince of the + departed: for he was the destroying sun of summer, and the genius of + pestilence and battle. His functions, however, in heaven and earth took up + so much of his time that he had little leisure to visit his nether + kingdom, and he was consequently obliged to content himself with the <i>rle</i> + of providing subjects for it by despatching thither the thousands of + recruits which he gathered daily from the abodes of men or from the field + of battle. Allt was the actual sovereign of the country. She was + represented with the body of a woman, ill-formed and shaggy, the grinning + muzzle of a lion, and the claws of a bird of prey. She brandished in each + hand a large serpent—a real animated javelin, whose poisonous bite + inflicted a fatal wound upon the enemy. Her children were two lions, which + she is represented as suckling, and she passed through her empire, not + seated in the saddle, but standing upright or kneeling on the back of a + horse, which seems oppressed by her weight. Sometimes she set out on an + expedition upon the river which communicates with the countries of light, + in order to meet the procession of newly arrived souls ceaselessly + despatched to her: she embarked in this case upon an enchanted vessel, + which made its way without sail or oars, its prow projecting like the beak + of a bird, and its stern terminating in the head of an ox. She overcomes + all resistance, and nothing can escape from her: the gods themselves can + pass into her empire only on the condition of submitting to death like + mortals, and of humbly avowing themselves her slaves. + </p> + <p> + <a name="linkBimage-0039" id="linkBimage-0039"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/220.jpg" width="100%" + alt="220.jpg the Goddess Allat Passes Through The Nether Regions in Her Bark. " /> + </div> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a bronze plaque of which an + engraving was published by Clermont-Ganneau. The original, + which belonged to M. Preti, is now in the collection of M. + de Clercq +</pre> + <p> + <a name="linkBimage-0040" id="linkBimage-0040"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/221.jpg" width="100%" + alt="221.jpg Nergal, the God of Hades; Back View. " /> + </div> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin. This is the back of the bronze plate + represented on the preceding page; the animal-head of the + god appears in relief at the top of the illustration. +</pre> + <p> + The warders at the gates despoiled the new-comers of everything which they + had brought with them, and conducted them in a naked condition before + Allt, who pronounced sentence upon them, and assigned to each his place + in the nether world. The good or evil committed on earth by such souls was + of little moment in determining the sentence: to secure the favour of the + judge, it was of far greater importance to have exhibited devotion to the + gods and to Allt herself, to have lavished sacrifices and offerings upon + them and to have enriched their temples. The souls which could not justify + themselves were subjected to horrible punishment: leprosy consumed them to + the end of time, and the most painful maladies attacked them, to torture + them ceaselessly without any hope of release. Those who were fortunate + enough to be spared from her rage, dragged out a miserable and joyless + existence. They were continually suffering from the pangs of thirst and + hunger, and found nothing to satisfy their appetites but clay and dust. + They shivered with cold, and they obtained no other garment to protect + them than mantles of feathers—the great silent wings of the + night-birds, invested with which they fluttered about and filled the air + with their screams. This gloomy and cruel conception of ordinary life in + this strange kingdom was still worse than the idea formed of the existence + in the tomb to which it succeeded. In the cemetery the soul was, at least, + alone with the dead body; in the house of Allt, on the contrary, it was + lost as it were among spirits as much afflicted as itself, and among the + genii born of darkness. None of these genii had a simple form, or + approached the human figure in shape; each individual was a hideous medley + of human and animal parts, in which the most repellent features were + artistically combined. Lions’ heads stood out from the bodies of + scorpion-tailed jackals, whose feet were armed with eagles’ claws: and + among such monsters the genii of pestilence, fever, and the south-west + wind took the chief place. When once the dead had become naturalized among + this terrible population, they could not escape from their condition, + unless by the exceptional mandate of the gods above. They possessed no + recollection of what they had done upon earth. Domestic affection, + friendships, and the memory of good offices rendered to one another,—all + were effaced from their minds: nothing remained there but an inexpressible + regret at having been exiled from the world of light, and an excruciating + desire to reach it once more. The threshold of Allat’s palace stood upon a + spring which had the property of restoring to life all who bathed in it or + drank of its waters: they gushed forth as soon as the stone was raised, + but the earth-spirits guarded it with a jealous care, and kept at a + distance all who attempted to appropriate a drop of it. They permitted + access to it only by order of Ea himself, or one of the supreme gods, and + even then with a rebellious heart at seeing their prey escape them. + Ancient legends related how the shepherd Dumuzi, son of Ea and Damkina, + having excited the love of Ishtar while he was pasturing his flocks under + the mysterious tree of Eridu, which covers the earth with its shade, was + chosen by the goddess from among all others to be the spouse of her youth, + and how, being mortally wounded by a wild boar, he was cast into the + kingdom of Allat. One means remained by which he might be restored to the + light of day: his wounds must be washed in the waters of the wonderful + spring, and Ishtar resolved to go in quest of this marvellous liquid. The + undertaking was fraught with danger, for no one might travel to the + infernal regions without having previously gone through the extreme + terrors of death, and even the gods themselves could not transgress this + fatal law. “To the land without return, to the land which thou knowest—Ishtar, + the daughter of Sin, turned her thoughts: she, the daughter of Sin, turned + her thoughts—to the house of darkness, the abode of Irkalla—to + the house from which he who enters can never emerge—to the path upon + which he who goes shall never come back—to the house into which he + who enters bids farewell to the light—the place where dust is + nourishment and clay is food; the light is not seen, darkness is the + dwelling, where the garments are the wings of birds—where dust + accumulates on door and bolt.” Ishtar arrives at the porch, she knocks at + it, she addresses the guardian in an imperious voice: “‘Guardian of the + waters, open thy gate—open thy gate that I may enter, even I.—If + thou openest not the door that I may enter, even I,—I will burst + open the door, I will break the bars, I will break the threshold, I will + burst in the panels, I will excite the dead that they may eat the living,—and + the dead shall be more numerous than the living.’—The guardian + opened his mouth and spake, he announced to the mighty Ishtar: ‘Stop, O + lady, and do not overturn the door until I go and apprise the Queen Allt + of thy name.’ Allat hesitates, and then gives him permission to receive + the goddess: ‘Go, guardian, open the gate to her—but treat her + according to the ancient laws. Mortals enter naked into the world, and + naked must they leave it: and since Ishtar has decided to accept their + lot, she too must be prepared to divest herself of her garments.’” The + guardian went, he opened his mouth: ‘Enter, my lady, and may Kutha rejoice—may + the palace and the land without return exult in thy presence! ‘He causes + her to pass through the first gate, divests her, removes the great crown + from her head:—‘Why, guardian, dost thou remove the great crown from + my head?’—‘Enter, my lady, such is the law of Allt.’ The second + gate, he causes her to pass through it, he divests her—removes the + rings from her ears:—‘Why, guardian, dost thou remove the rings from + my ears?’—‘Enter, my lady, such is the law of Allt.’” And from gate + to gate he removes some ornament from the distressed lady—now her + necklace with its attached amulets, now the tunic which covers her bosom, + now her enamelled girdle, her bracelets, and the rings on her ankles: and + at length, at the seventh gate, takes from her her last covering. When she + at length arrives in the presence of Allat, she throws herself upon her in + order to wrest from her in a terrible struggle the life of Dumuzi; but + Allat sends for Namtar, her messenger of misfortune, to punish, the + rebellious Ishtar. “Strike her eyes with the affliction of the eyes—strike + her loins with the affliction of the loins—strike her feet with the + affliction of the feet—strike her heart with the affliction of the + heart—strike her head with the affliction of the head—strike + violently at her, at her whole body!” While Ishtar was suffering the + torments of the infernal regions, the world of the living was wearing + mourning on account of her death. In the absence of the goddess of love, + the rites of love could no longer be performed. The passions of animals + and men were suspended. If she did not return quickly to the daylight, the + races of men and animals would become extinct, the earth would become a + desert, and the gods would have neither votaries nor offerings. + </p> + <p> + <a name="linkBimage-0041" id="linkBimage-0041"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/226.jpg" width="100%" + alt="226.jpg Ishtar Despoiled of Her Garments in Hades " /> + </div> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a Chaldan intaglio in the + Hague Museum. Salomon Reinach has demonstrated that the + naked figure is not the goddess herself, but a statue of the + goddess which was adored in one of the temples. +</pre> + <p> + “Papsukal, the servant of the great gods, tore his face before Shamash—clothed + in mourning, filled with sorrow. Shamash went—he wept in the + presence of Sin, his father,—and his tears flowed in the presence of + Ea, the king:—‘Ishtar has gone down into the earth, and she has not + come up again!—And ever since Ishtar has descended into the land + without return... [the passions of men and beasts have been suspended]... + the master goes to sleep while giving his command, the servant goes to + sleep on his duty.’” The resurrection of the goddess is the only remedy + for such ills, but this is dependent upon the resurrection of Damuzi: + Ishtar will never consent to reappear in the world, if she cannot bring + back her husband with her. Ea, the supreme god, the infallible executor of + the divine will—he who alone can modify the laws imposed upon + creation—at length decides to accord to her what she desires. “Ea, + in the wisdom of his heart, formed a male being,—formed + Uddushunmir, the servant of the gods:—‘Go then, Uddushunmir, turn + thy face towards the gate of the land without return; —the seven + gates of the land without return—may they become open at thy + presence—may Allt behold thee, and rejoice in thy presence! When + her heart shall be calm, and her wrath appeased, charm her in the name of + the great gods—turn thy thoughts to the spring’—‘May the + spring, my lady, give me of its waters that I may drink of them.’” Allt + broke out into a terrible rage, when she saw herself obliged to yield to + her rival; “she beat her sides, she gnawed her fingers,” she broke out + into curses against the messenger of misfortune. “‘Thou hast expressed to + me a wish which should not be made!—Fly, Uddushunmir, or I will + shut thee up in the great prison—the mud of the drains of the city + shall be thy food—the gutters of the town shall be thy drink—the + shadow of the walls shall be thy abode—the thresholds shall be thy + habitation—confinement and isolation shall weaken thy strength.’”* + She is obliged to obey, notwithstanding; she calls her messenger Namtar + and commands him to make all the preparations for resuscitating the + goddess. It was necessary to break the threshold of the palace in order to + get at the spring, and its waters would have their full effect only in + presence of the Anunnas. “Namtar went, he rent open the eternal palace,—he + twisted the uprights so that the stones of the threshold trembled;—he + made the Anunnaki come forth, and seated them on thrones of gold,—he + poured upon Ishtar the waters of life, and brought her away.” She received + again at each gate the articles of apparel she had abandoned in her + passage across the seven circles of hell: as soon as she saw the daylight + once more, it was revealed to her that the fate of her husband was + henceforward in her own hands. Every year she must bathe him in pure + water, and anoint him with the most precious perfumes, clothe him in a + robe of mourning, and play to him sad airs upon a crystal flute, whilst + her priestesses intoned their doleful chants, and tore their breasts in + sorrow: his heart would then take fresh life, and his youth flourish once + more, from springtime to springtime, as long as she should celebrate on + his behalf the ceremonies already prescribed by the deities of the + infernal world. + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + * It follows from this passage that Ishtar could be + delivered only at the cost of another life: it was for this + reason, doubtless, that Ea, instead of sending the ordinary + messenger of the gods, created a special messenger. Allt, + furious at the insignificance of the victim sent to her, + contents herself with threatening Uddushanmir with an + ignominious treatment if he does not escape as quickly as + possible. +</pre> + <p> + Dumuzi was a god, the lover, moreover, of a goddess, and the deity + succeeded where mortals failed.* Ea, Nebo, Gula, Ishtar, and their fellows + possessed, no doubt, the faculty of recalling the dead to life, but they + rarely made use of it on behalf of their creatures, and their most pious + votaries pleaded in vain from temple to temple for the resurrection of + their dead friends; they could never obtain the favour which had been + granted by Allt to Dumuzi. + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + * Merodach is called “the merciful one who takes pleasure in + raising the dead to life,” and “the lord of the pure + libation,” the “merciful one who has power to give life.” In + Jeremias may be found the list of the gods who up to the + present are known to have had the power to resuscitate the + dead; it is probable that this power belonged to all the + gods and goddesses of the first rank. +</pre> + <p> + <a name="linkBimage-0042" id="linkBimage-0042"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/229.jpg" width="100%" + alt="229.jpg Dumuzi Rejuvenated on the Knees of Ishtar. " /> + </div> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a Chaldan intaglio. +</pre> + <p> + When the dead body was once placed in the tomb, it rose up no more, it + could no more be reinstated in the place in the household it had lost, it + never could begin once more a new earthly existence. The necromancers, + indeed, might snatch away death’s prey for a few moments. The earth gaped + at the words of their invocations, the soul burst forth like a puff of + wind and answered gloomily the questions proposed to it; but when the + charm was once broken, it had to retrace its steps to the country without + return, to be plunged once more in darkness. This prospect of a dreary and + joyless eternity was not so terrifying to the Chaldans as it was to the + Egyptians. The few years of their earthly existence were of far more + concern to them than the endless ages which were to begin their monotonous + course on the morrow of their funeral. The sum of good and evil fortune + assigned to them by destiny they preferred to spend continuously in the + light of day on the fair plains of the Euphrates and Tigris: if they were + to economize during this period with the view of laying up a posthumous + treasure of felicity, their store would have no current value beyond the + tomb, and would thus become so much waste. The gods, therefore, whom they + served faithfully would recoup them, here in their native city, with + present prosperity, with health, riches, power, glory, and a numerous + offspring, for the offerings of their devotion; while, if they irritated + the deities by their shortcomings, they had nothing to expect but + overwhelming calamities and sufferings. The gods would “cut them down like + a reed,” and their “names would be annihilated, their seed destroyed;—they + would end their days in affliction and hunger,—their dead bodies + would be at the mercy of chance, and would receive no sepulture.” They + were content to resign themselves, therefore, to the dreary lot of eternal + misery which awaited them after death, provided they enjoyed in this world + a long and prosperous existence. Some of them felt and rebelled against + the injustice of the idea, which assigned one and the same fate, without + discrimination, to the coward and the hero killed on the battle-field, to + the tyrant and the mild ruler of his people, to the wicked and the + righteous. These therefore supposed that the gods would make distinctions, + that they would separate such heroes from the common herd, welcome them in + a fertile, sunlit island, separated from the abode of men by the waters of + death—the impassable river which leads to the house of Allt. The + tree of life flourished there, the spring of life poured forth there its + revivifying waters; thither Ea transferred Xisuthros after the Deluge; + Gilgames saw the shores of this island and returned from it, strong and + healthy as in the days of his youth. The site of this region of delights + was at first placed in the centre of the marshes of the Euphrates, where + this river flows into the sea; afterwards when the country became better + known, it was transferred beyond the ocean. In proportion as the limits of + the Chaldan horizon were thrust further and further away by mercantile or + warlike expeditions, this mysterious island was placed more and more to + the east, afterwards to the north, and at length at a distance so great + that it tended to vanish altogether. As a final resource, the gods of + heaven themselves became the hosts, and welcomed into their own kingdom + the purified souls of the heroes. + </p> + <p> + These souls were not so securely isolated from humanity that the + inhabitants of the world were not at times tempted to rejoin them before + their last hour had come. Just as Gilgames had dared of old the dangers of + the desert and the ocean in order to discover the island of Khasisadra, so + Etana darted through the air in order to ascend to the sky of Anu, to + become incorporated while still living in the choir of the blessed. The + legend gives an account of his friendship with the eagle of Shamash, and + of the many favours he had obtained from and rendered to the bird. It + happened at last, that his wife could not bring forth the son which lay in + her womb; the hero, addressing himself to the eagle, asked from her the + plant which alleviates the birth-pangs of women and facilitates their + delivery. This was only to be found, however, in the heaven of Anu, and + how could any one run the risk of mounting so high, without being + destroyed on the way by the anger of the gods? The eagle takes pity upon + the sorrow of his comrade, and resolves to attempt the enterprise with + him. “‘Friend,’ she says, ‘banish the cloud from thy face! Come, and I + will carry thee to the heaven of the god Anu. Place thy breast against my + breast—place thy two hands upon the pinions of my wings—place + thy side against my side.’ He places his breast against the breast of the + eagle, he places his two hands upon the pinions of the wings, he places + his side against her side;—he adjusts himself firmly, and his weight + was great.” The Chaldan artists have more than once represented the + departure of the hero. They exhibit him closely attached to the body of + his ally, and holding her in a strong embrace. A first flight has already + lifted them above the earth, and the shepherds scattered over the country + are stupefied at the unaccustomed sight: one announces the prodigy to + another, while their dogs seated at their feet extend their muzzles as if + in the act of howling with terror. “For the space of a double hour the + eagle bore him—then the eagle spake to him, to him Etana: ‘Behold, + my friend, the earth what it is; regard the sea which the ocean contains! + See, the earth is no more than a mountain, and the sea is no more than a + lake.’ The space of a second double hour she bore him, then the eagle + spake to him, to him Etana: ‘Behold, my friend, the earth what it is; the + sea appears as the girdle of the earth! ‘The space of a third double hour + she bore him, then the eagle spake to him, to him Etana: ‘See, my friend, + the earth, what it is:—the sea is no more than the rivulet made by a + gardener.’” + </p> + <p> + <a name="linkBimage-0043" id="linkBimage-0043"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/233.jpg" width="100%" + alt="233.jpg Etana Carried to Heaven by an Eagle. " /> + </div> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a Chaldan intaglio. +</pre> + <p> + “They at length arrive at the heaven of Anu, and rest there for a moment. + Etana sees around him nothing but empty space—no living thing within + it—not even a bird: he is struck with terror, but the eagle + reassures him, and tells him to proceed on his way to the heaven of + Ishtar. “‘Come, my friend, let me bear thee to Ishtar,—and I will + place thee near Ishtar, the lady,—and at the feet of Ishtar, the + lady, thou shalt throw thyself.—Place thy side against my side, + place thy hands on the pinions of my wings.’ The space of a double hour + she bore him: ‘Friend, behold the earth what it is.—The face of the + earth stretches out quite flat—and the sea is no greater than a + mere.’ The space of a second double hour she bore him: ‘Friend, behold the + earth what it is,—the earth is no more than a square plot in a + garden, and the great sea is not greater than a puddle of water.’” At the + third hour Etana lost courage, and cried, “Stop!” and the eagle + immediately descended again; but, Etana’s strength being exhausted, he let + go his hold, and was dashed to pieces on the ground. + </p> + <p> + The eagle escaped unhurt this time, but she soon suffered a more painful + death than that of Etana. She was at war with the serpent, though the + records which we as yet possess do not vouchsafe the reason, when she + discovered in the roots of a tree the nest in which her enemy concealed + its brood. She immediately proposed to her young ones to pounce down upon + the growing snakes; one of her eaglets, wiser than the rest, reminded her + that they were under the protection of Shamash, the great righter of + wrongs, and cautioned her against any transgression of the divine laws. + The old eagle felt herself wiser than her son, and rebuked him after the + manner of wise mothers: she carried away the serpent’s young, and gave + them as food to her own brood. The hissing serpent crawled as far as + Shamash, crying for vengeance: “The evil she has done me, Shamash—behold + it! Come to my help, Shamash! thy net is as wide as the earth—thy + snares reach to the distant mountain—who can escape thy net?—The + criminal Zu, Zu who was the first to act wickedly, did he escape it?” + Shamash refused to interfere personally, but he pointed out to the serpent + an artifice by which he might satisfy his vengeance as securely as if + Shamash himself had accomplished it. “Set out upon the way, ascend the + mountain,—and conceal thyself in a dead bull;—make an incision + in his inside—tear open his belly,—take up thy abode—establish + thyself in his belly. All the birds of the air will pounce upon it....—and + the eagle herself will come with them, ignorant that thou art within it;—she + will wish to possess herself of the flesh, she will come swiftly—she + will think of nothing but the entrails within. As soon as she begins to + attack the inside, seize her by her wings, beat down her wings, the + pinions of her wings and her claws, tear her and throw her into a ravine + of the mountain, that she may die there a death of hunger and thirst.” + </p> + <p> + The serpent did as Shamash advised, and the birds of the air began to + flock round the carcase in which she was hidden. The eagle came with the + rest, and at first kept aloof, looking for what should happen. When she + saw that the birds flew away unharmed all fear left her. In vain did the + wise eaglet warn her of the danger that was lurking within the prey; she + mocked at him and his predictions, dug her beak into the carrion, and the + serpent leaping out seized her by the wing. Then “the eagle her mouth + opened, and spake unto the snake, ‘Have mercy upon me, and according to + thy pleasure a gift I will lavish upon thee!’ The snake opened her mouth + and spake unto the eagle, ‘Did I release thee, Shamash would take part + against me; and the doom would fall upon me, which now I fulfil upon + thee.’ She tore out her wings, her feathers, her pinions; she tore her to + pieces, she threw her into a cleft, and there she died a death of hunger + and of thirst.” + </p> + <p> + The gods allowed no living being to penetrate with impunity into their + empire: he who was desirous of ascending thither, however brave he might + be, could do so only by death. The mass of humanity had no pretensions to + mount so high. Their religion gave them the choice between a perpetual + abode in the tomb, or confinement in the prison of Allt; if at times they + strove to escape from these alternatives, and to picture otherwise their + condition in the world beyond, their ideas as to the other life continued + to remain vague, and never approached the minute precision of the Egyptian + conception. The cares of the present life were too absorbing to allow them + leisure to speculate upon the conditions of a future existence. + </p> + <p> + <a name="linkBimage-0044" id="linkBimage-0044"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/236.jpg" width="100%" alt="236.jpg Endplate " /> + </div> + <p> + <br /> ============================== <a name="linkCimage-0001" + id="linkCimage-0001"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/frontispiece3.jpg" width="100%" + alt="Frontispiece El Hammam (the Bath) " /> + </div> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Drawn by Boudier, after J. Dieulafoy. The vignette, which is + by Faucher-Gudin, is reproduced from an intaglio in the + Cabinet des Mdailles. +</pre> + <p> + <br /> <br /> + </p> + <hr /> + <p> + <br /> <br /> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img alt="237 (112K)" src="images/237.jpg" width="100%" /> + </div> + <p> + <br /> <br /> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img alt="238 (62K)" src="images/238.jpg" width="100%" /> + </div> + <p> + <br /> <br /> + </p> + <hr /> + <p> + <br /> <br /> + </p> + <p> + <i>CHALDAN CIVILIZATION—ROYALTY—THE CONSTITUTION OF THE + FAMILY AND ITS PROPERTY—CHALMAN COMMERCE AND INDUSTRY.</i> + </p> + <p> + <i>The kings not gods, but the vicegerents of the gods: their sacerdotal + character—The queens and the women of the royal family: the sons and + the order of succession to the throne—The royal palaces: description + of the palace of Gudea at Lagash, the faades, the zigurt, the private + apartments, the furniture, the external decoration—Costume of the + men and women: the employees of the palace and the method of royal + administration; the military and the great lords.</i> + </p> + <p> + <i>The scribe and the clay books.—Cuneiform writing: its + hieroglyphic origin; the Protean character of the sounds which may be + assigned to the ideograms, grammatical tablets, and dictionaries—Their + contracts, and their numerous copies of them: the finger-nail mark, the + seal.</i> + </p> + <p> + <i>The constitution of the family: the position held by the wife—Marriage, + the contract, the religious ceremonies—Divorce: the rights of + wealthy women; woman and marriage among the lower classes—Adopted + children, their position in the family; ordinary motives for adoption—Slaves, + their condition, their enfranchisement.</i> + </p> + <p> + <i>The Chaldan towns: the aspect and distribution of the houses, domestic + life—The family patrimony: division of the inheritance—Lending + on usury, the rate of interest, commercial intercourse by land and sea—Trade + corporations: brick-making, industrial implements in stone and metal, + goldsmiths, engravers of cylinders, weavers; the state of the working + classes.</i> + </p> + <p> + <i>Farming and cultivation of the ground: landmarks, slaves, and + agricultural labourers—Scenes of pastoral life: fishing, hunting—Archaic + literature; positive sciences: arithmetic and geometry, astronomy and + astrology, the science of foretelling the future—The physician; + magic and its influence on neighbouring countries.</i> + </p> + <p> + <br /> <br /> + </p> + <hr /> + <p> + <br /> <br /> <a name="linkCimage-0005" id="linkCimage-0005"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/239.jpg" width="100%" alt="239.jpg Chapter III. " /> + </div> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Drawn by Boudier, from the sketch by Loftus. The initial + vignette, which is by Faucher-Gudin, represents a royal + figure kneeling and holding a large nail in both hands. The + nail serves to keep the figure fixed firmly in the earth. It + is a reproduction of the bronze figurine in the Louvre, + already published by Heuzey-Sakzeo, <i>Dcouvertes en + Chalde</i>, pl. 28, No. 4. +</pre> + <p> + <a name="linkC2HCH0001" id="linkC2HCH0001"> + <!-- H2 anchor --> </a> + </p> + <div style="height: 4em;"> + <br /><br /><br /><br /> + </div> + <h2> + CHAPTER III—CHALDAN CIVILIZATION + </h2> + <p> + <i>Royalty—The constitution of the family and its property—Chaldan + commerce and industry</i>. + </p> + <p> + The Chaldan kings, unlike their contemporaries the Pharaohs, rarely put + forward any pretensions to divinity. They contented themselves with + occupying an intermediate position between their subjects and the gods, + and for the purpose of mediation they believed themselves to be endowed + with powers not possessed by ordinary mortals. They sometimes designated + themselves the sons of Ea, or of Nnsun, or some other deity, but this + involved no belief in a divine parentage, and was merely pious hyperbole: + they entertained no illusions with regard to any descent from a god or + even from one of his doubles, but they desired to be recognized as his + vicegerents here below, as his prophets, his well-beloved, his pastors, + elected by him to rule his human flocks, or as priests devotedly attached + to his service. While, however, the ordinary priest chose for himself a + single master to whom he devoted himself, the priest-king exercised + universal sacerdotal functions and claimed to be pontiff of all the + national religions. His choice naturally was directed by preference to the + patrons of his city, those who had raised his ancestors from the dust, and + had exalted him to the supreme rank, but there were other divinities who + claimed their share of his homage and expected of him a devotion suited to + their importance. If he had attempted to carry out these duties personally + in detail, he would have had to spend his whole life at the foot of the + altar; even when he had delegated as many of them as he could to the + regular clergy, there still remained sufficient to occupy a large part of + his time. Every month, every day, brought its inevitable round of + sacrifices, prayers, and processions. On the 1st of the second Elul, the + King of Babylon had to present a gazelle without blemish to Sin; he then + made an offering of his own choosing to Shamash, and cut the throats of + his victims before the god. These ceremonies were repeated on the 2nd + without any alteration, but from the 3rd to the 12th they took place + during the night, before the statues of Merodach and Ishtar, in turn with + those of Nebo and Tashmit, of Mullil and Ninlil, of Eamman and of + Zirbanit; sometimes at the rising of a particular constellation—as, + for instance, that of the Great Bear, or that of the sons of Ishtar; + sometimes at the moment when the moon “raised above the earth her luminous + crown.” On such a date a penitential psalm or a litany was to be recited; + at another time it was forbidden to eat of meat either cooked or smoked, + to change the body-linen, to wear white garments, to drink medicine, to + sacrifice, to put forth an edict, or to drive out in a chariot. Not only + at Babylon, but everywhere else, obedience to the religious rites weighed + heavily on the local princes; at Uru, at Lagash, at Nipur, and in the + ruling cities of Upper and Lower Chalda. The king, as soon as he + succeeded to the throne, repaired to the temple to receive his solemn + investiture, which differed in form according to the gods he worshipped: + at Babylon, he addressed himself to the statue of Bel-Merodach in the + first days of the month Nisan which followed his accession, and he “took + him by the hands” to do homage to him. From thenceforth, he officiated for + Merodach here below, and the scrupulously minute devotions, which daily + occupied hours of his time, were so many acts of allegiance which his + fealty as a vassal constrained him to perform to his suzerain. They were, + in fact, analogous to the daily audiences demanded of a great lord by his + steward, for the purpose of rendering his accounts and of informing him of + current business: any interruption not justified by a matter of supreme + importance would be liable to be interpreted as a want of respect or as + revealing an inclination to rebel. By neglecting the slightest ceremonial + detail the king would arouse the suspicions of the gods, and excite their + anger against himself and his subjects: the people had, therefore, a + direct interest in his careful fulfilment of the priestly functions, and + his piety was not the least of his virtues in their eyes. All other + virtues—bravery, equity, justice—depended on it, and were only + valuable from the divine aid which piety obtained for them. The gods and + heroes of the earliest ages had taken upon themselves the task of + protecting the faithful from all their enemies, whether men or beasts. If + a lion decimated their flocks, or a urus of gigantic size devastated their + crops, it was the king’s duty to follow the example of his fabulous + predecessors and to set out and overcome them. The enterprise demanded all + the more courage and supernatural help, since these beasts were believed + to be no mere ordinary animals, but were looked on as instruments of + divine wrath the cause of which was often unknown, and whoever assailed + these monsters, provoked not only them but the god who instigated them. + Piety and confidence in the patron of the city alone sustained the king + when he set forth to drive the animal back to its lair; he engaged in + close combat with it, and no sooner had he pierced it with his arrows or + his lance, or felled it with axe and dagger, than he hastened to pour a + libation upon it, and to dedicate it as a trophy in one of the temples. + His exalted position entailed on him no less perils in time of war: if he + did not personally direct the first attacking column, he placed himself at + the head of the band composed of the flower of the army, whose charge at + an opportune moment was wont to secure the victory. + </p> + <p> + What would have been the use of his valour, if the dread of the gods had + not preceded his march, and if the light of their countenances had not + struck terror into the ranks of the enemy? As soon as he had triumphed by + their command, he sought before all else to reward them amply for the + assistance they had given him. He poured a tithe of the spoil into the + coffers of their treasury, he made over a part of the conquered country to + their domain, he granted them a tale of the prisoners to cultivate their + lands or to work at their buildings. Even the idols of the vanquished + shared the fate of their people: the king tore them from the sanctuaries + which had hitherto sheltered them, and took them as prisoners in his train + to form a court of captive gods about his patron divinity. Shamash, the + great judge of heaven, inspired him with justice, and the prosperity which + his good administration obtained for the people was less the work of the + sovereign than that of the immortals. + </p> + <p> + We know too little of the inner family life of the kings, to attempt to + say how they were able to combine the strict sacerdotal obligations + incumbent on them with the routine of daily life. We merely observe that + on great days of festival or sacrifice, when they themselves officiated, + they laid aside all the insignia of royalty during the ceremony and were + clad as ordinary priests. We see them on such occasions represented with + short-cut hair and naked breast, the loin-cloth about their waist, + advancing foremost in the rank, carrying the heavily laden “kufa,” or reed + basket, as if they were ordinary slaves; and, as a fact, they had for the + moment put aside their sovereignty and were merely temple servants, or + slaves appearing before their divine master to do his bidding, and + disguising themselves for the nonce in the garb of servitors. The wives of + the sovereign do not seem to have been invested with that semi-sacred + character which led the Egyptian women to be associated with the devotions + of the man, and made them indispensable auxiliaries in all religious + ceremonies; they did not, moreover, occupy that important position side by + side with the man which the Egyptian law assigned to the queens of the + Pharaohs. Whereas the monuments on the banks of the Nile reveal to us + princesses sharing the throne of their husbands whom they embrace with a + gesture of frank affection, in Chalda the wives of the prince, his + mother, sisters, daughters, and even his slaves, remain invisible to + posterity. + </p> + <p> + <a name="linkCimage-0006" id="linkCimage-0006"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/244.jpg" width="100%" + alt="244.jpg the King Urnina Bearing The ‘kufa.’ " /> + </div> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from Heuzey Sarzec. +</pre> + <p> + The harem in which they were shut up by custom, rarely opened its doors: + the people seldom caught sight of them, their relatives spoke of them as + little as possible, those in power avoided associating them in any public + acts of worship or government, and we could count on our fingers the + number of those whom the inscriptions mention by name. Some of them were + drawn from the noble families of the capital, others came from the + kingdoms of Chalda or from foreign courts; a certain number never rose + above the condition of mere concubines, many assumed the title of queen, + while almost all served as living pledges of alliances made with rival + states, or had been given as hostages at the concluding of a peace on the + termination of a war.* As the kings, who put forward no pretensions to a + divine origin, were not constrained, after the fashion of the Pharaohs, to + marry their sisters in order to keep up the purity of their race, it was + rare to find one among their wives who possessed an equal right to the + crown with themselves: such a case could be found only in troublous times, + when an aspirant to the throne, of base extraction, legitimated his + usurpation by marrying a sister or daughter of his predecessor. + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + * Political marriage-alliances between Egypt and Chalda + were of frequent occurrence, according to the Tel el-Amarna + tablets, and at a later period between Chalda and Assyria; + among the few queens of the very earliest times, the wife of + Nammaghani is the daughter of Urbau, vicegerent of Lagash, + and consequently the cousin or niece of her husband, while + the wife of Rimsin appears to be the daughter of a nobleman + of the name of Rimnannar. +</pre> + <p> + <a name="linkCimage-0008" id="linkCimage-0008"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="figleft" style="width:30%;"> + <img width="100%" src="images/249.jpg" + alt="249.jpg Terra-cotta Barrel-right " /> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> +Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, +from the facsimile by Place. +</pre> + </div> + <p> + The original status of the mother almost always determined that of her + children, and the sons of a princess were born princes, even if their + father were of obscure or unknown origin.* These princes exercised + important functions at court, or they received possessions which they + administered under the suzerainty of the head of the family; the daughters + were given to foreign kings, or to scions of the most distinguished + families. The sovereign was under no obligation to hand down his crown to + any particular member of his family; the eldest son usually succeeded him, + but the king could, if he preferred, select his favourite child as his + successor even if he happened to be the youngest, or the only one born of + a slave. As soon as the sovereign had made known his will, the custom of + primogeniture was set aside, and his word became law. We can well imagine + the secret intrigues formed both by mothers and sons to curry favour with + the father and bias his choice; we can picture the jealousy with which + they mutually watched each other, and the bitter hatred which any + preference shown to one would arouse in the breasts of all the others. + Often brothers who had been disappointed in their expectations would + combine secretly against the chosen or supposed heir; a conspiracy would + break out, and the people suddenly learn that their ruler of yesterday had + died by the hand of an assassin and that a new one filled his place. + </p> + <p> + Sometimes discontent spread beyond the confines of the palace, the army + became divided into two hostile camps, the citizens took the side of one + or other of the aspirants, and civil war raged for several years till some + decisive action brought it to a close. Meantime tributary vassals took + advantage of the consequent disorder to shake off the yoke, the Blamites + and various neighbouring cities joined in the dispute and ranged + themselves on the side of the party from which there was most to be + gained: the victorious faction always had to pay dearly for this somewhat + dubious help, and came out impoverished from the struggle. Such an + internecine war often caused the downfall of a dynasty—at times, + indeed, that of the entire state.** + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + * This fact is apparent from the introduction to the + inscription in which Sargon I. is supposed to give an + account of his life: “My father was unknown, my mother was a + princess;” and it was, indeed, from his mother that he + inherited his rights to the crown of Agade. +</pre> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + ** The above is perfectly true of the later Assyrian and + Chalan periods: it is scarcely needful to recall to the + reader the murders of Sargon II. and Sennacherib, or the + revolt of Assurdanpal against his father Shalmaneser III. + With regard to the earliest period we have merely + indications of what took place; the succession of King + Urnina of Lagash appears to have been accompanied by + troubles of this kind, and it is certain that his successor + Akurgal was not the eldest of his sons, but we do not at + present know to what events Akurgal owed his elevation. +</pre> + <p> + The palaces of the Chaldan kings, like those of the Egyptians, presented + the appearance of an actual citadel: the walls had to be sufficiently + thick to withstand an army for an indefinite period, and to protect the + garrison from every emergency, except that of treason or famine. One of + the statues found at Telloh holds in its lap the plan of one of these + residences: the external outline alone is given, but by means of it we can + easily picture to ourselves a fortified place, with its towers, its forts, + and its gateways placed between two bastions. It represents the ancient + palace of Lagash, subsequently enlarged and altered by Oudea or one of the + vicegerents who succeeded him, in which many a great lord of the place + must have resided down to the time of the Christian era. The site on which + it was built in the Girsu quarter of. the city was not entirely unoccupied + at the time of its foundation. Urbau had raised a ziggurat on that very + spot some centuries previously, and the walls which he had constructed + were falling into ruin. + </p> + <p> + <a name="linkCimage-0007" id="linkCimage-0007"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/248.jpg" width="100%" + alt="248.jpg the Plan of a Palace Built by Gudea. " /> + </div> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from Heuzey-Sarzec. The plan is + traced upon the tablet held in the lap of Statue E in the + Louvre. Below the plan can be seen the ruler marked with the + divisions used by the architect for drawing his designs to + the desired scale; the scribe’s stylus is represented lying + on the left of the plan. [Prof. Ptrie has shown that the + unit of measurement represented on this ruler is the cubit + of the Pyramid-builders of Egypt.—Te.] +</pre> + <p> + Gudea did not destroy the work of his remote predecessor, he merely + incorporated it into the substructures of the new building, thus showing + an indifference similar to that evinced by the Pharaohs for the monuments + of a former dynasty. The palaces, like the temples, never rose directly + from the soil, but were invariably built on the top of an artificial mound + of crude brick. At Lagash, this solid platform rises to the height of 40 + feet above the plain, and the only means of access to the top is by a + single narrow steep staircase, easily cut off or defended. + </p> + <p> + The palace which surmounts this artificial eminence describes a sort of + irregular rectangle, 174 feet long by 69 feet wide, and had, contrary to + the custom in Egypt, the four angles orientated to the four cardinal + points. The two principal sides are not parallel, but swell out slightly + towards the middle, and the flexion of the lines almost follows the + contour of one of those little clay cones upon which the kings were wont + to inscribe their annals or dedications. This flexure was probably not + intentional on the part of the architect, but was owing to the difficulty + of keeping a wall of such considerable extent in a straight line from one + end to another; and all Eastern nations, whether Chaldans or Egyptians, + troubled themselves but little about correctness of alignment, since + defects of this kind were scarcely ever perceptible in the actual edifice, + and are only clearly revealed in the plan drawn out to scale with modern + precision.* + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + * Mons. Heuzey thinks that the outward deflection of the + lines is owing “merely to a primitive method of obtaining + greater solidity of construction, and of giving a better + foundation to these long faades, which are placed upon + artificial terraces of crude brick always subject to cracks + and settlements.” I think that the explanation of the facts + which I have given in the text is simpler than that + ingeniously proposed by Mons. Heuzey: the masons, having + begun to build the wall at one end, were unable to carry it + on in a straight line until it reached the spot denoted on + the architect’s plan, and therefore altered the direction of + the wall when they detected their error; or, having begun to + build the wall from both ends simultaneously, were not + successful in making the two lines meet correctly, and they + have frankly patched up the junction by a mass of projecting + brickwork which conceals their unskilfulness. +</pre> + <p> + <a name="linkCimage-0009" id="linkCimage-0009"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/250.jpg" width="100%" + alt="250.jpg Plan of the Existing Buildings Of Telloh. " /> + </div> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from Heuzey-Sarzec. +</pre> + <p> + The faade of the building faces south-east, and is divided into three + blocks of unequal size. The centre of the middle block for a length of 18 + feet projects some 3 feet from the main front, and, by directly facing the + spectator, ingeniously masks the obtuse angle formed by the meeting of the + two walls. This projection is flanked right and left by rectangular + grooves, similar to those which ornament the faades of the fortresses and + brick houses of the Ancient Empire in Egypt: the regular alternation of + projections and hollows breaks the monotony of the facing by the play of + light and shade. Beyond these, again, the wall surface is broken by + semicircular pilasters some 17 inches in diameter, without bases, + capitals, or even a moulding, but placed side by side like so many + tree-trunks or posts forming a palisade. + </p> + <p> + <a name="linkCimage-0010" id="linkCimage-0010"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/251.jpg" width="100%" + alt="251.jpg Decoration of Coloured Cones on the Faade at Uruk " /> + </div> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from the sketch by Loftus. +</pre> + <p> + Various schemes of decoration succeed each other in progressive sequence, + less ornate and at greater distances apart, the further they recede from + the central block and the nearer they approach to the extremities of the + faade. They stop short at the southern angle, and the two sides of the + edifice running from south to west, and again from west to north, are + flat, bare surfaces, unbroken by projection or groove to relieve the + poverty and monotony of their appearance. The decoration reappears on the + north-east front, where the arrangement of the principal faade is partly + reproduced. The grooved divisions here start from the angles, and the + engaged columns are wanting, or rather they are transferred to the central + projection, and from a distance have the effect of a row of gigantic + organ-pipes. We may well ask if this squat and heavy mass of building, + which must have attracted the eye from all parts of the town, had nothing + to relieve the dull and dismal colour of its component bricks. + </p> + <p> + <a name="linkCimage-0011" id="linkCimage-0011"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/252.jpg" width="100%" + alt="252.jpg Pilasters of the Facade Of Gudea’s Palace " /> + </div> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from Heuzey-Sarzec +</pre> + <p> + The idea might not have occurred to us had we not found elsewhere an + attempt to lessen the gloomy appearance of the architecture by coloured + plastering. At Uruk, the walls of the palace are decorated by means of + terra-cotta cones, fixed deep into the solid plaster and painted red, + black, or yellow, forming interlaced or diaper patterns of chevrons, + spirals, lozenges, and triangles, with a very fair result: this mosaic of + coloured plaster covered all the surfaces, both flat and curved, giving to + the building a cheerful aspect entirely wanting in that of Lagash. + </p> + <p> + A long narrow trough of yellowish limestone stood in front of the palace, + and was raised on two steps: it was carved in relief on the outside with + figures of women standing with outstretched hands, passing to each other + vases from which gushed forth two streams of water. This trough formed a + reservoir, which was filled every morning for the use of the men and + beasts, and those whom some business or a command brought to the palace + could refresh themselves there while waiting to be received by the master. + The gates which gave access to the interior were placed at somewhat + irregular intervals: two opened from the principal faade, but on each of + the other sides there was only one entrance. They were arched and so low + that admittance was not easily gained; they were closed with two-leaved + doors of cedar or cypress, provided with bronze hinges, which turned upon + two blackish stones firmly set in the masonry on either side, and usually + inscribed with the name of the founder or that of the reigning sovereign. + Two of the entrances possessed a sort of covered way, in which the + soldiers of the external watch could take shelter from the heat of the sun + by day, from the cold at night, and from the dews at dawn. On crossing the + threshold, a corridor, flanked with two small rooms for porters or + warders, led into a courtyard surrounded with buildings of sufficient + depth to take up nearly half of the area enclosed within the walls. This + court was moreover a semi-public place, to which tradesmen, merchants, + suppliants, and functionaries of all ranks had easy access. A suite of + three rooms shut off in the north-east angle did duty for a magazine or + arsenal. The southern portion of the building was occupied by the State + apartments, the largest of which measures only 40 feet in length. In these + rooms Gudea and his successors gave audience to their nobles and + administered justice. The administrative officers and the staff who had + charge of them were probably located in the remaining part of the + building. The roof was flat, and ran all round the enclosing wall, forming + a terrace, access to it being gained by a staircase built between the + principal entrance and the arsenal. At the northern angle rose a ziggurat. + Custom demanded that the sovereign should possess a temple within his + dwelling, where he could fulfil his religious duties without going into + the town and mixing with the crowd. At Lagash the sacred tower was of + older date than the palace, and possibly formed part of the ancient + building of Urbau. It was originally composed of three stories, but the + lower one was altered by Gudea, and disappeared entirely in the thickness + of the basal platform. The second story thus became the bottom one; it was + enlarged, slightly raised above the neighbouring roofs, and was probably + crowned by a sanctuary dedicated to Ningirsu. It was, indeed, a monument + of modest proportions, and most of the public temples soared far above it; + but, small as it was, the whole town might be seen from the summit, with + its separate quarters and its belt of gardens; and beyond, the open + country intersected with streams, studded with isolated villages, patches + of wood, pools and weedy marshes left by the retiring inundation, and in + the far distance the lines of trees and bushes which bordered the banks of + the Euphrates and its confluents. Should a troop of enemies venture within + the range of sight, or should a suspicious tumult arise within the city, + the watchers posted on the highest terrace would immediately give the + alarm, and ‘through their warning the king would have time to close his + gates, and take measures to resist the invading enemy or crush the revolt + of his subjects. + </p> + <p> + <a name="linkCimage-0012" id="linkCimage-0012"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/255.jpg" width="100%" + alt="255.jpg Stone Socket of One Of the Doors in The Palace Of Gudea.( Right) " /> + </div> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from Heuzey-Sarzec. +</pre> + <p> + The northern apartments of the palace were appropriated to Gudea and his + family. They were placed with their back to the entrance court, and were + divided into two groups; the sovereign, his male children and their + attendants, inhabited the western one, while the women and their slaves + were cloistered, so to speak, in the northern set. The royal dwelling had + an external exit by means of a passage issuing on the north-west of the + enclosure, and it also communicated with the great courtyard by a vaulted + corridor which ran along one side of the base of the ziggurat: the doors + which, closed these two entrances opened wide enough to admit only one + person at a time, and to the right and left were recesses in the wall + which enabled the guards to examine all comers unobserved, and stab them + promptly if there were anything suspicious in their behaviour. Eight + chambers were lighted from the courtyard. In one of them were kept all the + provisions for the day, while another served as a kitchen: the head, cook + carried on his work at a sort of rectangular dresser of moderate size, on + which several fireplaces were marked out by little dividing walls of burnt + bricks, to accommodate as many pots or pans of various sizes. A well sunk + in the corner right down below the substructure provided the water needed + for culinary purposes. The king and his belongings accommodated themselves + in the remaining five or six rooms as best they could. A corridor, guarded + as carefully as the one previously described, led to his private + apartments and to those of his wives: these comprised a yard, some + half-dozen cells varying in size, a kitchen, a well, and a door through + which the servants could come and go, without passing through the men’s + quarters. The whole description in no way corresponds with the marvellous + ideal of an Oriental palace which we form for ourselves: the apartments + are mean and dismal, imperfectly lighted by the door or by some small + aperture timidly cut in the ceiling, arranged so as to protect the inmates + from the heat and dust, but without a thought given to luxury or display. + The walls were entirely void of any cedar woodwork inlaid with gold, or + panels of mosaic such as we find in the temples, nor were they hung with + dyed or embroidered draperies such as we moderns love to imagine, and + which we spread about in profusion, when we attempt to reproduce the + interior of an ancient house or palace.* + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + * Mons. de Sarzec expressly states that he was unable to + find anywhere in the palace of Gudea “the slightest trace of + any coating on the walls, either of colour or glazed brick. + The walls appear to have been left bare, without any + decoration except the regular joining of the courses of + brickwork.” The wood panelling was usually reserved for the + temples or sacred edifices: Mons. de Sarzec found the + remains of carbonized cedar panels in the ruins of a + sanctuary dedicated to Ningirsu. According to Mons. Heuzey, + the wall-hangings were probably covered with geometrical + designs, similar to those formed by the terra-cotta cones on + the walls of the palace at Uruk; the inscriptions, however, + which are full of minute details with regard to the + construction and ornamentation of the temples and palaces, + have hitherto contained nothing which would lead us to infer + that hangings were used for mural decoration in Chaldoa or + Assyria. +</pre> + <p> + The walls had to remain bare for the sake of coolness: at the most they + were only covered with a coat of white plaster, on which were painted, in + one or two colours, some scene of civil or religious life, or troops of + fantastic monsters struggling with one another, or men each with a bird + seated on his Wrist. The furniture was not less scanty than the + decoration; there were mats on the ground, coffers in which were kept the + linen and wearing apparel, low beds inlaid with ivory and metal and + provided with coverings and a thin mattress, copper or wooden stands to + support lamps or vases, square stools on four legs united by crossbars, + armchairs with lions’ claw feet, resembling the Egyptian armchairs in + outline, and making us ask if they were brought into Chaldaea by caravans, + or made from models which had come from some other country. A few rare + objects of artistic character might be found, which bore witness to a + certain taste for elegance and refinement; as, for instance, a kind of + circular trough of black stone, probably used to support a vase. Three + rows of imbricated scales surrounded the base of this, while seven small + sitting figures lean back against the upper part with an air of + satisfaction which is most cleverly rendered. The decoration of the larger + chambers used for public receptions and official ceremonies, while never + assuming the monumental character which we observe in contemporary + Egyptian buildings, afforded more scope for richness and variety than was + offered by the living-rooms. + </p> + <p> + <a name="linkCimage-0013" id="linkCimage-0013"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/258.jpg" width="100%" + alt="258.jpg Stand of Black Stone from the Palace Of Telloh. " /> + </div> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from Heuzey-Sarzec. +</pre> + <p> + Small tablets of brownish limestone, let into the wall or affixed to its + surface by terra-cotta pegs, and decorated with inscriptions, represented + in a more or less artless fashion the figure of the sovereign officiating + before some divinity, while his children and servants took part in the + ceremony by their chanting. Inscribed bricks celebrating the king’s + exploits were placed here and there in conspicuous places. These were not + embedded like the others in two layers of bitumen or lime, but were placed + in full view upon bronze statues of divinities or priests, fixed into the + ground or into some part of the masonry as magical nails destined to + preserve the bricks from destruction, and consequently to keep the memory + of the dedicator continually before posterity. Stelaa engraved on both + sides recalled the wars of past times, the battle-field, the scenes of + horror which took place there, and the return of the victor and his + triumph. Sitting or standing figures of diorite, silicious sandstone or + hard limestone, bearing inscriptions on their robes or shoulders, + perpetuated the features of the founder or of members of his family, and + commemorated the pious donations which had obtained for him the favour of + the gods: the palace of Lagash contained dozens of such statues, several + of which have come down to us almost intact—one of the ancient + Urbau, and nine of Gudea. + </p> + <p> + To judge by the space covered and the arrangement of the rooms, the + vicegerents of Lagash and the chiefs of towns of minor importance must, as + a rule, have been content with a comparatively small number of servants; + their court probably resembled that of the Egyptian barons who lived much + about the same period, such as Khnmhotp of the nome of the Gazelle, or + Thothotp of Hermopolis. In great cities such as Babylon the palace + occupied a much larger area, and the crowd of courtiers was doubtless as + great as that which thronged about the Pharaohs. No exact enumeration of + them has come down to us, but the titles which we come across show with + what minuteness they defined the offices about the person of the + sovereign. His costume alone required almost as many persons as there were + garments. The men wore the light loin-cloth or short-sleeved tunic which + scarcely covered the knees; after the fashion of the Egyptians, they threw + over the loin-cloth and the tunic a large “abayah,” whose shape and + material varied with the caprice of fashion. They often chose for this + purpose a sort of shawl of a plain material, fringed or ornamented with a + flat stripe round the edge; often they seem to have preferred it ribbed, + or artificially kilted from top to bottom.* + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + * The relatively modern costume was described by Herodotus, + i. 114; it was almost identical with the ancient one, as + proved by the representations on the cylinders and monuments + of Telloh. The short-sleeved tunic is more rarely + represented, and the loin-cloth is usually hidden under the + abayah in the case of nobles and kings. We see the princes + of Lagash wearing the simple loin-cloth, on the monuments of + Urnin, for example. For the Egyptian abayah, and the manner + of representing it, cf. vol. i. pp. 69, 71. +</pre> + <p> + The favourite material in ancient times, however, seems to have been a + hairy, shaggy cloth or woollen stuff, whose close fleecy thread hung + sometimes straight, sometimes crimped or waved, in regular rows like + flounces one above another. This could be arranged squarely around the + neck, like a mantel, but was more often draped crosswise over the left + shoulder and brought under the right arm-pit, so as to leave the upper + part of the breast and the arm bare on that side. It made a convenient and + useful garment—an excellent protection in summer from the sun, and + from the icy north wind in the winter. The feet were shod with sandals, a + tight-fitting cap covered the head, and round it was rolled a thick strip + of linen, forming a sort of rudimentary turban, which completed the + costume.* + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + *Cf. the head belonging to one of the statues of Telloh, + which is reproduced on p. 112 of this volume. We notice the + same head-dress on several intaglios and monuments, and also + on the terra-cotta plaque which will be found on p. 330 of + this volume, and which represents a herdsman wrestling with + a lion. Until we have further evidence, we cannot state, as + G. Raw-linson did, that this strip forming a turban was of + camel’s hair; the date of the introduction of the camel into + Chaldoa still remains uncertain. +</pre> + <p> + It is questionable whether, as in Egypt, wigs and false beards formed part + of the toilette. On some monuments we notice smooth faces and + close-cropped heads; on others the men appear with long hair, either + falling loose or twisted into a knot on the back of the neck.* While the + Egyptians delighted in garments of thin white linen, but slightly plaited + or crimped, the dwellers on the banks of the Euphrates preferred thick and + heavy stuffs patterned and striped with many colours. The kings wore the + same costume as their subjects, but composed of richer and finer + materials, dyed red or blue, decorated with floral, animal, or geometrical + designs;** a high tower-shaped tiara covered the forehead,*** unless + replaced by a diadem of Sin or some of the other gods, which was a conical + mitre supporting a double pair of horns, and sometimes surmounted by a + sort of diadem of feathers and mysterious figures, embroidered or painted + on the cap. Their arms were loaded with massive bracelets and their + fingers with rings; they wore necklaces and earrings, and carried each a + dagger in the belt. + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + * Dignitaries went bareheaded and shaved the chin; see, for + example, the two bas-reliefs given on pp. 105 and 244 of + this volume; cf. the heads reproduced as tailpieces on pp. + 2, 124. The knot of hair behind on the central figure is + easily distinguished in the vignette on p. 266 of this + volume. + + ** The details of colour and ornamentation, not furnished by + the Chaldan monuments, are given in the wall-painting at + Beni-Nasan representing the arrival of Asiatics in Egypt, + which belongs to a period contemporary with or slightly + anterior to the reign of Gudea. The resemblance of the + stuffs in which they are clothed to those of the Chaldan + garments, and the identity of the patterns on them with the + geometrical decoration of painted cones on the palace at + Uruk, have been pointed out with justice by H. G. Tomkins + + *** The high tiara is represented among others on the head + of Mardukna-dinakhe, King of Babylon: cf. what is said of + the conical mitre, the headdress of Sin, on pp. 14, 169 of + this volume. +</pre> + <p> + <a name="linkCimage-0014" id="linkCimage-0014"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/262.jpg" width="100%" + alt="262.jpg Female Servant Bare to the Waist.(left) " /> + </div> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from the bronze figure in the + Louvre, published by Heuzey-Sarzec, <i>Dcouvertes en + Chalde</i>, pl. 14. +</pre> + <p> + The royal wardrobe, jewels, arms, and insignia formed so many distinct + departments, and each was further divided into minor sections for + body-linen, washing, or for this or that kind of headdress or sceptre. The + dress of the women, which was singularly like that of the men, required no + less a staff of attendants. The female servants, as well as the male, went + about bare to the waist, at all events while working indoors. When they + went out, they wore the same sort of tunic or loin-cloth, but longer and + more resembling a petticoat; they had the same “abayah” drawn round the + shoulders or rolled about the body like a cloak, but with the women it + nearly touched the ground; sometimes an actual dress seems to have been + substituted for the “abayah,” drawn in to the figure by a belt and cut out + of the same hairy material as that of which the mantles were made. The + boots were of soft leather, laced, and without heels; the women’s + ornaments were more numerous than those of the men, and comprised + necklaces, bracelets, ankle, finger, and ear rings; their hair was + separated into bands and kept in place on the forehead by a fillet, + falling in thick plaits or twisted into a coil on the nape of the neck. + </p> + <p> + <a name="linkCimage-0015" id="linkCimage-0015"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/263.jpg" width="100%" + alt="263.jpg Costume of a Chaldn Lady (right) " /> + </div> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from the alabaster statuette in the + Louvre, published in Heuzey. She holds in her hand the jar + full of water, analogous to the streaming vase mentioned + above. +</pre> + <p> + A great deal of the work was performed by foreign or native slaves, + generally under the command of eunuchs, to whom the king and royal princes + entrusted most of the superintendence of their domestic arrangements; they + guarded and looked after the sleeping apartments, they fanned and kept the + flies from their master, and handed him his food and drink. Eunuchs in + Egypt were either unknown or but little esteemed: they never seem to have + been used, even in times when relations with Asia were of daily + occurrence, and when they might have been supplied from the Babylonian + slave-markets. + </p> + <p> + All these various officials closely attached to the person of the + sovereign—heads of the wardrobe, chamberlains, cupbearers, bearers + of the royal sword or of the flabella, commanders of the eunuchs or of the + guards—had, by the nature of their duties, daily opportunities of + gaining a direct influence over their master and his government, and from + among them he often chose the generals of his army or the administrators + of his domains. Here, again, as far as the few monuments and the obscurity + of the texts permit of our judging, we find indications of a civil and + military organization analogous to that of Egypt: the divergencies which + contemporaries may have been able to detect in the two national systems + are effaced by the distance of time, and we are struck merely by the + resemblances. As all business transactions were carried on by barter or by + the exchange of merchandise for weighed quantities of the precious metals, + the taxes were consequently paid in kind: the principal media being corn + and other cereals, dates, fruits, stuffs, live animals and slaves, as well + as gold, silver, lead, and copper, either in its native state or melted + into bars fashioned into implements or ornamented vases. Hence we + continually come across fiscal storehouses, both in town and country, + which demanded the services of a whole troop of functionaries and workmen: + administrators of corn, cattle, precious metals, wine and oil; in fine, as + many administrators as there were cultures or industries in the country + presided over the gathering of the products into the central depots and + regulated their redistribution. A certain portion was reserved for the + salaries of the employs and the pay of the workmen engaged in executing + public works: the surplus accumulated in the treasury and formed a + reserve, which was not drawn upon except in cases of extreme necessity. + Every palace, in addition to its living-rooms, contained within its walls + large store-chambers filled with provisions and weapons, which made it + more or less a fortress, furnished with indispensable requisites for + sustaining a prolonged siege either against an enemy’s troops or the + king’s own subjects in revolt. The king always kept about him bodies of + soldiers who perhaps were foreign mercenaries, like the Mazai of the + armies of the Pharaohs, and who formed his permanent body-guard in times + of peace. When a war was imminent, a military levy was made upon his + domains, but we are unable to find out whether the recruits thus raised + were drawn indiscriminately from the population in general, or merely from + a special class, analogous to that of the warriors which we find in Egypt, + who were paid in the same way by grants of land. The equipment of these + soldiers was of the rudest kind: they had no cuirass, but carried a + rectangular shield, and, in the case of those of higher rank at all + events, a conical metal helmet, probably of beaten copper, provided with a + piece to protect the back of the neck; the heavy infantry were armed with + a pike tipped with bronze ox-copper, an axe or sharp adze, a stone-headed + mace, and a dagger; the light troops were provided only with the bow and + sling. As early as the third millennium b.c., the king went to battle in a + chariot drawn by onagers, or perhaps horses; he had his own peculiar + weapon, which was a curved bton probably terminating in a metal point, + and resembling the sceptre of the Pharaohs. Considerable quantities of all + these arms were stored in the arsenals, which contained depots for bows, + maces, and pikes, and even the stones needed for the slings had their + special department for storage. At the beginning of each campaign, a + distribution of weapons to the newly levied troops took place; but as soon + as the war was at an end, the men brought back their accoutrements, which + were stored till they were again required. The valour of the soldiers and + their chiefs was then rewarded; the share of the spoil for some consisted + of cattle, gold, corn, a female slave, and vessels of value; for others, + lands or towns in the conquered country, regulated by the rank of the + recipients or the extent of the services they had rendered. + </p> + <p> + <a name="linkCimage-0016" id="linkCimage-0016"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/266.jpg" width="100%" + alt="266.jpg a Soldier Bringing Prisoners and Spoil. " /> + </div> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from the Chaldan intaglio in the + British. Museum. +</pre> + <p> + Property thus given was hereditary, and privileges were often added to it + which raised the holder to the rank of a petty prince: for instance, no + royal official was permitted to impose a tax upon such lands, or take the + cattle off them, or levy provisions upon them; no troop of soldiers might + enter them, not even for the purpose of arresting a fugitive. Most of the + noble families possessed domains of this kind, and constituted in each + kingdom a powerful and wealthy feudal aristocracy, whose relations to + their sovereign were probably much the same as those which bound the + nomarchs to the Pharaoh. The position of these nobles was not more stable + than that of the dynasties under which they lived: while some among them + gained power by marriages or by continued acquisitions of land, others + fell into disgrace and were ruined. As the soil belonged to the gods, it + is possible that these nobles were supposed, in theory, ‘to depend upon + the gods; but as the kings were the vicegerents of the gods upon earth, it + was to the king, as a matter of fact, that they owed their elevation. + Every state, therefore, comprised two parts, each subject to a distinct + rgime: one being the personal domain of the suzerain, which he managed + himself, and from which he drew the revenues; the other was composed of + fiefs, whose lords paid tribute and owed certain obligations to the king, + the nature of which we are as yet unable to define. + </p> + <p> + The Chaldan, like the Egyptian scribe, was the pivot on which the + machinery of this double royal and seignorial administration turned. He + does not appear to have enjoyed as much consideration as his + fellow-official in the Nile Valley: the Chaldan princes, nobles, priests, + soldiers, and temple or royal officials, did not covet the title of + scribe, or pride themselves upon holding that office side by side with + their other dignities, as we see was the case with their Egyptian + contemporaries. The position of a scribe, nevertheless, was an important + one. We continually meet with it in all grades of society—in the + palace, in the temples, in the storehouses, in private dwellings; in fine, + the scribe was ubiquitous, at court, in the town, in the country, in the + army, managing affairs both small and great, and seeing that they were + carried on regularly. His education differed but little from that given to + the Egyptian scribe; he learned the routine of administrative or judicial + affairs, the formularies for correspondence either with nobles or with + ordinary people, the art of writing, of calculating quickly, and of making + out bills correctly. We may well ask whether he ever employed papyrus or + prepared skins for these purposes. It would, indeed, seem strange that, + after centuries of intercourse, no caravan should have brought into + Chaldan any of those materials which were in such constant use for + literary purposes in Africa;* yet the same clay which furnished the + architect with such an abundant building material appears to have been the + only medium for transmitting the language which the scribes possessed. + They were always provided with slabs of a fine plastic clay, carefully + mixed and kept sufficiently moist to take easily the impression of an + object, but at the same time sufficiently firm to prevent the marks once + made from becoming either blurred or effaced. When a scribe had a text to + copy or a document to draw up, he chose out one of his slabs, which he + placed flat upon his left palm, and taking in the right hand a triangular + stylus of flint, copper, bronze, or bone,** he at once set to work. The + instrument, in early times, terminated in a fine point, and the marks made + by it when it was gently pressed upon the clay were slender and of uniform + thickness; in later times, the extremity of the stylus was cut with a + bevel, and the impression then took the shape of a metal nail or a wedge. + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + * On the Assyrian monuments we frequently see scribes taking + a list of the spoil, or writing letters on tablets and some + other soft material, either papyrus or prepared skin. Sayce + has given good reasons for believing that the Chaldanns of + the early dynasties knew of the papyrus, and either made it + themselves, or had it brought from Egypt. + + ** See the triangular stylus of copper or bronze reproduced + by the side of the measuring-rule, and the plan on the + tablet of Gudea, p. 248 of this volume. The Assyrian Museum + in the Louvre possesses several large, flat styli of bone, + cut to a point at one end, which appear to have belonged to + the Assyrian scribes. Taylor discovered in a tomb at Eridu a + flint tool, which may have served for the same purpose as + the metal or bone styli. +</pre> + <p> + <a name="linkCimage-0017" id="linkCimage-0017"> + <!-- IMG --></a> <a href="images/268.jpg">ENLARGE TO FULL SIZE</a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/268th.jpg" width="100%" + alt="268.jpg Manuscript on Papyrus in Heiroglyphics" /> + </div> + <p> + <br /> + </p> + <p> + They wrote from left to right along the upper part of the tablet, and + covered both sides of it with closely written lines, which sometimes ran + over on to the edges. When the writing was finished, the scribe sent his + work to the potter, who put it in the kiln and baked it, or the writer may + have had a small oven at his own disposition, as a clerk with us would + have his table or desk. The shape of these documents varied, and sometimes + strikes us as being peculiar: besides the tablets and the bricks, we find + small solid cones, or hollow cylinders of considerable size, on which the + kings related their exploits or recorded the history of their wars or the + dedication of their buildings. This method had a few inconveniences, but + many advantages. These clay books were heavy to hold and clumsy to handle, + while the characters did not stand out well from the brown, yellow, and + whitish background of the material; but, on the other hand, a poem, baked + and incorporated into the page itself, ran less danger of destruction than + if scribbled in ink on sheets of papyrus. Fire could make no impression on + it; it could withstand water for a considerable length of time; even if + broken, the pieces were still of use: as long as it was not pulverized, + the entire document could be restored, with the exception, perhaps, of a + few signs, or ‘some scraps of a sentence. The inscriptions which have been + saved from the foundations of the most ancient temples, several of which + date back forty or fifty centuries, are for the most part as clear and + legible as when they left the hands of the writer who engraved them or of + the workmen who baked them. It is owing to the material to which they were + committed that we possess the principal works of Chaldan literature which + have come down to us—poems, annals, hymns, magical incantations; how + few fragments of these would ever have reached us had their authors + confided them to parchment or paper, after the manner of the Egyptian + scribes! The greatest danger that they ran was that of being left + forgotten in the corner of the chamber in which they had been kept, or + buried under the rubbish of a building after a fire or some violent + catastrophe; even then the <i>dbris</i> were the means of preserving + them, by falling over them and covering them up. Protected under the + ruins, they would lie there for centuries, till the fortunate explorer + should bring them to light and deliver them over to the patient study of + the learned. + </p> + <p> + The cuneiform character in itself is neither picturesque nor decorative. + It does not offer that delightful assemblage of birds and snakes, of men + and quadrupeds, of heads and limbs, of tools, weapons, stars, trees, and + boats, which succeed each other in perplexing order on the Egyptian + monuments, to give permanence to the glory of Pharaoh and the greatness of + his gods. Cuneiform writing is essentially composed of thin short lines, + placed in juxtaposition or crossing each other in a somewhat clumsy + fashion; it has the appearance of numbers of nails scattered about at + haphazard, and its angular configuration, and its stiff and spiny + appearance, gives the inscriptions a dull and forbidding aspect which no + artifice of the engraver can overcome. + </p> + <p> + <a name="linkCimage-0018" id="linkCimage-0018"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/271.jpg" width="100%" alt="271.jpg Page Image " /> + </div> + <p> + <a name="linkCimage-0019" id="linkCimage-0019"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/272.jpg" width="100%" alt="272.jpg Page Image " /> + </div> + <p> + Yet, in spite of their seemingly arbitrary character, this mass of strokes + had its source in actual hieroglyphs. As in the origin of the Egyptian + script the earliest writers had begun by drawing on stone or clay the + outline of the object of which they desired to convey the idea. But, + whereas in Egypt the artistic temperament of the race, and the increasing + skill of their sculptors, had by degrees brought the drawing of each sign + to such perfection that it became a miniature portrait of the being or + object to be reproduced, in Chalda, on the contrary, the signs became + degraded from their original forms on account of the difficulty + experienced in copying them with the stylus on the clay tablets: they lost + their original vertical position, and were placed horizontally, retaining + finally but the very faintest resemblance to the original model. For + instance, the Chaldaean conception of the sky was that of a vault divided + into eight segments by diameters running from the four cardinal points and + from their principal subdivisions [symbol] the external circle was soon + omitted, the transverse lines alone remaining [symbol], which again was + simplified into a kind of irregular cross [symbol]. The figure of a man + standing, indicated by the lines resembling his contour, was placed on its + side [symbol] and reduced little by little till it came to be merely a + series of ill-balanced lines [symbol] [symbol]. We may still recognize in + [symbol] the five fingers and palm of a human hand [symbol]; but who would + guess at the first glance that [symbol] stands for the foot which the + scribes strove to place beside each character the special hieroglyph from + which it had been derived. Several fragments of these still exist, a study + of which seems to show that the Assyrian scribes of a more recent period + were at times as much puzzled as we are ourselves when they strove to get + at the principles of their own script: they had come to look on it as + nothing more than a system of arbitrary combinations, whose original form + had passed all the more readily into oblivion, because it had been + borrowed from a foreign race, who, as far as they were concerned, had + ceased to have a separate existence. The script had been invented by the + Sumerians in the very earliest times, and even they may have brought it in + an elemental condition from their distant fatherland. The first articulate + sounds which, being attached to the hieroglyphs, gave to each an + unalterable pronunciation, were words in the Sumerian tongue; + subsequently, when the natural progress of human thought led thi Chaldans + to replace, as in Egypt, the majority of the signs representing ideas by + those representing sounds, the syllabic values which were developed side + by side with the ideographic values were purely Sumerian. The group + [symbol] throughout all its forms, designates in the first place the sky, + then the god of the sky, and finally the concept of divinity in general. + In its first two senses it is read ana, but in the last it becomes dingir, + dimir; and though it never lost its double force, it was soon separated + from the ideas which it evoked, to be used merely to denote the syllable + an wherever it occurred, even in cases where it had no connection with the + sky or heavenly things. The same process was applied to other signs with + similar results: after having merely denoted ideas, they came to stand for + the sounds corresponding to them, and then passed on to be mere syllables—complex + syllables in which several consonants may be distinguished, or simple + syllables composed of only one consonant and one vowel, or vice versa. The + Egyptians had carried this system still further, and in many cases had + kept only one part of the syllable, namely, a mute consonant: they + detached, for example, the final u from pu and bu, and gave only the + values b and p to the human leg J and the mat Q. The peoples of the + Euphrates stopped halfway, and admitted actual letters for the vowel + sounds a, i, and u only. Their system remained a syllabary interspersed + with ideograms, but excluded an alphabet. + </p> + <p> + <a name="linkCimage-0020" id="linkCimage-0020"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/274.jpg" width="100%" alt="274.jpg Page Image " /> + </div> + <p> + It was eminently wanting in simplicity, but, taken as a whole, it would + not have presented as many difficulties as the script of the Egyptians, + had it not been forced, at a very early period, to adapt itself to the + exigencies of a language for which it had not been made. When it came to + be appropriated by the Semites, the ideographs, which up till then had + been read in Sumerian, did not lose the sounds which they possessed in + that tongue, but borrowed others from the new language. For example, “god” + was called ilu, and “heaven” called shami: [symbol], when encountered in + inscriptions by the Semites, were read [symbol] when the context showed + the sense to be “god,” and shami when the character evidently meant + “heaven.” They added these two vocables to the preceding ana, an, dingir, + dimir; but they did not stop there: they confounded the picture of the + star [symbol] with that of the sky, and sometimes attributed to [symbol], + the pronunciation kakkabu, and the meaning of star. The same process was + applied to all the groups, and the Semitic values being added to the + Sumerian, the scribes soon found themselves in possession of a double set + of syllables both simple and compound. This multiplicity of sounds, this + polyphonous character attached to their signs, became a cause of + embarrassment even to them. For instance, [symbol] when found in the body + of a word, stood for the syllables hi or hat, mid, mit, til, ziz; as an + ideogram it was used for a score of different concepts: that of lord or + master, inu, bilu; that of blood, dam; for a corpse, pagru, shalamtu; for + the feeble or oppressed, kahtu, nagpu; as the hollow and the spring, + nakbu; for the state of old age, labaru; of dying, mtu; of killing, mtu; + of opening, ptu; besides other meanings. Several phonetic complements + were added to it; it was preceded by ideograms which determined the sense + in which it was to be read, but which, like the Egyptian determinatives, + were not pronounced, and in this manner they succeeded in limiting the + number of mistakes which it was possible to make. With a final [symbol] it + would always mean [symbol] bilu, the master, but with an initial [symbol] + (thus [symbol]) it denoted the gods Bel or Ea; with [symbol]. which + indicates a man [symbol], it would be the corpse, pagru and shalamtu; with + [symbol] prefixed, it meant [symbol]—mutanu, the plague or death and + so on. In spite of these restrictions and explanations, the obscurity of + the meaning was so great, that in many cases the scribes ran the risk of + being unable to make out certain words and understand certain passages; + many of the values occurred but rarely, and remained unknown to those who + did not take the trouble to make a careful study of the syllabary and its + history. It became necessary to draw up tables for their use, in which all + the signs were classified and arranged, with their meanings and phonetic + transcriptions. These signs occupied one column, and in three or four + corresponding columns would be found, first, the name assigned to it; + secondly, the spelling, in syllables, of the phonetic values which the + signs expressed, thirdly, the Sumerian and Assyrian words which they + served to render, and sometimes glosses which completed the explanation. + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img alt="275 (94K)" src="images/275.jpg" width="100%" /> + </div> + <p> + <a name="linkCimage-0021" id="linkCimage-0021"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/276.jpg" width="100%" alt="276.jpg Tables " /> + </div> + <p> + Even this is far from exhausting the matter. Several of these dictionaries + went back to a very early date, and tradition ascribes to Sargon of Agade + the merit of having them drawn up or of having collected them in his + palace. The number of them naturally increased in the course of centuries; + in the later times of the Assyrian empire they were so numerous as to form + nearly one-fourth of the works in the library at Nineveh under + Assurbanipal. Other tablets contained dictionaries of archaic or obsolete + terms, grammatical paradigms, extracts from laws or ancient hymns analyzed + sentence by sentence and often word by word, interlinear glosses, + collections of Sumerian formulas translated into Semitic speech—a + child’s guide, in fact, which the savants of those times consulted with as + much advantage as those of our own day have done, and which must have + saved them from many a blunder. + </p> + <p> + When once accustomed to the difficulties and intricacies of their calling, + the scribes were never at a standstill. The stylus was plied in Chalda no + less assiduously than was the calamus in Egypt, and the indestructible + clay, which the Chaldans were as a rule content to use, proved a better + medium in the long run than the more refined material employed by their + rivals: the baked or merely dried clay tablets have withstood the assaults + of time in surprising quantities, while the majority of papyri have + disappeared without leaving a trace behind. If at Babylon we rarely meet + with those representations, which we find everywhere in the tombs of + Saqqara or Gzeh, of the people themselves and their families, their + occupations, amusements, and daily intercourse, we possess, on the other + hand, that of which the ruins of Memphis have furnished us but scanty + instances up to the present time, namely, judicial documents, regulating + the mutual relations of the people and conferring a legal sanction on the + various events of their life. Whether it were a question of buying lands + or contracting a marriage, of a loan on interest, or the sale of slaves, + the scribe was called in with his soft tablets to engross the necessary + agreement. In this he would insert as many details as possible—the + day of the month, the year of the reigning sovereign, and at times, to be + still more precise, an allusion to some important event which had just + taken place, and a memorial of which was inserted in official annals, such + as the taking of a town, the defeat of a neighbouring king, the dedication + of a temple, the building of a wall or fortress, the opening of a canal, + or the ravages of an inundation: the names of the witnesses and + magistrates before whom the act was confirmed were also added to those of + the contracting parties. The method of sanctioning it was curious. An + indentation was made with the finger-nail on one of the sides of the + tablet, and this mark, followed or preceded by the mention of a name, + “Nail of Zabudamik,” “Nail of Abzii,” took the place of our more or less + complicated sign-manuals. In later times, only the buyer and witnesses + approved by a nail-mark, while the seller appended his seal; an + inscription incised above the impress indicating the position of the + signatory. Every one of any importance possessed a seal, which he wore + attached to his wrist or hung round his neck by a cord; he scarcely ever + allowed it to be separated from his person during his lifetime, and after + death it was placed with him in the tomb in order to prevent any improper + use being made of it. It was usually a cylinder, sometimes a truncated + cone with a convex base, either of marble, red or green jasper, agate, + cornelian, onyx or rock crystal, but rarely of metal. Engraved upon it in + intaglio was an emblem or subject chosen by the owner, such as the single + figure of a god or goddess, an act of adoration, a sacrifice, or an + episode in the story of Gilgames, followed sometimes by the inscription of + a name and title. The cylinder was rolled, or, in the case of the cone, + merely pressed on the clay, in the space reserved for it. In several + localities the contracting parties had recourse to a very ingenious + procedure to prevent the agreements being altered or added to by + unscrupulous persons. When the document had been impressed on the tablet, + it was enveloped in a second coating of clay, upon which an exact copy of + the original was made, the latter thus becoming inaccessible to forgers: + if by chance, in course of time, any disagreement should take place, and + an alteration of the visible text should be suspected, the outer envelope + was broken in the presence of witnesses, and a comparison was made to see + if the exterior corresponded exactly with the interior version. Families + thus had their private archives, to which additions were rapidly made by + every generation; every household thus accumulated not only the evidences + of its own history, but to some extent that of other families with whom + they had formed alliances, or had business or friendly relations.* + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + * The tablets of Tell-Sifr come from one of these family + collections. They all, in number about one hundred, rested + on three enormous bricks, and they had been covered with a + mat of which the half-decayed remains were still visible: + three other crude bricks covered the heap. The documents + contained in them relate for the most part to the families + of Sininana and Amililni, and form part of their archives. +</pre> + <p> + <a name="linkCimage-0022" id="linkCimage-0022"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/279.jpg" width="100%" + alt="279.jpg the Tablet of Tell-sifr, Broken to Show The Two Texts. " /> + </div> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from Loftus. +</pre> + <p> + <a name="linkCimage-0023" id="linkCimage-0023"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/280.jpg" width="100%" + alt="280.jpg Tablet Bearing the Impress of a Seal " /> + </div> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a sketch by Layard. +</pre> + <p> + The constitution of the family was of a complex character. It would appear + that the people of each city were divided into clans, all of whose members + claimed to be descended from a common ancestor, who had flourished at a + more or less remote period. The members of each clan were by no means all + in the same social position, some having gone down in the world, others + having raised themselves; and amongst them we find many different callings—from + agricultural labourers to scribes, and from merchants to artisans. No + mutual tie existed among the majority of these members except the + remembrance of their common origin, perhaps also a common religion, and + eventual rights of succession or claims upon what belonged to each one + individually. The branches which had become gradually separated from the + parent stock, and which, taken all together, formed the clan, possessed + each, on the contrary, a very strict organization. It is possible that, at + the outset, the woman occupied the more important position, but at an + early date the man became the head of the family,* and around him were + ranged the wives, children, servants, and slaves, all of whom had their + various duties and privileges. + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + * The change in the condition of women would be due to the + influence of Semitic ideas and customs in Chalda. +</pre> + <p> + He offered the household worship to the gods of his race, in accordance + with special rites which had come down to him from his father; he made at + the tombs of his ancestors, at such times as were customary, the offerings + and prayers which assured their repose in the other world, and his powers + were as extensive in civil as in religious matters. He had absolute + authority over all the members of his household, and anything undertaken + by them without his consent was held invalid in the eyes of the law; his + sons could not marry unless he had duly authorized them to do so. For this + purpose he appeared before the magistrate with the future couple, and the + projected union could not be held as an actual marriage, until he had + affixed his seal or made his nail-mark on the contract tablet. It + amounted, in fact, to a formal deed of sale, and the parents of the girl + parted with her only in exchange for a proportionate gift from the + bridegroom. One girl would be valued at a silver shekel by weight, while + another was worth a mina, another much less;* the handing over of the + price was accompanied with a certain solemnity. When the young man + possessed no property as yet of his own, his family advanced him the sum + needed for the purchase. On her side, the maiden did not enter upon her + new life empty handed; her father, or, in the case of his death, the head + of the family at the time being, provided her with a dowry suited to her + social position, which was often augmented by considerable presents from + her grandmother, aunts, and cousins.** + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + * Shamashnazir receives, as the price of his daughter, ten + shekels of silver, which appears to have been an average + price in the class of life to which he belonged. + + ** The nature of the dowry in ancient times is clear from + the Sumero-Assyrian tablets in which the old legal texts are + explained, and again from the contents of the contracts of + Tell-Sifr, and the documents on stone, such as the Micliaux + stone, in which we see women bringing their possessions into + the community by marriage, and yet retaining the entire + disposition of them. +</pre> + <p> + The dowry would consist of a carefully marked out field of corn, a grove + of date-palms, a house in the town, a trousseau, furniture, slaves, or + ready money; the whole would be committed to clay, of which there would be + three copies at least, two being given by the scribe to the contracting + parties, while the third would be deposited in the hands of the + magistrate. When the bride and bridegroom both belonged to the same class, + or were possessed of equal fortunes, the relatives of the woman could + exact an oath from the man that he would abstain from taking a second wife + during her lifetime; a special article of the marriage agreement permitted + the woman to go free should the husband break his faith, and bound him to + pay an indemnity as a compensation for the insult he had offered her. This + engagement on the part of the man, however, did not affect his relations + with his female servants. In Chalda, as in Egypt, and indeed in the whole + of the ancient world, they were always completely at the mercy of their + purchaser, and the permission to treat them as he would had become so much + of a custom that the begetting of children by their master was desired + rather than otherwise: the complaints of the despised slave, who had not + been taken into her master’s favour, formed one of the themes of popular + poetry at a very early period. When the contract tablet was finally + sealed, one of the witnesses, who was required to be a free man, joined + the hands of the young couple; nothing then remained to be done but to + invite the blessing of the gods, and to end the day by a feast, which + would unite both families and their guests. The evil spirits, however, + always in quest of an easy prey, were liable to find their way into the + nuptial chamber, favoured by the confusion inseparable from all household + rejoicing: prudence demanded that their attempts should be frustrated, and + that the newly married couple should be protected from their attacks. The + companions of the bridegroom took possession of him, and, hand to hand and + foot to foot, formed as it were a rampart round him with their bodies, and + carried him off solemnly to his expectant bride. He then again repeated + the words which he had said in the morning: “I am the son of a prince, + gold and silver shall fill thy bosom; thou, even thou, shalt be my wife, I + myself will be thy husband;” and he continued: “As the fruits borne by an + orchard, so great shall be the abundance which I shall pour out upon this + woman.” * The priest then called down upon him benedictions from on high: + “Therefore, O ye (gods), all that is bad and that is not good in this man, + drive it far from him and give him strength. As for thee, O man, exhibit + thy manhood, that this woman may be thy wife; thou, O woman, give that + which makes thy womanhood, that this man may be thy husband.” On the + following morning, a thanksgiving sacrifice celebrated the completion of + the marriage, and by purifying the new household drove from it the host of + evil spirits.** + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + * This part of the ceremony is described on a Sumero- + Assyrian tablet, of which two copies exist, discovered and + translated by Pinches. The interpretation appears to me to + result from the fact that mention is made, at the + commencement of the column, of impious beings without gods, + who might approach the man; in other places magical + exorcisms indicate how much those spirits were dreaded “who + deprived the bride of the embraces of the man.” As Pinches + remarks, the formula is also found in the part of the poem + of Gilgames, where Ishtar wishes to marry the hero, which + shows that the rite and its accompanying words belong to a + remote past. + + ** The text that describes these ceremonies was discovered + and published by Pinches. As far as I can judge, it + contained an exorcism against the “knotting of the tag,” and + the mention of this subject called up that of the marriage + rites. The ceremony commanded on the day following the + marriage was probably a purification: as late as the time of + Herodotus, the union of man and woman rendered both impure, + and they had to perform an ablution before recommencing + their occupations. +</pre> + <p> + The woman, once bound, could only escape from the sovereign power of her + husband by death or divorce; but divorce for her was rather a trial to + which she submitted than a right of which she could freely make use. Her + husband could repudiate her at will without any complicated ceremonies. It + was enough for him to say: “Thou art not my wife!” and to restore to her a + sum of money equalling in value the dowry he had received with her;* he + then sent her back to her father, with a letter informing him of the + dissolution of the conjugal tie.** But if in a moment of weariness or + anger she hurled the fatal formula at him: “Thou are not my husband!” her + fate was sealed: she was thrown into the river and drowned.*** + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + * The sum is fixed at half a mina by the text of the + Sumerian laws; but it was sometimes less, e.g. ten shekels, + and sometimes more, e.g. a whole mina. + + ** Repudiation of a wife, and the ceremonial connected with + it, are summarized, as far as ancient times are concerned, + by a passage in the Sumero-Assyrian tablet, published by + Rawlinson, and translated by Oppert-Menant. Bertin, on the + contrary, takes the same text to be a description of the + principal marriage-rites, and from it he draws the + conclusion that the possibility of divorce was not admitted + in Chalda between persons of noble family. Meissner very + rightly returns to Oppert’s interpretation, a few details in + which he corrects. + + *** This fact was evident from the text of the so-called + <i>Sumerian Laws concerning the Organization of the Family</i>, + according to the generally received interpretation: + according to that proposed by Oppert-Menant, it was the + woman who had the right of causing the husband who had + wronged her to be thrown into the river. The publication of + the contracts of Iltani and of Bashtum appear to have shown + conclusively the correctness of the ordinary translation: + uncertainty with regard to one word prevents us from knowing + whether the guilty wife were strangled before being thrown + into the water, or if she were committed to the river alive. +</pre> + <p> + The adulteress was also punished with death, but with death by the sword: + and when the use of iron became widespread, the blade was to be of that + metal. Another ancient custom only spared the criminal to devote her to a + life of infamy: the outraged husband stripped her of her fleecy garments, + giving her merely the loin-cloth in its place, which left her half naked, + and then turned-her out of the house into the street, where she was at the + mercy of the first passer-by. Women of noble or wealthy families found in + their fortune a certain protection from the abuse of marital authority. + The property which they brought with them by their marriage contract, + remained at their own disposal.* They had the entire management of it, + they farmed it out, they sold it, they spent the income from it as they + liked, without interference from any one: the man enjoyed the comforts + which it procured, but he could not touch it, and his hold upon it was so + slight that his creditors could not lay their hands on it. + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + * In the documents of the New Chaldan Empire we find + instances of married women selling their property + themselves, and even of their being present, seated, at the + conclusion of the sale, or of their ceding to a married + daughter some property in their own possession, thus + renouncing the power of disposing of it, and keeping merely + the income from it; we have also instances of women + reclaiming valuables of gold which their husbands had given + away without their authorisation, and also obtaining an + indemnity for the wrong they had suffered; also of their + lending money to the mother-in-law of their brother; in + fine, empowered to deal with their own property in every + respect like an ordinary proprietor. +</pre> + <p> + If by his own act he divorced his wife, he not only lost all benefit from + her property, but he was obliged to make her an allowance or to pay her an + indemnity;* at his death, the widow succeeded to these, without prejudice + to what she was entitled to by her marriage contract or the will of the + deceased. The woman with a dowry, therefore, became more or less + emancipated by virtue of her money. As her departure deprived the + household of as much as, and sometimes more than, she had brought into it, + every care was taken that she should have no cause to retire from it, and + that no pretext should be given to her parents for her recall to her old + home; her wealth thus obtained for her the consideration and fair + treatment which the law had, at the outset, denied to her. + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + * The restitution of the dowry after divorce is ascertained, + as far as later times are concerned, from documents similar + to that published by Kohler-Peiser, in which we see the + second husband of a divorced wife claiming the dowry from + the first husband. The indemnity was fixed beforehand at six + silver min, in the marriage contract published by Oppert. +</pre> + <p> + When, however, the wife was poor, she had to bear without complaint the + whole burden of her inferior position. Her parents had no other resource + than to ask the highest possible price for her, according to the rank in + which they lived, or in virtue of the personal qualities she was supposed + to possess, and this amount, paid into their hands when they delivered her + over to the husband, formed, if not an actual dowry for her, at least a + provision for her in case of repudiation or widowhood: she was not, + however, any less the slave of her husband—a privileged slave, it is + true, and one whom he could not sell like his other slaves,* but of whom + he could easily rid himself when her first youth was passed, or when she + ceased to please him.** + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + * It appears, however, in certain cases not clearly + specified, that the husband could sell his wife, if she were + a shrew, as a slave. + + ** This form of marriage, which was of frequent occurrence + in ancient times, fell into disuse among the upper classes, + at least of Babylonian society. A few examples, however, are + found in late times. It continued in use among the lower + classes, and Herodotus affirms that in his time marriage + markets were held regularly, as in our own time fairs are + held for hiring male and female servants. +</pre> + <p> + In many cases the fiction of purchase was set aside, and mutual consent + took the place of all other formalities, marriage then becoming merely + cohabitation, terminating at will. The consent of the father was not + required for this irregular union, and many a son contracted a marriage + after this fashion, unknown to his relatives, with some young girl either + in his own or in an inferior station: but the law refused to allow her any + title except that of concubine, and forced her to wear a distinctive mark, + perhaps that of servitude, namely, the representation of an olive in some + valuable stone or in terra-cotta, bearing her own and her husband’s name, + with the date of their union, which she kept hung round her neck by a + cord. Whether they were legitimate wives or not, the women of the lower + and middle classes enjoyed as much independence as did the Egyptian women + of a similar rank. As all the household cares fell to their share, it was + necessary that they should be free to go about at all hours of the day: + and they could be seen in the streets and the markets, with bare feet, + their head and face uncovered, wearing their linen loin-cloth or their + long draped garments of hairy texture.* Their whole life was expended in a + ceaseless toil for their husbands and children: night and morning they + went to fetch water from the public well or the river, they bruised the + corn, made the bread, spun, wove, and clothed the entire household in + spite of the frequent demands of maternity.** The Chaldan women of wealth + or noble birth, whose civil status gave them a higher position, did not + enjoy so much freedom. They were scarcely affected by the cares of daily + life, and if they did any work within their houses, it was more from a + natural instinct, a sense of duty, or to relieve the tedium of their + existence, than from constraint or necessity; but the exigencies of their + rank reduced them to the state of prisoners. All the luxuries and comforts + which money could procure were lavished on them, or they obtained them for + themselves, but all the while they were obliged to remain shut in the + harem within their own houses; when they went out, it was only to visit + their female friends or their relatives, to go to some temple or festival, + and on such occasions they were surrounded with servants, eunuchs, and + pages, whose serried ranks shut out the external world. + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + * For the long garment of the women, see the statue + represented on p. 263 of the present work; for the loin- + cloth, which left the shoulders and bust exposed, see the + bronze figure on p. 262. The latter was no doubt the garment + worn at home by respectable women; we see by the punishment + inflicted on adulteresses that it was an outdoor garment for + courtesans, and also, doubtless, for slaves and women of the + lower classes. + + ** Women’s occupations are mentioned in several texts and on + several ancient monuments. On the seal, an impress of which + is given on p. 233 of this volume, we see above, on the + left, a woman kneeling and crushing the corn, and before her + a row of little disks, representing, no doubt, the loaves + prepared for baking. The length of time for suckling a child + is fixed at three years by the Sumero-Assyrian tablet + relating the history of the foundling; protracted suckling + was customary also in Egypt. +</pre> + <p> + There was no lack of children in these houses when the man had several + mistresses, either simultaneously or successively. Maternity was before + all things a woman’s first duty: should she delay in bearing children, or + should anything happen to them, she was considered as accursed or + possessed, and she was banished from the family lest her presence should + be a source of danger to it.* In spite of this many households remained + childless, either because a clause inserted in the contract prevented the + dismissal of the wife if barren, or because the children had died when the + father was stricken in years, and there was little hope of further + offspring. In such places adoption filled the gaps left by nature, and + furnished the family with desired heirs. For this purpose some chance + orphan might be brought into the household—one of those poor little + creatures consigned by their mothers to the river, as in the case of + Shargani, according to the ancient legend; or who had been exposed at the + cross-roads to excite the pity of passers-by,** like the foundling whose + story is given us in an old ballad. “He who had neither father nor mother,—he + who knew not his father or mother, but whose earliest memory is of a well—whose + entry into the world was in the street,” his benefactor “snatched him from + the jaws of dogs—and took him from the beaks of ravens.—He + seized the seal before witnesses—and he marked him on the sole of + the foot with the seal of the witness,—then he entrusted him to a + nurse,—and for three years he provided the nurse with flour, oil, + and clothing.” When the weaning was accomplished, “he appointed him to be + his child,—he brought him up to be his child,—he inscribed him + as his child,—and he gave him the education of a scribe.” The rites + of adoption in these cases did not differ from those attendant upon birth. + On both occasions the newly born infant was shown to witnesses, and it was + marked on the soles of its feet to establish its identity; its + registration in the family archives did not take place until these + precautions had been observed, and children adopted in this manner were + regarded thenceforward in the eyes of the world as the legitimate heirs of + the family. + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + * Divorce for sterility was customary in very early times. + Complete sterility or miscarriage was thought to be + occasioned by evil spirits; a woman thus possessed with a + devil came to be looked on as a dangerous being whom it was + necessary to exorcise. +</pre> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + ** Many of these children were those of courtesans or women + who had been repudiated, as we learn from the Sumero- + Assyrian tablet of Rawlinson: “She will expose her child + alone in the street, where the serpents in the road may bite + it, and its father and mother will know it no more.” + </pre> + <p> + People desiring to adopt a child usually made inquiries among their + acquaintances, or poor friends, or cousins who might consent to give up + one of their sons, in the hope of securing a better future for him. When + he happened to be a minor, the real father and mother, or, in the case of + the death of one, the surviving parent, appeared before the scribe, and + relinquished all their rights in favour of the adopting parents; the + latter, in accepting this act of renunciation, promised henceforth to + treat the child as if he were of their own flesh and blood, and often + settled upon him, at the same time, a certain sum chargeable on their own + patrimony. When the adopted son was of age, his consent to the agreement + was required, in addition to that of his parents. The adoption was + sometimes prompted by an interested motive, and not merely by the desire + for posterity or its semblance. Labour was expensive, slaves were scarce, + and children, by working for their father, took the place of hired + servants, and were content, like them, with food and clothing. The + adoption of adults was, therefore, most frequent in ancient times. The + introduction of a person into a fresh household severed the ties which + bound him to the old one; he became a stranger to those who had borne him; + he had no filial obligations to discharge to them, nor had he any right to + whatever property they might possess, unless, indeed, any unforeseen + circumstance prevented the carrying out of the agreement, and legally + obliged him to return to the status of his birth. In return, he undertook + all the duties and enjoyed the privileges of his new position; he owed to + his adopted parents the same amount of work, obedience, and respect that + he would have given to his natural parents; he shared in their condition, + whether for good or ill, and he inherited their possessions. Provision was + made for him in case of his repudiation by those who had adopted him, and + they had to make him compensation: he received the portion which would + have accrued to him after their death, and he then left them. Families + appear to have been fairly united, in spite of the elasticity of the laws + which governed them, and of the divers elements of which they were + sometimes composed. No doubt polygamy and frequently divorce exercised + here as elsewhere a deleterious influence; the harems of Babylon were + constantly the scenes of endless intrigues and quarrels among the women + and children of varied condition and different parentage who filled them. + Among the people of the middle classes, where restricted means necessarily + prevented a man having many wives, the course of family life appears to + have been as calm and affectionate as in Egypt, under the unquestioned + supremacy of the father: and in the event of his early death, the widow, + and later the son or son-in-law, took the direction of affairs. Should + quarrels arise and reach the point of bringing about a complete rupture + between parents and children, the law intervened, not to reconcile them, + but to repress any violence of which either side might be guilty towards + the other. It was reckoned as a misdemeanour for any father or mother to + disown a child, and they were punished by being kept shut up in their own + house, as long, doubtless, as they persisted in disowning it; but it was a + crime in a son, even if he were an adopted son, to renounce his parents, + and he was punished severely. If he had said to his father, “Thou art not + my father!” the latter marked him with a conspicuous sign and sold him in + the market. If he had said to his mother, “As for thee, thou art not my + mother!” he was similarly branded, and led through the streets or along + the roads, where with hue and cry he was driven from the town and + province.* + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + * I have adopted the generally received meaning of this + document as a whole, but I am obliged to state that Oppert- + Menant admit quite a different interpretation. According to + them, it would appear to be a sweeping renunciation of + children by parents, and of parents by children, at the + close of a judicial condemnation. Oppert has upheld this + interpretation against Haupt, and still keeps to his + opinion. The documents published by Meissner show that the + text of the ancient Sumerian laws applied equally to adopted + children, but made no distinction between the insult offered + to the father and that offered to the mother: the same + penalty was applicable in both cases. +</pre> + <p> + The slaves were numerous, but distributed in unequal proportion among the + various classes of the population: whilst in the palace they might be + found literally in crowds, it was rare among the middle classes to meet + with any family possessing more than two or three at a time. They were + drawn partly from foreign races; prisoners who had been wounded and + carried from the field of battle, or fugitives who had fallen into the + hands of the victors after a defeat, or Elamites or Gutis who had been + surprised in their own villages during some expedition; not to mention + people of every category carried off by the Bedouin during their raids in + distant parts, such as Syria or Egypt, whom they were continually bringing + for sale to Babylon and Uru, and, indeed, to all those cities to which + they had easy access. The kings, the vicegerents, the temple + administration, and the feudal lords, provided employment for vast numbers + in the construction of their buildings or in the cultivation of their + domains; the work was hard and the mortality great, but gaps were soon + filled up by the influx of fresh gangs. The survivors intermarried, and + their children, brought up to speak the Chaldan tongue and conforming to + the customs of the country, became assimilated to the ruling race; they + formed, beneath the superior native Semite and Sumerian population,an + inferior servile class, spread alike throughout the towns and country, who + were continually reinforced by individuals of the native race, such as + foundlings, women and children sold by husband or father, debtors deprived + by creditors of their liberty, and criminals judicially condemned. The law + took no individual account of them, but counted them by heads, as so many + cattle: they belonged to their respective masters in the same fashion as + did the beasts of his flock or the trees of his garden, and their life or + death was dependent upon his will, though the exercise of his rights was + naturally restrained by interest and custom. He could use them as pledges + or for payment of debt, could exchange them or sell them in the market. + The price of a slave never rose very high: a woman might be bought for + four and a half shekels of silver by weight, and the value of a male adult + fluctuated between ten shekels and the third of a mina. The bill of sale + was inscribed on clay, and given to the purchaser at the time of payment: + the tablets which were the vouchers of the rights of the former proprietor + were then broken, and the transfer was completed. The master seldom + ill-treated his slaves, except in cases of reiterated disobedience, + rebellion, or flight; he could arrest his runaway slaves wherever he could + lay his hands on them; he could shackle their ankles, fetter their wrists, + and whip them mercilessly. As a rule, he permitted them to marry and bring + up a family; he apprenticed their children, and as soon as they knew a + trade, he set them up in business in his own name, allowing them a share + in the profits. The more intelligent among them were trained to be clerks + or stewards; they were taught to read, write, and calculate, the essential + accomplishments of a skilful scribe; they were appointed as + superintendents over their former comrades, or overseers of the + administration of property, and they ended by becoming confidential + servants in the household. The savings which they had accumulated in their + earlier years furnished them with the means of procuring some few + consolations: they could hire themselves out for wages, and could even + acquire slaves who would go out to work for them, in the same way as they + themselves had been a source of income to their proprietors. If they + followed a lucrative profession and were successful in it, their savings + sometimes permitted them to buy their own freedom, and, if they were + married, to pay the ransom of their wife and children. At times, their + master, desirous of rewarding long and faithful service, liberated them of + his own accord, without waiting till they had saved up the necessary money + or goods for their enfranchisement: in such cases they remained his + dependants, and continued in his service as freemen to perform the + services they had formerly rendered as slaves. They then enjoyed the same + rights and advantages as the old native race; they could leave legacies, + inherit property, claim legal rights, and acquire and possess houses and + lands. Their sons could make good matches among the daughters of the + middle classes, according to their education and fortune; when they were + intelligent, active, and industrious, there was nothing to prevent them + from rising to the highest offices about the person of the sovereign. + </p> + <p> + <a name="linkCimage-0024" id="linkCimage-0024"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/294.jpg" width="100%" + alt="294.jpg an Egyptian Slave Merchant " /> + </div> + <p> + If we knew more of the internal history of the great Chaldan cities, we + should no doubt come to see what an important part the servile element + played in them; and could we trace it back for a few generations, we + should probably discover that there were few great families who did not + reckon a slave or a freedman among their ancestors. It would be + interesting to follow this people, made up of such complex elements, in + all their daily work and recreation, as we are able to do in the case of + contemporary Egyptians; but the monuments which might furnish us with the + necessary materials are scarce, and the positive information to be gleaned + from them amounts to but little. We are tolerably safe, however, in + supposing the more wealthy cities to have been, as a whole, very similar + in appearance to those existing at the present day in the regions which as + yet have been scarcely touched by the advent of European civilization. + Sinuous, narrow, muddy streets, littered with domestic refuse and organic + detritus, in which flocks of ravens and wandering packs of dogs perform + with more or less efficiency the duties of sanitary officers; whole + quarters of the town composed of huts made of reeds and puddled clay, low + houses of crude brick, surmounted perhaps even in those times with the + conical domes we find later on the Assyrian bas-reliefs; crowded and noisy + bazaars, where each trade is located in its special lanes and blind + alleys; silent and desolate spaces occupied by palaces and gardens, in + which the private life of the wealthy was concealed from public gaze; and + looking down upon this medley of individual dwellings, the palaces and + temples with their ziggurats crowned with gilded and painted sanctuaries. + In the ruins of Uru, Eridu, and Uruk, the remains of houses belonging + doubtless to well-to-do families have been brought to light. They are + built of fine bricks, whose courses are cemented together with a thin + layer of bitumen, but they they are only lighted internally by small + appertures pierced at irregular distances in the upper part of the walls: + the low arched doorway, closed by a heavy two-leaved door, leads into a + blind passage, which opens as a rule on the courtyard in the centre of the + building. + </p> + <p> + <a name="linkCimage-0026" id="linkCimage-0026"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/298a.jpg" width="100%" + alt="208a.jpg Chaldean Houses at Uru. " /> + </div> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from the sketch by Taylor. +</pre> + <p> + <a name="linkCimage-0027" id="linkCimage-0027"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/298b.jpg" width="100%" + alt="208b Plans of Houses Excavated at Eridu and Ubu. " /> + </div> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + These plans were drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from sketches by + Taylor. The houses reproduced to the left of the plan were + those uncovered in the ruins of Uru; those on the right + belong to the ruins of Eridu. On the latter, the niches + mentioned in the text will be found indicated. +</pre> + <p> + In the interior may still be distinguished the small oblong rooms, + sometimes vaulted, sometimes roofed with a flat, ceiling supported by + trunks of palm trees;* the walls are often of a considerable thickness, in + which are found narrow niches here and there. The majority of the rooms + were merely store-chambers, and contained the family provisions and + treasures; others served as living-rooms, and were provided with + furniture. The latter, in the houses of the richer citizens no less than + in those of the people, was of a very simple kind, and was mostly composed + of chairs and stools, similar to those in the royal palaces; the bedrooms + contained the linen chests and the beds with their thin mattresses, + coverings, and cushions, and perhaps wooden head-rests, resembling those + found in Africa,** but the Chaldans slept mostly on mats spread on the + ground. + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + * Taylor, <i>Notes on the Ruins of Mugeyer</i>, in the <i>Journ. of + the Royal As. Soc</i>, vol. xv. p. 266, found the remains of + the palm-tree beams which formed the terrace still existing. + He thinks (<i>Notes on Tel-el-Lahm</i>, etc., in the <i>Journ, of + the Royal As. Soc.</i>, vol. xv. p. 411) with Loftus that some + of the chambers were vaulted. Cf. upon the custom of + vaulting in Chaldan houses, Piereot-Cupiez, <i>Histoire de + l’Art</i>, vol. ii. p. 163, et seq. + + ** The dressing of the hair in coils and elaborate + erections, as seen in the various figures engraved upon + Chaldan intaglios (cf. what is said of the different ways + of arranging the hair on p. 262 of this volume), appears to + have necessitated the use of these articles of furniture; + such complicated erections of hair must have lasted several + days at least, and would not have kept in condition so long + except for the use of the head-rest. +</pre> + <p> + An oven for baking occupied a corner of the courtyard, side by side with + the stones for grinding the corn; the ashes on the hearth were always + aglow, and if by chance the fire went out, the fire-stick was always at + hand to relight it, as in Egypt. The kitchen utensils and household + pottery comprised a few large copper pans and earthenware pots rounded at + the base, dishes, water and wine jars, and heavy plates of coarse ware; + metal had not as yet superseded stone, and in the same house we meet with + bronze axes and hammers side by side with the same implements in cut + flint, besides knives, scrapers, and mace-heads.* + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + * Implements in flint and other kinds of stone have been + discovered by Taylor, and are now in the British Museum. The + bronze implements come partly from the tombs of Mugher, and + partly from the ruins explored by Loftus at Tell-Sifr—that + is to say, the ancient cities of Uru and Larsam: the name of + Tell-Sifr, the “mound of copper,” comes from the quantity of + objects in copper which have been discovered there. +</pre> + <p> + <a name="linkCimage-0028" id="linkCimage-0028"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/300.jpg" width="100%" + alt="300.jpg Chaldan Household Utensils in Terra-cotta " /> + </div> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from the sketch by G. Rawlinson, and + the heliogravure in Heuzey-Sarzec. +</pre> + <p> + At the present day the women of the country of the Euphrates spend a great + part of their time on the roofs of their dwellings.* They install + themselves there in the morning, till they are driven away by the heat; as + soon as the sun gets low in the heavens, they return to their post, and + either pass the day on neighbouring roofs whilst they bake, cook, wash and + dry the linen; or, if they have slaves to attend to such menial + occupations, they sew and embroider in the open air. + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + * Olivier, <i>Voyage dans l’Empire Othoman,</i> vol. ii. pp. 356, + 357, 381, 382, 392, 393. +</pre> + <p> + They come down into the interior of the house during the hottest hours of + the day. In most of the wealthy houses, the coolest room is one below the + level of the courtyard, into which but little light can penetrate. It is + paved with plaques of polished gypsum, which resembles our finest + grey-and-white marble, and the walls are covered with a coat of delicate + plastering, smooth to the touch and agreeable to the eye. This is watered + several times during the day in hot weather, and the evaporation from it + cools the air. The few ruined habitations which have as yet been explored + seem to bear witness to a considerable similarity between the requirements + and customs of ancient times and those of to-day. Like the modern women of + Bagdad and Mosul, the Chaldan women of old preferred an existence in the + open air, in spite of its publicity, to a seclusion within stuffy rooms or + narrow courts. The heat of the sun, cold, rain, and illness obliged them + at times to seek a refuge within four walls, but as soon as they could + conveniently escape from them, they climbed up on to their roof to pass + the greater part of their time there. + </p> + <p> + Many families of the lower and middle classes owned the houses which they + occupied. They constituted a patrimony which the owners made every effort + to preserve intact through all reverses of fortune.* The head of the + family bequeathed it to his widow or his eldest son, or left it undivided + to his heirs, in the assurance, no doubt, that one of them would buy up + the rights of the others. + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + * A house could be let for various lengths of time—for + three months, for a year, for five years, for an indefinite + term, but with a minimum of six months, since the rent is + payable at the beginning and in the middle of each year. +</pre> + <p> + The remainder of his goods, farms, gardens, corn-lands, slaves, furniture, + and jewels, were divided among the brothers or natural descendants, “from + the mouth to the gold;” that is to say, from the moment of announcing the + beginning of the business, to that when each one received his share. In + order to invest this act with greater solemnity, it took place usually in + the presence of a priest. Those interested repaired to the temple, “to the + gate of the god;” they placed the whole of the inheritance in the hands of + the chosen arbitrator, and demanded of him to divide it justly; or the + eldest brother perhaps anticipated the apportionment, and the priest had + merely to sanction the result, or settle the differences which might arise + among the lawful recipients in the course of the operation. When this was + accomplished, the legatees had to declare themselves satisfied; and when + no further claims arose, they had to sign an engagement before the + priestly arbitrator that they would henceforth refrain from all + quarrelling on the subject, and that they would never make a complaint one + against the other. By dint of these continual redistributions from one + generation to another, the largest fortunes soon became dispersed: the + individual shares became smaller and smaller, and scarcely sufficed to + keep a family, so that the slightest reverse obliged the possessor to have + recourse to usurers. The Chaldans, like the Egyptians, were unacquainted + with the use of money, but from the earliest times the employment of + precious metals for purposes of exchange was practised among them to an + enormous extent. Though copper and gold were both used, silver was the + principal medium in these transactions, and formed the standard value of + all purchaseable objects. It was never cut into flat rings or twists of + wire, as was the case with the Egyptian “tabnu;” it was melted into small + unstamped ingots, which were passed from hand to hand by weight, being + tested in the scales at each transaction. “To weigh” was in the ordinary + language the equivalent for “payment in metal,” whereas “to measure” + denoted that the payment was in grain. The ingots for exchange were, + therefore, designated by the name of the weights to which they + corresponded. The lowest unit was a shekel, weighing on an average nearly + half an ounce, sixty shekels making a mina, and sixty minas a talent. It + is a question whether the Chaldanns possessed in early times, as did the + Assyrians of a later period, two kinds of shekels and minas, one heavy and + the other light. Whether the loan were in metal, grain, or any other + substance, the interest was very high.* A very ancient law fixed it in + certain cases at twelve drachmas per mina, per annum—that is to say, + at twenty per cent.—and more recent texts show us that, when raised + to twenty-five per cent., it did not appear to them abnormal. + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + * We find several different examples, during the Second + Chaldann Empire, of an exchange of corn for provisions and + liquids, or of beams for dates. As a fact, exchange has + never completely died out in these regions, and at the + present day, in Chalda, as in Egypt, corn is used in many + cases either to pay Government taxes or to discharge + commercial debts. +</pre> + <p> + The commerce of the chief cities was almost entirely concentrated in the + temples. The large quantities of metals and cereals constantly brought to + the god, either as part of the fixed temple revenue, or as daily + offerings, accumulated so rapidly, that they would have overflowed the + storehouses, had not a means been devised of utilizing them quickly: the + priests treated them as articles of commerce and made a profit out of + them.* Every bargain necessitated the calling in of a public scribe. The + bill, drawn up before witnesses on a clay tablet, enumerated the sums paid + out, the names of the parties, the rate per cent., the date of repayment, + and sometimes a penal clause in the event of fraud or insolvency; the + tablet remained in the possession of the creditor until the debt had been + completely discharged. The borrower often gave as a pledge either slaves, + a field, or a house, or certain of his friends would pledge on his behalf + their own personal fortune; at times he would pay by the labour of his own + hands the interest which he would otherwise have been unable to meet, and + the stipulation was previously made in the contract of the number of days + of corve which he should periodically fulfil for his creditor. If, in + spite of all this, the debtor was unable to procure the necessary funds to + meet his engagements, the principal became augmented by a fixed sum—for + instance, one-third—and continued to increase at this rate until the + total value of the amount reached that of the security:** the slave, the + field, or the house then ceased to belong to their former, master, subject + to a right of redemption, of which he was rarely able to avail himself for + lack of means.*** + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + * It was to the god himself—Shamash, for example—that the + loan was supposed to be made, and it is to him that the + contracts stipulate that the capital and interest shall be + paid. It is curious to lind among the most successful money- + lenders several princesses consecrated to the sun-god. + + ** It is easy to foresee, from the contracts of the New + Assyrian or Babylonian Empire, how in this manner the + original sum lent became doubled and trebled; generally the + interest accumulated till it was quadrupled, after which, no + doubt, the security was taken by the creditor. They probably + calculated that the capital and compound interest was by + then equal in value to the person or object given as a + security. + + *** The creditors protected themselves against this right of + redemption by a maledictory formula inserted at the end of + the contracts against those who should avail themselves of + it; it is generally inscribed on the boundary stones of the + First Chaldan Empire. +</pre> + <p> + The small tradesman or free workman, who by some accident had become + involved in debt, seldom escaped this progressive impoverishment except by + strenuous efforts and incessant labour. Foreign commerce, it is true, + entailed considerable risk, but the chances of acquiring wealth were so + great that many individuals launched upon it in preference to more sure + but less lucrative undertakings. They would set off alone or in companies + for Elam or the northern regions, for Syria, or even for so distant a + country as Egypt, and they would bring back in their caravans all that was + accounted precious in those lands. Overland routes were not free from + dangers; not only were nomad tribes and professional bandits constantly + hovering round the traveller, and obliging him to exercise ceaseless + vigilance, but the inhabitants of the villages through which he passed, + the local lords and the kings of the countries which he traversed, had no + scruple in levying blackmail upon him in obliging him to pay dearly for + right of way through their marches or territory.** There were less risks + in choosing a sea route: the Euphrates on one side, the Tigris, the Ula, + and the Uknu on the other, ran through a country peopled with a rich + industrial population, among whom Chaldan merchandise was easily and + profitably sold or exchanged for commodities which would command a good + price at the end of the voyage. The vessels generally were keleks or + “kufas,” but the latter were of immense size. + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + * We have no information from Babylonian sources relating to + the state of the roads, and the dangers which merchants + encountered in foreign lands; the Egyptian documents partly + supply what is here lacking. The “instructions” contained in + the <i>Sallier Papyrus,</i> No. ii., show what were the miseries + of the traveller, and the <i>Adventures of Sinuht</i> allude to + the insecurity of the roads in Syria, by the very care with + which the hero relates all the precautions which he took for + his protection. These two documents are of the XIIth or + XIIIth dynasty—that is to say, contemporaneous with the + kings, of Uru and with Gudea. +</pre> + <p> + Several individuals, as a rule, would club together to hire one of these + boats and freight it with a suitable cargo.* The body of the boat was very + light, being made of osier or willow covered with skins sewn together; a + layer of straw was spread on the bottom, on which were piled the bales or + chests, which were again protected by a rough thatch of straw. The crew + was composed of two oarsmen at least, and sometimes a few donkeys: the + merchants then pursued their way up stream till they had disposed of their + cargo, and taken in a sufficient freight for their return voyage. The + dangers, though apparently not so great as those by the land route, were + not the less real. The boat was liable to sink or run aground near the + bank, the dwellers in the neighbourhood of the river might intercept it + and pillage its contents, a war might break out between two contiguous + kingdoms and suspend all commerce: the merchants’ career continually + vacillated between servitude, death, and fortune. + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + * The payment demanded was something considerable: the only + contract which I know of existing for such a transaction is + of the time of Darius I., and exacts a silver shekel per day + for the hire of boat and crew. +</pre> + <p> + Business carried on at home in the towns was seldom the means of enriching + a man, and sometimes scarcely afforded him a means of livelihood. Rent was + high for those who had not a house of their own; the least they could + expect to pay was half a silver shekel per annum, but the average price + was a whole shekel. On taking possession they paid a deposit which + sometimes amounted to one-third of the whole sum, the remainder being due + at the end of the year. The leases lasted, as a rule, merely a + twelvemonth, though sometimes they were extended for terms of greater + length, such as two, three, or even eight years. The cost of repairs and + of keeping the house in good condition fell usually upon the lessee, who + was also allowed to build upon the land he had leased, in which case it + was declared free of all charges for a period of about ten years, but the + house, and, as a rule, all he had built, then reverted to the landlord. + Most possessors of shops made their own goods for sale, assisted by slaves + or free apprentices. Every workman taught his own trade to his children, + and these in their turn would instruct theirs; families which had an + hereditary profession, or from generation to generation had gathered bands + of workmen about them, formed themselves into various guilds, or, to use + the customary term, into tribes, governed by chiefs and following + specified customs. A workman belonged to the tribe of the weavers, or of + the blacksmiths, or of the corn-merchants, and the description of an + individual would not have been considered as sufficiently exact, if the + designation of his tribe were not inserted after his name in addition to + his paternal affiliation. The organization was like that of Egypt, but + more fully developed. The various trades, moreover, were almost the same + among the two peoples, the exceptions being such as are readily accounted + for by the differences in the nature of the soil and physical constitution + of the respective countries. We do not meet on the banks of the Euphrates + with those corporations of stone-cutters and marble workers which were so + numerous in the valley of the Nile. The vast Chaldan plain, in the + absence of mountains or accessible quarries, would have furnished no + occupation for them: the Chaldans had to go a long way in quest of the + small quantities of limestone, alabaster, or diorite which they required, + and which they reserved only for details of architectural decoration for + which a small number of artisans and sculptors were amply sufficient. The + manufacture of bricks, on the other hand, made great progress; the crude + bricks were larger than those of Egypt, and they were more enduring, + composed of finer clay and better executed; the manufacture of burnt brick + too was carried to a degree of perfection to which Memphis or Thebes never + attained. An ancient legend ascribes the invention of the bricks, and + consequently the construction of the earliest cities, jointly to Sin, the + eldest son of Bel, and Ninib his brother: this event was said to have + taken place in May-June, and from that time forward the third month of the + year, over which the twins presided, was called, Murga in Sumerian, Simanu + in the Semitic speech, the month of brick. This was the season which was + especially devoted to the processes of their manufacture: the flood in the + rivers, which was very great in the preceding months, then began to + subside, and the clay which was deposited by the waters during the weeks + of overflow, washed and refined as it was, lent itself readily to the + operation. The sun, moreover, gave forth sufficient heat to dry the clay + blocks in a uniform and gradual manner: later, in July and August, they + would crack under the ardour of his rays, and become converted externally + into a friable mass, while their interior would remain too moist to allow + them to be prudently used in carefully built structures. The work of + brick-making was inaugurated with festivals and sacrifices to Sin, + Merodach, Nebo, and all the deities who were concerned in the art of + building: further religious ceremonies were observed at intervals during + the month to sanctify the progress of the work. The manufacture did not + cease on the last day of the month, but was continued with more or less + activity, according to the heat of the sun, and the importance of the + orders received, until the return of the inundation: but the bricks + intended for public buildings, temples, or palaces, could not be made + outside a prescribed limit of time. The shades of colour produced + naturally in the process of burning—red or yellow, grey or brown—were + not pleasant to the eye, and they were accustomed, therefore, to coat the + bricks with an attractive enamel which preserved them from the + disintegrating effects of sun and rain. The paste was laid on the edges or + sides while the brick was in a crude state, and was incorporated with it + by vitrification in the heat of the kiln. The process was known from an + early date in Egypt, but was rarely employed there in the decoration of + buildings, while in Chalda the use of such enamelled plaques was common. + The substructures of palaces and the exterior walls of temples were left + unadorned, but the shrines which crowned the “ziggurat,” the + reception-halls, and the headings of doors were covered with these + many-coloured tiles. Fragments of them are found to-day in the ruins of + the cities, and the analysis of these pieces shows the marvellous skill of + the ancient workers in enamel; the shades of colour are pure and pleasant + to the eye, while the material is so evenly put on and so solid, that + neither centuries of burial in a sodden soil, nor the wear and tear of + transport, nor the exposure to the damp of our museums, have succeeded in + diminishing their brilliance and freshness. + </p> + <p> + To get a clear idea of the industrial operations of the country, it would + be necessary to see the various corporations at their work, as we are able + to do, in the case of Egypt in the scenes of the mastabas of Saqqra, or + of the rock-chambers of Beni-Hasan. The manufacture of stone implements + gave considerable employment, and the equipment of the dead in the tombs + of Uru would have been a matter of small moment, if we were to exclude its + flint implements, its knives, cleavers, scrapers, adzes, axes, and + hammers. The cutting of these objects is bold, and the final touches show + skill, but we rarely meet with that purity of contour and intensity of + polish which distinguish similar objects among Western peoples. A few + examples, it is true, are of fairly artistic shape, and bear engraved + inscriptions: one of these, a flint hammer of beautiful form, belonged to + a god, probably Eamman, and seems to have come from a temple in which one + of its owners had deposited it. + </p> + <p> + <a name="linkCimage-0029" id="linkCimage-0029"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/311a.jpg" width="100%" + alt="311a.jpg Chaldan Stone Implements. " /> + </div> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from the sketches published by + Taylor and by ‘G. Rawlinson. On the left a scraper and two + knives one above the other, an axe in the middle, on the + right an axe and a hammer. All these objects were found in + Taylor’s excavations, and are now in the British Museum. +</pre> + <p> + It is an exception, and a remarkable exception. Stone was the material of + the implements of the poor—implements which were coarse in shape, + and cost little: if much care were given to their execution, they would + come to be so costly that no one would buy them, or, if sold for a + moderate sum, the seller would obtain no profit from the transaction. + Beyond a certain price, it was more advantageous to purchase metal + implements, of copper in the early ages, afterwards of bronze, and lastly + of iron. Among the metal-founders and smiths all kinds of examples of + these were to be found—axes of an elegant and graceful design, + hammers and knives, as well as culinary and domestic utensils, cups, + cauldrons, dishes, mountings of doors and coffers, statuettes of men, + bulls, monsters, and gods—which could be turned to weapons of all + descriptions—arrow and lance heads, swords, daggers, and rounded + helmets with neck-piece or visor. + </p> + <p> + <a name="linkCimage-0030" id="linkCimage-0030"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/311b.jpg" width="100%" + alt="311b.jpg Chaldan Stone Hammer Bearing an Inscription. " /> + </div> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from the illustration published by + Fr. Lenormant. +</pre> + <p> + <a name="linkCimage-0031" id="linkCimage-0031"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="figright" style="width:40%;"> + <img width="100%" src="images/312.jpg" + alt="312.jpg Chaldn Implements of Bronze " /> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> +Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from +Rawlinson’s<i>Five Great Monarchies</i>. +On the right two axes, in the +middle a hammer, on the left a knife, +and below the head of a lance. +</pre> + </div> + <p> + Some of the metal objects manufactured by the Chaldaeans attained large + dimensions; for instance, the “brazen seas” which were set up before each + sanctuary, either for the purpose of receiving the libations, or for the + prescribed rites of purification. As is often the case among + half-civilized peoples, the goldsmiths worked in the precious metals with + much facility and skill. We have not, succeeded up to the present in + finding any of those golden images which the kings were accustomed to + dedicate in the temples out of their own possessions, or the spoil + obtained from the enemy; but a silver vase dedicated to Ningirsu by + Entena, vicegerent of Lagash, gives us some idea of this department of the + temple furniture. It stands upright on a small square bronze pedestal with + four feet. A piously expressed inscription runs round the neck, and the + bowl of the vase is divided horizontally into two divisions, framed above + and below by twisted cord-work. Four two-headed eagles, with outspread + wings and tail, occupy the lower division; they are in the act of seizing + with their claws two animals, placed back to back, represented in the act + of walking: the intervals between the eagles are filled up alternatively + by two lions, two wild goats, and two stags. Above, and close to the rise + of the neck, are disposed seven heifers lying down and all looking in the + same direction: they are all engraved upon the flat metal, and are without + relief or incrustation. The whole composition is harmoniously put + together, the posture of the animals and their general form are well + conceived and boldly rendered, but the details of the mane of the lions + and the feathers of the eagles are reproduced with a realism and attention + to minutio which belong to the infancy of art. This single example of + ancient goldsmiths’work would be sufficient to prove that the early + Chaldns were not a whit behind the Egyptians in this handicraft, even if + we had not the golden ornaments, the bracelets, ear and finger rings to + judge from, with which the tombs have furnished us in considerable + numbers. + </p> + <p> + <a name="linkCimage-0032" id="linkCimage-0032"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/313.jpg" width="100%" + alt="313.jpg Vase of Silver. And Bull Of Copper. " /> + </div> + <p> + Alongside the goldsmiths there must have been a whole army of lapidaries + and gem-cutters occupied in the engraving of cylinders. Numerous and + delicate operations were required to metamorphose a scrap of crude rock, + marble, granite, agate, onyx, green and red jasper, crystal or + lapis-lazuli, into one of those marvellous seals which are now found by + the hundred scattered throughout the museums of Europe. They had to be + rounded, reduced to the proper proportions, and polished, before the + subject or legend could be engraved upon them with the burin. To drill a + hole through them required great dexterity, and some of the lapidaries, + from a dread of breaking the cylinder, either did not pierce it at all, or + merely bored a shallow hole into each extremity to allow it to roll freely + in its metallic mounting. The tools used in engraving were similar to + those employed at the present day, but of a rougher kind. The burin, which + was often nothing more than a flint point, marked out the area of the + design, and sketched out the figures; the saw was largely employed to cut + away the depressions when these required no detailed handling; and lastly, + the drill, either worked with the hand or in a kind of lathe, was made to + indicate the joints and muscles of the individual by a series of round + holes. The object thus summarily dealt with might be regarded as + sufficiently worked for ordinary clients; but those who were willing to + pay for them could obtain cylinders from which every mark of the tool had + been adroitly removed, and where the beauty of the workmanship vied with + the costliness of the material. + </p> + <p> + <a name="linkCimage-0033" id="linkCimage-0033"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/315.jpg" width="100%" + alt="315.jpg Chaldan Cylinder Exhibiting Traces of The Different Tools Used by the Engraver " /> + </div> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a heliogravure in Mnant’s + <i>Catalogue de la collection de M. de Clercq</i> +</pre> + <p> + The seal of Shargani, King of Agad, that of Bingani-shar-ali, and many + others which have been picked up by chance in the excavations, are true + bas-reliefs, reduced and condensed, so to speak, to the space of something + like a square inch of surface, but conceived with an artistic ingenuity + and executed with a boldness which modern engravers have rarely equalled + and never surpassed. There are traces on them, it is true, of some of the + defects which disfigured the latter work of the Assyrians—heaviness + of form, exaggerated prominence of muscles and hardness of outline—but + there are also all the qualities which distinguish an original and + forcible art. + </p> + <p> + The countries of the Euphrates were renowned in classic times for the + beauty of the embroidered and painted stuffs which they manufactured.* + Nothing has come down to us of these Babylonian tissues of which the Greek + and Latin writers extolled the magnificence, but we may form some idea, + from the statues and the figures engraved on cylinders, of what the + weavers and embroiderers of this ancient time were capable. The loom which + they made use of differed but slightly from the horizontal loom commonly + employed in the Nile Valley, and everything tends to show that their plain + linen cloths were of the kind represented in the swathings and fragments + of clothing still to be found in the sepulchral chambers of Memphis and + Thebes. The manufacture of fleecy woollen garments so much affected by men + and women alike indicates a great dexterity. When once the threads of the + woof had been stretched, those of the warp were attached to them by knots + in as many parallel lines—at regular intervals—as there were + rows of fringe to be displayed on the surface of the cloth, the loops thus + formed being allowed to hang down in their respective places: sometimes + these loops were retained just as they stood, sometimes they were cut and + the ends frayed out so as to give the appearance of a shaggy texture. + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + * Most modern writers understand by tapestry what the + ancients were accustomed to call needle embroidery or + painting on stuffs: I can find no indication on the most + ancient monuments of Chaldan or Egypt of the manufacturing + of real tapestry. +</pre> + <p> + <a name="linkCimage-0034" id="linkCimage-0034"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/318.jpg" width="100%" alt="318.jpg Egyptian Manuscript " /> + </div> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Part of an Egyptian Manuscript found in the Swathing of a + Mummy +</pre> + <p> + <a name="linkCimage-0035" id="linkCimage-0035"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/318-text.jpg" width="100%" + alt="318-text.jpg Egyptian Manuscript " /> + </div> + <p> + Most of these stuffs preserved their original white or creamy colour—especially + those woven at home by the women for the requirements of their own toilet, + and for the ordinary uses of the household. The Chaldans, however, like + many other Asiatic peoples, had a strong preference for lively colours, + and the outdoor garments and gala attire of the rich were distinguished by + a profusion of blue patterns on a red ground, or red upon blue, arranged + in stripes, zigzags, checks, and dots or circles. There must, therefore, + have been as much occupation for dyers as there was for weavers; and it is + possible that the two operations were carried out by the same hands. We + know nothing of the bakers, butchers, carriers, masons, and other artisans + who supplied the necessities of the cities: they were doubtless able to + make two ends meet and nothing more, and if we should succeed some day in + obtaining information about them, we shall probably find that their + condition was as miserable as that of their Egyptian contemporaries. The + course of their lives was monotonous enough, except when it was broken at + prescribed intervals by the ordinary festivals in honour of the gods of + the city, or by the casual suspensions of work occasioned by the + triumphant return of the king from some warlike expedition, or by his + inauguration of a new temple. + </p> + <p> + The gaiety of the people on such occasions was the more exuberant in + proportion to the undisturbed monotony or misery of the days which + preceded them. As soon, for instance, as Gudea had brought to completion + Ininnu, the house of his patron Ningirsu, “he felt relieved from the + strain and washed his hands. For seven days, no grain was bruised in the + quern, the maid was the equal of her mistress, the servant walked in the + same rank as his master, the strong and the weak rested side by side in + the city.” The world seemed topsy-turvy as during the Roman Saturnalia; + the classes mingled together, and the inferiors were probably accustomed + to abuse the unusual licence which they momentarily enjoyed: when the + festival was over, social distinctions reasserted themselves, and each one + fell back into his accustomed position. Life was not so pleasant in + Chalda as in Egypt. The innumerable promissory notes, the receipted + accounts, the contracts of sale and purchase—these cunningly drawn + up deeds which have been deciphered by the hundred—reveal to us a + people greedy of gain, exacting, litigious, of artisans in Egypt. This is + taken from a source belonging to the XIIth or possibly the XIIIth dynasty. + We may assume, from the fact that the two civilizations were about on the + same level, that the information supplied in this respect by the Egyptian + monuments is generally applicable to the condition of Chaldan workmen of + the same period. + </p> + <p> + (Unreadable) and almost exclusively absorbed by material concerns. The + climate, too, variable and oppressive in summer and winter alike, imposed + upon the Chaldan painful exactions, and obliged him to work with an + energy of which the majority of Egyptians would not have felt themselves + capable. The Chaldan, suffering greater and more prolonged hardships, + earned more doubtless, but was not on this account the happier. However + lucrative his calling might be, it was not sufficiently so to supply him + always with domestic necessities, and both tradespeople and operatives + were obliged to run into debt to supplement their straitened means. When + they had once fallen into the hands of the usurer, the exorbitant interest + which they had to pay kept them a long time in his power. If when the bill + fell due there was nothing to meet it, it had to be renewed under still + more disastrous conditions; as the pledge given was usually the homestead, + or the slave who assisted in the trade, or the garden which supplied food + for the family, the mortgagor was reduced to the extreme of misery if he + could not satisfy his creditors, This plague of usury was not, moreover, + confined to the towns; it raged with equal violence in the country, and + the farmers also became its victims. + </p> + <p> + If, theoretically, the earth belonged to the gods, and under them to the + kings, the latter had made, and continued daily to make, such large + concessions of it to their vassals, that the greater part of their domains + were always in the hands of the nobles or private individuals. These could + dispose of their landed property at pleasure, farm it out, sell it or + distribute it among their heirs and friends. + </p> + <p> + They paid on account of it a tax which varied at different epochs, but + which was always burthensome; but when they had once satisfied this + exaction, and paid the dues which the temples might claim on behalf of the + gods, neither the State nor any individual had the right to interfere in + their administration of it, or put any restrictions upon them. Some + proprietors cultivated their lands themselves—the poor by their own + labour, the rich by the aid of some trustworthy slave whom they interested + in the success of his farming by assigning him a certain percentage on the + net return. Sometimes the lands were leased out in whole or in part to + free peasants who relieved the proprietors of all the worry and risks of + managing it themselves. A survey of the area of each state had been made + at an early age, and the lots into which it had been divided were + registered on clay tablets containing the name of the proprietor as well + as those of his neighbours, together with such indications of the features + of the land, dykes, canals, rivers, and buildings as would serve to define + its boundaries: rough plans accompanied the description, and in the most + complicated instances interpreted it to the eye. This survey was + frequently repeated, and enabled the sovereign to arrange his scheme of + taxation on a solid basis, and to calculate the product of it without + material error. Gardens and groves of date-palms, together with large + regions devoted to rough attempts at vegetable culture, were often to be + met with, especially in the neighbourhood of towns; these paid their + contributions to the State, as well as the owners’rent, in kind—in + fruit, vegetables, and fresh or dried dates. The best soil was reserved, + for the growth of wheat and other cereals, and its extent was measured in + terms of corn; corn was also the standard in which the revenue was + reckoned both in public and private contracts. Such and such a field + required about fifty litres of seed to the arura. Another needed sixty-two + or seventy-five according to the fertility of the land and its locality. + Landed property was placed under the guardianship of the gods, and its + transfer or cession was accompanied by formalities of a half-religious, + half-magical character: the party giving delivery of it called down upon + the head of any one who would dare in the future to dispute the validity + of the deed, imprecations of which the text was inserted on a portion of + the surface of an egg-shaped nodule of flint, basalt, or other hard stone. + These little monuments display on their cone-shaped end a series of + figures, sometimes arranged in two parallel divisions, sometimes scattered + over the surface, which represent the deities invoked to watch over the + sanctity of the contract. It was a kind of representation in miniature of + the aspect which the heavens presented to the Chaldans. The disks of the + sun and moon, together with Venus-Ashtar, are the prominent elements in + the scene: the zodiacal figures, or the symbols employed to represent + them, are arranged in an apparent orbit around these—such as the + Scorpion, the Bird, the Dog, the Thunderbolt of Ramman, the mace, the + horned monsters, half hidden by the temples they guard, and the enormous + Dragon who embraces in his folds half the entire firmament. “If ever, in + the course of days, any one of the brothers, children, family, men or + women, slaves or servants of the house, or any governor or functionary + whatsoever, arises and intends to steal this field, and remove this + landmark, either to make a gift of it to a god, or to assign it to a + competitor, or to appropriate it to himself; if he modifies the area of + it, the limits and the landmark; if he divides it into portions, and if he + says: ‘The field has no owner, since there has been no donation of it; ‘—if, + from dread of the terrible imprecations which protect this stele and this + field, he sends a fool, a deaf or blind person, a wicked wretch, an idiot, + a stranger, or an ignorant one, and should cause this stele to be taken + away,* and should throw it into the water, cover it with dust, mutilate it + by scratching it with a stone, burn it in the fire and destroy it, or + write anything else upon it, or carry,it away to a place where it will be + no longer seen,—this man, may Anu, Bel, Ea, the exalted lady, the + great gods, cast upon him looks of wrath, may they destroy his strength, + may they exterminate his race.” All the immortals are associated in this + excommunication, and each one promises in his turn the aid of his power. + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + * All the people enumerated in this passage might, in + ignorance of what they were doing, be induced to tear up the + stone, and unconsciously commit a sacrilege from which every + Chaldan in his senses would have shrunk back. The formula + provides for such cases, and it secures that the curse shall + fall not only on the irresponsible instruments, but reach + the instigator of the crime, even when he had taken no + actual part in the deed. +</pre> + <p> + <a name="linkCimage-0036" id="linkCimage-0036"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/322.jpg" width="100%" + alt="322.jpg the Michaux Stone (left) " /> + </div> + <p> + <a name="linkCimage-0037" id="linkCimage-0037"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/323.jpg" width="100%" + alt="323.jpg the Other Side of The Michaux Stone (right) " /> + </div> + <p> + Merodach, by whose spells the sick are re stored, will inflict upon the + guilty one a dropsy which no incantation can cure. Shamas, the supreme + judge, will send forth against him one of his inexorable judgments. Sin, + the inhabitant of the brilliant heavens, will cover him with leprosy as + with a garment. Adar, the warrior, will break his weapons; and Zamama, the + king of strifes, will not stand by him on the field of battle. Eamman will + let loose his tempest upon his fields, and will overwhelm them. The whole + band of the invisibles hold themselves ready to defend the rights of the + proprietor against all attacks. In no part of the ancient world was the + sacred character of property so forcibly laid down, or the possession of + the soil more firmly secured by religion. + </p> + <p> + In instruments of agriculture and modes of cultivation Chalda was no + better off than Egypt. The rapidity with which the river rose in the + spring, and its variable subsidence from year to year, furnished little + inducement to the Chaldans to entrust to it the work of watering their + lands; on the contrary, they were compelled to protect themselves from it, + and to keep at a distance the volume of waters it brought down. Each + property, whether of square, triangular, or any other shape, was + surrounded with a continuous earth-built barrier which bounded it on every + side, and served at the same time as a rampart against the inundation. + </p> + <p> + <a name="linkCimage-0038" id="linkCimage-0038"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/324.jpg" width="100%" + alt="324.jpg Two Rows of Shadufs on the Bank Of a River. " /> + </div> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from an Assyrian bas-relief from + Koyunjik. +</pre> + <p> + Rows of shadufs installed along the banks of the canals or streams + provided for the irrigation of the lands.* The fields were laid out like a + chess-board, and the squares, separated from each other by earthen ridges, + formed as it were so many basins: when the elevation of the ground + arrested the flow of the waters, these were collected into reservoirs, + whence by the use of other shadufs they were raised to a higher level. + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + * In Mesopotamia and Chalda there may still be seen + “everywhere ruins of ancient canals; and there are also to + be met with, in many places, ridges of earth, which stretch + for considerable distances in a straight line, and surround + lands perfectly level.” (Olivier). +</pre> + <p> + The plough was nothing more than an obliquely placed mattock, whose handle + was lengthened in order to harness oxen to it. Whilst the ploughman + pressed heavily on the handle, two attendants kept incessantly goading the + beasts, or urging them forward with voice and whip, and a third scattered + the seed in the furrow. A considerable capital was needed to ensure + success in agricultural undertakings: contracts were made for three years, + and stipulated that payments should be made partly in metal and partly in + the products of the soil. + </p> + <p> + <a name="linkCimage-0039" id="linkCimage-0039"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/325.jpg" width="100%" + alt="325.jpg Chaldan Farming Operations. " /> + </div> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a Chaldan intaglio reproduced + in Layard. The original is in the cabinet of medals in the + Bibliothque Nationale. +</pre> + <p> + The farmer paid a small sum when entering into possession, and the + remainder of the debt was gradually liquidated at the end of each twelve + months, the payment being in silver one year, and in corn the two + following. The rent varied according to the quality of the soil and the + facilities which it afforded for cultivation: a field, for instance, of + three bushels was made to pay nine hundred measures, while another of ten + bushels had only eighteen hundred to pay. In many instances the peasant + preferred to take the proprietor into partnership, the latter in such case + providing all the expenses of cultivation, on the understanding that he + should receive two-thirds of the gross product. The tenant was obliged to + administer the estate as a careful householder during the term of his + lease: he was to maintain the buildings and implements in good repair, to + see that the hedges were kept up, to keep the shadufs in working order, + and to secure the good condition of the watercourses. He had rarely enough + slaves to manage the business with profit: those he had purchased were + sufficient, with the aid of his wives and children, to carry on ordinary + operations, but when any pressure arose, especially at harvest-time, he + had to seek elsewhere the additional labourers he required. The temples + were the chief sources for the supply of these. The majority of the + supplementary labourers were free men, who were hired out by their family, + or engaged themselves for a fixed term, during which they were subject to + a sort of slavery, the conditions of which were determined by law. The + workman renounced his liberty for fifteen days, or a month, or for a whole + year; he disposed, so to speak, of a portion of his life to the + provisional master of his choice, and if he did not enter upon his work at + the day agreed upon, or if he showed himself inactive in the duties + assigned to him, he was liable to severe punishment. He received in + exchange for his labour his food, lodging, and clothing; and if an + accident should occur to him during the term of his service, the law + granted him an indemnity in proportion to the injury he had sustained. + </p> + <p> + <a name="linkCimage-0040" id="linkCimage-0040"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/327.jpg" width="100%" alt="327.jpg the Farm Oxen " /> + </div> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a green marble cylinder in the + Louvre. +</pre> + <p> + His average wage was from four to six shekels of silver per annum. He was + also entitled by custom to another shekel in the form of a retaining fee, + and he could claim his pay, which was given to him mostly in corn, in + monthly instalments, if his agreement were for a considerable time, and + daily if it were for a short period. + </p> + <p> + The mercenary never fell into the condition of the ordinary serf: he + retained his rights as a man, and possessed in the person of the patron + for whom he laboured, or whom he himself had selected, a defender of his + interests. When he came to the end of his engagement, he returned to his + family, and resumed his ordinary occupation until the next occasion. Many + of the farmers in a small way earned thus, in a few weeks, sufficient + means to supplement their own modest personal income. Others sought out + more permanent occupations, and hired themselves out as regular + farm-servants. + </p> + <p> + The lands which neither the rise of the river nor the irrigation system + could reach so as to render fit for agriculture, were reserved for the + pasture of the flocks in the springtime, when they were covered with rich + grass. The presence of lions in the neighbourhood, however, obliged the + husbandmen to take precautions for the safety of their flocks. They + constructed provisional enclosures into which the animals were driven + every evening, when the pastures were too far off to allow of the flocks + being brought back to the sheepfold. The chase was a favourite pastime + among them, and few days passed without the hunter’s bringing back with + him a young gazelle caught in a trap, or a hare killed by an arrow. These + formed substantial additions to the larder, for the Chaldans do not seem + to have kept about them, as the Egyptians did, such tamed animals as + cranes or herons, gazelles or deer: they contented themselves with the + useful species, oxen, asses, sheep, and goats. Some of the ancient + monuments, cylinders, and clay tablets reproduce in a rough manner scenes + from pastoral life. The door of the fold opens, and we see a flock of + goats sallying forth to the cracking of the herdsman’s whip: when they + reach the pasture they scatter over the meadows, and while the shepherd + keeps his eye upon them, he plays upon his reed to the delight of his dog. + In the mean time the farm-people are engaged in the careful preparation of + the evening meal: two individuals on opposite sides of the hearth watch + the pot boiling between them, while a baker makes his dough into round + cakes. + </p> + <p> + <a name="linkCimage-0041" id="linkCimage-0041"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/329a.jpg" width="100%" alt="329a.jpg Cooking: a Quarrel. " /> + </div> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from one of the terra-cotta plaques + discovered by Loftus. +</pre> + <p> + Sometimes a quarrel breaks out among the comrades, and leads to a stand-up + fight with the fists; or a lion, perhaps, in quest of a meal, surprises + and kills one of the bulls: the shepherd runs up, his axe in his hand, to + contend bravely with the marauder for the possession of his beast. The + shepherd was accustomed to provide himself with assistance in the shape of + enormous dogs, who had no more hesitation in attacking beasts of prey than + they had in pursuing game. In these combats the natural courage of the + shepherd was stimulated by interest: for he was personally responsible for + the safety of his flock, and if a lion should find an entrance into one of + the enclosures. + </p> + <p> + <a name="linkCimage-0042" id="linkCimage-0042"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/329b.jpg" width="100%" + alt="329b.jpg Scenes of Pastoral Life in Chalda. " /> + </div> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a Chaldan intaglio from + Layard. Another cylinder of the same kind is reproduced at + p. 233 of the present work; it represents Etana arising to + heaven by the aid of his friend the eagle, while the + pastoral scene below resembles in nearly all particulars + that given above. +</pre> + <p> + <a name="linkCimage-0043" id="linkCimage-0043"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/330.jpg" width="100%" alt="330.jpg Fight With a Lion " /> + </div> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from one of the terra-cotta tablets + discovered by Loftus. +</pre> + <p> + Fishing was not so much a pastime as a source of livelihood; for fish + occupied a high place in the bill of fare of the common folk. Caught by + the line, net, or trap, it was dried,in the sun, smoked, or salted. The + chase was essentially the pastime of the great noble—the pursuit of + the lion and the bear in the wooded covers or the marshy thickets of the + river-bank; the pursuit of the gazelle, the ostrich, and bustard on the + elevated plains or rocky tablelands of the desert. The onager of + Mesopotamia is a very beautiful animal, with its grey glossy coat, and its + lively and rapid action. + </p> + <p> + <a name="linkCimage-0044" id="linkCimage-0044"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/331.jpg" width="100%" alt="331.jpg the Dog in Tub Leash " /> + </div> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a terra-cotta tablet discovered + by Sir H. Rawlinson in the ruins of Babylon, and now in the + British Museum +</pre> + <p> + <a name="linkCimage-0045" id="linkCimage-0045"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="figright" style="width:30%;"> + <img width="100%" src="images/332.jpg" + alt="332.jpg Chaldan Carrying a Fish. (left) " /> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> +Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, +from one of the terra-cotta +tablets discovered by Loftus. +</pre> + </div> + <p> + If it is disturbed, it gives forth a cry, kicks up its heels, and dashes + off: when at a safe distance, it stops, turns round, and faces its + pursuer: as soon as he approaches, it starts off again, stops, and takes + to its heels again, continuing this procedure as long as it is followed. + The Chaldans found it difficult to catch by the aid of dogs, but they + could bring it down by arrows, or perhaps catch it alive by stratagem. A + running noose was thrown round its neck, and two men held the ends of the + ropes. The animal struggled, made a rush, and attempted to bite, but its + efforts tended only to tighten the noose still more firmly, and it at + length gave in, half strangled; after alternating struggles and + suffocating paroxysms, it became somewhat calmer, and allowed itself to be + led. It was finally tamed, if not to the extent of becoming useful in + agriculture, at least for the purposes of war: before the horse was known + in Chalda, it was used to draw the chariot. The original habitat of the + horse was the great table-lands of Central Asia: it is doubtful whether it + was brought suddenly into the region of the Tigrus and Euphrates by some + barbaric invasion, or whether it was passed on from tribe to tribe, and + thus gradually reached that country. It soon became acclimatized, and its + cross-breeding with the ass led for centuries to the production of + magnificent mules. The horse was known to the kings of Lagash, who used it + in harness. The sovereigns of neighbouring cities were also acquainted + with it, but it seems to have been employed solely by the upper classes of + society, and never to have been generally used in the war-chariot or as a + charger in cavalry operations. + </p> + <p> + The Chaldans carried agriculture to a high degree of perfection, and + succeeded in obtaining from the soil everything it could be made to yield. + </p> + <p> + <a name="linkCimage-0046" id="linkCimage-0046"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/333.jpg" width="100%" + alt="333.jpg the Onager Taken With The Lasso. " /> + </div> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from the Assyrian bas-relief of + Nimrud. See p. 35 of the present work for an illustration of + onagers pierced by arrows in the chase. +</pre> + <p> + Their methods, transmitted in the first place to the Greeks, and + afterwards to the Arabs, were perpetuated long after their civilization + had disappeared, and were even practised by the people of Iraq under the + Abbasside Caliphs. Agricultural treatises on clay, which contained an + account of these matters, were deposited in one or other of the sacred + libraries in which the priests of each city were long accustomed to + collect together documents from every source on which they could lay their + hands. There were to be found in each of these collections a certain + number of works which were unique, either because the authors were natives + of the city, or because all copies of them had been destroyed in the + course of centuries—the Epic of Grilgames, for instance, at Uruk; a + history of the Creation, and of the battles of the gods with the monsters + at Kutha: all of them had their special collections of hymns or psalms, + religious and magical formulas, their lists of words and grammatical + phraseology, their glossaries and syllabaries, which enabled them to + understand and translate texts drawn up in Sumerian, or to decipher those + whose writing presented more than ordinary difficulty. In these libraries + there was, we find, as in the inscriptions of Egypt, a complete + literature, of which only some shattered fragments have come down to us. + The little we are able to examine has produced upon our modern + investigators a complex impression, in which astonishment rather than + admiration contends with a sense of tedious-ness. There may be recognized + here and there, among the wearisome successions of phrases, with their + rugged proper names, episodes which seem something like a Chaldaean + “Genesis” or “Veda;” now and then a bold flight of fancy, a sudden + exaltation of thought, or a felicitous expression, arrests the attention + and holds it captive for a time. In the narrative of the adventures of + Grilgames, for instance, there is a certain nobility of character, and the + sequence of events, in their natural and marvellous development, are + handled with gravity and freedom: if we sometimes encounter episodes which + provoke a smile or excite our repugnance, we must take into account the + rudeness of the age with which they deal, and remember that the men and + gods of the later Homeric epic are not a whit behind the heroes of + Babylonian story in coarseness. The recognition of divine omnipotence, and + the keenly felt afflictions of the soul, awakened in the Chaldan psalmist + feelings of adoration and penitence which still find, in spite of the + differences of religion, an echo in our own hearts; and the unknown + scribe, who related the story of the descent of Ishtar to the infernal + regions, was able to express with a certain gloomy energy the miseries of + the “Land without return. “These instances are to be regarded, however, as + exceptional: the bulk of Chaldan literature seems nothing more than a + heap of pretentious trash, in which even the best-equipped reader can see + no meaning, or, if he can, it is of such a character as to seem unworthy + of record. His judgment is natural in the circumstances, for the ancient + East is not, like Greece and Italy, the dead of yesterday whose soul still + hovers around us, and whose legacies constitute more than the half of our + patrimony: on the contrary, it was buried soul and body, gods and cities, + men and circumstances, ages ago, and even its heirs, in the lapse of + years, have become extinct. In proportion as we are able to bring its + civilization to light, we become more and more conscious that we have + little or nothing in common with it. Its laws and customs, its methods of + action and its modes of thought, are so far apart from those of the + present day, that they seem to us to belong to a humanity utterly + different from our own. The names of its deities do not appeal to our + imagination like those of the Olympian cycle, and no traditional respect + serves to do away with the sense of uncouthness which we experience from + the jingle of syllables which enter into them. Its artists did not regard + the world from the same point of view as we do, and its writers, drawing + their inspiration from an entirely different source, made use of obsolete + methods to express their feelings and co-ordinate their ideas. It thus + happens that while we understand to a shade the classical language of the + Greeks and Romans, and can read their works almost without effort, the + great primitive literatures of the world, the Egyptian and Chaldan, have + nothing to offer us for the most part but a sequence of problems to solve + or of enigmas to unriddle with patience. How many phrases, how many words + at which we stumble, require a painstaking analysis before we can make + ourselves master of their meaning! And even when we have determined to our + satisfaction their literal signification, what a number of excursions we + must make in the domain of religious, ethical, and political history + before we can compel them to render up to us their full import, or make + them as intelligible to others as they are to ourselves! When so many + commentaries are required to interpret the thought of an individual or a + people, some difficulty must be experienced in estimating the value of the + expression which they have given to it. Elements of beauty were certainly, + and perhaps are still, within it; but in proportion as we clear away the + rubbish which encumbers it, the mass of glossaries necessary to interpret + it fall in and bury it so as to stifle it afresh. + </p> + <p> + While the obstacles to our appreciation of Chaldann literature are of + such a serious character, we are much more at home in our efforts to + estimate the extent and depth of their scientific knowledge. They were as + well versed as the Egyptians, but not more, in arithmetic and geometry in + as far as these had an application to the affairs of everyday life: the + difference between the two peoples consisted chiefly in their respective + numerical systems—the Egyptians employing almost exclusively the + decimal system of notation, while the Chaldans combined its use with the + duodecimal. + </p> + <p> + <a name="linkCimage-0047" id="linkCimage-0047"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/337.jpg" width="100%" alt="337.jpg Page Image " /> + </div> + <p> + To express the units, they made use of so many vertical “nails” placed one + after, or above, each other, thus [symbols] etc.; tens were represented by + bent brackets [symbols], up to 60; beyond this figure they had the choice + of two methods of notation: they could express the further tens by the + continuous additions of brackets thus, [symbols] or they could represent + 50 by a vertical “nail,” and add for every additional ten a bracket to the + right of it, thus: [symbols]. The notation of a hundred was represented by + the vertical “nail” with a horizontal stroke to the right thus [symbols], + and the number of hundreds by the symbols placed before this sign, thus + [symbols], etc.: a thousand was written [symbols] i.e. ten times one + hundred, and the series of thousands by the combination of different + notations which served to express units, tens, and hundreds. They + subdivided the unit, moreover, into sixty equal parts, and each of these + parts into sixty further equal subdivisions, and this system of fractions + was used in all kinds of quantitive measurements. The fathom, the foot and + its square, talents and bushels, the complete system of Chaldan weights + and measures, were based on the intimate alliance and parallel use of the + decimal and duodecimal systems of notation. The sixtieth was more + frequently employed than the hundredth when large quantities were in + question: it was called a “soss,” and ten sosses were equal to a “ner,” + while sixty ners were equivalent to a “sar;” the series, sosses, ners, and + sars, being employed in all estimations of values. Years and measures of + length were reckoned in sosses, while talents and bushels were measured in + sosses and sars. The fact that these subdivisions were all divisible by 10 + or 12, rendered calculations by means of them easy to the merchant and + workmen as well as to the mathematical expert. The glimpses that we have + been able to obtain up to the present of Chaldaean scientific methods + indicate that they were on a low level, but they were sufficiently + advanced to furnish practical rules for application in everyday affairs: + helps to memory of different kinds, lists of figures with their names + phonetically rendered in Sumerian and Semitic speech, tables of squares + and cubes, and rudimentary formulas and figures for land-surveying, + furnished sufficient instructions to enable any one to make complicated + calculations in a ready manner, and to work out in figures, with tolerable + accuracy, the superficial area of irregularly shaped plots of land. The + Chaldaeans could draw out, with a fair amount of exactness, plans of + properties or of towns, and their ambition impelled them even to attempt + to make maps of the world. The latter were, it is true, but rough + sketches, in which mythological beliefs vitiated the information which + merchants and soldiers had collected in their journeys. The earth was + represented as a disk surrounded by the ocean stream: Chalda took up the + greater part of it, and foreign countries did not appear in it at all, or + held a position out in the cold at its extremities. Actual knowledge was + woven in an extraordinary manner with mystic considerations, in which the + virtues of numbers, their connections with the gods, and the application + of geometrical diagrams to the prediction of the future, played an + important part. We know what a brilliant fortune these speculations + attained in after-years, and the firm hold they obtained for centuries + over Western nations, as formerly over the Bast. It was not in arithmetic + and geometry alone, moreover, that the Chaldaeans were led away by such + deceits: each branch of science in its turn was vitiated by them, and, + indeed, it could hardly be otherwise when we come to consider the Chaldan + outlook upon the universe. Its operations, in their eyes, were not carried + on under impersonal and unswerving laws, but by voluntary and rational + agents, swayed by an inexorable fate against which they dared not rebel, + but still free enough and powerful enough to avert by magic the decrees of + destiny, or at least to retard their execution. From this conception of + things each subordinate science was obliged to make its investigations in + two perfectly distinct regions: it had at first to determine the material + facts within its competence—such as the position of the stars, for + instance, or the symptoms of a malady; it had then to discover the beings + which revealed themselves through these material manifestations, their + names and their characteristics. When once it had obtained this + information, and could lay its hands upon them, it could compel them to + work on its behalf: science was thus nothing else than the application of + magic to a particular class of phenomena. + </p> + <p> + The number of astronomical facts with which the Chaldans had made + themselves acquainted was considerable. + </p> + <p> + <a name="linkCimage-0048" id="linkCimage-0048"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/340.jpg" width="100%" + alt="340.jpg Chaldan Map of the World. " /> + </div> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a sketch by Peiser. +</pre> + <p> + It was a question in ancient times whether they or the Egyptians had been + the first to carry their investigations into the infinite depths of + celestial space: when it came to be a question as to which of the two + peoples had made the greater progress in this branch of knowledge, all + hesitation vanished, and the pre-eminence was accorded by the ancients to + the priests of Babylon rather than to those of Heliopolis and Memphis.* + </p> + <p> + * Clement of Alexandria, Lucien, Diogenes Laertius, Macrobius, attribute + the origin of astronomy to the Egyptians, and Diodorus Sioulus asserts + that they were the teachers of the Babylonians; Josephus maintains, on the + contrary, that the Egyptians were the pupils of the Chaldans. + </p> + <p> + The Chaldaeans had conducted astronomical observations from remote + antiquity.* Callisthenes collected and sent to his uncle Aristotle a + number of these observations, of which the oldest had been made nineteen + hundred and three years before his time—that is, about the middle of + the twenty-third century before our era: he could have transcribed many of + a still earlier date if the archives of Babylon had been fully accessible + to him. + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + * Epigenes asserts that their observations extended back to + 720,000 years before the time of Alexander, while Berossus + and Critodemus limit their antiquity to 490,000 years, which + was further reduced to 473,000 years by Diodorus, to 470,000 + by Cicero, and to 270,000 by Hipparchus. +</pre> + <p> + The Chaldan priests had been accustomed from an early date to record on + their clay tablets the aspect of the heavens and the changes which took + place in them night after night, the appearance of the constellations, + their comparative brilliancy, the precise moments of their rising and + setting and culmination, together with the more or less rapid movements of + the planets, and their motions towards or from one another. To their + unaided eyes, sharpened by practice and favoured by the transparency of + the air, many stars were visible, as to the Egyptians, which we can + perceive only by the aid of the telescope. These thousands of brilliant + bodies, scattered apparently at random over the face of the sky, moved, + however, with perfect regularity, and the period between their departure + from and their return to the same point in the heavens was determined at + an early date: their position could be predicted at any hour, their course + in the firmament being traced so accurately that its various stages were + marked out and indicated beforehand. The moon, they discovered, had to + complete two hundred and twenty-three revolutions of twenty-nine days and + a half each, before it returned to the point from which it had set out. + This period of its career being accomplished, it began a second of equal + length, then a third, and so on, in an infinite series, during which it + traversed the same celestial houses and repeated in them the same acts of + its life: all the eclipses which it had undergone in one period would + again afflict it in another, and would be manifest in the same places of + the earth in the same order of time.* Whether they ascribed these eclipses + to some mechanical cause, or regarded them as so many unfortunate attacks + made upon Sin by the seven, they recognized their periodical character, + and they were acquainted with the system of the two hundred and + twenty-three lunations by which their occurrence and duration could be + predicted. Further observations encouraged the astronomers to endeavour to + do for the sun what they had so successfully accomplished in regard to the + moon. + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + * This period of two hundred and twenty-three lunations is + that described by Ptolemy in the fourth book of his + “Astronomy,” in which he deals with the average motion of + the moon. The Chaldans seem not to have been able to make a + skilful use of it, for their books indicate the occurrence + of lunar eclipses outside the predicted periods. +</pre> + <p> + <a name="linkCimage-0049" id="linkCimage-0049"></a> <a + href="images/341.jpg"></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:100%;"> + <img alt="341th (67K)" src="images/341th.jpg" width="100%" /> + </div> + <p> + <br /> + </p> + <p> + No long experience was needed to discover the fact that the majority of + solar eclipses were followed some fourteen days and a half after by an + eclipse of the moon; but they were unable to take sufficient advantage of + this experience to predict with certainty the instant of a future eclipse + of the sun, although they had been so struck with the connection of the + two phenomena as to believe that they were in a position to announce it + approximately.* They were frequently deceived in their predictions, and + more than one eclipse which they had promised did not take place at the + time expected:** but their successful prognostications were sufficiently + frequent to console them for their failures, and to maintain the respect + of the people and the rulers for their knowledge. Their years were vague + years of three hundred and sixty days. The twelve equal months of which + they were composed bore names which were borrowed, on the one hand, from + events in civil life, such as “Simanu,” from the making of brick, and + “Addaru,” from the sowing of seed, and, on the other, from mythological + occurrences whose origin is still obscure, such as “Nisanu,” from the + altar of Ea, and “Elul,” from a message of Ishtar. The adjustment of this + year to astronomical demands was roughly carried out by the addition of a + month every six years, which was called a second Adar, Blul, or Nisan, + according to the place in which it was intercalated. + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + * Tannery is of opinion that the Chaldans must have + predicted eclipses of the sun by means of the period of two + hundred and twenty-three lunations, and shows by what a + simple means they could have arrived at it. + + ** An astronomer mentions, in the time of Assurbanipal, that + on the 28th, 29th, and 30th of the month he prepared for the + observation of an eclipse; but the sun continued brilliant, + and the eclipse did not take place. +</pre> + <p> + The neglect of the hours and minutes in their calculation of the length of + the year became with them, as with the Egyptians, a source of serious + embarrassment, and we are still ignorant as to the means employed to meet + the difficulty. The months had relations to the signs of the zodiac, and + the days composing them were made up of twelve double hours each. The + Chaldns had invented two instruments, both of them of a simple character, + to measure time—the clepsydra and the solar clock, the latter of + which in later times became the source of the Greek “polos.” The sun-dial + served to determine a number of simple facts which were indispensable in + astronomical calculations, such as the four cardinal points, the meridian + of the place, the solstitial and equinoctial epochs, and the elevation of + the pole at the position of observation. The construction of the sundial + and clepsydra, if not of the polos also, is doubtless to be referred back + to a very ancient date, but none of the texts already brought to light + makes mention of the employment of these instruments.* + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + * Herodotus (ii. 109) formally attributes the invention of + the sun-dial and polos to the Babylonians. The “polos” was a + solar clock. It consisted of a concave hemisphere with a + style rising from its centre: the shadow of the style + described every day an arc of a circle parallel to the + equator, and the daily parallels were divided into twelve or + twenty-four equal parts. Smith discovered, in the palace of + Sennacherib at Koyunjik, a portion of an astrolabe, which is + now in the British Museum. +</pre> + <p> + All these discoveries, which constitute in our eyes the scientific + patrimony of the Chaldans, were regarded by themselves as the least + important results of their investigations. Did they not know, thanks to + these investigations, that the stars shone for other purposes than to + lighten up the nights—to rule, in fact, the destinies of men and + kings, and, in ruling that of kings, to determine the fortune of empires? + Their earliest astronomers, by their assiduous contemplation of the + nightly heavens, had come to the conclusion that the vicissitudes of the + heavenly bodies were in fixed relations with mundane phenomena and events. + If Mercury, for instance, displayed an unusual brilliancy at his rising, + and his disk appeared as a two-edged sword, riches and abundance, due to + the position of the luminous halo which surrounded him, would be scattered + over Chalda, while discords would cease therein, and justice would + triumph over iniquity. The first observer who was struck by this + coincidence noted it down; his successors confirmed his observations, and + at length deduced, in the process of the years, from their accumulated + knowledge, a general law. Henceforward, each time that Mercury assumed the + same aspect it was of favourable augury, and kings and their subjects + became the recipients of his bounty. As long as he maintained this + appearance no foreign ruler could install himself in Chalda, tyranny + would be divided against itself, equity would prevail, and a strong + monarch bear sway; while the landholders and the king would be confirmed + in their privileges, and obedience, together with tranquillity, would rule + everywhere in the land. The number of these observations increased to such + a degree that it was found necessary to classify them methodically to + avoid confusion. Tables of them were drawn up, in which the reader could + see at one and the same moment the aspect of the heavens on such and such + a night and hour, and the corresponding events either then happening, or + about to happen, in Chaldan, Syria, or some foreign land. If, for + instance, the moon displayed the same appearance on the 1st and 27th of + the month, Elam was threatened; but “if the sun, at his setting, appears + double his usual size, with three groups of bluish rays, the King of + Chalda is ruined.” To the indications of the heavenly bodies, the + Chaldans added the portents which could be deduced from atmospheric + phenomena: if it thundered on the 27th of Tammuz, the wheat-harvest would + be excellent and the produce of the ears magnificent; but if this, should + occur six days later, that is, on the 2nd of Abu, floods and rains were to + be apprehended in a short time, together with the death of the king and + the division of his empire. It was not for nothing that the sun and moon + surrounded themselves in the evening with blood-red vapours or veiled + themselves in dark clouds; that they grew suddenly pale or red after + having been intensely bright; that unexpected fires blazed out on the + confines of the air, and that on certain nights the stars seemed to have + become detached from the firmament and to be falling upon the earth. These + prodigies were so many warnings granted by the gods to the people and + their kings before great crises in human affairs: the astronomer + investigated and interpreted them, and his predictions had a greater + influence than we are prepared to believe upon the fortunes of individuals + and even of states. The rulers consulted and imposed upon the astronomers + the duty of selecting the most favourable moment for the execution of the + projects they had in view. From an early date each temple contained a + library of astrological writings, where the people might find, drawn up as + in a. code, the signs which bore upon their destinies. One of these + libraries, consisting of not less than seventy clay tablets, is considered + to have been first drawn up in the reign of Sargon of Agad, but to have + been so modified and enriched with new examples from time to time that the + original is well-nigh lost. This was the classical work on the subject in + the VIIth century before our era, and the astronomers-royal, to whom + applications were accustomed to be made to explain a natural phenomenon or + a prodigy, drew their answers ready-made from it. Astronomy, as thus + understood, was not merely the queen of sciences, it was the mistress of + the world: taught secretly in the temples, its adepts—at least, + those who had passed through the regular curriculum of study which it + required—became almost a distinct class in society. The occupation + was a lucrative one, and its accomplished professors had numerous rivals + whose educational antecedents were unknown, but who excited the envy of + the experts in their trading upon the credulity of the people. These + quacks went about the country drawing up horoscopes, and arranging schemes + of birthday prognostications, of which the majority were without any + authentic warranty. The law sometimes took note of the fact that they were + competing with the official experts, and interfered with their business: + but if they happened to be exiled from one city, they found some + neighbouring one ready to receive them. + </p> + <p> + Chalda abounded with soothsayers and necromancers no less than with + astrologers; she possessed no real school of medicine, such as we find in + Egypt, in which were taught rational methods of diagnosing maladies and of + curing them by the use of simples. The Chaldaeans were content to confide + the care of their bodies to sorcerers and exorcists, who were experts in + the art of casting out demons and spirits, whose presence in a living + being brought about those disorders to which humanity is prone. The facial + expression of the patient during the crisis, the words which escaped from + him in delirium, were, for these clever individuals, so many signs + revealing the nature and sometimes the name of the enemy to be combated—the + Fever-god, the Plague-god, the Headache-god. Consultations and medical + treatment were, therefore, religious offices, in which were involved + purifications, offerings, and a whole ritual of mysterious words and + gestures. The magician lighted a fire of herbs and sweet-smelling plants + in front of his patient, and the clear flame arising from this put the + spectres to flight and dispelled the malign influences, a prayer + describing the enchantments and their effects being afterwards recited. + “The baleful imprecation like a demon has fallen upon a man;—wail + and pain have fallen upon him,—direful wail has fallen upon him,—the + baleful imprecation, the spell, the pains in the head!—This man, the + baleful imprecation slaughters him like a sheep,—for his god has + quitted his body—his goddess has withdrawn herself in displeasure + from him,—a wail of pain has spread itself as a garment upon him and + has overtaken him!” The harm done by the magician, though terrible, could + be repaired by the gods, and Merodach was moved to compassion betimes. + Merodach cast his eyes on the patient, Merodach entered into the house of + his father Ea, saying: “My father, the baleful curse has fallen like a + demon upon the man!” Twice he thus speaks, and then adds: “What this man + ought to do, I know not; how shall he be healed?” Ea replies to his son + Merodach: “My son, what is there that I could add to thy knowledge?—Merodach, + what is there that I could add to thy knowledge?—That which I know, + thou knowest it:—go then, my son, Merodach,—lead him to the + house of purification of the god who prepares remedies,—and break + the spell that is upon him, draw away the charm which is upon him,—the + ill which afflicts his body,—which he suffers by reason of the curse + of his father,—or the curse of his mother,—or the curse of his + eldest brother,—or by the curse of a murderess who is unknown to the + man.—The curse, may it be taken from him by the charm of Ea,—like + a clove of garlic which is stripped skin by skin,—like a cluster of + dates may it be cut off,—like a bunch of flowers may it be uprooted! + The spell, may heaven avert it,—may the earth avert it!” The god + himself deigned to point out the remedy: the sick man was to take a clove + of garlic, some dates, and a stalk bearing flowers, and was to throw them + into the fire, bit by bit, repeating appropriate prayers at each stage of + the operation. “In like manner as this garlic is peeled and thrown into + the fire,—and the burning flame consumes it,—as it will never + be planted in the vegetable garden, it will never draw moisture from the + pond or from the ditch,—its root will never again spread in the + earth,—its stalk will not pierce the ground and behold the sun,—it + will not serve as food for the gods or the king,—so may it remove + the baleful curse, so may it loose the bond—of sickness, of sin, of + shortcomings, of perversity, of crime!—The sickness which is in my + body, in my flesh, in my muscles,—like this garlic may it be + stripped off,—and may the burning flame consume it in this day;—may + the spell of the sorcerer be cast out, that I may behold the light!” The + ceremony could be prolonged at will: the sick person pulled to pieces the + cluster of dates, the bunch of flowers, a fleece of wool, some goats’ + hair, a skein of dyed thread, and a bean, which were all in turn consumed + in the fire. At each stage of the operation he repeated the formula, + introducing into it one or two expressions characterizing the nature of + the particular offering; as, for instance, “the dates will no more hang + from their stalks, the leaves of the branch will never again be united to + the tree, the wool and the hair will never again lie on the back of the + animal on which they grew, and will never be used for weaving garments.” + The use of magical words was often accompanied by remedies, which were for + the most part both grotesque and disgusting in their composition: they + comprised bitter or stinking wood-shavings, raw meat, snake’s flesh, wine + and oil, the whole reduced to a pulp, or made into a sort of pill and + swallowed on the chance of its bringing relief. The Egyptian physicians + employed similar compounds, to which they attributed wonderful effects, + but they made use of them in exceptional circumstances only. The medical + authorities in Chalda recommended them before all others, and their very + strangeness reassured the patient as to their efficacy: they filled the + possessing spirits with disgust, and became a means of relief owing to the + invincible horror with which they inspired the persecuting demons. The + Chaldans were not, however, ignorant of the natural virtues of herbs, and + at times made use of them; but they were not held in very high esteem, and + the physicians preferred the prescriptions which pandered to the popular + craving for the supernatural. Amulets further confirmed the effect + produced by the recipes, and prevented the enemy, once cast out, from + re-entering the body; these amulets were made of knots of cord, pierced + shells, bronze or terra-cotta statuettes, and plaques fastened to the arms + or worn round the neck. On each of the latter kind were roughly drawn the + most terrible images that they could conceive, a shortened incantation was + scrawled on its surface, or it was covered with extraordinary characters, + which when the spirits perceived they at once took flight, and the + possessor of the talisman escaped the threatened illness. + </p> + <p> + However laughable, and at the same time deplorable, this hopeless medley + of exact knowledge and gross superstition may appear to us at the present + day, it was the means of bringing a prosperity to the cities of Chalda + which no amount of actual science would ever have produced. The + neighbouring barbaric peoples were imbued with the same ideas as the + Chaldns regarding the constitution of the world and the nature of the + laws which governed it. They lived likewise in perpetual fear of those + invisible beings whose changeable and arbitrary will actuated all visible + phenomena; they attributed all the reverses and misfortunes which overtook + them to the direct action of these malevolent beings; they believed firmly + in the influence of stars on the course of events; they were constantly on + the look out for prodigies, and were greatly alarmed by them, since they + had no certain knowledge of the number and nature of their enemies, and + the means they had invented for protecting themselves from them or of + overcoming them too often proved inefficient. In the eyes of these + barbarians, the Chaldeans seemed to be possessed of the very powers which + they themselves lacked. The magicians of Chalda had forced the demons to + obey them and to unmask themselves before them; they read with ease in the + heavens the present and future of men and nations; they interpreted the + will of the immortals in its smallest manifestations, and with them this + faculty was not a limited and ephemeral power, quickly exhausted by use: + the rites and formulas known to them enabled them to exercise it freely at + all times, in all places, alike upon the most exalted of the gods and the + most dreaded of mortals, without its ever becoming weakened. + </p> + <p> + <a name="linkCimage-0050" id="linkCimage-0050"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="figleft" style="width:50%;"> + <img width="100%" src="images/352.jpg" alt="352.jpg a Chaldan Amulet. " /> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> +Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from +a sketch by Loftus. The original +is in the British Museum. +</pre> + </div> + <p> + A race so endowed with wisdom was, indeed, destined to triumph over its + neighbours, and the latter would have no chance of resisting such a nation + unless they borrowed from it its manners, customs, industry, writing, and + all the arts and sciences which had brought about their superiority. + Chaldann civilization spread into Elam and took possession of the + inhabitants of the shores of the Persian Gulf, and then, since its course + was impeded on the south by the sea, on the west by the desert, and on the + east by the mountains, it turned in the direction of the great northern + plains and proceeded up the two rivers, beside whose lower waters it had + been cradled. It was at this very time that the Pharaohs of the XIIIth + dynasty had just completed the conquest of Nubia. Greater Egypt, made what + she was by the efforts of twenty generations, had become an African power. + The sea formed her northern boundary, the desert and the mountains + enclosed her on all sides, and the Nile appeared the only natural outlet + into a new world: she followed it indefatigably from one cataract to + another, colonizing as she passed all the lands fertilized by its waters. + Every step which she made in this direction increased the distance between + her capitals and the Mediterranean, and brought her armies further south. + Asia would have practically ceased to exist, as far as Egypt was + concerned, had not the repeated incursions of the Bedouin obliged her to + make advances from time to time in that direction; still she crossed the + frontier as seldom as possible, and recalled her troops as soon as they + had reduced the marauders to order: Ethiopia alone attracted her, and it + was there that she firmly established her empire. The two great civilized + peoples of the ancient world, therefore, had each their field of action + clearly marked out, and neither of them had ever ventured into that of the + other. There had been no lack of intercourse between them, and the + encounter of their armies, if it ever really had taken place, had been + accidental, had merely produced passing results, and up till then had + terminated without bringing to either side a decisive advantage. + </p> + <p> + <a name="linkCimage-0051" id="linkCimage-0051"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/354.jpg" width="100%" + alt="354.jpg Magic Nail of Terra Cotta " /> + </div> + <p> + <a name="linkCimage-0052" id="linkCimage-0052"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/355.jpg" width="100%" + alt="355.jpg Egyptian Cornice Bearing the Cartouches of Ramses I. " /> + </div> + <p> + <a name="linkC2H_APPE" id="linkC2H_APPE"> + <!-- H2 anchor --> </a> + </p> + <div style="height: 4em;"> + <br /><br /><br /><br /> + </div> + <h2> + APPENDIX<br /> <br /> THE PHARAOHS OF THE ANCIENT AND MIDDLE EMPIRES + </h2> + <h3> + (Dynasties I.-XIV.) + </h3> + <p> + The lists of the Pharaohs of the Memphite period appear to have been drawn + up in much the same order as we now possess them, as early as the XIIth + dynasty: it is certain that the sequence was definitely fixed about the + time of the XXth dynasty, since it was under this that the Canon of Turin + was copied. The lists which have come down to us appear to follow two + traditions, which differ completely in certain cases: one has been + preserved for us by the abbreviators of Manetho, while the other was the + authority followed by the compilers of the tables of Abydos and Saqqra, + as well as by the author of the Turin Papyrus. + </p> + <p> + There appear to have been in the first five dynasties a certain number of + kings whose exact order and filiation were supposed to be well known to + the compilers; but, at the same time, there were others whose names were + found on the monuments, but whose position with regard to their + predecessors was indicated neither by historical documents nor by popular + romance. We find, therefore, in these two traditional lists a series of + sovereigns always occupying the same position, and others hovering around + them, who have no decided place. The hieroglyphic lists and the Royal + Canon appear to have been chiefly concerned with the former; but the + authorities followed by Manetho have studiously collected the names of the + latter, and have intercalated them in different places, sometimes in the + middle, but mostly at the end of the dynasty, where they form a kind of <i>caput + mortuum</i>. The most striking example of this arrangement is afforded us + in the IVth dynasty. The contemporary monuments show that its kings formed + a compact group, to which are appended the first three sovereigns of the + Vth dynasty, always in the same order: Menkar succeeded Khfr, + Shopsiskaf followed Menkar, Usirkaf followed Shopsiskaf, and so on to + the end. The lists of Manetho suppress Shopsiskaf, and substitute four + other individuals in his place, namely, Katises, Bikheris, Seberkheres, + Thamphthis, whose reigns must have occupied more than half a century; + these four were doubtless aspirants to the throne, or local kings + belonging to the time between the IVth and Vth dynasties, whom Manetho’s + authorities inserted between the compact groups made up of Kheops and his + sons on the one hand, and of Usirkaf and his two real of supposed brothers + on the other, omitting Shopsiskaf, and having no idea that Usirkaf was his + immediate successor, with or without rivals to the throne. + </p> + <p> + In a course of lectures given at the <i>Collge de France</i> (1893-95), I + have examined at length the questions raised by a study of the various + lists, and I may be able, perhaps, some day to publish the result of my + researches: for the present I must confine myself merely to what is + necessary to the elucidation of the present work, namely, the Manethonian + tradition on the one hand, and the tradition of the monumental tables on + the other. The text which I propose to follow for the latter, during the + first five dynasties, is that of the second table of Abydos; the names + placed between brackets [ ] are taken either from the table of Saqqra or + from the Royal Canon of Turin. The numbers of the years, months, and days + are those furnished by the last-mentioned document. + </p> + <p> + <a name="linkCimage-0053" id="linkCimage-0053"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/357.jpg" width="100%" + alt="357.jpg Lists of the Pharaohs Of The Ancient Empire " /> + </div> + <p> + <a name="linkCimage-0054" id="linkCimage-0054"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/358.jpg" width="100%" + alt="358.jpg Lists on the Monuments " /> + </div> + <p> + From the VIth to the XIIth dynasty, the lists of Manetho are at fault: + they give the origin and duration of the dynasties, without furnishing us + with the names of the kings. + </p> + <p> + <a name="linkCimage-0055" id="linkCimage-0055"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/359.jpg" width="100%" + alt="359.jpg Lists on the Monuments " /> + </div> + <p> + This blank is partially filled by the table of Abydos, by the fragments of + the Turin Papyrus, and by information supplied by the monuments. No such + definitely established sequence appears to have existed for this period, + as for the preceding ones. The Heracleopolitan dynasties figure, perhaps, + in the Canon of Turin only; as for the later Memphite dynasties, the table + of Abydos gives one series of Pharaohs, while the Canon adopts a different + one. After the close of the VIth dynasty, and before the accession of the + IXth, there was, doubtless, a period when several branches of the royal + family claimed the supremacy and ruled in different parts of Egypt: this + is what we know to have taken place later between the XXIInd and the + XXIVth dynasties. The tradition of Abydos had, perhaps, adopted one of + these contemporaneous dynasties, while the Turin Papyrus had chosen + another: Manetho, on the other hand, had selected from among them, as + representatives of the legitimate succession, the line reigning at Memphis + which immediately followed the sovereigns of the VIth dynasty. The + following table gives both the series known, as far as it is possible for + the present to re-establish the order:— + </p> + <p> + <a name="linkCimage-0056" id="linkCimage-0056"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/360.jpg" width="100%" + alt="360.jpg Lists on the Monuments " /> + </div> + <p> + The XIth (Theban) dynasty contains but a small number of kings according + to the official lists. The tables on the monuments recognize only two, + Nibkhrur and Snkhkar, but the Turin Canon admits at least half a + dozen. These differences probably arose from the fact that, the second + Heracleopolitan dynasty having reigned at the same time as the earlier + Theban princes, the tables on the monuments, while rejecting the + Heracleopolitans, recognized as legitimate Pharaohs only those of the + Theban kings who had ruled over the whole of Egypt, namely, the first and + last of the series; the Canon, on the contrary, replaced the later + Heracleopolitans by those among the contemporary Thebans who had assumed + the royal titles. Whatever may have been the cause of these combinations, + we find the lists again harmonizing with the accession of the XIIth + (Theban) dynasty. + </p> + <p> + For the succeeding dynasties we possess merely the names enumerated on the + fragments of the Turin Papyrus, several of which, however, are also found + either in the royal chamber at Karnak, or on contemporary monuments. The + order of the names is not always certain: it is, perhaps, best to + transcribe the sequence as we are able to gather it from the fragments of + the Royal Papyrus, without attempting to distinguish between those which + belong to the XIIIth and those which must be. relegated to the following + dynasties. + </p> + <p> + <a name="linkCimage-0057" id="linkCimage-0057"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/361.jpg" width="100%" + alt="361.jpg Lists on the Monuments " /> + </div> + <p> + About fifty names still remain, but so mutilated and scattered over such + small fragments of papyrus, that their order is most uncertain. We possess + monuments of about one-fifth of these kings, and the lengths of their + reigns, as far as we know them, all appear to have been short: we have no + reason to doubt that they did really govern, and we can only hope that in + time the progress of excavation will yield us records of them one after + another. They bring us down to the period of the invasion of the + Shepherds, and it is possible that some among them may be found to be + contemporaries of the XVth and XVIth dynasties. + </p> + <p> + <a name="linkCimage-0058" id="linkCimage-0058"> + <!-- IMG --></a> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img src="images/362.jpg" width="100%" alt="362.jpg Tailpiece " /> + </div> + <p> + <br /> <br /> + </p> + <div class="fig" style="width:80%;"> + <img alt="cover2 (229K)" src="images/cover2.jpg" width="100%" /> + </div> + <p> + <br /> <br /> <br /> <br /> + </p> +<pre xml:space="preserve"> + + + + + +End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of History Of Egypt, Chalda, Syria, +Babylonia, and Assyria, Volume 3 (of 12), by G. 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differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..e94d011 --- /dev/null +++ b/17323-h/images/preface2.jpg diff --git a/17323-h/images/spines.jpg b/17323-h/images/spines.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..ee35490 --- /dev/null +++ b/17323-h/images/spines.jpg diff --git a/17323-h/images/tables0048.jpg b/17323-h/images/tables0048.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..705cd93 --- /dev/null +++ b/17323-h/images/tables0048.jpg diff --git a/17323-h/images/titlepage.jpg b/17323-h/images/titlepage.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..0410c7a --- /dev/null +++ b/17323-h/images/titlepage.jpg diff --git a/17323.txt b/17323.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..4d88214 --- /dev/null +++ b/17323.txt @@ -0,0 +1,9386 @@ +The Project Gutenberg EBook of History Of Egypt, Chaldaea, Syria, +Babylonia, and Assyria, Volume 3 (of 12), by G. Maspero + +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: History Of Egypt, Chaldaea, Syria, Babylonia, and Assyria, Volume 3 (of 12) + +Author: G. Maspero + +Editor: A.H. Sayce + +Translator: M.L. McClure + +Release Date: December 16, 2005 [EBook #17323] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ASCII + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HISTORY OF EGYPT, CHALDAEA *** + + + + +Produced by David Widger + + + + + +HISTORY OF EGYPT CHALDEA, SYRIA, BABYLONIA, AND ASSYRIA + + +By G. MASPERO, +Honorable Doctor of Civil Laws, and Fellow of Queen's College, Oxford; +Member of the Institute and Professor at the College of France. + +Edited by A. H. SAYCE, +Professor of Assyriology, Oxford. + +Translated by M. L. McCLURE, +Member of the Committee of the Egypt Exploration Fund + + +CONTAINING OVER TWELVE HUNDRED COLORED PLATES AND ILLUSTRATIONS + + +Volume III. + + +LONDON + +THE GROLIER SOCIETY + +PUBLISHERS + + +[Illustration: 001.jpg El Hammam (The Bath)] + + +[Illustration: 002.jpg THE BANKS OF THE EUPHRATES AT IIILLAH] + + Drawn by Boudier, after J. Dieulafoy. The vignette, which is + by Faucher-Gudin, is reproduced from an intaglio in the + Cabinet des Medailles. + + + + +CHAPTER I--ANCIENT CHALDAEA + + +The Creation, the Deluge, the history of the gods--The country, its +cities its inhabitants, its early dynasties. + +[Illustration: 002a.jpg] + +"In the time when nothing which was called heaven existed above, and when +nothing below had as yet received the name of earth,* Apsu, the Ocean, +who first was their father, and Chaos-Tiamat, who gave birth to them +all, mingled their waters in one, reeds which were not united, rushes +which bore no fruit."** Life germinated slowly in this inert mass, in +which the elements of our world lay still in confusion: when at length +it did spring up, it was but feebly, and at rare intervals, through +the hatching of divine couples devoid of personality and almost without +form. "In the time when the gods were not created, not one as yet, when +they had neither been called by their names, nor had their destinies +been assigned to them by fate, gods manifested themselves. Lakhmu and +Lakhamu were the first to appear, and waxed great for ages; then Anshar +and Kishar were produced after them. Days were added to days, and years +were heaped upon years: Anu, Inlil, and Ea were born in their turn, for +Anshar and Kishar had given them birth." As the generations emanated one +from the other, their vitality increased, and the personality of each +became more clearly defined; the last generation included none but +beings of an original character and clearly marked individuality. Anu, +the sunlit sky by day, the starlit firmament by night; Inlil-Bel, +the king of the earth; Ea, the sovereign of the waters and the +personification of wisdom.*** Each of them duplicated himself, Anu into +Anat, Bel into Belit, Ea into Damkina, and united himself to the spouse +whom he had deduced from himself. Other divinities sprang from these +fruitful pairs, and the impulse once given, the world was rapidly +peopled by their descendants. Sin, Shamash, and Kamman, who presided +respectively over the moon, the sun, and the air, were all three of +equal rank; next came the lords of the planets, Ninib, Merodach, Nergal, +the warrior-goddess Ishtar, and Nebo; then a whole army of lesser +deities, who ranged themselves around Anu as round a supreme master. +Tiamat, finding her domain becoming more and more restricted owing +to the activity of the others, desired to raise battalion against +battalion, and set herself to create unceasingly; but her offspring, +made in her own image, appeared like those incongruous phantoms which +men see in dreams, and which are made up of members borrowed from a +score of different animals. They appeared in the form of bulls with +human heads, of horses with the snouts of dogs, of dogs with quadruple +bodies springing from a single fish-like tail. Some of them had the beak +of an eagle or a hawk; others, four wings and two faces; others, the +legs and horns of a goat; others, again, the hind quarters of a horse +and the whole body of a man. Tiamat furnished them with terrible +weapons, placed them under the command of her husband Kingu, and set out +to war against the gods. + + * In Chaldaea, as in Egypt, nothing was supposed to have a + real existence until it had received its name: the sentence + quoted in the text means practically, that at that time + there was neither heaven nor earth. + + ** Apsu has been transliterated kiracruv [in Greek], by the + author an extract from whose works has been preserved by + Damascius. He gives a different version of the tradition, + according to which the amorphous goddess Mummu-Tiamat + consisted of two persons. The first, Tauthe, was the wife of + Apason; the second, Moymis, was the son of Apason and of + Tauthe. The last part of the sentence is very obscure in the + Assyrian text, and has been translated in a variety of + different ways. It seems to contain a comparison between + Apsu and Mummu-Tiamat on the one hand, and the reeds and + clumps of rushes so common in Chaldaea on the other; the two + divinities remain inert and unfruitful, like water-plants + which have not yet manifested their exuberant growth. + + *** The first fragments of the Chaldaean account of the + Creation were discovered by G. Smith, who described them in + the _Daily Telegraph_ (of March 4, 1875), and published them + in the _Transactions of the Society of Biblical Archaeology_, + and translated in his Chaldaean account of Genesis all the + fragments with which he was acquainted; other fragments have + since been collected, but unfortunately not enough to enable + us to entirely reconstitute the legend. It covered at least + six tablets, possibly more. Portions of it have been + translated after Smith, by Talbot, by Oppert, by Lenormant, + by Schrader, by Sayce, by Jensen, by Winckler, by Zimmern, + and lastly by Delitzsch. Since G. Smith wrote _The Chaldaean + Account_, a fragment of a different version has been + considered to be a part of the dogma of the Creation, as it + was put forth at Kutha. + +[Illustration: 006.jpg ONE OF THE EAGLE-HEADED GENII.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin from an Assyrian bas-relief from + Khorsabad + +At first they knew not whom to send against her. Anshar despatched his +son Anu; but Anu was afraid, and made no attempt to oppose her. He sent +Ea; but Ea, like Anu, grew pale with fear, and did not venture to attack +her. Merodach, the son of Ea, was the only one who believed himself +strong enough to conquer her. The gods, summoned to a solemn banquet in +the palace of Anshar, unanimously chose him to be their champion, and +proclaimed him king. "Thou, thou art glorious among the great gods, thy +will is second to none, thy bidding is Anu; Marduk (Merodach), thou art +glorious among the great gods, thy will is second to none,* thy bidding +is Anu.** From this day, that which thou orderest may not be changed, +the power to raise or to abase shall be in thy hand, the word of thy +mouth shall endure, and thy commandment shall not meet with opposition. +None of the gods shall transgress thy law; but wheresoever a sanctuary +of the gods is decorated, the place where they shall give their oracles +shall be thy place.*** Marduk, it is thou who art our avenger! We bestow +on thee the attributes of a king; the whole of all that exists, thou +hast it, and everywhere thy word shall be exalted. Thy weapons shall not +be turned aside, they shall strike thy enemy. O master, who trusts in +thee, spare thou, his life; but the god who hath done evil, put out +his life like water. They clad their champion in a garment, and thus +addressed him: 'Thy will, master, shall be that of the gods. Speak the +word, 'Let it be so,' it shall be so. Thus open thy mouth, this garment +shall disappear; say unto it, 'Return,' and the garment shall be there." +He spoke with his lips, the garment disappeared; he said unto it, +"Return," and the garment was restored. + + * The Assyrian runs, "thy destiny is second to none." This + refers not to the _destiny_ of the god himself, but to the + fate which he allots to others. I have substituted, here and + elsewhere, for the word "destiny," the special meaning of + which would not have been understood, the word "will," + which, though it does not exactly reproduce the Assyrian + expression, avoids the necessity for paraphrases or formulas + calculated to puzzle the modern reader. + + ** Or, to put it less concisely, "When thou commandest, it + is Anu himself who commands," and the same blind obedience + must be paid to thee as to Anu. + + *** The meaning is uncertain. The sentence seems to convey + that henceforth Merodach would be at home in all temples + that were constructed in honour of the other gods. + +Merodach having been once convinced by this evidence that he had the +power of doing everything and of undoing everything at his pleasure, the +gods handed to him the sceptre, the throne, the crown, the insignia of +supreme rule, and greeted him with their acclamations: "Be King!--Go! +Cut short the life of Tiamat, and let the wind carry her blood to the +hidden extremities of the universe."* He equipped himself carefully for +the struggle. "He made a bow and placed his mark upon it;"** he had a +spear brought to him and fitted a point to it; the god lifted the lance, +brandished it in his right hand, then hung the bow and quiver at +his side. He placed a thunderbolt before him, filled his body with a +devouring flame, then made a net in which to catch the anarchic Tiamat; +he placed the four winds in such a way that she could not escape, south +and north, east and west, and with his own hand he brought them the net, +the gift of his father Anu. "He created the hurricane, the evil wind, the +storm, the tempest, the four winds, the seven winds, the waterspout, the +wind that is second to none; then he let loose the winds he had created, +all seven of them, in order to bewilder the anarchic Tiamat by charging +behind her. And the master of the waterspout raised his mighty weapon, +he mounted his chariot, a work without its equal, formidable; he +installed himself therein, tied the four reins to the side, and darted +forth, pitiless, torrent-like, swift." + + * Sayce was the first, I believe, to cite, in connection + with this mysterious order, the passage in which Berossus + tells how the gods created men from a little clay, moistened + with the blood of the god Belos. Here there seems to be a + fear lest the blood of Tiamat, mingling with the mud, should + produce a crop of monsters similar to those which the + goddess had already created; the blood, if carried to the + north, into the domain of the night, would there lose its + creative power, or the monsters who might spring from it + would at any rate remain strangers to the world of gods and + men. + + ** "Literally, he made his weapon known; "perhaps it would + be better to interpret it, "and he made it known that the + bow would henceforth be his distinctive weapon." + +[Illustration: 008.jpg BEL-MERODACH, ARMED WITH THE THUNDERBOLT, DOES +BATTLE WITH THE TUMULTUOUS TIAMAT.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin from the bas-relief from Nimrud + preserved in the British Museum. + +He passed through the serried ranks of the monsters and penetrated as +far as Tiamat, and provoked her with his cries. "'Thou hast rebelled +against the sovereignty of the gods, thou hast plotted evil against +them, and hast desired that my fathers should taste of thy malevolence; +therefore thy host shall be reduced to slavery, thy weapons shall be +torn from thee. Come, then, thou and I must give battle to one another!' +Tiamat, when she heard him, flew into a fury, she became mad with rage; +then Tiamat howled, she raised herself savagely to her full height, and +planted her feet firmly on the earth. She pronounced an incantation, +recited her formula, and called to her aid the gods of the combat, +both them and their weapons. They drew near one to another, Tiamat and +Marduk, wisest of the gods: They flung themselves into the combat, they +met one another in the struggle. Then the master unfolded his net and +seized her; he caused the hurricane which waited behind him to pass +in front of him, and, when Tiamat opened her mouth to swallow him, he +thrust the hurricane into it so that the monster could not close her +jaws again. The mighty wind filled her paunch, her breast swelled, her +maw was split. Marduk gave a straight thrust with his lance, burst +open the paunch, pierced the interior, tore the breast, then bound the +monster and deprived her of life. When he had vanquished Tiamat, who had +been their leader, her army was disbanded, her host was scattered, and +the gods, her allies, who had marched beside her, trembled, were scared, +and fled." He seized hold of them, and of Kingu their chief, and brought +them bound in chains before the throne of his father. + +He had saved the gods from ruin, but this was the least part of +his task; he had still to sweep out of space the huge carcase which +encumbered it, and to separate its ill-assorted elements, and arrange +them afresh for the benefit of the conquerors. He returned to Tiamat +whom he had bound in chains. He placed his foot upon her, with his +unerring knife he cut into the upper part of her; then he cut the +blood-vessels, and caused the blood to be carried by the north wind to +the hidden places. And the gods saw his face, they rejoiced, they gave +themselves up to gladness, and sent him a present, a tribute of peace; +then he recovered his calm, he contemplated the corpse, raised it and +wrought marvels. + +[Illustration: 010.jpg A KUFA LADEN WITH STONES, AND MANNED BY A CREW OF +FOUR MEN.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a bas-relief at Koyunjik. + Behind the _kufa_ may be seen a fisherman seated astride on + an inflated skin with his fish-basket attached to his neck. + +He split it in two as one does a fish for drying; then he hung up one of +the halves on high, which became the heavens; the other half he spread +out under his feet to form the earth, and made the universe such as +men have since known it. As in Egypt, the world was a kind of enclosed +chamber balanced on the bosom of the eternal waters.* The earth, which +forms the lower part of it, or floor, is something like an overturned +boat in appearance, and hollow underneath, not like one of the narrow +skiffs in use among other races, but a kufa, or kind of semicircular +boat such as the tribes of the Lower Euphrates have made use of from +earliest antiquity down to our own times. + + * The description of the Egyptian world will be found in + vol. i. p. 21 of the present work. So far the only + systematic attempt to reconstruct the Chaldaean world, since + Lenormant, has been made by Jensen, who, after examining all + the elements which went to compose it, one after another, + sums up in a few pages, and reproduces in a plate, the + principal results of his inquiry. It will be seen at a + glance how much I have taken from his work, and in what + respects the drawing here reproduced differs from his. + +[Illustration: 012.jpg THE WORLD AS CONCEIVED BY THE CHALDAEANS] + +The earth rises gradually from the extremities to the centre, like a +great mountain, of which the snow-region, where the Euphrates finds its +source, approximately marks the summit. It was at first supposed to be +divided into seven zones, placed one on the top of the other along its +sides, like the stories of a temple; later on it was divided into four +"houses," each of which, like the "houses" of Egypt, corresponded with +one of the four cardinal points, and was under the rule of particular +gods. Near the foot of the mountain, the edges of the so-called boat +curve abruptly outwards, and surround the earth with a continuous wall +of uniform height having no opening. The waters accumulated in the +hollow thus formed, as in a ditch; it was a narrow and mysterious sea, +an ocean stream, which no living man might cross save with permission +from on high, and whose waves rigorously separated the domain of men +from the regions reserved to the gods. The heavens rose above the +"mountain of the world" like a boldly formed dome, the circumference +of which rested on the top of the wall in the same way as the upper +structures of a house rest on its foundations. Merodach wrought it out +of a hard resisting metal which shone brilliantly during the day in +the rays of the sun, and at night appeared only as a dark blue surface, +strewn irregularly with luminous stars. He left it quite solid in the +southern regions, but tunnelled it in the north, by contriving within +it a huge cavern which communicated with external space by means of two +doors placed at the east and the west.* The sun came forth each morning +by the first of these doors; he mounted to the zenith, following the +internal base of the cupola from east to south; then he slowly descended +again to the western door, and re-entered the tunnel in the firmament, +where he spent the night,** Merodach regulated the course of the whole +universe on the movements of the sun. He instituted the year and divided +it into twelve months. To each month he assigned three decans, each of +whom exercised his influence successively for a period of ten days; he +then placed the procession of the days under the authority of Nibiru, +in order that none of them should wander from his track and be lost. "He +lighted the moon that she might rule the night, and made her a star of +night that she might indicate the days:*** 'From month to month, without +ceasing, shape thy disk,**** and at the beginning of the month kindle +thyself in the evening, lighting up thy horns so as to make the heavens +distinguishable; on the seventh day, show to me thy disk; and on the +fifteenth, let thy two halves be full from month to month.'" He cleared +a path for the planets, and four of them he entrusted to four gods; the +fifth, our Jupiter, he reserved for himself, and appointed him to be +shepherd of this celestial flock; in order that all the gods might have +their image visible in the sky, he mapped out on the vault of heaven +groups of stars which he allotted to them, and which seemed to men like +representations of real or fabulous beings, fishes with the heads of +rams, lions, bulls, goats and scorpions. + + * Jensen has made a collection of the texts which speak of + the interior of the heavens (Kirib shami) and of their + aspect. The expressions which have induced many + Assyriologists to conclude that the heavens were divided + into different parts subject to different gods may be + explained without necessarily having recourse to this + hypothesis; the "heaven of Ami," for instance, is an + expression which merely affirms Anu's sovereignty in the + heavens, and is only a more elegant way of designating the + heavens by the name of the god who rules them. The gates of + heaven are mentioned in the account of the Creation. + + ** It is generally admitted that the Chaldaeans believed that + the sun passed over the world in the daytime, and underneath + it during the night. The general resemblance of their theory + of the universe to the Egyptian theory leads me to believe + that they, no less than the Egyptians (cf. vol. i. pp. 24, + 25, of the present work), for along time believed that the + sun and moon revolved round the earth in a horizontal plane. + + *** This obscure phrase seems to be explained, if we + remember that the Chaldaean, like the Egyptian day, dated + from the rising of one moon to the rising of the following + moon; for instance, from six o'clock one evening to about + six o'clock the next evening. The moon, the star of night, + thus marks the appearance of each day and "indicates the + days." + + **** The word here translated by "disk" is literally the + royal cap, decorated with horns, "Agu," which Sin, the moon- + god, wears on his head. + +The heavens having been put in order,* he set about peopling the earth, +and the gods, who had so far passively and perhaps powerlessly watched +him at his work, at length made up their minds to assist him. They +covered the soil with verdure, and all collectively "made living beings +of many kinds. The cattle of the fields, the wild beasts of the fields, +the reptiles of the fields, they fashioned them and made of them +creatures of life."** According to one legend, these first animals +had hardly left the hands of their creators, when, not being able to +withstand the glare of the light, they fell dead one after the other. +Then Merodach, seeing that the earth was again becoming desolate, and +that its fertility was of no use to any one, begged his father Ea to cut +off his head and mix clay with the blood which welled from the trunk, +then from this clay to fashion new beasts and men, to whom the virtues +of this divine blood would give the necessary strength to enable them +to resist the air and light. At first they led a somewhat wretched +existence, and "lived without rule after the manner of beasts. But, +in the first year, appeared a monster endowed with human reason named +Oannes, who rose from out of the Erythraean sea, at the point where it +borders Babylonia. He had the whole body of a fish, but above his fish's +head he had another head which was that of a man, and human feet emerged +from beneath his fish's tail; he had a human voice, and his image is +preserved to this day. He passed the day in the midst of men without +taking any food; he taught them the use of letters, sciences and arts of +all kinds, the rules for the founding of cities, and the construction of +temples, the principles of law and of surveying; he showed them how to +sow and reap; he gave them all that contributes to the comforts of life. +Since that time nothing excellent has been invented. At sunset this +monster Oannes plunged back into the sea, and remained all night beneath +the waves, for he was amphibious. He wrote a book on the origin of +things and of civilization, which he gave to men." These are a few of +the fables which were current among the races of the Lower Euphrates +with regard to the first beginnings of the universe. That they possessed +many other legends of which we now know nothing is certain, but either +they have perished for ever, or the works in which they were recorded +still await discovery, it may be under the ruins of a palace or in the +cupboards of some museum. + +* The arrangement of the heavens by Merodach is described at the end +of the fourth and beginning of the fifth tablets. The text, originally +somewhat obscure, is so mutilated in places that it is not always +possible to make out the sense with certainty. + +** The creation of the animals and then of man is related on the seventh +tablet, and on a tablet the place of which, in the series, is still +undetermined. I have been obliged to translate the text rather freely, +so as to make the meaning clear to the modern reader. + +[Illustration: 017.jpg A GOD-FISH] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from an Assyrian bas-relief from + Nimrud. + +They do not seem to have conceived the possibility of an absolute +creation, by means of which the gods, or one of them, should have +evolved out of nothing all that exists: the creation was for them merely +the setting in motion of pre-existing elements, and the creator only an +organizer of the various materials floating in chaos. Popular fancy +in different towns varied the names of the creators and the methods +employed by them; as centuries passed on, a pile of vague, confused, and +contradictory traditions were amassed, no one of which was held to be +quite satisfactory, though all found partisans to support them. Just as +in Egypt, the theologians of local priesthoods endeavoured to classify +them and bring them into a kind of harmony: many they rejected and +others they recast in order to better reconcile their statements: they +arranged them in systems, from which they undertook to unravel, under +inspiration from on high, the true history of the universe. That which I +have tried to set forth above is very ancient, if, as is said to be the +case, it was in existence two or even three thousand years before our +era; but the versions of it which we possess were drawn up much later, +perhaps not till about the VIIth century B.C.* It had been accepted by +the inhabitants of Babylon because it flattered their religious vanity +by attributing the credit of having evolved order out of chaos to +Merodach, the protector of their city.** He it was whom the Assyrian +scribes had raised to a position of honour at the court of the last +kings of Nineveh:*** it was Merodach's name which Berossus inscribed at +the beginning of his book, when he set about relating to the Greeks +the origin of the world according to the Chaldeans, and the dawn of +Babylonian civilization. + + * The question as to whether the text was originally written + in Sumerian or in the Semitic tongue has frequently been + discussed; the form in which we have it at present is not + very old, and does not date much further back than the reign + of Assurbanipal, if it is not even contemporary with that + monarch. According to Sayce, the first version would date + back beyond the XXth century, to the reign of Khammurabi; + according to Jensen, beyond the XXXth century before our + era. + + ** Sayce thinks that the myth originated at Eridu, on the + shores of the Persian Gulf, and afterwards received its + present form at Babylon, where the local schools of theology + adapted it to the god Merodach. + + *** The tablets in which it is preserved for us come partly + from the library of Assurbanipal at Nineveh, partly from + that of the temple of Nebo at Borsippa; these latter are + more recent than the others, and seem to have been written + during the period of the Persian supremacy. + +Like the Egyptian civilization, it had had its birth between the sea and +the dry land on a low, marshy, alluvial soil, flooded annually by the +rivers which traverse it, devastated at long intervals by tidal waves of +extraordinary violence. The Euphrates and the Tigris cannot be regarded +as mysterious streams like the Nile, whose source so long defied +exploration that people were tempted to place it beyond the regions +inhabited by man. The former rise in Armenia, on the slopes of the +Niphates, one of the chains of mountains which lie between the Black Sea +and Mesopotamia, and the only range which at certain points reaches the +line of eternal snow. At first they flow parallel to one another, the +Euphrates from east to west as far as Malatiyeh, the Tigris from the +west towards the east in the direction of Assyria. Beyond Malatiyeh, the +Euphrates bends abruptly to the south-west, and makes its way across the +Taurus as though desirous of reaching the Mediterranean by the shortest +route, but it soon alters its intention, and makes for the south-east +in search of the Persian Gulf. The Tigris runs in an oblique direction +towards the south from the point where the mountains open out, and +gradually approaches the Euphrates. Near Bagdad the two rivers are only +a few leagues apart. However, they do not yet blend their waters; after +proceeding side by side for some twenty or thirty miles, they again +separate and only finally; unite at a point some eighty leagues lower +down. At the beginning of our geological period their course was not +such a long one. The sea then penetrated as far as lat. 33 deg., and was +only arrested by the last undulations of the great plateau of secondary +formation, which descend from the mountain group of Armenia: the two +rivers entered the sea at a distance of about twenty leagues apart, +falling into a gulf bounded on the east by the last spurs of the +mountains of Iran, on the west by the sandy heights which border the +margin of the Arabian Desert.* They filled up this gulf with their +alluvial deposit, aided by the Adhem, the Diyaleh, the Kerkha, the +Karun, and other rivers, which at the end of long independent courses +became tributaries of the Tigris. The present beds of the two rivers, +connected by numerous canals, at length meet near the village of Kornah +and form one single river, the Shatt-el-Arab, which carries their waters +to the sea. The mud with which they are charged is deposited when it +reaches their mouth, and accumulates rapidly; it is said that the coast +advances about a mile every seventy years.** In its upper reaches the +Euphrates collects a number of small affluents, the most important of +which, the Kara-Su, has often been confounded with it. Near the middle +of its course, the Sadjur on the right bank carries into it the waters +of the Taurus and the Amanus, on the left bank the Balikh and the Khabur +contribute those of the Karadja-Dagh; from the mouth of the Khabur to +the sea the Euphrates receives no further affluent. The Tigris is fed on +the left by the Bitlis-Khai, the two Zabs, the Adhem, and the Diyaleh. +The Euphrates is navigable from Sumeisat, the Tigris from Mossul, both +of them almost as soon as they leave the mountains. They are subject +to annual floods, which occur when the winter snow melts on the higher +ranges of Armenia. The Tigris, which rises from the southern slope of +the Niphates and has the more direct course, is the first to overflow +its banks, which it does at the beginning of March, and reaches its +greatest height about the 10th or 12th of May. The Euphrates rises in +the middle of March, and does not attain its highest level till the +close of May. From June onwards it falls with increasing rapidity; by +September all the water which has not been absorbed by the soil has +returned to the river-bed. The inundation does not possess the same +importance for the regions covered by it, that the rise of the Nile +does for Egypt. In fact, it does more harm than good, and the river-side +population have always worked hard to protect themselves from it and to +keep it away from their lands rather than facilitate its access to +them; they regard it as a sort of necessary evil to which they resign +themselves, while trying to minimize its effects.*** + + * This fact has been established by Ross and Lynch in two + articles in the _Journal of the Royal Geographical Society_, + vol. ix. pp. 446, 472. The Chaldaeans and Assyrians called + the gulf into which the two rivers debouched, Nar Marratum, + or "salt river," a name which they extended to the Chaldaean + Sea, i.e. to the whole Persian Gulf. + + ** Loftus estimated, about the middle of the last century, + the progress of alluvial deposit at about one English mile + in every seventy years; H. Rawlinson considers that the + progress must have been more considerable in ancient times, + and estimates it at an English mile in thirty years. Kiepert + thinks, taking the above estimate as a basis, that in the + sixth century before our era the fore-shore came from about + ten to twelve German miles (47 to 56 English) higher up than + the present fore-shore. G. Rawlinson estimates on his part + that between the thirtieth and twentieth centuries B.C., a + period in which he places the establishment of the first + Chaldaean Empire, the fore-shore was more than 120 miles + above the mouth of Shatt-el-Arab, to the north of the + present village of Kornah. + + *** Fr. Lenormant has energetically defended this hypothesis + in the majority of his works: it is set forth at some length + in his work on _La Langue primitive de la Chaldee_. Hommel, + on the other hand, maintains and strives to demonstrate + scientifically the relationship of the non-Semitic tongue + with Turkish. + +The traveller Olivier noticed this, and writes as follows: "The land +there is rather less fertile [than in Egypt], because it does not +receive the alluvial deposits of the rivers with the same regularity as +that of the Delta. It is necessary to irrigate it in order to render it +productive, and to protect it sedulously from the inundations which are +too destructive in their action and too irregular." + +The first races to colonize this country of rivers, or at any rate +the first of which we can find traces, seem to have belonged to three +different types. The most important were the Semites, who spoke a +dialect akin to Aramaic, Hebrew, and Phoenician. It was for a long +time supposed that they came down from the north, and traces of their +occupation have been pointed out in Armenia in the vicinity of Ararat, +or halfway down the course of the Tigris, at the foot of the Gordysean +mountains. It has recently been suggested that we ought rather to seek +for their place of origin in Southern Arabia, and this view is gaining +ground among the learned. Side by side with these Semites, the monuments +give evidence of a race of ill-defined character, which some have +sought, without much success, to connect with the tribes of the Urall or +Altai; these people are for the present provisionally called Sumerians.* +They came, it would appear, from some northern country; they brought +with them from their original home a curious system of writing, which, +modified, transformed, and adopted by ten different nations, has +preserved for us all that we know in regard to the majority of the +empires which rose and fell in Western Asia before the Persian conquest. +Semite or Sumerian, it is still doubtful which preceded the other at the +mouths of the Euphrates. The Sumerians, who were for a time all-powerful +in the centuries before the dawn of history, had already mingled closely +with the Semites when we first hear of them. Their language gave way to +the Semitic, and tended gradually to become a language of ceremony and +ritual, which was at last learnt less for everyday use, than for the +drawing up of certain royal inscriptions, or for the interpretation of +very ancient texts of a legal or sacred character. Their religion became +assimilated to the religion, and their gods identified with the gods, of +the Semites. The process of fusion commenced at such an early date, that +nothing has really come down to us from the time when the two races were +strangers to each other. We are, therefore, unable to say with certainty +how much each borrowed from the other, what each gave, or relinquished +of its individual instincts and customs. We must take and judge them as +they come before us, as forming one single nation, imbued with the +same ideas, influenced in all their acts by the same civilization, and +possessed of such strongly marked characteristics that only in the last +days of their existence do we find any appreciable change. In the course +of the ages they had to submit to the invasions and domination of some +dozen different races, of whom some--Assyrians and Chaldaeans--were +descended from a Semitic stock, while the others--Elamites, Cossaaans, +Persians, Macedonians, and Parthians--either were not connected with +them by any tie of blood, or traced their origin in some distant manner +to the Sumerian branch. They got quickly rid of a portion of these +superfluous elements, and absorbed or assimilated the rest; like +the Egyptians, they seem to have been one of those races which, once +established, were incapable of ever undergoing modification, and +remained unchanged from one end of their existence to the other. + +* The name _Accadian_ proposed by H. Rawlinson and by Hincks, and +adopted by Sayce, seems to have given way to _Sumerian_, the title put +forward by Oppert. The existence of the Sumerian or Sumero-Accadian +has been contested by Halevy in a number of noteworthy works. M. Halevy +wishes to recognize in the so-called Sumerian documents the Semitic +tongue of the ordinary inscriptions, but written in a priestly syllabic +character subject to certain rules; this would be practically a +_cryptogram_, or rather an _allogram_. M. Halevy won over Messrs. Guyard +and Pognon in France, Delitzsch and a part of the Delitzsch school +in Germany, to his view of the facts. The controversy, which has been +carried on on both sides with a somewhat unnecessary vehemence, still +rages; it has been simplified quite recently by Delitzcsh's return to +the Sumerian theory. Without reviewing the arguments in detail, and +while doing full justice to the profound learning displayed by M. +Halevy, I feel forced to declare with Tiele that his criticisms "oblige +scholars to carefully reconsider all that has been taken as proved in +these matters, but that they do not warrant us in rejecting as untenable +the hypothesis, still a very probable one, according to which the +difference in the graphic systems corresponds to a real difference in. +idiom." + +Their country must have presented at the beginning very much the same +aspect of disorder and neglect which it offers to modern eyes. It was +a flat interminable moorland stretching away to the horizon, there to +begin again seemingly more limitless than ever, with, no rise or fall in +the ground to break the dull monotony; clumps of palm trees and slender +mimosas, intersected by lines of water gleaming in the distance, then +long patches of wormwood and mallow, endless vistas of burnt-up plain, +more palms and more mimosas, make up the picture of the land, whose +uniform soil consists of rich, stiff, heavy clay, split up by the heat +of the sun into a network of deep narrow fissures, from which the +shrubs and wild herbs shoot forth each year in spring-time. By an almost +imperceptible slope it falls gently away from north to south towards +the Persian Gulf, from east to west towards the Arabian plateau. The +Euphrates flows through it with unstable and changing course, between +shifting banks which it shapes and re-shapes from season to season. + +[Illustration: 025.jpg GIGANTIC CHALDAEAN REEDS] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from an Assyrian bas-relief of the + palace of Nimrud. + +The slightest impulse of its current encroaches on them, breaks through +them, and makes openings for streamlets, the majority of which are +clogged up and obliterated by the washing away of their margins, almost +as rapidly as they are formed. Others grow wider and longer, and, +sending out branches, are transformed into permanent canals or regular +rivers, navigable at certain seasons. They meet on the left bank +detached offshoots of the Tigris, and after wandering capriciously in +the space between the two rivers, at last rejoin their parent stream: +such are the Shatt-el-Hai and the Shatt-en-Nil. The overflowing waters +on the right bank, owing to the fall of the land, run towards the +low limestone hills which shut in the basin of the Euphrates in the +direction of the desert; they are arrested at the foot of these hills, +and are diverted on to the low-lying ground, where they lose themselves +in the morasses, or hollow out a series of lakes along its borders, +the largest of which, Bahr-i-Nedjif, is shut in on three sides by steep +cliffs, and rises or falls periodically with the floods. A broad canal, +which takes its origin in the direction of Hit at the beginning of the +alluvial plain, bears with it the overflow, and, skirting the lowest +terraces of the Arabian chain, runs almost parallel to the Euphrates. In +proportion as the canal proceeds southward the ground sinks still lower, +and becomes saturated with the overflowing waters, until, the banks +gradually disappearing, the whole neighbourhood is converted into a +morass. The Euphrates and its branches do not at all times succeed in +reaching the sea: they are lost for the most part in vast lagoons to +which the tide comes up, and in its ebb bears their waters away with +it. Reeds grow there luxuriantly in enormous beds, and reach sometimes +a height of from thirteen to sixteen feet; banks of black and putrid mud +emerge amidst the green growth, and give off deadly emanations. Winter +is scarcely felt here: snow is unknown, hoar-frost is rarely seen, +but sometimes in the morning a thin film of ice covers the marshes, to +disappear under the first rays of the sun.* + + * Loftus attributes the lowering of the temperature during + the winter to the wind blowing over a soil impregnated with + saltpetre. "We were," he says, "in a kind of immense + freezing chamber." + +[Illustration: 027.jpg THE MARSHES ABOUT THE CONFLUENCE OF THE KERKHA +AND TIGRIS.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a sketch by J. Dieulafoy. +For six weeks in November and December there is much rain: after this +period there are only occasional showers, occurring at longer and longer +intervals until May, when they entirely cease, and the summer sets in, +to last until the following November. There are almost six continuous +months of depressing and moist heat, which overcomes both men and +animals and makes them incapable of any constant effort.* Sometimes +a south or east wind suddenly arises, and bearing with it across the +fields and canals whirlwinds of sand, burns up in its passage the little +verdure which the sun had spared. Swarms of locusts follow in its train, +and complete the work of devastation. A sound as of distant rain is at +first heard, increasing in intensity as the creatures approach. Soon +their thickly concentrated battalions fill the heavens on all sides, +flying with slow and uniform motion at a great height. They at length +alight, cover everything, devour everything, and, propagating their +species, die within a few days: nothing, not a blade of vegetation, +remains on the region where they alighted. + + * Loftus says that he himself had witnessed in the + neighbourhood of Bagdad during the daytime birds perched on + the palm trees in an exhausted condition, and panting with + open beaks. The inhabitants of Bagdad during the summer pass + their nights on the housetops, and the hours of day in + passages within, expressly constructed to protect them from + the heat. + +Notwithstanding these drawbacks, the country was not lacking in +resources. The soil was almost as fertile as the loam of Egypt, and, +like the latter, rewarded a hundredfold the labour of the inhabitants.* +Among the wild herbage which spreads over the country in the spring, +and clothes it for a brief season with flowers, it was found that some +plants, with a little culture, could be rendered useful to men and +beasts. There were ten or twelve different species of pulse to choose +from--beans, 'lentils, chick-peas, vetches, kidney beans, onions, +cucumbers, egg-plants, "gombo," and pumpkins. From the seed of the +sesame an oil was expressed which served for food, while the castor-oil +plant furnished that required for lighting. The safflower and henna +supplied the women with dyes for the stuffs which they manufactured from +hemp and flax. Aquatic plants were more numerous than on the banks +of the Nile, but they did not occupy such an important place among +food-stuffs. The "lily bread" of the Pharaohs would have seemed meagre +fare to people accustomed from early times to wheaten bread. Wheat and +barley are considered to be indigenous on the plains of the Euphrates; +it was supposed to be here that they were first cultivated in Western +Asia, and that they spread from hence to Syria, Egypt, and the whole +of Europe.** "The soil there is so favourable to the growth of cereals, +that it yields usually two hundredfold, and in places of exceptional +fertility three hundredfold. The leaves of the wheat and barley have a +width of four digits. As for the millet and sesame, which in altitude +are as great as trees, I will not state their height, although I know +it from experience, being convinced that those who have not lived in +Babylonia would regard my statement with incredulity." Herodotus in his +enthusiasm exaggerated the matter, or perhaps, as a general rule, he +selected as examples the exceptional instances which had been mentioned +to him: at present wheat and barley give a yield to the husbandman of +some thirty or forty fold. + + * Olivier, who was a physician and naturalist, and had + visited Egypt as well as Mesopotamia, thought that Babylonia + was somewhat less fertile than Egypt. Loftus, who was + neither, and had not visited Egypt, declares, on the + contrary, that the banks of the Euphrates are no less + productive than those of the Nile. + + ** Native traditions collected by Berossus confirm this, and + the testimony of Olivier is usually cited as falling in with + that of the Chaldaean writer. Olivier is considered, indeed, + to have discovered wild cereals in Mesopotamia. Pie only + says, however, that on the banks of the Euphrates above Anah + he had met with "wheat, barley, and spelt in a kind of + ravine;" from the context it clearly follows that these were + plants which had reverted to a wild state--instances of + which have been observed several times in Mesopotamia. A. de + Oandolle admitted the Mesopotamian origin of the various + species of wheat and barley. + +[Illustration: 030.jpg THE GATHERING OF THE SPATHES OF THE MALE PALM +TREE] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a cylinder in the Museum at the + Hague. The original measures almost an inch in height. + +"The date palm meets all the other needs of the population; they make +from it a kind of bread, wine, vinegar, honey, cakes, and numerous kinds +of stuffs; the smiths use the stones of its fruit for charcoal; these +same stones, broken and macerated, are given as a fattening food to +cattle and sheep." Such a useful tree was tended with a loving care, +the vicissitudes in its growth were observed, and its reproduction was +facilitated by the process of shaking the flowers of the male palm over +those of the female: the gods themselves had taught this artifice to +men, and they were frequently represented with a bunch of flowers in +their right hand, in the attitude assumed by a peasant in fertilizing +a palm tree. Fruit trees were everywhere mingled with ornamental +trees--the fig, apple, almond, walnut, apricot, pistachio, vine, with +the plane tree, cypress, tamarisk, and acacia; in the prosperous period +of the country the plain of the Euphrates was a great orchard which +extended uninterruptedly from the plateau of Mesopotamia to the shores +of the Persian Gulf. + +The flora would not have been so abundant if the fauna had been +sufficient for the supply of a large population. A considerable +proportion of the tribes on the Lower Euphrates lived for a long time +on fish only. They consumed them either fresh, salted, or smoked: they +dried them in the sun, crushed them in a mortar, strained the pulp +through linen, and worked it up into a kind of bread or into cakes. The +barbel and carp attained a great size in these sluggish waters, and if +the Chalaeans, like the Arabs who have succeeded them in these regions, +clearly preferred these fish above others, they did not despise at the +same time such less delicate species as the eel, murena, silurus, and +even that singular gurnard whose habits are an object of wonder to our +naturalists. This fish spends its existence usually in the water, but +a life in the open air has no terrors for it: it leaps out on the bank, +climbs trees without much difficulty, finds a congenial habitat on the +banks of mud exposed by the falling tide, and basks there in the sun, +prepared to vanish in the ooze in the twinkling of an eye if some +approaching bird should catch sight of it. Pelicans, herons, cranes, +storks, cormorants, hundreds of varieties of seagulls, ducks, swans, +wild geese, secure in the possession of an inexhaustible supply of food, +sport and prosper among the reeds. The ostrich, greater bustard, the +common and red-legged partridge and quail, find their habitat on the +borders of the desert; while the thrush, blackbird, ortolan, pigeon, +and turtle-dove abound on every side, in spite of daily onslaughts from +eagles, hawks, and other birds of prey. + +[Illustration: 032.jpg A WINGED GENIUS HOLDING IN HIS HAND THE SPATHE OF +THE MALE DATE-PALM.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a bas-relief from Nimrud, in + the British Museum. + +[Illustration: 033.jpg THE HEAVILY MANED LION WOUNDED BY AN ARROW AND +VOMITING BLOOD.] + +Snakes are found here and there, but they are for the most part of +innocuous species: three poisonous varieties only are known, and their +bite does not produce such terrible consequences as that of the horned +viper or Egyptian uraeus. There are two kinds of lion--one without mane, +and the other hooded, with a heavy mass of black and tangled hair: the +proper signification of the old Chaldaean name was "the great 'dog," and +they have, indeed, a greater resemblance to large dogs than to the +red lions of Africa.* They fly at the approach of man; they betake +themselves in the daytime to retreats among the marshes or in the +thickets which border the rivers, sallying forth at night, like +the jackal, to scour the country. Driven to bay, they turn upon the +assailant and fight desperately. The Chaldaean kings, like the Pharaohs, +did not shrink from entering into a close conflict with them, +and boasted of having rendered a service to their subjects by the +destruction of many of these beasts. + +* The Sumerian name of the lion is ur-malch "the great dog." The best +description of the first-mentioned species is still that of Olivier, who +saw in the house oL the Pasha of Bagdad five of them in captivity; cf. +Layard, Nineveh and Babylon, p. 487. Father Scheil tells me the lions +have disappeared completely since the last twenty years. + +[Illustration: 034.jpg THE URUS IN ACT OF CHARGING] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from an Assyrian bas-relief from + Nimrud (Layard, Monuments of Nineveh, 1st series, pi. 11). + +[Illustration: 035.jpg a herd of onagers pursued by dogs and wounded by +arrows.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a bas-relief in the British + Museum. + +The elephant seems to have roamed for some time over the steppes of +the middle Euphrates;* there is no indication of its presence after the +XIIIth century before our era, and from that time forward it was merely +an object of curiosity brought at great expense from distant countries. +This is not the only instance of animals which have disappeared in +the course of centuries; the rulers of Nineveh were so addicted to the +pursuit of the urus that they ended by exterminating it. Several sorts +of panthers and smaller felidae had their lairs in the thickets of +Mesopotamia. The wild ass and onager roamed in small herds between the +Balikh and the Tigris. Attempts were made, it would seem, at a very +early period to tame them and make use of them to draw chariots; but +this attempt either did not succeed at all, or issued in such uncertain +results, that it was given up as soon as other less refractory animals +were made the subjects of successful experiment. + + * The existence of the elephant in Mesopotamia and Northern + Syria is well established by the Egyptian inscription of + Amenemhabi in the XVth century before our era. + +[Illustration: 036.jpg THE CHIEF DOMESTIC ANIMALS OP THE REGIONS OF THE +EUPHRATES.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from an Assyrian bas-relief from + Kouyunjik. + +The wild boar, and his relative, the domestic hog, inhabited the +morasses. Assyrian sculptors amused themselves sometimes by representing +long gaunt sows making their way through the cane-brakes, followed by +their interminable offspring. The hog remained here, as in Egypt, in +a semi-tamed condition, and the people were possessed of only a small +number of domesticated animals besides the dog--namely, the ass, ox, +goat, and sheep; the horse and camel were at first unknown, and were +introduced at a later period.* + +[Illustration: 037.jpg THE SOW AND HER LITTER MAKING THEIR WAY THROUGH A +BED OF REEDS.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a bas-relief from Kouyunjik. + + * The horse is denoted in the Assyrian texts by a group of + signs which mean "the ass of the East," and the camel by + other signs in which the character for "ass" also appears. + The methods of rendering these two names show that the + subjects of them were unknown in the earliest times; the + epoch of their introduction is uncertain. A chariot drawn by + horses appears on the "Stele of the Vultures." Camels are + mentioned among the booty obtained from the Bedouin of the + desert. + +We know nothing of the efforts which the first inhabitants--Sumerians +and Semites--had to make in order to control the waters and to bring the +land under culture: the most ancient monuments exhibit them as already +possessors of the soil, and in a forward state of civilization.* Their +chief cities were divided into two groups: one in the south, in the +neighbourhood of the sea; the other in a northern direction, in the +region where the Euphrates and Tigris are separated from each other by +merely a narrow strip of land. The southern group consisted of seven, of +which Eridu lay nearest to the coast. This town stood on the left bank +of the Euphrates, at a point which is now called Abu-Shahrein. A little +to the west, on the opposite bank, but at some distance from the stream, +the mound of Mugheir marks the site of Uru, the most important, if not +the oldest, of the southern cities. Lagash occupied the site of the +modern Telloh to the north of Eridu, not far from the Shatt-el-Hai; +Nisin and Mar, Larsam and Uruk, occupied positions at short distances +from each other on the marshy ground which extends between the Euphrates +and the Shatt-en-Nil. The inscriptions mention here and there other +less important places, of which the ruins have not yet been +discovered--Zirlab and Shurippak, places of embarkation at the mouth +of the Euphrates for the passage of the Persian Gulf; and the island of +Dilmun, situated some forty leagues to the south in the centre of the +Salt Sea,--"Nar-Marratum." The northern group comprised Nipur, the +"incomparable;" Barsip, on the branch which flows parallel to the +Euphrates and falls into the Bahr-i-Nedjif; Babylon, the "gate of the +god," the "residence of life," the only metropolis of the Euphrates +region of which posterity never lost a reminiscence; Kishu, Kuta, +Agade;** and lastly the two Sipparas, that of Shamash and that of +Anunit. The earliest Chaldaean civilization was confined almost entirely +to the two banks of the Lower Euphrates: except at its northern +boundary, it did not reach the Tigris, and did not cross this river. +Separated from the rest of the world--on the east by the marshes which +border the river in its lower course, on the north by the badly watered +and sparsely inhabited table-land of Mesopotamia, on the west by the +Arabian desert--it was able to develop its civilization, as Egypt had +done, in an isolated area, and to follow out its destiny in peace. The +only point from which it might anticipate serious danger was on the +east, whence the Kashshi and the Elamites, organized into military +states, incessantly harassed it year after year by their attacks. The +Kashshi were scarcely better than half-civilized mountain hordes, but +the Elamites were advanced in civilization, and their capital, Susa, +vied with the richest cities of the Euphrates, Uru and Babylon, in +antiquity and magnificence. + + * For an ideal picture of what may have been the beginnings + of that civilization, see Delitzsch, Die Entstehung des + altesten Schriflssystems, p. 214, et seq. I will not enter + into the question as to whether it did or did not come by + sea to the mouths of the Euphrates and Tigris. The legend of + the fish-god Oannes (Berossus, frag. 1), which seems to + conceal some indication on the subject, is merely a + mythological tradition, from which it would be wrong to + deduce historical conclusions. + + ** Agade, or Agane, has been identified with one of the two + towns of which Sippara is made up, more especially with that + which was called Anunit Sippara; the reading Agadi, Agacle, + was especially assumed to lead to its identification with + the Accad of _Genesis x. 10_, and with the Akkad of native + tradition. This opinion has been generally abandoned by + Assyriologists, and Agane has not yet found a site. Was it + only a name for Babylon? + +[Illustration: 040.jpg MAP OF CHALDAEA] + +There was nothing serious to fear from the Guti, on the branch of the +Tigris to the north-east, or from the Shuti to the north of these; they +were merely marauding tribes, and, however troublesome they might be +to their neighbours in their devastating incursions, they could not +compromise the existence of the country, or bring it into subjection. +It would appear that the Chaldseans had already begun to encroach upon +these tribes and to establish colonies among them--El-Ashshur on the +banks of the Tigris, Harran on the furthest point of the Mesopotamian +plain, towards the sources of the Balikh. Beyond these were vague and +unknown regions--Tidanum, Martu, the sea of the setting sun, the vast +territories of Milukhkha and Magan.* Egypt, from the time they were +acquainted with its existence, was a semi-fabulous country at the ends +of the earth. + + * The question concerning Milukhkha and Magan has exercised + Assyriologists for twenty years. The prevailing opinion + appears to be that which identifies Magan with the Sinaitic + Peninsula, and Milukhkha with the country to the north of + Magan as far as the Wady Arish and the Mediterranean; others + maintain, not the theory of Delitzsch, according to whom + Magan and Milukhkha are synonyms for Shumir and Akkad, and + consequently two of the great divisions of Babylonia, but an + analogous hypothesis, in which they are regarded as + districts to the west of the Euphrates, either in Chaldaean + regions or on the margin of the desert, or even in the + desert itself towards the Sinaitic Peninsula. What we know + of the texts induces me, in common with H. Rawlinson, to + place these countries on the shores of the Persian Gulf, + between the mouth of the Euphrates and the Bahrein islands; + possibly the Makse and the Melangitso of classical + historians and geographers were the descendants of the + people of Magan (Makan) and Milukhkha (Melugga), who had + been driven towards the entrance to the Persian Gulf by some + such event as the increase in these regions of the Kashdi + (Chaldaeans). The names, emigrated to the western parts of + Arabia and to the Sinaitic Peninsula in after-times, as the + name of India passed to America in the XVIth century of our + era. + +How long did it take to bring this people out of savagery, and to +build up so many flourishing cities? The learned did not readily resign +themselves to a confession of ignorance on the subject. As they +had depicted the primordial chaos, the birth of the gods, and their +struggles over the creation, so they related unhesitatingly everything +which had happened since the creation of mankind, and they laid claim to +being able to calculate the number of centuries which lay between their +own day and the origin of things. The tradition to which most credence +was attached in the Greek period at Babylon, that which has been +preserved for us in the histories of Berossue, asserts that there was +a somewhat long interval between the manifestation of Oannes and +the foundation of a dynasty. The first king was Aloros of Babylon, a +Chaldaean of whom nothing is related except that he was chosen by the +divinity himself to be a shepherd of the people. He reigned for ten +sari, amounting in all to 36,000 years; for the saros is 3600 years, the +ner 600 years, and the soss 60 years. + +[Illustration: 041.jpg TWO FISH-LIKE DEITIES OF THE CHALDAEANS.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from an intaglio in the British Museum. + +After the death of Aloros, his son Alaparos ruled for three sari, after +which Amillaros, of the city of Pantibibla, reigned thirteen sari. It +was under him that there issued from the Bed Sea a second Annedotos, +resembling Oannes in his semi-divine shape, half man and half fish. +After him Ammenon, also from Pantibibla, a Chaldaean, ruled for a term +of twelve sari; under him, they say, the mysterious Oannes appeared. +Afterwards Amelagaros of Pantibibla governed for eighteen sari; then +Davos, the shepherd from Pantibibla, reigned ten sari: under him there +issued from the Red Sea a fourth Annedotos, who had a form similar to +the others, being made up of man and fish. After him Bvedoranchos of +Pantibibla reigned for eighteen sari; in his time there issued yet +another monster, named Anodaphos, from the sea. These various monsters +developed carefully and in detail that which Oannes had set forth in a +brief way. Then Amempsinos of Larancha, a Chalaean, reigned ten sari; and +Obartes, also a Chaldaean, of Larancha, eight sari. Finally, on the death +of Obartes, his son Xisuthros held the sceptre for eighteen sari. It +was under him that the great deluge took place. Thus ten kings are to +be reckoned in all, and the duration of their combined reigns amounts +to one hundred and twenty sari. From the beginning of the world to the +Deluge they reckoned 691,200 years, of which 259,200 had passed +before the coming of Aloros, and the remaining 432,000 were generously +distributed between this prince and his immediate successors: the Greek +and Latin writers had certainly a fine occasion for amusement over these +fabulous numbers of years which the Chaldaeans assigned to the lives and +reigns of their first kings. + +Men in the mean time became wicked; they lost the habit of offering +sacrifices to the gods, and the gods, justly indignant at this +negligence, resolved to be avenged.* Now, Shamashnapishtim I was +reigning at this time in Shurippak, the "town of the ship:" he and +all his family were saved, and he related afterwards to one of his +descendants how Ea had snatched him from the disaster which fell upon +his people.** "Shurippak, the city which thou thyself knowest, is +situated on the bank of the Euphrates; it was already an ancient town +when the hearts of the gods who resided in it impelled them to bring the +deluge upon it--the great gods as many as they are; their father Anu, +their counsellor Bel the warrior, their throne-bearer Ninib, their +prince Innugi. The master of wisdom, Ea, took his seat with them,*** +and, moved with pity, was anxious to warn Shamashnapishtim, his servant, +of the peril which threatened him;" but it was a very serious affair to +betray to a mortal a secret of heaven, and as he did not venture to do +so in a direct manner, his inventive mind suggested to him an artifice. + + * The account of Bcrossus implies this as a cause of the + Deluge, since he mentions the injunction imposed upon the + survivors by a mysterious voice to be henceforward + respectful towards the gods, [Greek word]. The Chalaean + account considers the Deluge to have been sent as a + punishment upon men for their sins against the gods, since + it represents towards the end (cf. p. 52 of this History) Ea + as reproaching Bel for having confounded the innocent and + the guilty in one punishment. + + ** The name of this individual has been read in various + ways: Shamashnapishtim, "sun of life," Sitnapishtim, "the + saved," and Pirnapishtim. In one passage at least we find, + in place of Shamashnapishtim, the name or epithet of + Aclrakhasis, or by inversion Khasisadra, which appears to + signify "the very shrewd," and is explained by the skill + with which he interpreted the oracle of Ea. Khasisadra is + most probably the form which the Greeks have transcribed by + Xisuthros, Sisuthros, Sisithes. + + *** The account of the Deluge covers the eleventh tablet of + the poem of Gilgames. The hero, threatened with death, + proceeds to rejoin his ancestor Shamashnapishtim to demand + from him the secret of immortality, and the latter tells him + the manner in which he escaped from the waters: he had saved + his life only at the expense of the destruction of men. The + text of it was published by Smith and by Haupt, fragment by + fragment, and then restored consecutively. The studies of + which it is the object would make a complete library. The + principal translations are those of Smith, of Oppert, of + Lenor-mant, of Haupt, of Jensen, of A. Jeremias, of + Sauveplane, and of Zimmern. + +[Illustration: 045.jpg Page with ONE OF THE TABLETS OF THE DELUGE +SERIES.] + + Facsimile by Faucher-Gudin, from the photograph published by + G. Smith, Chaldaean Account of the Deluge from terra-cotta + tablets found at Nineveh. + +He confided to a hedge of reeds the resolution that had been adopted:* +"Hedge, hedge, wall, wall! Hearken, hedge, and understand well, wall! +Man of Shurippak, son of Ubaratutu, construct a wooden house, build a +ship, abandon thy goods, seek life; throw away thy possessions, save thy +life, and place in the vessel all the seed of life. The ship which thou +shalt build, let its proportions be exactly measured, let its dimensions +and shape be well arranged, then launch it in the sea." Shamashnapishtim +heard the address to the field of reeds, or perhaps the reeds repeated +it to him. "I understood it, and I said to my master Ea 'The command, +O my master, which thou hast thus enunciated, I myself will respect it, +and I will execute it: but what shall I say to the town, the people and +the elders?'" Ea opened his mouth and spake; he said to his servant: +"Answer thus and say to them: 'Because Bel hates me, I will no longer +dwell in your town, and upon the land of Bel I will no longer lay my +head, but I will go upon the sea, and will dwell with Ea my master. Now +Bel will make rain to fall upon you, upon the swarm of birds and the +multitude of fishes, upon all the animals of the field, and upon all +the crops; but Ea will give you a sign: the god who rules the rain will +cause to fall upon you, on a certain evening, an abundant rain. When the +dawn of the next day appears, the deluge will begin, which will cover +the earth and drown all living things.'" Shamashnapishtim repeated the +warning to the people, but the people refused to believe it, and turned +him into ridicule. The work went rapidly forward: the hull was a hundred +and forty cubits long, the deck one hundred and forty broad; all the +joints were caulked with pitch and bitumen. A solemn festival was +observed at its completion, and the embarkation began.** "All that I +possessed I filled the ship with it all that I had of silver, I filled +it with it; all that I had of gold I filled it with it, all that I had +of the seed of life of every kind I filled it with it; I caused all +my family and my servants to go up into it; beasts of the field, wild +beasts of the field, I caused them to go up all together. Shamash had +given me a sign: 'When the god who rules the rain, in the evening shall +cause an abundant rain to fall, enter into the ship and close thy door.' +The sign was revealed: the god who rules the rain caused to fall one +night an abundant rain. The day, I feared its dawning; I feared to see +the daylight; I entered into the ship and I shut the door; that the ship +might be guided, I handed over to Buzur-Bel, the pilot, the great ark +and its fortunes." + + * The sense of this passage is far from being certain; I + have followed the interpretation proposed, with some + variations, by Pinches, by Haupt, and by Jensen. The + stratagem at once recalls the history of King Midas, and the + talking reeds which knew the secret of his ass's ears. In + the version of Berossus, it is Kronos who plays the part + here assigned to Ea in regard to Xisuthros. + + ** The text is mutilated, and does not furnish enough + information to follow in every detail the building of the + ark. From what we can understand, the vessel of + Shamashnapishtim was a kind of immense kelek, decked, but + without masts or rigging of any sort. The text identifies + the festival celebrated by the hero before the embarkation + with the festival Akitu of Merodach, at Babylon, during + which "Nebo, the powerful son, sailed from Borsippa to + Babylon in the bark of the river Asmu, of beauty." The + embarkation of Nebo and his voyage on the stream had + probably inspired the information according to which the + embarkation of Shamashnapishtim was made the occasion of a + festival Akitu, celebrated at Shurippak; the time of the + Babylonian festival was probably thought to coincide with + the anniversary of the Deluge. + +"As soon as the morning became clear, a black cloud arose from the +foundations of heaven. Bamman growled in its bosom; Nebo and Marduk +ran before it--ran like two throne-bearers over hill and dale. Nera +the Great tore up the stake to which the ark was moored. Ninib came up +quickly; he began the attack; the Anunnaki raised their torches and made +the earth to tremble at their brilliancy; the tempest of Ramman scaled +the heaven, changed all the light to darkness, flooded the earth like a +lake.* For a whole day the hurricane raged, and blew violently over the +mountains and over the country; the tempest rushed upon men like the +shock of an army, brother no longer beheld brother, men recognized each +other no more. + + * The progress of the tempest is described as the attack of + the gods, who had resolved on the destruction of men. Ramman + is the thunder which growls in the cloud; Nebo, Merodach, + Nera the Great (Nergal), and Ninib, denote the different + phases of the hurricane from the moment when the wind gets + up until it is at its height; the Anunnaki represent the + lightning which flashes carelessly across the heaven. + +[Illustration: 048.jpg SHAMASHNAPISHTIM SHUT INTO THE ARK.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a Chalaean intaglio. + +In heaven, the gods were afraid of the deluge;* they betook themselves +to flight, they clambered to the firmament of Anu; the gods, howling +like dogs, cowered upon the parapet.** Ishtar wailed like a woman +in travail; she cried out, "the lady of life, the goddess with the +beautiful voice: 'The past returns to clay, because I have prophesied +evil before the gods! Prophesying evil before the gods, I have +counselled the attack to bring my men to nothing; and these to whom I +myself have given birth, where are they? Like the spawn of fish they +encumber the sea! 'The gods wept with her over the affair of the +Anunnaki;' the gods, in the place where they sat weeping, their lips +were closed." It was not pity only which made their tears to flow: +there were mixed up with it feelings of regret and fears for the future. +Mankind once destroyed, who would then make the accustomed offerings? +The inconsiderate anger of Bel, while punishing the impiety of their +creatures, had inflicted injury upon themselves. "Six days and nights +the wind continued, the deluge and the tempest raged. The seventh day at +daybreak the storm abated; the deluge, which had carried on warfare like +an army, ceased, the sea became calm and the hurricane disappeared, the +deluge ceased. I surveyed the sea with my eyes, raising my voice; but +all mankind had returned to clay, neither fields nor woods could be +distinguished.*** I opened the hatchway and the light fell upon my face; +I sank down, I cowered, I wept, and my tears ran down my cheeks when I +beheld the world all terror and all sea. At the end of twelve days, a +point of land stood up from the waters, the ship touched the land of +Nisir:**** the mountain of Nisir stopped the ship and permitted it to +float no longer. One day, two days, the mountain of Nisir stopped the +ship and permitted it to float no longer. + + * The gods enumerated above alone took part in the drama of + the Deluge: they were the confederates and emissaries of + Bel. The others were present as spectators of the disaster, + and were terrified. + + ** The upper part of the mountain wall is here referred to, + upon which the heaven is supported. There was a narrow space + between the escarpment and the place upon which the vault of + the firmament rested: the Babylonian poet represented the + gods as crowded like a pack of hounds upon this parapet, and + beholding from it the outburst of the tempest and the + waters. + + ***The translation is uncertain: the text refers to a legend + which has not come down to us, in which Ishtar is related to + have counselled the destruction of men. + + **** The Anunnaki represent here the evil genii whom the + gods that produced the deluge had let loose, and whom + Ramman, Nebo, Merodach, Nergal, and Ninib, all the followers + of Bel, had led to the attack upon men: the other deities + shared the fears and grief of Ishtar in regard to the + ravages which these Anunnaki had brought about (cf. below, + pp. 141-143 of this History). + + + +Three days, four days, the mountain of Nisir* stopped the ship and +permitted it to float no longer. Five days, six days, the mountain of +Nisir stopped the ship and permitted it to float no longer. The seventh +day, at dawn, I took out a dove and let it go: the dove went, turned +about, and as there was no place to alight upon, came back. I took out a +swallow and let it go: the swallow went, turned about, and as there was +no place to alight upon, came back. I took out a raven and let it go: +the raven went, and saw that the water had abated, and came near the +ship flapping its wings, croaking, and returned no more." +Shamashnapishtim escaped from the deluge, but he did not know whether +the divine wrath was appeased, or what would be done with him when it +became known that he still lived.** He resolved to conciliate the +gods by expiatory ceremonies. "I sent forth the inhabitants of the ark +towards the four winds, I made an offering, I poured out a propitiatory +libation on the summit of the mountain. I set up seven and seven +vessels, and I placed there some sweet-smelling rushes, some cedar-wood, +and storax." He thereupon re-entered the ship to await there the effect +of his sacrifice. + + * I have adopted, in the translation of this difficult + passage, the meaning suggested by Haupt, according to which + it ought to be translated, "The field makes nothing more + than one with the mountain;" that is to say, "mountains and + fields are no longer distinguishable one from another." I + have merely substituted for mountain the version wood, piece + of land covered with trees, which Jensen has suggested. + + ** The mountain of Nisir is replaced in the version of + Berossus by the Gordyaean mountains of classical geography; a + passage of Assur-nazir-pal informs us that it was situated + between the Tigris and the Great Zab, according to Delitzsch + between 35 deg. and 36 deg. N. latitude. The Assyrian-speaking + people interpreted the name as _Salvation_, and a play upon + words probably decided the placing upon its slopes the + locality where those _saved_ from the deluge landed on the + abating of the waters. Fr. Lenormant proposes to identify it + with the peak Rowandiz. + +The gods, who no longer hoped for such a wind-fall, accepted the +sacrifice with a wondering joy. "The gods sniffed up the odour, the gods +sniffed up the excellent odour, the gods gathered like flies above the +offering. "When Ishtar, the mistress of life, came in her turn, she held +up the great amulet which Anu had made for her."* She was still furious +against those who had determined upon the destruction of mankind, +especially against Bel: "These gods, I swear it on the necklace of my +neck! I will not forget them; these days I will remember, and will not +forget them for ever. Let the other gods come quickly to take part in +the offering. Bel shall have no part in the offering, for he was not +wise: but he has caused the deluge, and he has devoted my people to +destruction." Bel himself had not recovered his temper: "When he arrived +in his turn and saw the ship, he remained immovable before it, and his +heart was filled with rage against the gods of heaven. 'Who is he who +has come out of it living? No man must survive the destruction!'" The +gods had everything to fear from his anger: Ninib was eager to exculpate +himself, and to put the blame upon the right person. Ea did not disavow +his acts: "he opened his mouth and spake; he said to Bel the warrior: +'Thou, the wisest among the gods, O warrior, why wert thou not wise, and +didst cause the deluge? The sinner, make him responsible for his sin; +the criminal, make him responsible for his crime: but be calm, and do +not cut off all; be patient, and do not drown all. What was the good of +causing the deluge? A lion had only to come to decimate the people. +What was the good of causing the deluge? A leopard had only to come to +decimate the people. What was the good of causing the deluge? Famine +had only to present itself to desolate the country. What was the good +of causing the deluge? Nera the Plague had only to come to destroy the +people. As for me, I did, not reveal the judgment of the gods: I caused +Khasisadra to dream a dream, and he became aware of the judgment of the +gods, and then he made his resolve.'" Bel was pacified at the words of +Ea: "he went up into the interior of the ship; he took hold of my hand +and made me go up, even me; he made my wife go up, and he pushed her to +my side; he turned our faces towards him, he placed himself between +us, and blessed us: 'Up to this time Shamashnapishtim was a man: +henceforward let Shamashnapishtim and his wife be reverenced like us, +the gods, and let Shamashnapishtim dwell afar off, at the mouth of the +seas, and he carried us away and placed us afar off, at the mouth of the +seas.'" Another form of the legend relates that by an order of the god, +Xisuthros, before embarking, had buried in the town of Sippara all the +books in which his ancestors had set forth the sacred sciences--books +of oracles and omens, "in which were recorded the beginning, the middle, +and the end. When he had disappeared, those of his companions who +remained on board, seeing that he did not return, went out and set off +in search of him, calling him by name. He did not show himself to them, +but a voice from heaven enjoined upon them to be devout towards the +gods, to return to Babylon and dig up the books in order that they might +be handed down to future generations; the voice also informed them that +the country in which they were was Armenia. They offered sacrifice in +turn, they regained their country on foot, they dug up the books of +Sippara and wrote many more; afterwards they refounded Babylon." It was +even maintained in the time of the Seleucido, that a portion of the ark +existed on one of the summits of the Gordyaean mountains.** Pilgrimages +were made to it, and the faithful scraped off the bitumen which covered +it, to make out of it amulets of sovereign virtue against evil spells. + +[Illustration: 051.jpg THE JUDI MOUNTAINS SOMETIMES IDENTIFIED WITH TUB +NTSIB MOUNTAINS.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a sketch by G. Smith, _Assyrian + Discoveries_, p. 108. + + * We are ignorant of the object which the goddess lifted up: + it may have been the sceptre surmounted by a radiating star, + such as we see on certain cylinders. Several Assyriologists + translate it arrows or lightning. Ishtar is, in fact, an + armed goddess who throws the arrow or lightning made by her + father Anu, the heaven. + + ** Bekossus, fragm. xv. The legend about the remains of the + ark has passed into Jewish tradition concerning the Deluge. + Nicholas of Damascus relates, like Berossus, that they were + still to be seen on the top of Mount Baris. From that time + they have been continuously seen, sometimes on one peak and + sometimes on another. In the last century they were pointed + out to Chardin, and the memory of them has not died out in + our own century. Discoveries of charcoal and bitumen, such + as those made at Gebel Judi, upon one of the mountains + identified with Nisir, probably explain many of these local + traditions. + +The chronicle of these fabulous times placed, soon after the abating of +the waters, the foundation of a new dynasty, as extraordinary or almost +as extraordinary in character as that before the flood. According to +Berossus it was of Chaldaean origin, and comprised eighty-six kings, who +bore rule during 34,080 years; the first two, Evechous and Khomasbelos, +reigned 2400 and 2700 years, while the later reigns did not exceed +the ordinary limits of human life. An attempt was afterwards made to +harmonize them with probability: the number of kings was reduced to +six, and their combined reigns to 225 years. This attempt arose from +a misapprehension of their true character; names and deeds, everything +connected with them belongs to myth and fiction only, and is irreducible +to history proper. They supplied to priests and poets material for +scores of different stories, of which several have come down to us in +fragments. Some are short, and serve as preambles to prayers or magical +formulas; others are of some length, and may pass for real epics. The +gods intervene in them, and along with kings play an important part. It +is Nera, for instance, the lord of the plague, who declares war against +mankind in order to punish them for having despised the authority of +Anu. He makes Babylon to feel his wrath first: "The children of Babel, +they were as birds, and the bird-catcher, thou wert he! thou takest them +in the net, thou enclosest them, thou decimatest them--hero Nera!" +One after the other he attacks the mother cities of the Euphrates and +obliges them to render homage to him--even Uruk, "the dwelling of Anu +and Ishtar--the town of the priestesses, of the _almehs_, and the sacred +courtesans; "then he turns upon the foreign nations and carries his +ravages as far as Phoenicia. In other fragments, the hero Etana makes an +attempt to raise himself to heaven, and the eagle, his companion, flies +away with him, without, however, being able to bring the enterprise to +a successful issue. Nimrod and his exploits are known to us from the +Bible.* "He was a mighty hunter before the Lord: wherefore it is said, +Even as Nimrod the mighty hunter before the Lord. And the beginning of +his kingdom was Babel, and Erech, and Accad, and Calneh, in the land of +Shinar." Almost all the characteristics which are attributed by Hebrew +tradition to Nimrod we find in G-ilgames, King of Uruk and descendant of +the Shamashnapishtim who had witnessed the deluge.** + + * Genesis x. 9, 10. Among the Jews and Mussulmans a complete + cycle of legends have developed around Nimrod. He built the + Tower of Babel; he threw Abraham into a fiery furnace, and + he tried to mount to heaven on the back of an eagle. Sayce + and Grivel saw in Nimrod an heroic form of Merodach, the god + of Babylonia: the majority of living Assyriologists prefer + to follow Smith's example, and identify him with the hero + Gilgames. + + ** The name of this hero is composed of three signs, which + Smith provisionally rendered Isdubar--a reading which, + modified into Gishdhubar, Gistubar, is still retained by + many Assyriologists. There have been proposed one after + another the renderings Dhubar, Namrudu, Anamarutu, Numarad, + Namrasit, all of which exhibit in the name of the hero that + of Nimrod. Pinches discovered, in 1890, what appears to be + the true signification of the three signs,Gilgamesh, + Gilgames; Sayce and Oppert have compared this name with that + of Gilgamos, a Babylonian hero, of whom. AElian has preserved + the memory. A. Jeremias continued to reject both the reading + and the identification. + +Several copies of a poem, in which an unknown scribe had celebrated his +exploits, existed about the middle of the VIIth century before our era +in the Royal Library at Nineveh; they had been transcribed by order of +Assur-banipal from a more ancient copy, and the fragments of them which +have come down to us, in spite of their lacunae, enable us to restore +the original text, if not in its entirety, at least in regard to +the succession of events. They were divided into twelve episodes +corresponding with the twelve divisions of the year, and the ancient +Babylonian author was guided in his choice of these divisions by +something more than mere chance. Gilgames, at first an ordinary mortal +under the patronage of the gods, had himself become a god and son of the +goddess Aruru: "he had seen the abyss, he had learned everything that +is kept secret and hidden, he had even made known to men what had taken +place before the deluge." The sun, who had protected him in his human +condition, had placed him beside himself on the judgment-seat, and +delegated to him authority to pronounce decisions from which there was +no appeal: he was, as it were, a sun on a small scale, before whom the +kings, princes, and great ones of the earth humbly bowed their heads.* +The scribes had, therefore, some authority for treating the events of +his life after the model of the year, and for expressing them in twelve +chants, which answered to the annual course of the sun through the +twelve months. + + * The identity of Gilgames with the Accadian fire-god, or + rather with the sun, was recognized from the first by H. + Rawlinson, and has been accepted since by almost all + Assyriologists. A tablet brought back by G. Smith, called + attention to by Fr. Delitzsch, and published by Haupt, + contains the remains of a hymn addressed to Gilgames, "the + powerful king, the king of the Spirits of the Earth." + +[Illustration: 057.jpg GILGAMES STRANGLES A LION.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from an Assyrian bas-relief from + Khorsabad, in the Museum of the Louvre + +The whole story is essentially an account of his struggles with Ishtar, +and the first pages reveal him as already at issue with the goddess. His +portrait, such as the monuments have preserved it for us, is singularly +unlike the ordinary type: one would be inclined to regard it as +representing an individual of a different race, a survival of some very +ancient nation which had held rule on the plains of the Euphrates before +the arrival of the Sumerian or Semitic* tribes. + + * Smith (The Chaldaean Account of Genesis, p. 194) remarked + the difference between the representations of Gilgames and + the typical Babylonian: he concluded from this that the hero + was of Ethiopian origin. Hommel declares that his features + have neither a Sumerian nor Semitic aspect, and that they + raise an insoluble question in ethnology. + +His figure is tall, broad, muscular to an astonishing degree, and +expresses at once vigour and activity; his head is massive, bony, almost +square, with a somewhat flattened face, a large nose, and prominent +cheek-bones, the whole framed by an abundance of hair, and a thick beard +symmetrically curled. All the young men of Uruk, the well-protected, +were captivated by the prodigious strength and beauty of the hero; the +elders of the city betook themselves to Ishtar to complain of the state +of neglect to which the young generation had relegated them. "He has no +longer a rival in their hearts, but thy subjects are led to battle, and +Gilgames does not send one child back to his father. Night and day they +cry after him: 'It is he the shepherd of Uruk, the well-protected, he +is its shepherd and master, he the powerful, the perfect and the wise.'" +Even the women did not escape the general enthusiasm: "he leaves not a +single virgin to her mother, a single daughter to a warrior, a single +wife to her master. Ishtar heard their complaint, the gods heard it, and +cried with a loud voice to Aruru: 'It is thou, Aruru, who hast given him +birth; create for him now his fellow, that he may be able to meet him on +a day when it pleaseth him, in order that they may fight with each other +and Uruk may be delivered.'When Aruru heard them, she created in her +heart a man of Anu. Aruru washed her hands, took a bit of clay, cast it +upon the earth, kneaded it and created Babani, the warrior, the exalted +scion, the man of Ninib, whose whole body is covered with hair, whose +tresses are as long as those of a woman; the locks of his hair bristle +on his head like those on the corn-god; he is clad in a vestment +like that of the god of the fields; he browses with the gazelles, he +quenches his thirst with the beasts of the field, he sports with the +beasts of the waters." Frequent representations of Eabani are found upon +the monuments; he has the horns of a goat, the legs and tail of a bull.* +He possessed not only the strength of a brute, but his intelligence also +embraced all things, the past and the future: he would probably have +triumphed over Gilgames if Shamash had not succeeded in attaching them +to one another by an indissoluble tie of friendship. The difficulty was +to draw these two future friends together, and to bring them face to +face without their coming to blows; the god sent his courier Saidu, +the hunter, to study the habits of the monster, and to find out the +necessary means to persuade him to come down peaceably to Uruk. +"Saidu, the hunter, proceeded to meet Eabani near the entrance of the +watering-place. One day, two days, three days, Eabani met him at the +entrance of the watering-place. He perceived Saidu, and his countenance +darkened: he entered the enclosure, he became sad, he groaned, he cried +with a loud voice, his heart was heavy, his features were distorted, +sobs burst from his breast. The hunter saw from a distance that his face +was inflamed with anger," and judging it more prudent not to persevere +farther in his enterprise, returned to impart to the god what he had +observed. + + * Smith was the first, I believe, to compare his form to + that of a satyr or faun; this comparison is rendered more + probable by the fact that the modern inhabitants of Chaldaea + believe in the existence of similar monsters. A. Jeremias + places Eabani alongside Priapus, who is generally a god of + the fields, and a clever soothsayer. Following out these + ideas, we might compare our Eabani with the Graico-Roman + Proteus, who pastures the flocks of the sea, and whom it was + necessary to pursue and seize by force or cunning words to + compel him to give oracular predictions. + +[Illustration: 060.jpg GILGAMES FIGHTS, ON THE LEFT WITH A BULL, ON THE +RIGHT WITH EABANI.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a Chaldaean intaglio in the + Museum at the Hague. The original measures about 1 7/10 inch + in height. + +"I was afraid," said he, in finishing his narrative,* "and I did not +approach him. He had filled up the pit which I had dug to trap him, he +broke the nets which I had spread, he delivered from my hands the cattle +and the beasts of the field, he did not allow me to search the country +through." Shamash thought that where the strongest man might fail by the +employment of force, a woman might possibly succeed by the attractions +of pleasure; he commanded Saidu to go quickly to Uruk and there to +choose from among the priestesses of Ishtar one of the most beautiful.** +The hunter presented himself before Grilgames, recounted to him his +adventures, and sought his permission to take away with him one of the +sacred courtesans. "'Go, my hunter, take the priestess; when the beasts +come to the watering-place, let her display her beauty; he will see +her, he will approach her, and his beasts that troop around him will be +scattered.'"*** The hunter went, he took with him the priestess, he took +the straight road; the third day they arrived at the fatal plain. The +hunter and the priestess sat down to rest; one day, two days, they sat +at the entrance of the watering-place from whose waters Eabani drank +along with the animals, where he sported with the beasts of the water. + + * Haupt, Das Babylonische Nimrodepos, p. 9, 11. 42-50. The + beginning of each line is destroyed, and the translation of + the whole is only approximate. + + ** The priestesses of Ishtar were young and beautiful women, + devoted to the service of the goddess and her worshippers. + Besides the title _qadishtu,_ priestess, they bore various + names, _kizireti, ukhati, kharimati_; the priestess who + accompanied Saidu was an _ukhat_. + + *** As far as can be guessed from the narrative, interrupted + as it is by so many lacunae, the power of Eabani over the + beasts of the field seems to have depended on his + continence. From the moment in which he yields to his + passions the beasts fly from him as they would do from an + ordinary mortal; there is then no other resource for him but + to leave the solitudes to live among men in towns. This + explains the means devised by Shamash against him: cf. in + the _Arabian Nights_ the story of Shehabeddin. + +"When Eabani arrived, he who dwells in the mountains, and who browses +upon the grass like the gazelles, who drinks with the animals, who +sports with the beasts of the water, the priestess saw the satyr." She +was afraid and blushed, but the hunter recalled her to her duty. "It is +he, priestess. Undo thy garment, show him thy form, that he may be +taken with thy beauty; be not ashamed, but deprive him of his soul. He +perceives thee, he is rushing towards thee, arrange thy garment; he is +coming upon thee, receive him with every art of woman; his beasts +which troop around him will be scattered, and he will press thee to his +breast." The priestess did as she was commanded; she received him with +every art of woman, and he pressed her to his breast. Six days and seven +nights, Eabani remained near the priestess, his well-beloved. When he +got tired of pleasure he turned his face towards his cattle, and he saw +that the gazelles had turned aside and that the beasts of the field had +fled far from him. Eabani was alarmed, he fell into a swoon, his knees +became stiff because his cattle had fled from him. While he lay as if +dead, he heard the voice of the priestess: he recovered his senses, +he came to himself full of love; he seated himself at the feet of the +priestess, he looked into her face, and while the priestess spoke his +ears listened. For it was to him the priestess spoke--to him, Eabani. +"Thou who art superb, Eabani, as a god, why dost thou live among +the beasts of the field? Come, I will conduct thee to Uruk the +well-protected, to the glorious house, the dwelling of Anu and +Ishtar--to the place where is Gilgames, whose strength is supreme, and +who, like a Urus, excels the heroes in strength." While she thus spoke +to him, he hung upon her words, he the wise of heart, he realized +by anticipation a friend. Eabani said to the priestess: "Let us go, +priestess; lead me to the glorious and holy abode of Anu and Ishtar--to +the place where is Gilgames, whose strength is supreme, and who, like +a Urus, prevails over the heroes by his strength. I will fight with him +and manifest to him my power; I will send forth a panther against Uruk, +and he must struggle with it."* The priestess conducted her prisoner +to Uruk, but the city at that moment was celebrating the festival of +Tammuz, and Gilgames did not care to interrupt the solemnities in order +to face the tasks to which Eabani had invited him: what was the use of +such trials since the gods themselves had deigned to point out to him in +a dream the line of conduct he was to pursue, and had taken up the +cause of their children. Shamash, in fact, began the instruction of the +monster, and sketched an alluring picture of the life which awaited him +if he would agree not to return to his mountain home. Not only would +the priestess belong to him for ever, having none other than him for +husband, but Gilgames would shower upon him riches and honours. "He will +give thee wherein to sleep a great bed cunningly wrought; he will seat +thee on his divan, he will give thee a place on his left hand, and +the princes of the earth shall kiss thy feet, the people of Uruk +shall grovel on the ground before thee." It was by such flatteries +and promises for the future that Gilgames gained the affection of his +servant Eabani, whom he loved for ever. + + * I have softened down a good deal the account of the + seduction, which is described with a sincerity and precision + truly primitive. + +Shamash had reasons for being urgent. Khumbaba, King of Elam, had +invaded the country of the Euphrates, destroyed the temples, and +substituted for the national worship the cult of foreign deities;* the +two heroes in concert could alone check his advance, and kill him. They +collected their troops, set out on the march, having learned from a +female magician that the enemy had concealed himself in a sacred grove. +They entered it in disguise, "and stopped in rapture for a moment before +the cedar trees; they contemplated the height of them, they contemplated +the thickness of them; the place where Khumbaba was accustomed to walk +up and down with rapid strides, alleys were made in it, paths kept up +with great care. They saw at length the hill of cedars, the abode of the +gods, the sanctuary of Irnini, and before the hill, a magnificent cedar, +and pleasant grateful shade." They surprised Khumbaba at the moment when +he was about to take his outdoor exercise, cut off his head, and came +back in triumph to Uruk.** "Gilgames brightened his weapons, he polished +his weapons. He put aside his war-harness, he put on his white garments, +he adorned himself with the royal insignia, and bound on the diadem: +Gilgames put his tiara on his head, and bound on his diadem." + + * Khumbaba contains the name of the Elamite god, Khumba, + whichenters into the composition of names of towns, like Ti- + Khumbi; or into those of princes, as Khumbanigash, + Khumbasundasa, Khumbasidh. The comparison between Khumbaba + and Combabos, the hero of a singular legend, current in the + second century of our era, does not seem to be admissible, + at least for the present. The names agree well in sound, + but, as Oppert has rightly said, no event in the history of + Combabos finds a counterpart in anything we know of that of + Khumbaba up to the present. + + ** G. Smith places at this juncture Gilgames's accession to + the throne; this is not confirmed by the fragments of the + text known up to the present, and it is not even certain + that the poem relates anywhere the exaltation and coronation + of the hero. It would appear even that Gilgames is + recognized from the beginning as King of Uruk, the well- + protected. + +Ishtar saw him thus adorned, and the same passion consumed her which +inflames mortals.* "To the love of Gilgames she raised her eyes, the +mighty Ishtar, and she said, 'Come, Gilgames, be my husband, thou! Thy +love, give it to me, as a gift to me, and thou shalt be my spouse, and +I shall be thy wife. I will place thee in a chariot of lapis and gold, +with golden wheels and mountings of onyx: thou shalt be drawn in it by +great lions, and thou shalt enter our house with the odorous incense of +cedar-wood. When thou shalt have entered our house, all the country by +the sea shall embrace thy feet, kings shall bow down before thee, the +nobles and the great ones, the gifts of the mountains and of the plain +they will bring to thee as tribute. Thy oxen shall prosper, thy sheep +shall be doubly fruitful, thy mules shall spontaneously come under the +yoke, thy chariot-horse shall be strong and shall galop, thy bull +under the yoke shall have no rival.'" Gilgames repels this unexpected +declaration with a mixed feeling of contempt and apprehension: he abuses +the goddess, and insolently questions her as to what has become of her +mortal husbands during her long divine life. "Tammuz, the spouse of thy +youth, thou hast condemned him to weep from year to year.** Nilala, the +spotted sparrow-hawk, thou lovedst him, afterward thou didst strike +him and break his wing: he continues in the wood and cries: 'O, my +wings!'*** Thou didst afterwards love a lion of mature strength, and +then didst cause him to be rent by blows, seven at a time.**** Thou +lovedst also a stallion magnificent in the battle; thou didst devote him +to death by the goad and whip: thou didst compel him to galop for ten +leagues, thou didst devote him to exhaustion and thirst, thou didst +devote to tears his mother Silili. + + * Ishtar's declaration to Gilgames and the hero's reply have + been frequently translated and summarized since the + discovery of the poem. Smith thought to connect this episode + with the "Descent of Ishtar to Hades," which we shall meet + with further on in this History, but his opinion is no + longer accepted. The "Descent of Ishtar" in its present + condition is the beginning of a magical formula: it has + nothing to do with the acts of Gilgames. + + ** Tammuz-Adonis is the only one known to us among this long + list of the lovers of the goddess. The others must have been + fairly celebrated among the Chaldaeans, since the few words + devoted to each is sufficient to recall them to the memory + of the reader, but we have not as yet found anything + bearing upon their adventures in the table of the ancient + Chaldaeo-Assyrian classics, which had been copied out by a + Ninevite scribe for the use of Assur-bani-pal, the title of + the poems is wanting. + + *** The text gives _kappi_, and the legend evidently refers + to a bird whose cry resembles the word meaning "my + wings." The spotted sparrow-hawk utters a cry which may be + strictly understood and interpreted in this way. + + **** This is evidently the origin of our fable of the + "Amorous Lion." + +Thou didst also love the shepherd Tabulu, who lavished incessantly upon +thee the smoke of sacrifices, and daily slaughtered goats to thee; thou +didst strike him and turn him into a leopard; his own servants went in +pursuit of him, and his dogs followed his trail.* Thou didst love +Ishullanu, thy father's gardener, who ceaselessly brought thee presents +of fruit, and decorated every day thy table. Thou raisedst thine eyes to +him, thou seizedst him: 'My Ishullanu, we shall eat melons, then shalt +thou stretch forth thy hand and remove that which separates us.' +Ishullanu said to thee: 'I, what dost thou require from me? O my mother, +prepare no food for me, I myself will not eat: anything I should eat +would be for me a misfortune and a curse, and my body would be stricken +by a mortal coldness.' Then thou didst hear him and didst become angry, +thou didst strike him, thou didst transform him into a dwarf, thou didst +set him up on the middle of a couch; he could not rise up, he could not +get down from where he was. Thou lovest me now, afterwards thou wilt +strike me as thou didst these."** + + * The changing of a lover, by the goddess or sorceress + who loves him, into a beast, occurs pretty frequently in + Oriental tales; as to the man changed by Ishtar into a + brute, which she caused to be torn by his own hounds, we may + compare the classic story of Artemis surprised at her bath + by Actseon. + + ** As to the misfortune of Ishullanu, we may compare the + story in the _Abrabian Nights_ of the Fisherman and the + Genie shut up in the leaden bottle. The king of the Black + Islands was transformed into a statue from the waist to the + feet by the sorceress, whom he had married and afterwards + offended; he remained lying on a bed, from which he could + not get down, and the unfaithful one came daily to whip him. + +"When Ishtar heard him, she fell into a fury, she ascended to heaven. +The mighty Ishtar presented herself before her father Anu, before her +mother Anatu she presented herself, and said: 'My father, Grilgames +has despised me. Grilgames has enumerated my unfaithfulnesses, my +unfaithfulnesses and my ignominies.' Anu opened his mouth and spake to +the mighty Ishtar: 'Canst thou not remain quiet now that Gilgames +has enumerated to thee thy unfaithfulnesses, thy unfaithfulnesses and +ignominies?'" But she refused to allow the outrage to go unpunished. +She desired her father to make a celestial urus who would execute her +vengeance on the hero; and, as he hesitated, she threatened to destroy +every living thing in the entire universe by suspending the impulses of +desire, and the effect of love. Anu finally gives way to her rage: he +creates a frightful urus, whose ravages soon rendered uninhabitable the +neighbourhood of Uruk the well-protected. The two heroes, Gilgames and +Eabani, touched by the miseries and terror of the people, set out on the +chase, and hastened to rouse the beast from its lair on the banks of +the Euphrates in the marshes, to which it resorted after each murderous +onslaught. + +[Illustration: 068.jpg GILGAMES AND EABANI FIGHTING WITH MONSTERS.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a Chaldaean intaglio in the New + York Museum. The original is about an inch and a half in + height. + +A troop of three hundred valiant warriors penetrated into the thickets +in three lines to drive the animal towards the heroes. The beast with +head lowered charged them; but Eabani seized it with one hand by the +right horn, and with the other by the tail, and forced it to rear. +Gilgames at the same instant, seizing it by the leg, plunged his dagger +into its heart. The beast being despatched, they celebrated their +victory by a sacrifice of thanksgiving, and poured out a libation to +Sharnash, whose protection had not failed them in this last danger. +Ishtar, her projects of vengeance having been defeated, "ascended the +ramparts of Uruk the well-protected. She sent forth a loud cry, she +hurled forth a malediction: 'Cursed be Gilgames, who has insulted me, +and who has killed the celestial urus.' Eabani heard these words of +Ishtar, he tore a limb from the celestial urus and threw it in the face +of the goddess: 'Thou also I will conquer, and I will treat thee like +him: I will fasten the curse upon thy sides.' Ishtar assembled her +priestesses, her female votaries, her frenzied women, and together they +intoned a dirge over the limb of the celestial urus. Gilgames assembled +all the turners in ivory, and the workmen were astonished at the +enormous size of the horns; they were worth thirty _mimae_ of lapis, +their diameter was a half-cubit, and both of them could contain six +measures of oil." He dedicated them to Shamash, and suspended them on +the corners of the altar; then he washed his hands in the Euphrates, +re-entered Uruk, and passed through the streets in triumph. A riotous +banquet ended the day, but on that very night Eabani felt himself +haunted by an inexplicable and baleful dream, and fortune abandoned the +two heroes. Gilgames had cried in the intoxication of success to the +women of Uruk: "Who shines forth among the valiant? Who is glorious +above all men? Gilgames shines forth among the valiant, Gilgames is +glorious above all men." Ishtar made him feel her vengeance in the +destruction of that beauty of which he was so proud; she covered him +with leprosy from head to foot, and made him an object of horror to his +friends of the previous day. A life of pain and a frightful death--he +alone could escape them who dared to go to the confines of the world in +quest of the Fountain of Youth and the Tree of Life which were said to +be there hidden; but the road was rough, unknown, beset by dangers, and +no one of those who had ventured upon it had ever returned. Gilgames +resolved to brave every peril rather than submit to his fate, and +proposed this fresh adventure to his friend Eabani, who, notwithstanding +his sad forebodings, consented to accompany him. They killed a tiger +on the way, but Eabani was mortally wounded in a struggle in which they +engaged in the neighbourhood of Nipur, and breathed his last after an +agony of twelve days' duration. + +"Gilgames wept bitterly over his friend Eabani, grovelling on the bare +earth." The selfish fear of death struggled in his spirit with regret at +having lost so dear a companion, a tried friend in so many encounters. +"I do not wish to die like Eabani: sorrow has entered my heart, the fear +of death has taken possession of me, and I am overcome. But I will go +with rapid steps to the strong Shamashnapishtim, son of Ubaratutu, +to learn from him how to become immortal." He leaves the plain of the +Euphrates, he plunges boldly into the desert, he loses himself for a +whole day amid frightful solitudes. "I reached at nightfall a ravine in +the mountain, I beheld lions and trembled, but I raised my face towards +the moon-god, and I prayed: my supplication ascended even to the father +of the gods, and he extended over me his protection." A vision from on +high revealed to him the road he was to take. With axe and dagger +in hand, he reached the entrance of a dark passage leading into the +mountain of Mashu,* "whose gate is guarded day and night by supernatural +beings." + + * The land of Mashu is the land to the west of the + Euphrates, coterminous on one part with the northern regions + of the Red Sea, on the other with the Persian Gulf; the name + appears to be preserved in that of the classic Mesene, and + possibly in the land of Massa of the Hebrews. + +[Illustration: 071.jpg THE SCORPION-MEN OF THE MOUNTAINS OF MASHU.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from an Assyrian intaglio. + +"The scorpion-men, of whom the stature extends upwards as far as the +supports of heaven, and of whom the breasts descend as low as Hades, +guard the door. The terror which they inspire strikes down like a +thunderbolt; their look kills, their splendour confounds and overturns +the mountains; they watch over the sun at his rising and setting. +Grilgames perceived them, and his features were distorted with fear and +horror; their savage appearance disturbed his mind. The scorpion-man +said to his wife: 'He who comes towards us, his body is marked by the +gods.'* The scorpion-woman replied to him: 'In his mind he is a god, in +his mortal covering he is a man.' The scorpion-man spoke and said: +'It is as the father of the gods, has commanded, he has travelled over +distant regions before joining us, thee and me.'" Gilgames learns +that the guardians are not evilly disposed towards him, and becomes +reassured, tell them his misfortunes and implores permission to pass +beyond them so as to reach "Sha-mashnapishtim, his father, who was +translated to the gods, and who has at his disposal both life and +death." The scorpion-man in vain shows to him the perils before him, of +which the horrible darkness enveloping the Mashu mountains is not the +least: Gilgames proceeds through the depths of the darkness for long +hours, and afterwards comes out in the neighbourhood of a marvellous +forest upon the shore of the ocean which encircles the world. One tree +especially excites his wonder: "As soon as he sees it he runs towards +it. Its fruits are so many precious stones, its boughs are splendid +to look upon, for the branches are weighed down with lapis, and their +fruits are superb." When his astonishment had calmed down, Gilgames +begins to grieve, and to curse the ocean which stays his steps. "Sabitu, +the virgin who is seated on the throne of the seas," perceiving him +from a distance, retires at first to her castle, and barricades herself +within it. He calls out to her from the strand, implores and threatens +her in turn, adjures her to help him in his voyage. "If it can be done, +I will cross the sea; if it cannot be done, I will lay me down on the +land to die." The goddess is at length touched by his tears. "Gilgames, +there has never been a passage hither, and no one from time immemorial +has been able to cross the sea. Shamash the valiant crossed the sea; +after Shamash, who can cross it? The crossing is troublesome, the way +difficult, perilous the Water of Death, which, like a bolt, is drawn +between thee and thy aim. Even if, Gilgames, thou didst cross the +sea, what wouldest thou do on arriving at the Water of Death?" Arad-Ea, +Shamashnapishtim's mariner, can alone bring the enterprise to a happy +ending: "if it is possible, thou shalt cross the sea with him; if it is +not possible, thou shalt retrace thy steps." + +* We must not forget that Gilgames is covered with leprosy; this is the +disease with which the Chaldaean gods mark their enemies when they wish +to punish them in a severe fashion. + +[Illustration: 073.jpg GILGAMES AND ARAD-EA NAVIGATING THEIR VESSEL.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a Chaldaean intaglio in the + British Museum. The original measures a little over an inch. + +Arad-Ea and the hero took ship: forty days' tempestuous cruising brought +them to the Waters of Death, which with a supreme effort they passed. +Beyond these they rested on their oars and loosed their girdles: the +happy island rose up before them, and Shamashnapishtim stood upon the +shore, ready to answer the questions of his grandson. + +None but a god dare enter his mysterious paradise: the bark bearing +an ordinary mortal must stop at some distance from the shore, and the +conversation is carried on from on board. Gilgames narrated once +more the story of his life, and makes known the object of his visit; +Shamashnapishtim answers him stoically that death follows from an +inexorable law, to which it is better to submit with a good grace. +"However long the time we shall build houses, however long the time we +shall put our seal to contracts, however long the time brothers shall +quarrel with each other, however long the time there shall be hostility +between kings, however long the time rivers shall overflow their banks, +we shall not be able to portray any image of death. When the spirits +salute a man at his birth, then the genii of the earth, the great gods, +Mamitu the moulder of destinies, all of them together assign a fate to +him, they determine for him his life and death; but the day of his death +remains unknown to him." Gilgames thinks, doubtless, that his forefather +is amusing himself at his expense in preaching resignation, seeing that +he himself had been able to escape this destiny. "I look upon thee, +Shamashnapishtim, and thy appearance has not changed: thou art like me +and not different, thou art like me and I am like thee. Thou wouldest +be strong enough of heart to enter upon a combat, to judge by thy +appearance; tell me, then, how thou hast obtained this existence among +the gods to which thou hast aspired?" Shamashnapishtim yields to his +wish, if only to show him how abnormal his own case was, and indicate +the merits which had marked him out for a destiny superior to that of +the common herd of humanity. He describes the deluge to him, and relates +how he was able to escape from it by the favour of Ea, and how by that +of Bel he was made while living a member of the army of the gods. "'And +now,' he adds, 'as far as thou art concerned, which one of the Gods will +bestow upon thee the strength to obtain the life which thou seekest? +Come, go to sleep!' Six days and seven nights he is as a man whose +strength appears suspended, for sleep has fallen upon him like a blast +of wind. Shamashnapishtim spoke to his wife: 'Behold this man who asks +for life, and upon whom sleep has fallen like a blast of wind.' The wife +answers Shamashnapishtim, the man of distant lands: 'Cast a spell upon +him, this man, and he will eat of the magic broth; and the road by which +he has come, he will retrace it in health of body; and the great gate +through which he has come forth, he will return by it to his country.' +Shamashnapishtim spoke to his wife: 'The misfortunes of this man +distress thee: very well, cook the broth, and place it by his head.' +And while Gilgames still slept on board his vessel, the material for the +broth was gathered; on the second day it was picked, on the third it was +steeped, on the fourth Shamashnapishtim prepared his pot, on the fifth +he put into it 'Senility,' on the sixth the broth was cooked, on the +seventh he cast his spell suddenly on his man, and the latter consumed +the broth. Then Gilgames spoke to Shamashnapishtim, the inhabitant of +distant lands: 'I hesitated, slumber laid hold of me; thou hast cast a +spell upon me, thou hast given me the broth.'" The effect would not have +been lasting, if other ceremonies had not followed in addition to this +spell from the sorcerer's kitchen: Gilgames after this preparation could +now land upon the shore of the happy island and purify himself there. +Shamashnapishtim confided this business to his mariner Arad-Ea: "'The +man whom thou hast brought, his body is covered with ulcers, the leprous +scabs have spoiled the beauty of his body. Take him, Arad-Ea, lead him +to the place of purification, let him wash his ulcers white as snow in +the water, let him get rid of his scabs, and let the sea bear them away +so that at length his body may appear healthy. He will then change +the fillet which binds his brows, and the loin-cloth which hides his +nakedness: until he returns to his country, until he reaches the end of +his journey, let him by no means put off the loin-cloth, however ragged; +then only shall he have always a clean one.' Then Arad-Ea took him and +conducted him to the place of purification: he washed his ulcers white +as snow in the water, he got rid of his scabs, and the sea carried them +away, so that at length his body appeared healthy. He changed the fillet +which bound his brows, the loincloth which hid his nakedness: until +he should reach the end of his journey, he was not to put off the +loin-cloth, however ragged; then alone was he to have a clean one." The +cure effected, Gilgames goes again on board his bark, and returns to the +place where Shamashnapishtim was awaiting him. + +Shamashnapishtim would not send his descendant back to the land of the +living without making him a princely present. "His wife spoke to him, +to him Shamashnapishtim, the inhabitant of distant lands: 'Gilgames has +come, he is comforted, he is cured; what wilt thou give to him, now that +he is about to return to his country?' He took the oars, Gilgames, he +brought the bark near the shore, and Shamashnapishtim spoke to him, to +Gilgames: 'Gilgames, thou art going from here comforted; what shall I +give thee, now that thou art about to return to thy country? I am about +to reveal to thee, Gilgames, a secret, and the judgment of the gods I am +about to tell it thee. There is a plant similar to the hawthorn in its +flower, and whose thorns prick like the viper. If thy hand can lay hold +of that plant without being torn, break from it a branch, and bear it +with thee; it will secure for thee an eternal youth.'Gilgames gathers +the branch, and in his joy plans with Arad-Ea future enterprises: +'Arad-Ea, this plant is the plant of renovation, by which a man +obtains life; I will bear it with me to Uruk the well-protected, I will +cultivate a bush from it, I will cut some of it, and its name shall +be, "the old man becomes young by it;" I will eat of it, and I shall +repossess the vigour of my youth.'" He reckoned without the gods, whose +jealous minds will not allow men to participate in their privileges. +The first place on which they set foot on shore, "he perceived a well of +fresh water, went down to it, and whilst he was drawing water, a serpent +came out of it, and snatched from him the plant, yea--the serpent rushed +out and bore away the plant, and while escaping uttered a malediction. +That day Gilgames sat down, he wept, and his tears streamed down his +cheeks he said to the mariner Arad-Ba: 'What is the use, Arad-Ea, of my +renewed strength; what is the use of my heart's rejoicing in my return +to life? It is not myself I have served; it is this earthly lion I have +served. Hardly twenty leagues on the road, and he for himself alone has +already taken possession of the plant. As I opened the well, the plant +was lost to me, and the genius of the fountain took possession of it: +who am I that I should tear it from him?'" He re-embarks in sadness, +he re-enters Uruk the well-protected, and at length begins to think of +celebrating the funeral solemnities of Eabani, to whom he was not able +to show respect at the time of his death. He supervises them, fulfils +the rites, intones the final chant: "The temples, thou shalt enter them +no more; the white vestments, thou shalt no longer put them on; the +sweet-smelling ointments, thou shalt no longer anoint thyself with them +to envelop thee with their perfume. Thou shalt no longer press thy +bow to the ground to bend it, but those that the bow has wounded shall +surround thee; thou no longer holdest thy sceptre in thy hand, but +spectres fascinate thee; thou no longer adornest thy feet with wings, +thou no longer givest forth a sound upon the earth. Thy wife whom thou +lovedst thou embracest her no more; thy wife whom thou hatedst thou +beatest her no more. Thy daughter whom thou lovedst thou embracest her +no more; thy daughter whom thou hatedst, thou beatest her no more. The +resounding earth lies heavy upon thee, she who is dark, she who is +dark, Tjinazu the mother, she who is dark, whose side is-not veiled with +splendid vestments, whose bosom, like a new-born animal, is not covered. +Eabani has descended from the earth to Hades; it is not the messenger +of Nergal the implacable who has snatched him away, it is not the plague +which has carried him off, it is not consumption that has carried him +off, it is the earth which has carried him off; it is not the field of +battle which has carried him off, it is the earth which has carried him +off!" Gilgames dragged himself along from temple to temple, repeating +his complaint before Bel and before Sin, and at length threw himself +at the feet of the god of the Dead, Nergal: "'Burst open the sepulchral +cavern, open the ground, that the spirit of Eabani may issue from the +soil like a blast of wind.' As soon as Nergal the valiant heard him, +he burst open the sepulchral vault, he opened the earth, he caused the +spirit of Eabani to issue from the earth like a blast of wind." Gilgames +interrogates him, and asks him with anxiety what the state of the dead +may be: "'Tell, my friend, tell, my friend, open the earth and what thou +seest tell it.'--'I cannot tell it thee, my friend, I cannot tell it +thee; if I should open the earth before thee, if I were to tell to thee +that which I have seen, terror would overthrow thee, thou wouldest faint +away, thou wouldest weep.'--'Terror will overthrow me, I shall faint +away, I shall weep, but tell it to me.'" And the ghost depicts for him +the sorrows of the abode and the miseries of the shades. Those only +enjoy some happiness who have fallen with arms in their hands, and who +have been solemnly buried after the fight; the manes neglected by their +relatives succumb to hunger and thirst.* "On a sleeping couch he lies, +drinking pure water, he who has been killed in battle. 'Thou hast seen +him?'--'I have seen him; his father and his mother support his head, and +his wife bends over him wailing.' 'But he whose body remains forgotten +in the fields,--thou hast seen him?'--'I have seen him; his soul has no +rest at all in the earth.' 'He whose soul no one cares for,--thou hast +seen him?'--'I have seen him; the dregs of the cup, the remains of a +repast, that which is thrown among the refuse of the street, that is +what he has to nourish him.'" This poem did not proceed in its entirety, +or at one time, from the imagination of a single individual. Each +episode of it answers to some separate legend concerning Gilgames, or +the origin of Uruk the well-protected: the greater part preserves under +a later form an air of extreme antiquity, and, if the events dealt with +have not a precise bearing on the life of a king, they paint in a lively +way the vicissitudes of the life of the people.** These lions, leopards, +or gigantic uruses with which Grilgames and his faithful Eabani carry +on so fierce a warfare, are not, as is sometimes said, mythological +animals. + + * Cf. vol. i. pp. 160, 161 of this History for analogous + ideas among the Egyptians as to the condition of the dead + who were neglected by their relatives: the Egyptian double + had to live on the same refuse as the Chaldaean soul. + + ** G. Smith, identifying Gilgames with Nimrod, believes, on + the other hand, that Nimrod was a real king, who reigned in + Mesopotamia about 2250 B.C.; the poem contains, according to + him, episodes, more or less embellished, in the life of the + sovereign. + +Similar monsters, it was believed, appeared from time to time in the +marshes of Chaldaea, and gave proof of their existence to the inhabitants +of neighbouring villages by such ravages as real lions and tigers commit +in India or the Sahara. It was the duty of chiefs on the border lands of +the Euphrates, as on the banks of the Nile, as among all peoples still +sunk in semi-barbarism, to go forth to the attack of these beasts +single-handed, and to sacrifice themselves one after the other, until +one of them more fortunate or stronger than the rest should triumph +over these mischievous brutes. The kings of Babylon and Nineveh in later +times converted into a pleasure that which had been an official duty of +their early predecessors: Gilgames had not yet arrived at that stage, +and the seriousness, not to speak of the fear, with which he entered +on the fight with such beasts, is an evidence of the early date of the +portions of his history which are concerned with his hunting exploits. +The scenes are represented on the seals of princes who reigned prior to +the year 3000 B.C., and the work of the ancient engraver harmonizes so +perfectly with the description of the comparatively modern scribe that +it seems like an anticipated illustration of the latter; the engravings +represent so persistently and with so little variation the images of +the monsters, and those of Gilgames and his faithful Eabani, that the +corresponding episodes in the poem must have already existed as we know +them, if not in form, at least in their main drift. Other portions of +the poem are more recent, and it would seem that the expedition against +Khumbaba contains allusions to the Elamite* invasions from which Chaldaea +had suffered so much towards the XXth century before our era. The +traditions which we possess of the times following the Deluge, embody, +like the adventures of Gilganes, very ancient elements, which the +scribes or narrators wove together in a more or less skilful manner +around the name of some king or divinity. + + * Smith thought he could restore from the poem a part of + Chaldaean history: he supposed Izdubar-Nimrod to have been, + about 2250, the liberator of Babylon, oppressed by Elam, and + the date of the foundation of a great Babylonian empire to + have coincided with his victory over the Elamites. The + annals of Assurbanipal show us, in fact, that an Elamite + king, Kudurnankhundi, had pillaged Uruk about 2280 B.C., and + had transported to Susa a statue of the goddess Ishtar. + +[Illustration: 082.jpg GILGAMES STRUGGLES WITH A LION] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a Chaldaean intaglio in the + British Museum. The original measures about 1 2/5 inch in + height. + +The fabulous chronicle of the cities of the Euphrates existed, +therefore, in a piecemeal condition--in the memory of the people or in +the books of the priests--before even their primitive history began; +the learned who collected it later on had only to select some of the +materials with which it furnished them, in order to form out of them a +connected narrative, in which the earliest ages were distinguished from +the most recent only in the assumption of more frequent and more direct +interpositions of the powers of heaven in the affairs of men. Every city +had naturally its own version, in which its own protecting deities, its +heroes and princes, played the most important parts. That of Babylon +threw all the rest into the shade; not that it was superior to them, +but because this city had speedily become strong enough to assert its +political supremacy over the whole region of the Euphrates. Its scribes +were accustomed to see their master treat the lords of other towns as +subjects or vassals. They fancied that this must have always been +the case, and that from its origin Babylon had been recognized as the +queen-city to which its contemporaries rendered homage. They made its +individual annals the framework for the history of the entire country, +and from the succession of its princely families on the throne, diverse +as they were in origin, they constructed a complete canon of the kings +of Chaldaea. + +But the manner of grouping the names and of dividing the dynasties +varied according to the period in which the lists were drawn up, and at +the present time we are in possession of at least two systems which the +Babylonian historians attempted to construct. Berossus, who communicated +one of them to the Greeks about the beginning of the IInd century B.C., +would not admit more than eight dynasties in the period of thirty-six +thousand years between the Deluge and the Persian invasion. The lists, +which he had copied from originals in the cuneiform character, have +suffered severely at the hands of his abbreviators, who omitted the +majority of the names which seemed to them very barbarous in form, while +those who copied these abbreviated lists have made such further havoc +with them that they are now for the most part unintelligible. Modern +criticism has frequently attempted to restore them, with varying +results; the reconstruction here given, which passes for the most +probable, is not equally certain in all its parts:--* + +[Illustration: 084.jpg CHRONOLOGIC TABLE] + +It was not without reason that Berossus and his authorities had put the +sum total of reigns at thirty-six thousand years; this number falls in +with a certain astrological period, during which the gods had granted to +the Chaldaeans glory, prosperity, and independence, and whose termination +coincided with the capture of Babylon by Cyrus.** Others before them had +employed the same artifice, but they reckoned ten dynasties in the place +of the eight accepted by Berossus:-- + + * After the example of G. B. Niebuhr, Gutschmid admitted + here, as Oppert did, 45 Assyrians; he based his view on + Herodotus, in which it is said that the Assyrians held sway + in Asia for 520 years, until its conquest by the Medes. Upon + the improbability of this opinion, see Schrader's + demonstration. + + ** The existence of this astronomical or astrological scheme + on which Berossus founded his chronology, was pointed out by + Brandis, afterwards by Gutschmid; it is now generally + accepted. + +[Illustration: 085.jpg TABLE] + +Attempts have been made to bring the two lists* into harmony, with +varying results; in my opinion, a waste of time and labour. For even +comparatively recent periods of their history, the Chaldaeans, like +the Egyptians, had to depend upon a collection of certain abbreviated, +incoherent, and often contradictory documents, from which they found it +difficult to make a choice: they could not, therefore, always come to an +agreement when they wished to determine how many dynasties had succeeded +each other during these doubtful epochs, how many kings were included in +each dynasty, and what length of reign was to be assigned to each king. +We do not know the motives which influenced Berossus in his preference +of one tradition over others; perhaps he had no choice in the matter, +and that of which he constituted himself the interpreter was the only +one which was then known. In any case, the tradition he followed forms a +system which we cannot, modify without misinterpreting the intention of +those who drew it up or who have handed it down to us. We must accept +or reject it just as it is, in its entirety and without alteration: +to attempt to adapt it to the testimony of the monuments would be +equivalent to the creation of a new system, and not to the correction +simply of the old one. The right course is to put it aside for the +moment, and confine ourselves to the original lists whose fragments have +come down to us: they do not furnish us, it is true, with a history of +Chaldaea such as it unfolded itself from age to age, but they teach us +what the later Chaldaeans knew, or thought they knew, of that history. +Still it is wise to treat them with some reserve, and not to forget that +if they agree with each other in the main, they differ frequently in +details. Thus the small dynasties, which are called the VIth and VIIth, +include the same number of kings on both the tablets which establish +their existence, but the number of years assigned to the names of +the kings and the total years of each dynasty vary a little from one +another:-- + + * The first document having claim to the title of Royal + Canon was found among the tablets of the British Museum, and + was published by G. Smith. The others were successively + discovered by Pinches; some erroneous readings in them have + been corrected by Fr. Delitzsch, and an exact edition has + been published by Knudtzon. Smith's list is the fragment of + a chronicle in which the VIth, VIIth, and VIIIth dynasties + only are almost complete. One of Pinches's lists consists + merely of a number of royal names not arranged in any + consistent order, and containing their non-Semitic as well + as their Semitic forms. The other two lists are actual + canons, giving the names of the kings and the years of their + reigns; unfortunately they are much mutilated, and the + lacunae in them cannot yet be filled up. All of them have + been translated by Sayce. + +[Illustration: 080.jpg TABLE] + +[Illustration: 081.jpg TABLE] + +Is the difference in the calculations the fault of the scribes, who, +in mechanically copying and recopying, ended by fatally altering the +figures? Or is it to be explained by some circumstance of which we are +ignorant--an association on the throne, of which the duration is at one +time neglected with regard to one of the co-regents, and at another time +with regard to the other; or was it owing to a question of legitimacy, +by which, according to the decision arrived at, a reign was prolonged or +abbreviated? Cotemporaneous monuments will some day, perhaps, enable +us to solve the problem which the later Chaldaeans did not succeed in +clearing up. While awaiting the means to restore a rigorously exact +chronology, we must be content with the approximate information +furnished by the tablets as to the succession of the Babylonian kings. + +Actual history occupied but a small space in the lists--barely twenty +centuries out of a whole of three hundred and sixty: beyond the historic +period the imagination was given a free rein, and the few facts which +were known disappeared almost completely under the accumulation of +mythical narratives and popular stories. It was not that the documents +were entirely wanting, for the Chaldaeans took a great interest in their +past history, and made a diligent search for any memorials of it. Each +time they succeeded in disinterring an inscription from the ruins of a +town, they were accustomed to make-several copies of it, and to deposit +them among the archives, where they would be open to the examination +of their archaeologists.* When a prince undertook the rebuilding of +a temple, he always made excavations under the first courses of the +ancient structure in order to recover the documents which preserved the +memory of its foundation: if he discovered them, he recorded on the new +cylinders, in which he boasted of his own work, the name of the first +builder, and sometimes the number of years which had elapsed since its +erection.** + + * We have a considerable number of examples of copies of + ancient texts made in this manner. For instance, the + dedication of a temple at Uruk by King Singashid, copied by + the scribe Nabubalatsuikbi, son of Mizirai ("the Egyptian + "), for the temple of Ezida; the legendary history of King + Sargon of Agade, copied from the inscription on the base of + his statue, of which there will be further mention (pp. 91- + 93 of this History); a dedication of the King Khammurabi; + the inscription of Agumkakrimi, which came from the library + of Assurbanipal. + + ** Nabonidos, for instance, the last king of Babylon before + the Persian conquest, has left us a memorial of his + excavations. He found in this manner the cylinders of + Shagashaltiburiash at Sippara, those of Khammurabi, and + those of Naramsin. + +We act in a similar way to-day, and our excavations, like those of the +Chaldaeans, end in singularly disconnected results: the materials which +the earth yields for the reconstruction of the first centuries consist +almost entirely of mutilated records of local dynasties, isolated +names of sovereigns, dedications of temples to gods, on sites no longer +identifiable, of whose nature we know nothing, and too brief allusions +to conquests or victories over vaguely designated nations.* The +population was dense and life active in the plains of the Lower +Euphrates. The cities in this region formed at their origin so many +individual and, for the most part, petty states, whose kings and patron +gods claimed to be independent of all the neighbouring kings and gods: +one city, one god, one lord--this was the rule here as in the ancient +feudal districts from which the nomes of Egypt arose. The strongest +of these principalities imposed its laws upon the weakest: formed into +unions of two or three under a single ruler, they came to constitute a +dozen kingdoms of almost equal strength on the banks of the Euphrates. +On the north we are acquainted with those of Agade, Babylon, Kuta, +Kharsag-Kalama, and that of Kishu, which comprised a part of Mesopotamia +and possibly the distant fortress of Harran: petty as these States were, +their rulers attempted to conceal their weakness by assuming such titles +as "Kings of the Four Houses of the World," "Kings of the Universe," +"Kings of Shumir and Akkad." Northern Babylonia seems to have possessed +a supremacy amongst them. We are probably wise in not giving too much +credit to the fragmentary tablet which assigns to it a dynasty of +kings, of which we have no confirmatory information from other +sources--Amilgula, Shamashnazir, Amilsin, and several others: this list, +however, places among these phantom rulers one individual at least, +Shargina-Sharrukin, who has left us material evidences of his existence. +This Sargon the Elder, whose complete name is Shargani-shar-ali, was +the son of a certain Ittibel, who does not appear to have been king. +At first his possessions were confined to the city of Agade and some +undetermined portions of the environs of Babylon, but he soon succeeded +in annexing Babylon itself, Sippara, Kishu, Uruk, Kuta, and Nipur: the +contemporary records attest his conquest of Elam, Guti, and even of the +far-off land of Syria, which was already known to him under the name of +Amuru. His activity as a builder was in no way behind his warlike zeal. +He built Ekur, the sanctuary of Bel in Nipur, and the great temple +Eulbar in Agade, in honour of Anunit, the goddess presiding over the +morning star. He erected in Babylon a palace which afterwards became a +royal burying-place. He founded a new capital, a city which he peopled +with families brought from Kishu and Babylon: for a long time after his +day it bore the name which he bestowed upon it, Dur-Sharrukin. This +sums up all the positive knowledge we have about him, and the later +Chaldseans seem not to have been much better informed than ourselves. + + * The earliest Assyriologists, H. Rawlinson, Oppert, + considered the local kings as having been, for the most + part, kings of all Chaldaea, and placed them in succession + one after the other in the framework of the most ancient + dynasties of Berossus. The merit of having established the + existence of series of local dynasties, and of having given + to Chaldaean history its modern form, belongs to G. Smith. + Smith's idea was adopted by Menant, by Delitzsch-Murdter, by + Tiele, by Winckler, and by all Assyriologists, with + modifications suggested by the progress of decipherment. + +They filled up the lacunae of his history with legends. As he seemed +to them to have appeared suddenly on the scene, without any apparent +connection with the king who preceded him, they assumed that he was a +usurper of unknown origin, irregularly introduced by the favour of the +gods into the lawful series of kings. An inscription engraved, it was +said, on one of his statues, and afterwards, about the VIIth century +B.C., copied and deposited in the library of Nineveh, related at length +the circumstances of his mysterious birth. "Sharrukin, the mighty king, +the king of Agade, am I. My mother was a princess; my father, I did not +know him; the brother of my father lived in the mountains. My town was +Azupirani, which is situated on the bank of the Euphrates. My mother, +the princess, conceived me, and secretly gave birth to me: she placed +me in a basket of reeds, she shut up the mouth of it with bitumen, she +abandoned me to the river, which did not overwhelm me. The river bore +me; it brought me to Akki, the drawer of water. Akki, the drawer of +water, received me in the goodness of his heart; Akki, the drawer of +water, made me a gardener. As gardener, the goddess Ishtar loved me, and +during forty-four years I held royal sway; I commanded the Black Heads,* +and ruled them." This is no unusual origin for the founders of empires +and dynasties; witness the cases of Cyrus and Bomulus.* Sargon, like +Moses, and many other heroes of history or fable, is exposed to the +waters: he owes his safety to a poor fellah who works his shadouf on the +banks of the Euphrates to water the fields, and he passes his infancy in +obscurity, if not in misery. Having reached the age of manhood, Ishtar +falls in love with him as she did with his fellow-craftsman, the +gardener Ishullanu, and he becomes king, we know not by what means. + + * The phrase "Black Heads," _nishi salmat hahhadi_, has been + taken in an ethnological sense as designating one of the + races of Chaldaea, the Semitic; other Assyriologists consider + it as denoting mankind in general. The latter meaning seems + the more probable. + + ** Smith had already compared the infancy of Sargon with + that of Moses; the comparison with Cyrus, Bacchus, and + Romulus was made by Talbot. Traditions of the same kind are + frequent in history or folk-tales. + +The same inscription which reveals the romance of his youth, recounts +the successes of his manhood, and boasts of the uniformly victorious +issue of his warlike exploits. Owing to lacunae, the end of the account +is in the main wanting, and we are thus prevented from following the +development of his career, but other documents come to the rescue and +claim to furnish its most important vicissitudes. He had reduced the +cities of the Lower Euphrates, the island of Dilmun, Durilu, Elam, the +country of Kazalla: he had invaded Syria, conquered Phoenicia, crossed +the arm of the sea which separates Cyprus from the coast, and only +returned to his palace after an absence of three years, and after having +erected his statues on the Syrian coast. He had hardly settled down to +rest when a rebellion broke out suddenly; the chiefs of Chaldaea formed +a league against him, and blockaded him in Agade: Ishtar, exceptionally +faithful to the end, obtains for him the victory, and he comes out of a +crisis, in which he might have been utterly ruined, with a more secure +position than ever. All these events are regarded as having occurred +sometime about 3800 B.C., at a period when the VIth dynasty was +flourishing in Egypt. Some of them have been proved to be true by recent +discoveries, and the rest are not at all improbable in themselves, +though the work in which they are recorded is a later astrological +treatise. The writer was anxious to prove, by examples drawn from the +chronicles, the use of portents of victory or defeat, of civic peace +or rebellion--portents which he deduced from the configuration of the +heavens on the various days of the month: by going back as far as Sargon +of Agade for his instances, he must have at once increased the respect +for himself on account of his knowledge of antiquity, and the difficulty +which the common herd must have felt in verifying his assertions. His +zeal in collecting examples was probably stimulated by the fact that +some of the exploits which he attributes to the ancient Sargon had been +recently accomplished by a king of the same name: the brilliant career +of Sargon of Agade would seem to have been in his estimation something +like an anticipation of the still more glorious life of the Sargon of +Nineveh.* What better proof of the high veneration in which the learned +men of Assyria held the memory of the ancient Chaldaean conqueror? +Naramsin, who succeeded Sargon about 3750 B.C.** inherited his +authority, and to some extent his renown. + + * Hommel (Gescamede, p. 307) believes that the life of our + Sargon was modelled, not on the Assyrian Sargon, but on a + second Sargon, whom he places about 2000 B.C. Tiele refuses + to accept the hypothesis, but his objections are not + weighty, in my opinion; Hilprecht and Sayce accepted the + authenticity of the facts in their details, and the recent + discoveries have shown that they were right in so doing. + There is a distant resemblance between the life of the + legendary Sargon and the account of the victories of Ramses + II. ending in a conspiracy on his return. + + + ** The date of Naramsin is given us by the cylinder of + Nabonidos, who is cited lower down. It was discovered by + Pinches. Its authenticity is maintained by Oppert, by + Latrille, by Tiele, by Hommel, who felt at first some + hesitation, by Delitzsch-Murdter; it has been called in + question, with hesitation, by Ed. Meyer, and more boldly by + Winckler. There is at present no serious reason to question + its accuracy, at least relatively, except the instinctive + repugnance of modern critics to consider as legitimate, + dates which carry them back further into the past than they + are accustomed to go. + +The astrological tablets assert that he attacked the city of Apirak, on +the borders of Elam, killed the Sing, Rish-ramman, and led the people +away into slavery. He conquered at least part, if not the whole of Elam, +and one of the few monuments which have come down to us was raised at +Sippara in commemoration of his prowess against the mountaineers of the +Zagros. He is represented on it overpowering their chief: his warriors +follow after him and charge up the hill, carrying everything before +their steady onslaught. Another of his warlike expeditions is said to +have had as its field of operations a district of Magan, which, in the +view of the writer, undoubtedly represented the Sinaitic Peninsula and +perhaps Egypt. This expedition against Magan no doubt took place, and +one of the few monuments of Naramsin which have reached us refers to it. +Other inscriptions tell us incidentally that Naramsin reigned over the +"four Houses of the world," Babylon, Sippara, Nipur, and Lagash. Like +his father, he had worked at the building of the Ekur of Nipur and the +Bulbar of Agade; he erected, moreover, at his own cost, the temple +of the Sun at Sippara.* The latter passed through many and varied +vicissitudes. Restored, enlarged, ruined on several occasions, the date +of its construction and the name of its founder were lost in the course +of ages. + + * The text giving us this information is that in which + Nabonidos affirms that Naramsin, son of Sargon of Agado, had + founded the temple of the Sun at Sippara, 3200 years before + himself, which would give us 3750 B.C. for the reign of + Naramsin. + +The last independent King of Babylon, Nabonaid [Nabonidos], at length +discovered the cylinders in which Naramsin, son of Sargon, had signified +to posterity all that he had done towards the erection of a temple +worthy of the deity to the god of Sippara: "for three thousand two +hundred years not one of the kings had been able to find them." We +have no means of judging what these edifices were like for which +the Chaldaeans themselves showed such veneration; they have entirely +disappeared, or, if anything remains of them, the excavations hitherto +carried out have not revealed it. Many small objects, however, which +have accidentally escaped destruction give us a fair idea of the artists +who lived in Babylon at this time, and of their skill in handling the +graving-tool and chisel. An alabaster vase with the name of +Naramsin, and a mace-head of exquisitely veined marble, dedicated by +Shargani-shar-ali to the sun-god of Sippara, are valued only on account +of the beauty of the material and the rarity of the inscription; but a +porphyry cylinder, which belonged to Ibnishar, scribe of the above-named +Shargani, must be ranked among the masterpieces of Oriental engraving. +It represents the hero Gilgames, kneeling and holding with both hands +a spherically shaped vase, from which flow two copious jets forming a +stream running through the country; an ox, armed with a pair of gigantic +crescent-shaped horns, throws back its head to catch one of the jets +as it falls. Everything in this little specimen is equally worthy of +admiration--the purity of outline, the skilful and delicate cutting of +the intaglio, the fidelity of the action, and the accuracy of form. +A fragment of a bas-relief of the reign of Naramsin shows that the +sculptors were not a bit behind the engravers of gems. This consists now +only of a single figure, a god, who is standing on the right, wearing a +conical head-dress and clothed in a hairy garment which leaves his right +arm free. The legs are wanting, the left arm and the hair are for +the most part broken away, while the features have also suffered; its +distinguishing characteristic is a sublety of workmanship which is +lacking in the artistic products of a later age. The outline stands out +from the background with a rare delicacy, the details of the muscles +being in no sense exaggerated: were it not for the costume and pointed +beard, one would fancy it a specimen of Egyptian work of the best +Memphite period. + +[Illustration 096.jpg THE SEAL OF SHARGANI-SHAR-ALI: GILGAMES WATERS THE +CELESTIAL OX.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from Menant. + +One is almost tempted to believe in the truth of the tradition which +ascribes to Naramsin the conquest of Egypt, or of the neighbouring +countries. + +[Illustration: 096a.jpg Painting in Color of Charioteer] + + Drawn by Boudier, from a photograph published by Father + Schiel. + +[Illustration: 097.jpg Page image] + +Did Sargon and Naramsin live at so early a date as that assigned to +them by Nabonidos? The scribes who assisted the kings of the second +Babylonian empire in their archaeological researches had perhaps +insufficient reasons for placing the date of these kings so far back in +the misty past: should evidence of a serious character A constrain us to +attribute to them a later origin, we ought not to be surprised. In the +mean time our best course is to accept the opinion of the Chaldaeans, +and to leave Sargon and Naramsin in the century assigned to them by +Nabonidos, although from this point they look down as from a high +eminence upon all the rest of Chaldaean antiquity. Excavations have +brought to light several personages of a similar date, whether a +little earlier, or a little later: Bingani-sharali, Man-ish-turba, +and especially Alusharshid, who lived at Kishu and Nipur, and gained +victories over Elam. + +[Illustration: 098.jpg Page image: the arms op the city and kings of +Lagash] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a bas-relief from Lagash, now + in the Louvre + +After this glimpse of light on these shadowy kings darkness once more +closes in upon us, and conceals from us the majority of the sovereigns +who ruled afterwards in Babylon. The facts and names which can be +referred with certainty to the following centuries belong not to +Babylon, but to the southern States, Lagash, Uruk, Uru, Nishin, and +Larsam. The national writers had neglected these principalities; +we possess neither a resume of their chronicles nor a list of their +dynasties, and the inscriptions which speak of their the arms of the +city gods and princes are still very rare and kings of Lagash. Lagash, +as far as our evidence goes, was, perhaps, the most illustrious of +all these cities.* It occupied the heart of the country, and its site +covered both sides of the Shatt-el-Hai; the Tigris separated it on the +east from Anshan, the westernmost of the Elamite districts, with which +it carried on a perpetual frontier war. + + * We are indebted almost exclusively to the researches of M. + de Sarzec, and his discoveries at Telloh, for what we know + of it. The results of his excavations, acquired by the + French government, are now in the Louvre. The description of + the ruins, the text of the inscriptions, and an account of + the statues and other objects found in the course of the + work, have been published by Heuzey-Sakzec, _Decouvertes en + Chaldee_. The name of the ancient town has been read + Sirpurla, Zirgulla, etc. + +All parts of the country were not equally fertile: the fruitful and +well-cultivated district in the neighbourhood of the Shatt-el-Hai gave +place to impoverished lands ending to the eastward, finally in swampy +marshes, which with great difficulty furnished means of sustenance to a +poor and thinly scattered population of fisher-folk. + +[Illustration: 099.jpg FRAGMENT OF BAS-RELIEF BY URNINA, KING OF +LAGASH.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a stone in the Louvre. + +The capital, built on the left bank of the river, stretched out to the +north-east and south-west a distance of some five miles. It was not so +much a city as an agglomeration of large villages, each grouped around a +temple or palace--Uruazagga, Gishgalla, G-irsu, Nina, and Lagash, +which latter imposed its name upon the whole. A branch of the river +Shatt-el-Hai protected it on the south, and supplied the village of +Nina with water; no trace of an inclosing wall has been found, and the +temples and palaces seem to have served as refuges in case of attack. +It had as its arms, or totem, a double-headed eagle standing on a lion +passant, or on two demi-lions placed back to back. Its chief god was +called Ningirsu, that is, the lord of Girsu, where his temple stood: his +companion Bau, and his associates Ninagal, Innanna and Ninsia, were +the deities of the other divisions of the city. The princes were first +called kings, but afterwards vicegerents--_patesi_--when they came under +the suzerainty of a more powerful king, the King of Uruk or of Babylon. + +The earlier history of this remarkable town is made up of the +scanty memoirs of its rulers, together with those of the princes of +Gishban--"the land of the Bow," of which Ishin seems to have been the +principal town. A very ancient document states, that, at the instigation +of Inlil, the god of Nipur, the local deities, Ningirsu and Kirsig, set +up a boundary between the two cities. In the course of time, Meshilim, +a king of Kishu, which, before the rise of Agade, was the chief town in +those parts, extended his dominion over Lagash and erected his stele at +its border; Ush, vicegerent of Gishban, however, removed it, and had to +suffer defeat before he would recognize the new order of things. After +the lapse of some years, of which we possess no records, we find the +mention of a certain Urukagina, who assumes the title of king: he +restored or enlarged several temples, and dug the canal which supplied +the town of Nina with water. A few generations later we find the ruling +authority in the hands of a certain Urnina, whose father Ninigaldun and +grandfather Gurshar received no titles--a fact which proves that they +could not have been reigning sovereigns. Urnina appears to have been of +a peaceful and devout disposition, as the inscriptions contain frequent +references to the edifices he had erected in honour of the gods, the +sacred objects he had dedicated to them, and the timber for building +purposes which he had brought from Magan, but there is no mention in +them of any war. His son Akurgal was also a builder of temples, but +his grandson Idingiranagin, who succeeded Akurgal, was a warlike and +combative prince. + +[Illustration: 101.jpg IDINGIRANAGIN HOLDING THE TOTEM OF LAGASH.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from the bas-relief F2 in the + Louvre. + +It seems probable that, about that time, the kingdom of Gishban had +become a really powerful state. It had triumphed not only over +Babylonia proper, but over Kish, Uru, Uruk, and Larsam, while one of its +sovereigns had actually established his rule in some parts of Northern +Syria. Idingiranagin vanquished the troops of Gishban, and there is now +in the Louvre a trophy which he dedicated in the temple of Ninglrsu on +his return from the campaign. + + * Hilpeecht, Bab. Expcd. of the Univ. of Pennsylvania, vol. + i., 2nd part, p. 47 sqq. + +[Illustration: 102.jpg IDINGIRANAGIN IN HIS CHARIOT LEADING HIS TROOPS.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a bas-relief in the Louvre. The + attendant standing behind the king has been obliterated, but + we see clearly the contour of his shoulder, and his hands + holding the reins. It is a large stele of close-grained + white limestone, rounded at the top, and covered with scenes + and inscriptions on both its faces. One of these faces + treats only of religious subjects. Two warlike goddesses, + crowned with plumed head-dresses and crescent-shaped horns, + are placed before a heap of weapons and various other + objects, which probably represent some of the booty + collected in the campaign. It would appear that they + accompany a tall figure of a god or king, possibly that of + the deity Ningirsu, patron of Lagash and its kings. Ningirsu + raises in one hand an ensign, of which the staff bears at + the top the royal totem, the eagle with outspread wings + laying hold by his talons of two half-lions back to back; + with the other hand he brings a, club down heavily upon a + group of prisoners, who struggle at his feet in the meshes + of a large net. + + +[Illustration: 103.jpg Page image. VULTURES FEEDING UPON THE DEAD.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from the fragment of a bas-relief in + the Louvre. This is the human sacrifice after the victory, + such as we find it in Egypt--the offering to the national + god of a tenth of the captives, who struggle in vain to + escape from fate. On the other stele the battle is at its + height. Idingiranagin, standing upright in his chariot, + which is guided by an attendant, charges the enemy at the + head of his troops, and the plain is covered with corpses + cut down by his fierce blows: a flock of vultures accompany + him, and peck at each other in their struggles over the + arms, legs, and decapitated heads of the vanquished. Victory + once secured, he retraces his steps to bestow funeral + honours upon the dead. + + +[Illustration: 104.jpg PILING UP THE MOUND OF THE DEAD AFTER THE +BATTLE.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from the fragment of a bas-relief in + the Louvre. The bodies raised regularly in layers form an + enormous heap: priests or soldiers wearing loin-cloths mount + to its top, where they pile the offerings and the earth + which are to form the funerary mound. The sovereign, + moreover, has, in honour of the dead, consigned to execution + some of the prisoners, and deigns to kill with his own hand + one of the principal chiefs of the enemy. + +The design and execution of these scenes are singularly rude; men and +beasts--indeed, all the figures--have exaggerated proportions, uncouth +forms, awkward positions, and an uncertain and heavy gait. The war ended +in a treaty concluded with Enakalli, vicegerent of Grishban, by which +Lagash obtained considerable advantages. Idingiranagin replaced the +stele of Meshilim, overthrown by one of Enakalli's predecessors, and +dug a ditch from the Euphrates to the provinces of Guedln to serve +henceforth as a boundary. He further levied a tribute of corn for the +benefit of the goddess Nina and her consort Ningirsu, and applied +the spoils of the campaign to the building of new sanctuaries for the +patron-gods of his city. + +[Illustration: 105.jpg KING URNINA AND HIS FAMILY.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a bas-relief in the Louvre. Cf. + another bas-relief of the same king, p. 244; and for the + probable explanation of these pierced plaques, see p. 258 of + the present work. + +His reign was, on the whole, a glorious and successful one. He conquered +the mountain district of Elam, rescued Uruk and Uru, which had both +fallen into the hands of the people of Gishban, organized an expedition +against the town of Az and killed its vicegerent, in addition to which +he burnt Arsua, and devastated the district of Mishime. He next directed +an attack against Zuran, king of Udban, and, by vanquishing this Prince +on the field of battle, he extended his dominion over nearly the whole +of Babylonia. + +The prosperity of his dynasty was subjected to numerous and strange +vicissitudes. Whether it was that its resources were too feeble to +stand the exigencies and strain of war for any length of time, or that +intestine strife had been the chief cause of its decline, we cannot +say. Its kings married many wives and became surrounded with a numerous +progeny: Urnina had at least four sons. They often entrusted to their +children or their sons-in-law the government of the small towns which +together made up the city: these represented so many temporary fiefs, of +which the holders were distinguished by the title of "vicegerents." This +dismemberment of the supreme authority in the interest of princes, who +believed for the most part that they had stronger claims to the throne +than its occupant, was attended with dangers to peace and to the +permanence of the dynasty. The texts furnish us with evidence of the +existence of at least half a dozen descendants of Akurgal--Inannatuma +I., Intemena, his grandson Inannatuma II, all of whom seem to have been +vigorous rulers who energetically maintained the supremacy of their city +over the neighbouring estates. Inannatuma I., however, proved no match +in the end against Urlamma, the vicegerent of Gishban, and lost part, at +least, of the territory acquired by Idingiranagin, but his son Intemena +defeated Urlamma on the banks of the Lumasirta Canal, and, having killed +or deposed him, gave the vicegerency of Gishban to a certain Hi, priest +of Ninab, who remained his loyal vassal to the end of his days. With +his aid Intemena restored the stelae and walls which had been destroyed +during the war; he also cleared out the old canals and dug new ones, the +most important of which was apparently an arm of the Shatt-el-Hai, and +ran from the Euphrates to the Tigris, through the very centre of the +domains of Ghirsu. + +Other kings and vicegerents of doubtful sequence were followed lastly by +Urbau and his son Gudea. These were all piously devoted to Ningirsu in +general, and in particular to the patron of their choice from among +the divinities of the country--Papsukal, Dunziranna, and Ninagal. They +restored and enriched the temples of these gods: they dedicated to +them statues or oblation vases for the welfare of themselves and their +families. It would seem, if we are to trust the accounts which they give +of themselves, that their lives were passed in profound peace, without +other care than that of fulfilling their duties to heaven and its +ministers. Their actual condition, if we could examine it, would +doubtless appear less agreeable and especially less equable; revolutions +in the palace would not be wanting, nor struggles with the other peoples +of Chaldaea, with Susiana and even more distant nations. When Agade rose +into power in Northern Babylonia, they fell under its rule, and one of +them, Lugal-ushum-gal, acknowledged himself a dependant of Sargon. On +the decline of Agade, and when that city was superseded by Uru in the +hegemony of Babylonia proper, the vicegerents of Lagash were transferred +with the other great towns to the jurisdiction of Uru, and flourished +under the supremacy of the new dynasty. + +Grudea, son of Urbau, who, if not the most powerful of its princes, +is at least the sovereign of whom we possess the greatest number of +monuments, captured the town of Anshan in Elam, and this is probably not +the only campaign in which he took part, for he speaks of his success +in an incidental manner, and as if he were in a hurry to pass to more +interesting subjects. + +[Illustration: 108.jpg THE SACRIFICE] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a stone in the Louvre. + +That which seemed to him important in his reign, and which especially +called forth the recognition of posterity, was the number of his pious +foundations, distinguished as they were by beauty and magnificence. The +gods themselves had inspired him in his devout undertakings, and had +even revealed to him the plans which he was to carry out. An old man of +venerable aspect appeared to him in a vision, and commanded him to build +a temple: as he did not know with whom he had to do, Nina his mother +informed him that it was his brother, the god Ningirsu. This having been +made clear, a young woman furnished with style and writing tablet was +presented to him--Nisaba, the sister of Nina; she made a drawing in his +presence, and put before him the complete model of a building. He set +to work on it _con amore_, and sent for materials to the most distant +countries--to Magan, Amanus, the Lebanon, and into the mountains which +separate the valley of the Upper Tigris from that of the Euphrates. + +[Illustration: 109.jpg SITTING STATUE OF GUDEA] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin + +The sanctuaries which he decorated, and of which he felt so proud, are +to-day mere heaps of bricks, now returned to their original clay; but +many of the objects which he placed in them, and especially the statues, +have traversed the centuries without serious damage before finding a +resting-place in the Louvre. The sculptors of Lagash, after the time of +Idingi-ranagin, had been instructed in a good school, and had learned +their business. Their bas-reliefs are not so good as those of Naramsin; +the execution of them is not so refined, the drawing less delicate, and +the modelling of the parts not so well thought out. A good illustration +of their work is the fragment of a square stele which represents a scene +of offering or sacrifice. We see in the lower part of the picture a +female singer, who is accompanied by a musician, playing on a lyre +ornamented with the head of an ox, and a bull in the act of walking. +In the upper part an individual advances, clad in a fringed mantle, and +bearing in his right hand a kind of round paten, and in his left a short +staff. An acolyte follows him, his arms brought up to his breast, while +another individual marks, by clapping his hands, the rhythm of the ode +which a singer like the one below is reciting. The fragment is much +abraded, and its details, not being clearly exhibited, have rather to +be guessed at; but the defaced aspect which time has produced is of some +service to it, since it conceals in some respect the rudeness of +its workmanship. The statues, on the other hand, bear evidence of a +precision of chiselling and a skill beyond question. Not that there are +no faults to be found in the work. They are squat, thick, and heavy +in form, and seem oppressed by the weight of the woollen covering with +which the Chaldeans enveloped themselves; when viewed closely, they +excite at once the wonder and repulsion of an eye accustomed to the +delicate grace, and at times somewhat slender form, which usually +characterized the good statues of the ancient and middle empire of +Egypt. But when we have got over the effect of first impressions, we can +but admire the audacity with which the artists attacked their material. +This is of hard dolerite, offering great resistance to the tool--harder, +perhaps, than the diorite out of which the Memphite sculptor had to +cut his Khephren: they succeeded in mastering it, and in handling it as +freely as if it were a block of limestone or marble. + +[Illustration: 111.jpg Plan of the Ruins of Mughier] + +The surface of the breast and back, the muscular development of the +shoulders and arms, the details of the hands and feet, all the nude +portions, are treated at once with a boldness and attention to minutiae +rarely met with in similar works. The pose is lacking in variety; the +individual, whether male or female, is sometimes represented standing +and sometimes sitting on a low seat, the legs brought together, the bust +rising squarely from the hips, the hands crossed upon the breast, in a +posture of submission or respectful adoration. The mantle passes over +the left shoulder, leaving the right free, and is fastened on the right +breast, the drapery displaying awkward and inartistic folds: the latter +widens in the form of a funnel from top to bottom, being bell-shaped +around the lower part of the body, and barely leaves the ankles exposed. + +[Illustration: 112.jpg STATUES FROM TELLOH. and HEAD OF ONE OF THE +STATUE OF GUDEA.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from Heuzey-Sarzec. + +All the large statues to be seen at the Louvre have lost their heads; +fortunately we possess a few separate heads. Some are completely shaven, +others wear a kind of turban affording shade to the forehead and eyes; +among them all we see the same qualities and defects which we find in +the bodies: a hardness of expression, heaviness, absence of vivacity, +and yet withal a vigour of reproduction and an accurate knowledge of +human anatomy. These are instances of what could be accomplished in a +city of secondary rank; better things were doubtless produced in the +great cities, such as Uru and Babylon. Chaldaean art, as we are able +to catch a glimpse of it in the monuments of Lagash, had neither the +litheness, nor animation, nor elegance of the Egyptian, but it was +nevertheless not lacking in force, breadth, and originality. Urningirsu +succeeded his father Gudea, to be followed rapidly by several successive +vicegerents, ending, it would appear, in Gala-lama. Their inscriptions +are short and insignificant, and show that they did not enjoy the same +resources or the same favour which enabled Gudea to reign gloriously. +The prosperity of Lagash decreased steadily under their administration, +and they were all the humble vassals of the King of Uru, Dungi, son of +Urbau; a fact which tends to make us regard Urbau as having been the +suzerain upon whom Gudea himself was dependent. Uru, the only city among +those of Lower Chaldaea which stands on the right bank of the Euphrates, +was a small but strong place, and favourably situated for becoming one +of the commercial and industrial centres in these distant ages. The +Wady Eummein, not far distant, brought to it the riches of Central and +Southern Arabia, gold, precious stones, gums, and odoriferous resins for +the exigencies of worship. Another route, marked out by wells, traversed +the desert to the land of the semi-fabulous Mashu, and from thence +perhaps penetrated as far as Southern Syria and the Sinaitic +Peninsula--Magan and Milukhkha on the shores of the Red Sea: this was +not the easiest but it was the most direct route for those bound for +Africa, and products of Egypt were no doubt carried along it in order +to reach in the shortest time the markets of Uru. The Euphrates now +runs nearly five miles to the north of the town, but from the regions +bordering the Black Sea. + +[Illustration: 114.jpg Plan of the Ruins of Abu-Shahreyn] + +In ancient times it was not so distant, but passed almost by its +gates. The cedars, cypresses, and pines of Amamis and the Lebanon,the +limestones, marbles, and hard stones of Upper Syria, were brought down +to it by boat; and probably also metals--iron, copper and lead. + +The Shatt-el-Hai, moreover, poured its waters into the Euphrates almost +opposite the city, and opened up to it commercial relations with the +Upper and Middle Tigris. And this was not all; whilst some of its +boatmen used its canals and rivers as highways, another section made +their way to the waters of the Persian Gulf and traded with the ports on +its coast. Eridu, the only city which could have barred their access +to the sea, was a town given up to religion, and existed only for its +temples and its gods. It was not long before it fell under the influence +of its powerful neighbour, becoming the first port of call for vessels +proceeding up the Euphrates. + +[Illustration: 115.jpg AN ARAB CROSSING THE TIGRIS IN A "KUFA."] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a sketch by Chesney. + +In the time of the Greeks and Romans the Chaldaeans were accustomed +to navigate the Tigris either in round flat-bottomed boats, of little +draught--"kufas," in fact--or on rafts placed upon inflated skins, +exactly similar in appearance and construction to the "keleks" of our +own day. These keleks were as much at home on the sea as upon the river, +and they may still be found in the Persian Gulf engaged in the coasting +trade. Doubtless many of these were included among the vessels of Uru +mentioned in the texts, but there were also among the latter those +long large rowing-boats with curved stem and stern, Egyptian in their +appearance, which are to be found roughly incised on some ancient +cylinders. These primitive fleets were not disposed to risk the +navigation of the open sea. They preferred to proceed slowly along the +shore, hugging it in all cases, except when it was necessary to reach +some group of neighbouring islands; many days of navigation were thus +required to make a passage which one of our smallest sail-boats would +effect in a few hours, and at the end of their longest voyages they +were not very distant from their point of departure. It would be a great +mistake to suppose them capable of sailing round Arabia and of fetching +blocks of stone by sea from the Sinaitic Peninsula; such an expedition, +which would have been dangerous even for Greek or Roman Galleys, would +have been simply impossible for them. If they ever crossed the Strait +of Ormuzd, it was an exceptional thing, their ordinary voyages being +confined within the limits of the gulf. The merchants of Uru were +accustomed to visit regularly the island of Dilmun, the land of Magan, +the countries of Milukhkha and Gubin; from these places they brought +cargoes of diorite for their sculptors, building-timber for their +architects, perfumes and metals transported from Yemen by land, and +possibly pearls from the Bahrein Islands. They encountered serious +rivalry from the sailors of Dilmun and Magan, whose maritime tribes were +then as now accustomed to scour the seas. The risk was great for those +who set out on such expeditions, perhaps never to return, but the profit +was considerable. + +[Illustration: 117.jpg AN ASSYRIAN KELEK LADEN WITH BUILDING-STONE.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a bas-relief from "Kouyunjik" + (Layard, _The Monuments of Nineveh_, 2nd series, pi. 13; cf. + Place, _Ninive et l'Assyrie_, pl. 43, No. 1.) + +Uru, enriched by its commerce, was soon in a position to subjugate +the petty neighbouring states--Uruk, Larsam, Lagash, and Nipur. Its +territory formed a fairly extended sovereignty, whose lords entitled +themselves kings of Shumir and Akkad, and ruled over all Southern +Chaldaea for many centuries. + +Several of these kings, the Lugalkigubnidudu and the Lugalkisalsi, of +whom some monuments have been preserved to us, seem to have extended +their influence beyond these limits prior to the time of Sargon the +Elder; and we can date the earliest of them with tolerable probability. +Urbau reigned some time about 2900 B.C. He was an energetic builder, and +material traces of his activity are to be found everywhere throughout +the country. The temple of the Sun at Larsam, the temple of Nina in +Uruk, and the temples of Inlilla and Ninlilla in Nipur were indebted +to him for their origin or restoration: he decorated or repaired +all structures which were not of his own erection: in Uru itself +the sanctuary of the moon-god owes its foundation to him, and the +fortifications of the city were his work. Dungi, his son, was an +indefatigable bricklayer, like his father: he completed the sanctuary +of the moon-god, and constructed buildings in Uruk, Lagash, and Kutha. +There is no indication in the inscriptions of his having been engaged +in any civil struggle or in war with a foreign nation; we should make a +serious mistake, however, if we concluded from this silence that peace +was not disturbed in his time. The tie which bound together the petty +states of which Uru was composed was of the slightest. The sovereign +could barely claim as his own more than the capital and the district +surrounding it; the other cities recognized his authority, paid him +tribute, did homage to him in religious matters, and doubtless rendered +him military service also, but each one of them nevertheless maintained +its particular constitution and obeyed its hereditary lords. These +lords, it is true, lost their title of king, which now belonged +exclusively to their suzerain, and each one had to be content in his +district with the simple designation of "vicegerent;" but having once +fulfilled their feudal obligations, they had absolute power over +their ancient domains, and were able to transmit to their progeny the +inheritance they had received from their fathers. Gudea probably, and +most certainly his successors, ruled in this way over Lagash, as a fief +depending on the crown of Uru. After the manner of the Egyptian barons, +the vassals of the kings of Chaldaea submitted to the control of their +suzerain without resenting his authority as long as they felt the +curbing influence of a strong hand: but on the least sign of feebleness +in their master they reasserted themselves, and endeavoured to recover +their independence. A reign of any length was sure to be disturbed by +rebellions sometimes difficult to repress: if we are ignorant of any +such, it is owing to the fact that inscriptions hitherto discovered are +found upon objects upon which an account of a battle would hardly find +a fitting place, such as bricks from a temple, votive cones or cylinders +of terra-cotta, amulets or private seals. We are still in ignorance as +to Dungi's successors, and the number of years during which this first +dynasty was able to prolong its existence. We can but guess that its +empire broke up by disintegration after a period of no long duration. +Its cities for the most part became emancipated, and their rulers +proclaimed themselves kings once more. We see that the kingdom of +Amnanu, for instance, was established on the left bank of the Euphrates, +with Uruk as its capital, and that three successive sovereigns at +least--of whom Singashid seems to have been the most active--were able +to hold their own there. Uru had still, however, sufficient prestige and +wealth to make it the actual metropolis of the entire country. No one +could become the legitimate lord of Shumir and Accad before he had +been solemnly enthroned in the temple at Uru. For many centuries every +ambitious kinglet in turn contended for its possession and made it +his residence. The first of these, about 2500 B.C., were the lords +of Nishin, Libitanunit, Gamiladar, Inedin, Bursin I., and Ismidagan: +afterwards, about 2400 B.C., Gungunum of Nipur made himself master of +it. The descendants of Gungunum, amongst others Bursin II., Gimilsin, +Inesin, reigned gloriously for a few years. Their records show that +they conquered not only a part of Elam, but part of Syria. They were +dispossessed in their turn by a family belonging to Larsam, whose two +chief representatives, as far as we know, were Nurramman and his son +Sinidinnam (about 2300 B.C.). Naturally enough, Sinidinnam was a builder +or repairer of temples, but he added to such work the clearing of the +Shatt-el-Hai and the excavation of a new canal giving a more direct +communication between the Shatt and the Tigris, and in thus controlling +the water-system of the country became worthy of being considered one of +the benefactors of Chaldaea. + +We have here the mere dust of history, rather than history itself: here +an isolated individual makes his appearance in the record of his name, +to vanish when we attempt to lay hold of him; there, the stem of a +dynasty which breaks abruptly off, pompous preambles, devout formulas, +dedications of objects or buildings, here and there the account of some +battle, or the indication of some foreign country with which relations +of friendship or commerce were maintained--these are the scanty +materials out of which to construct a connected narrative. Egypt has not +much more to offer us in regard to many of her Pharaohs, but we have in +her case at least the ascertained framework of her dynasties, in +which each fact and each new name falls eventually, and after some +uncertainty, into its proper place. The main outlines of the picture are +drawn with sufficient exactitude to require no readjustment, the groups +are for the most part in their fitting positions, the blank spaces or +positions not properly occupied are gradually restricted, and filled in +from day to day; the expected moment is in sight when, the arrangement +of the whole being accomplished, it will be necessary only to fill in +the details. In the case of Chaldaea the framework itself is wanting, +and expedients must be resorted to in order to classify the elements +entering into its composition. Naramsin is in his proper place, or +nearly so; but as for Gudea, what interval separates him from Naramsin, +and at what distance from Gudea are we to place the kings of Uru? The +beginnings of Chaldaea have merely a provisional history: the facts in +it are certain, but the connection of the facts with one another is too +often a matter of speculation. The arrangement which is put forward at +present can be regarded only as probable, but it would be difficult +to propose a better until the excavations have furnished us with fresh +material; it must be accepted merely as an attempt, without pledging to +it our confidence on the one hand, or regarding it with scepticism on +the other. + + + + +CHAPTER II--THE TEMPLES AND THE GODS OF CHALDAEA + +_THE CONSTRUCTION AND REVENUES OF THE TEMPLES--THE POPULAR GODS AND THE +THEOLOGICAL TRIADS----THE DEAD AND HADES_. + +_Chaldaean cities: the resemblance of their ruins to natural mounds +caused by their exclusive use of brick as a building material--Their +city walls: the temples and local gods; reconstruction of their history +by means of the stamped bricks of which they were built--The two types +of ziggurat: the arrangement of the temple of Nannar at Uru. + +The tribes of the Chaldaean gods--Genii hostile to men, their monstrous +shapes; the south-west wind; friendly genii--The Seven, and their +attacks on the moon-god; Gibil, the fire-god, overcomes them and their +snares--The Sumerian gods; Ningirsu: the difficulty of defining them and +of understanding the nature of them; they become merged in the Semitic +deities. + +Characteristics and dispositions of the Chaldaean gods--the goddesses, +like women of the harem, are practically nonentities; Mylitta and +her meretricious rites--The divine aristocracy and its principal +representatives: their relations to the earth, oracles, speaking +statues, household gods--The gods of each city do not exclude those +of neighbouring cities: their alliances and their borrowings from one +another--The sky-gods and the earth-gods, the sidereal gods: the moon +and the sun. + +The feudal gods: several among them unite to govern the world; the two +triads of Eridu--The supreme triad: Anu the heaven; Bel the earth and +his fusion with the Babylonian Merodach; Ea, the god of the waters--The +second triad: Sin the moon and Shamash the sun; substitution of Bamman +for Ishtar in this triad; the winds and the legend of Adapa, the +attributes of Ramman--The addition of goddesses to these two triads; +the insignificant position which they occupy. + +The assembly of the gods governs the world: the bird Zu steals the +tablets of destiny--Destinies are written in the heavens and determined +by the movements of the stars; comets and their presiding deities, Nebo +and Ishtai--The numerical value of the gods--The arrangement of the +temples, the local priesthood, festivals, revenues of the gods and gifts +made to them--Sacrifices, the expiation of crimes--Death and the future +of the soul--Tombs and the cremation of the dead; the royal sepulchres +and funerary rites--Hades and its sovereigns: Nergal, Allat, the +descent of Ishtar into the infernal regions, and the possibility of a +resurrection The invocation of the dead--The ascension of Etana._ + + +[Illustration: 124.jpg Chapter II] + + + + +CHAPTER II--THE TEMPLES AND THE GODS OF CHALDAEA + +_The construction and revenues of the temples--Popular gods and +theological triads--The dead and Hades_. + + +The cities of the Euphrates attract no attention, like those of the +Nile, by the magnificence of their ruins, which are witnesses, +even after centuries of neglect, to the activity of a powerful and +industrious people: on the contrary, they are merely heaps of rubbish in +which no architectural outline can be distinguished--mounds of stiff +and greyish clay, cracked by the sun, washed into deep crevasses by the +rain, and bearing no apparent traces of the handiwork of man. + +[Illustration: 126.jpg PLAN OF THE RUINS OF WAKKA] + +In the estimation of the Chaldaean architects, stone was a material of +secondary consideration: as it was necessary to bring it from a great +distance and at considerable expense, they used it very sparingly, and +then merely for lintels, uprights, thresholds, for hinges on which to +hang their doors, for dressings in some of their state apartments, in +cornices or sculptured friezes on the external walls of their buildings; +and even then its employment suggested rather that of a band of +embroidery carefully disposed on some garment to relieve the plainness +of the material. Crude brick, burnt brick, enamelled brick, but always +and everywhere brick was the principal element in their construction. +The soil of the marshes or of the plains, separated from the pebbles +and foreign substances which it contained, mixed with grass or chopped +straw, moistened with water, and assiduously trodden underfoot, +furnished the ancient builders with materials of incredible tenacity. +This was moulded into thin square bricks, eight inches to a foot across, +and three to four inches thick, but rarely larger: they were stamped on +the flat side, by means of an incised wooden block, with the name of +the reigning sovereign, and were then dried in the sun.* A layer of +fine mortar or of bitumen was sometimes spread between the courses, or +handfuls of reeds would be strewn at intervals between the brickwork to +increase the cohesion: more frequently the crude bricks were piled one +upon another, and their natural softness and moisture brought about +their rapid agglutination.** As the building proceeded, the weight +of the courses served to increase still further the adherence of the +layers: the walls soon became consolidated into a compact mass, in which +the horizontal strata were distinguishable only by the varied tints of +the clay used to make the different relays of bricks. + + * The making of bricks for the Assyrian monuments of the + time of the Sargonids has been minutely described by Place, + _Ninive et l'Assyrie_, vol. i. pp. 211-214. The methods of + procedure were exactly the same as those used under the + earliest king known, as has been proved by the examination + of the bricks taken from the monuments of Uru and Lagash. + + ** This method of building was noticed by classical writers. + The word "Bowarieh," borne by several ancient mounds in + Chaldoa, signifies, properly speaking, a mat of reeds; it is + applied only to such buildings as are apparently constructed + with alternate layers of brick and dried reeds. The + proportion of these layers differs in certain localities: in + the ruins of the ancient temple of Belos at Babylon, now + called the "Mujelibeh," the lines of straw and reeds run + uninterruptedly between each course of bricks; in the ruins + of Akkerkuf, they only occur at wider intervals--according + to Niebuhr and Ives, every seventh or eighth course; + according to Raymond, every seventh course, or sometimes + every fifth or sixth course, but in these cases the layer of + reeds becomes 3 1/2 to 3 3/4 inches wide. H. Rawlin-son + thinks, on the other hand, that all the monuments in which + we find layers of straw and reeds between the brick courses + belong to the Parthian period. + +[Illustration: 128.jpg A CHALDAEAN STAMPED BRICK.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a brick preserved in the + Louvre. The bricks bearing historical inscriptions, which + are sometimes met with, appear to have been mostly ex-voto + offerings placed somewhere prominently, and not building + materials hidden in the masonry. + + +Monuments constructed of such a plastic material required constant +attention and frequent repairs, to keep them in good condition: after a +few years of neglect they became quite disfigured, the houses suffered +a partial dissolution in every storm, the streets were covered with +a coating of fine mud, and the general outline of the buildings and +habitations grew blurred and defaced. Whilst in Egypt the main features +of the towns are still traceable above ground, and are so well preserved +in places that, while excavating them, we are carried away from +the present into the world of the past, the Chaldaean cities, on the +contrary, are so overthrown and seem to have returned so thoroughly to +the dust from which their founders raised them, that the most patient +research and the most enlightened imagination can only imperfectly +reconstitute their arrangement. + +The towns were not enclosed within those square or rectangular +enclosures with which the engineers of the Pharaohs fortified their +strongholds. The ground-plan of Uru was an oval, that of Larsam formed +almost a circle upon the soil, while Uruk and Eridu resembled in shape +a sort of irregular trapezium. The curtain of the citadel looked down on +the plain from a great height, so that the defenders were almost out +of reach of the arrows or slings of the besiegers: the remains of the +ramparts at Uruk at the present day are still forty to fifty feet +high, and twenty or more feet in thickness at the top. Narrow turrets +projected at intervals of every fifty feet along the face of the wall: +the excavations have not been sufficiently pursued to permit of our +seeing what system of defence was applied to the entrances. The area +described by these cities was often very large, but the population +in them was distributed very unequally; the temples in the different +quarters formed centres around which were clustered the dwellings of the +inhabitants, sometimes densely packed, and elsewhere thinly scattered. +The largest and richest of these temples was usually reserved for the +principal deity, whose edifices were being continually decorated by +the ruling princes, and the extent of whose ruins still attracts the +traveller. The walls, constructed and repaired with bricks stamped +with the names of lords of the locality, contain in themselves alone an +almost complete history. Did Urbau, we may ask, found the ziggurat of +Nannar in Uru? We meet with his bricks at the base of the most ancient +portions of the building, and we moreover learn, from cylinders +unearthed not far from it, that "for Nannar, the powerful bull of Anu, +the son of Bel, his King, Urbau, the brave hero, King of Uru, had built +E-Timila, his favourite temple." The bricks of his son Dungi are found +mixed with his own, while here and there other bricks belonging to +subsequent kings, with cylinders, cones, and minor objects, strewn +between the courses, mark restorations at various later periods. What +is true of one Chaldaean city is equally true of all of them, and the +dynasties of Uruk and of Lagash, like those of Uru, can be reconstructed +from the revelations of their brickwork. The lords of heaven promised +to the lords of the earth, as a reward of their piety, both glory and +wealth in this life, and an eternal fame after death: they have, indeed, +kept their word. The majority of the earliest Chaldaean heroes would be +unknown to us, were it not for the witness of the ruined sanctuaries +which they built, and that which they did in the service of their +heavenly patrons has alone preserved their names from oblivion. Their +most extravagant devotion, however, cost them less money and effort than +that of the Pharaohs their contemporaries. While the latter had to +bring from a distance, even from the remotest parts of the desert, the +different kinds of stone which they considered worthy to form part of +the decoration of the houses of their gods, the Chaldaean kings gathered +up outside their very doors the principal material for their buildings: +should they require any other accessories, they could obtain, at +the worst, hard stone for their statues and thresholds in Magan and +Milukhkha, and beams of cedar and cypress in the forests of the Amanus +and the Upper Tigris. Under these conditions a temple was soon erected, +and its construction did not demand centuries of continuous labour, like +the great limestone and granite sanctuaries of Egypt: the same ruler who +laid the first brick, almost always placed the final one, and succeeding +generations had only to keep the building in ordinary repair, without +altering its original plan. The work of construction was in almost +every case carried out all at one time, designed and finished from +the drawings of one architect, and bears traces but rarely of those +deviations from the earlier plans which sometimes make the comprehension +of the Theban temples so difficult a matter: if the state of decay of +certain parts, or more often inadequate excavation, frequently prevent +us from appreciating their details, we can at least reinstate their +general outline with tolerable accuracy. + +While the Egyptian temple was spread superficially over a large area, +the Chalaean temple strove to attain as high an elevation as possible. +The "ziggurats," whose angular profile is a special characteristic of +the landscapes of the Euphrates, were composed of several immense cubes, +piled up on one another, and diminishing in size up to the small shrine +by which they were crowned and wherein the god himself was supposed to +dwell. There are two principal types of these ziggurats. In the first, +for which the builders of Lower Chaldaea showed a marked preference, +the vertical axis, common to all the superimposed stories, did not pass +through the centre of the rectangle which served as the base of the +whole building; it was carried back and placed near to one of the narrow +ends of the base, so that the back elevation of the temple rose abruptly +in steep narrow ledges above the plain, while the terraces of the front +broadened out into wide platforms. The stories are composed of solid +blocks of crude brick; up to the present, at least, no traces of +internal chambers have been found.* The chapel on the summit could not +contain more than one apartment: an altar stood before the door, and +access to it was obtained by a straight external staircase, interrupted +at each terrace by a more or less spacious landing.** The second type +of temple frequently found in Northern Chaldaea was represented by a +building on a square base with seven stories, all of equal height, +connected by one or two lateral staircases, having on the summit, the +pavilion of the god; this is the "terraced tower" which excited the +admiration of the Greeks at Babylon, and of which the temple of Bel was +the most remarkable example. The ruins of it still exist, but it has +been so frequently and so completely restored in the course of ages, +that it is impossible to say how much now remains of the original +construction. We know of several examples, however, of the other type +of ziggurat--one at Uru, another at Bridu, a third at Uruk, without +mentioning those which have not as yet been methodically explored. None +of them rises directly from the surface of the ground, but they are all +built on a raised platform, which consequently places the foundations of +the temple nearly on a level with the roofs of the surrounding houses. +The raised platform of the temple of Nannar at Uru still measures 20 +feet in height, and its four angles are orientated exactly to the four +cardinal points. Its facade was approached by an inclined plane, or by +a flight of low steps, and the summit, which was surrounded by a low +balustrade, was paved with enormous burnt bricks. On this terrace, +processions at solemn festivals would have ample space to perform their +evolutions. The lower story of the temple occupies a parallelogram of +198 feet in length by 173 feet in width, and rises about 27 feet in +height. + + * Perrot-Ohipiez admit that between the first and second + story there was a sort of plinth seven feet in height which + corresponded to the foundation platform below the first + story. It appears to me, as it did to Loftus, that the slope + which now separates the two vertical masses of brickwork "is + accidental, and owes its existence to the destruction of the + upper portion of the second story." Taylor mentions only two + stories, and evidently considers the slope in question to be + a bank of rubbish. + + ** Perrot-Chipiez place the staircase leading from the + ground-level to the terrace inside the building--"an + arrangement which would have the advantage of not + interfering with the outline of this immense platform, and + would not detract from the strength and solidity of its + appearance;" Reber proposes a different combination. At Uru, + the whole staircase projects in front of the platform and + "loads up to the edge of the basement of the second story," + then continues as an inclined plane from the edge of the + first story to the terrace of the second, forming one single + staircase, perhaps of the same width as this second story, + leading from the base to the summit of the building. + +[Illustration: 134.jpg THE TEMPLE OF NANNAR AT URU, APPROXIMATELY +RESTORED.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin. The restoration differs from that + proposed by Perrot-Chipiez. I have made it by working out + the description taken down on the spot by Taylor. + +The central mass of crude brick has preserved its casing of red tiles, +cemented with bitumen, almost intact up to the top; it is +strengthened by buttresses--nine on the longer and six on the shorter +sides--projecting about a foot, which relieve its rather bare surface. +The second story rises to the height of only 20 feet above, the first, +and when intact could not have been more than 26 to 30 feet high.* Many +bricks bearing the stamp of Dungi are found among the materials used in +the latest restoration, which took place about the VIth century before +our era; they have a smooth surface, are broken here and there by +air-holes, and their very simplicity seems to bear witness to the fact +that Nabonidos confined himself to the task of merely restoring things +to the state in which the earlier kings of Uru had left them.** + +[Illustration: 135.jpg THE TEMPLE OF URU IN ITS PRESENT STATE, ACCORDING +TO TAYLOR] + + Facsimile, by Faucher-Gudin, of the drawing published by + Taylor. + + + * At the present time 14 feet high, plus 5 feet of rubbish, + 119 feet long, 75 feet wide (Loftus, _Travels and Researches + in Olialdsea and Susiana_, p. 129). + + ** The cylinders of Nabonidos describing the restoration of + the temple were found at the four angles of the second story + by Taylor. + +Till within the last century, traces of a third story to this temple +might have been distinguished; unlike the lower ones, it was not of +solid brickwork, but contained at least one chamber: this was the Holy +of Holies, the sanctuary of Nannar. The external walls were covered with +pale blue enamelled tiles, having a polished surface. The interior +was panelled with cedar or cypress--rare woods procured as articles +of commerce from the peoples of the North and West; this woodwork was +inlaid in parts with thin leaves of gold, alternating with panels of +mosaics composed of small pieces of white marble, alabaster, onyx, and +agate, cut and polished. + +[Illustration: 136.jpg FURTHER VIEW OF THE TEMPLE OF URU] + + In Its Present State, According To Loftus. Drawn by + Bouchier, from Loftus. + +Here stood the statue of Nannar, one of those stiff and conventionalized +figures in the traditional pose handed down from generation to +generation, and which lingered even in the Chaldaean statues of Greek +times. The spirit of the god dwelt within it in the same way as the +double resided in the Egyptian idols, and from thence he watched over +the restless movements of the people below, the noise of whose turmoil +scarcely reached him at that elevation. The gods of the Euphrates, like +those of the Nile, constituted a countless multitude of visible and +invisible beings, distributed into tribes and empires throughout all the +regions of the universe. A particular function or occupation formed, +so to speak, the principality of each one, in which he worked with an +indefatigable zeal, under the orders of his respective prince or king; +but, whereas in Egypt they were on the whole friendly to man, or at the +best indifferent in regard to him, in Chaldaea they for the most part +pursued him with an implacable hatred, and only seemed to exist in order +to destroy him. These monsters of alarming aspect, armed with knives and +lances, whom the theologians of Heliopolis and Thebes confined within +the caverns of Hades in the depths of eternal darkness, were believed +by the Chaldaeans to be let loose in broad daylight over the earth,--such +were the "gallu" and the "mas-kim," the "alu" and the "utukku," besides +a score of other demoniacal tribes bearing curious and mysterious names. + +[Illustration: 137.jpg Lion-headed genius.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a small terra-cotta figure of + the Assyrian period, and now in the Louvre. It was one of + the figures buried under the threshold of one of the gates + of the town at Khorsabad, to keep off baleful influences. + +Some floated in the air and presided over the unhealthy winds. The +South-West Wind, the most cruel of them all, stalked over the solitudes +of Arabia, whence he suddenly issued during the most oppressive months +of the year: he collected round him as he passed the malarial vapours +given off by the marshes under the heat of the sun, and he spread them +over the country, striking down in his violence not only man and beast, +but destroying harvests, pasturage, and even trees. + +[Illustration: 138.jpg THE SOUTH-WEST WIND] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from the bronze original now in the + Louvre. The latter museum and the British Museum possess + several other figures of the same demon. + +The genii of fevers and madness crept in silently everywhere, insidious +and traitorous as they were. The plague alternately slumbered or made +furious onslaughts among crowded populations. Imps haunted the houses, +goblins wandered about the water's edge, ghouls lay in wait for +travellers in unfrequented places, and the dead quitting their tombs in +the night stole stealthily among the living to satiate themselves with +their blood. The material shapes attributed to these murderous beings +were supposed to convey to the eye their perverse and ferocious +characters. They were represented as composite creatures in whom the +body of a man would be joined grotesquely to the limbs of animals in the +most unexpected combinations. They worked in as best they could, birds' +claws, fishes' scales, a bull's tail, several pairs of wings, the head +of a lion, vulture, hyaena, or wolf; when they left the creature a human +head, they made it as hideous and distorted as possible. The South-West +Wind was distinguished from all the rest by the multiplicity of the +incongruous elements of which his person was composed. His dog-like body +was supported upon two legs terminating in eagle's claws; in addition to +his arms, which were furnished with sharp talons, he had four outspread +wings, two of which fell behind him, while the other two rose up and +surrounded his head; he had a scorpion's tail, a human face with large +goggle-eyes, bushy eyebrows, fleshless cheeks, and retreating lips, +showing a formidable row of threatening teeth, while from his flattened +skull protruded the horns of a goat: the entire combination was so +hideous, that it even alarmed the god and put him to flight, when he was +unexpectedly confronted with his own portrait. There was no lack of +good genii to combat this deformed and vicious band. They too +were represented as monsters, but monsters of a fine and noble +bearing,--griffins, winged lions, lion-headed men, and more especially +those splendid human-headed bulls, those "lamassi" crowned with mitres, +whose gigantic statues kept watch before the palace and temple gates. +Between these two races hostility was constantly displayed: restrained +at one point, it broke out afresh at another, and the evil genii, +invariably beaten, as invariably refused to accept their defeat. Man, +less securely armed against them than were the gods, was ever meeting +with them. "Up there, they are howling, here they lie in wait,--they are +great worms let loose by heaven--powerful ones whose clamour rises above +the city--who pour water in torrents from heaven, sons who have come +out of the bosom of the earth.--They twine around the high rafters, +the great rafters, like a crown;--they take their way from house to +house,--for the door cannot stop them, nor bar the way, nor repulse +them,--for they creep like a serpent under the door--they insinuate +themselves like the air between the folding doors,--they separate the +bride from the embraces of the bridegroom,--they snatch the child from +between the knees of the man,--they entice the unwary from out of his +fruitful house,--they are the threatening voice which pursues him from +behind." Their malice extended even to animals: "They force the raven +to fly away on the wing,--and they make the swallow to escape from its +nest;--they cause the bull to flee, they cause the lamb to flee--they, +the bad demons who lay snares." + +The most audacious among them did not fear at times to attack the gods +of light; on one occasion, in the infancy of the world, they had sought +to dispossess them and reign in their stead. Without any warning they +had climbed the heavens, and fallen upon Sin, the moon-god; they had +repulsed Shamash, the Sun, and Eamman, both of whom had come to the +rescue; they had driven Ishtar and Anu from their thrones: the whole +firmament would have become a prey to them, had not Bel and Nusku, Ea +and Merodach, intervened at the eleventh hour, and succeeded in hurling +them down to the earth, after a terrible battle. They never completely +recovered from this reverse, and the gods raised up as rivals to them a +class of friendly genii--the "Igigi," who were governed by five heavenly +Anunnas. + +[Illustration: 141.jpg SIN DELIVERED BY MERODACH FROM THE ASSAULT OF THE +SEVEN EVIL SPIRITS.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from an Assyrian intaglio published + by Layard. + +The earthly Anunnas, the Anunnaki, had as their chiefs seven sons +of Bel, with bodies of lions, tigers, and serpents: "the sixth was a +tempestuous wind which obeyed neither god nor king,--the seventh, a +whirlwind, a desolating storm which destroys everything,"--"Seven, +seven,--in the depth of the abyss of waters they are seven,--and +destroyers of heaven they are seven.--They have grown up in the depths +of the abyss, in the palace;--males they are not, females they are +not,--they are storms which pass quickly.--They take no wife, they give +birth to no child,--they know neither compassion nor kindness,--they +listen to no prayer nor supplication.--As wild horses they are born in +the mountains,--they are the enemies of Ba,--they are the agents of the +gods;--they are evil, they are evil--and they are seven, they are seven, +they are twice seven." Man, if reduced to his own resources, could have +no chance of success in struggling against beings who had almost reduced +the gods to submission. He invoked in his defence the help of the whole +universe, the spirits of heaven and earth, the spirit of Bel and of +Belit, that of Ninib and of Nebo, those of Sin, of Ishtar, and of +Bamman; but Gibir or Gibil, the Lord of Fire, was the most powerful +auxiliary in this incessant warfare. The offspring of night and of dark +waters, the Anunnaki had no greater enemy than fire; whether kindled +on the household hearth or upon the altars, its appearance put them to +flight and dispelled their power. + +[Illustration: 142.jpg STRUGGLE BETWEEN A GOOD AND AN EVIL GENIUS.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from Layard. + +"Gibil, renowned hero in the land,--valiant, son of the Abyss, exalted +in the land,--Gibil, thy clear flame, breaking forth,--when it lightens +up the darkness,--assigns to all that bears a name its own destiny. +--The copper and tin, it is thou who dost mix them,--gold and silver, +it is thou who meltest them,--thou art the companion of the goddess +Ninkasi--thou art he who exposes his breast to the nightly enemy!--Cause +then the limbs of man, son of his god, to shine,--make him to be bright +like the sky,--may he shine like the earth,--may he be bright like the +interior of the heavens,--may the evil word be kept far from him," and +with it the malignant spirits. The very insistence with which help is +claimed against the Anunnaki shows how much their power was dreaded. +The Chaldean felt them everywhere about him, and could not move without +incurring the danger of coming into contact with them. He did not fear +them so much during the day, as the presence of the luminary deities in +the heavens reassured him; but the night belonged to them, and he was +open to their attacks. If he lingered in the country at dusk, they were +there, under the hedges, behind walls and trunks of trees, ready to +rush out upon him at every turn. If he ventured after sundown into the +streets of his village or town, he again met with them quarrelling with +dogs over the offal on a rubbish heap, crouched in the shelter of a +doorway, lying hidden in corners where the shadows were darkest. Even +when barricaded within his house, under the immediate protection of +his domestic idols, these genii still threatened him and left him not a +moment's repose.* The number of them was so great that he was unable to +protect himself adequately from all of them: when he had disarmed the +greater portion of them, there were always several remaining against +whom he had forgotten to take necessary precautions. What must have +been the total of the subordinate genii, when, towards the IXth century +before our era, the official census of the invisible beings stated +the number of the great gods in heaven and earth to be sixty-five +thousand!** + + * The presence of the evil spirits everywhere is shown, + among other magical formulas, by the incantation in + Rawlinson, _Cun, Ins. W. As._, vol. ii. pi. 18, where we + find enumerated at length the places from which they are to + be kept out. The magician closes the house to them, the + hedge which surrounds the house, the yoke laid upon the + oxen, the tomb, the prison, the well, the furnace, the + shade, the vase for libation, the ravines, the valleys, the + mountains, the door. + + ** Assurnazirpal, King of Assyria, speaks in one of his + inscriptions of these sixty-five thousand great gods of + heaven and earth. + +We are often much puzzled to say what these various divinities, whose +names we decipher on the monuments, could possibly have represented. The +sovereigns of Lagash addressed their prayers to Ningirsu, the valiant +champion of Inlil; to Ninursag, the lady of the terrestrial mountain: +to Ninsia, the lord of fate; to the King Ninagal; to Inzu, of whose real +name no one has an idea; to Inanna, the queen of battles; to Pasag, to +Galalim, to Dunshagana, to Ninmar, to Ningishzida. Gudea raised temples +to them in all the cities over which his authority extended, and he +devoted to these pious foundations a yearly income out of his domain +land or from the spoils of his wars. "Gudea, the 'vicegerent' of +Lagash, after having built the temple Ininnu for Ningirsu, constructed a +treasury; a house decorated with sculptures, such as no 'vicegerent' +had ever before constructed for Ningirsu; he constructed it for him, +he wrote his name in it, he made in it all that was needful, and he +executed faithfully all the words from the mouth of Ningirsu." The +dedication of these edifices was accompanied with solemn festivals, in +which the whole population took an active part. "During seven years no +grain was ground, and the maidservant was the equal of her mistress, the +slave walked beside his master, and in my town the weak rested by +the side of the strong." Henceforward Gudea watched scrupulously lest +anything impure should enter and mar the sanctity of the place. + +[Illustration: 145.jpg THE GOD NINGIBSU, PATRON OF LAGASH.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from Heuzey-Sarzec. The attribution + of this figure to Ningirsu is very probable, but not wholly + certain. + +Those we have enumerated were the ancient Sumerian divinities, but the +characteristics of most of them would have been lost to us, had we +not learned, by means of other documents, to what gods the Semites +assimilated them, gods who are better known and who are represented +under a less barbarous aspect. Ningirsu, the lord of the division of +Lagash which was called Girsu, was identified with Ninib; Inlil is Bel, +Ninursag is Beltis, Inzu is Sin, Inanna is Ishtar, and so on with the +rest. The cultus of each, too, was not a local cultus, confined to some +obscure corner of the country; they all were rulers over the whole of +Chaldaea, in the north as in the south, at Uruk, at Urn, at Larsam, at +Nipur, even in Babylon itself. Inlil was the ruler of the earth and of +Hades, Babbar was the sun, Inzu the moon, Inanna-Antmit the morning and +evening star and the goddess or love, at a time when two distinct +religious and two rival groups of gods existed side by side on the banks +of the Euphrates. The Sumerian language is for us, at the present day, +but a collection of strange names, of whose meaning and pronunciation we +are often ignorant. We may well ask what beings and beliefs were +originally hidden under these barbaric combinations of syllables which +are constantly recurring in the inscriptions of the oldest dynasties, +such as Pasag, Dunshagana, Dumuzi-. Zuaba, and a score of others. The +priests of subsequent times claimed to define exactly the attributes of +each of them, and probably their statements are, in the main, correct. +But it is impossible for us to gauge the motives which determined the +assimilation of some of these divinities, the fashion in which it was +carried out, the mutual concessions which Semite and Sumerian must have +made before they could arrive at an understanding, and before the +primitive characteristics of each deity were softened down or entirely +effaced in the process. Many of these divine personages, such as Ea, +Merodach, Ishtar, are so completely transformed, that we may well ask to +which of the two peoples they owed their origin. The Semites finally +gained the ascendency over their rivals, and the Sumerian gods from +thenceforward preserved an independent existence only in connection with +magic, divination, and the science of foretelling events, and also in +the formulas of exorcists and physicians, to which the harshness of +their names lent a greater weight. Elsewhere it was Bel and Sin, Shamash +and Eamman, who were universally worshipped, but a Bel, a Sin, a +Shamash, who still betrayed traces of their former connection with the +Sumerian Inlil and Inzu, with Babbar and Mermer. In whatever language, +however, they were addressed, by whatever name they were called upon, +they did not fail to hear and grant a favourable reply to the appeals of +the faithful. + +Whether Sumerian or Semitic, the gods, like those of Egypt, were not +abstract personages, guiding in a metaphysical fashion the forces of +nature. Each of them contained in himself one of the principal elements +of which our universe is composed,--earth, water, sky, sun, moon, and +the stars which moved around the terrestrial mountain. The succession of +natural phenomena with them was not the result of unalterable laws; it +was due entirely to a series of voluntary acts, accomplished by beings +of different grades of intelligence and power. Every part of the great +whole is represented by a god, a god who is a man, a Chaldaean, who, +although of a finer and more lasting nature than other Chaldaeans, +possesses nevertheless the same instincts and is swayed by the same +passions. He is, as a rule, wanting in that somewhat lithe grace of +form, and in that rather easy-going good-nature, which were the primary +characteristics of the Egyptian gods: the Chaldaean divinity has the +broad shoulders, the thick-set figure and projecting muscles of the +people over whom he rules; he has their hasty and violent temperament, +their coarse sensuality, their cruel and warlike propensities, their +boldness in conceiving undertakings, and their obstinate tenacity in +carrying them out. Their goddesses are modelled on the tyra of the +Chaldaen women, or, more properly speaking, on that of their queens. The +majority of them do not quit the harem, and have no other ambition than +to become speedily the mother of a numerous offspring. Those who openly +reject the rigid constraints of such a life, and who seek to share the +rank of the gods, seem to lose all self-restraint when they put off +the veil: like Ishtar, they exchange a life of severe chastity for +the lowest debauchery, and they subject their followers to the same +irregular life which they themselves have led. "Every woman born in the +country must enter once during her lifetime the enclosure of the temple +of Aphrodite, must there sit down and unite herself to a stranger. Many +who are wealthy are too proud to mix with the rest, and repair thither +in closed chariots, followed by a considerable train of slaves. The +greater number seat themselves on the sacred pavement, with a cord +twisted about their heads,--and there is always a great crowd there, +coming and going; the women being divided by ropes into long lanes, down +which strangers pass to make their choice. A woman who has once taken +her place here cannot return home until a stranger has thrown into her +lap a silver coin, and has led her away with him beyond the limits of +the sacred enclosure. As he throws the money he pronounces these words: +'May the goddess Mylitta make thee happy! '--Now, among the Assyrians, +Aphrodite is called Mylitta. The silver coin may be of any value, but +none may refuse it, that is forbidden by the law, for, once thrown, it +is sacred. The woman follows the first man who throws her the money, and +repels no one. When once she has accompanied him, and has thus satisfied +the goddess, she returns to her home, and from thenceforth, however +large the sum offered to her, she will yield to no one. The women who +are tall or beautiful soon return to their homes, but those who are ugly +remain a long time before they are able to comply with the law; some +of them are obliged to wait three or four years within the enclosure."* +This custom still existed in the Vth century before our era, and the +Greeks who visited Babylon about that time found it still in full force. + + * Herodotus, i. 199: of. Stabo, xvi. p. 1058, who probably + has merely quoted this passage from Herodotus, or some + writer who copied from Herodotus. We meet with a direct + allusion to this same custom in the Bible, in the _Book of + Barueh_; "The women also, with cords about them, sitting in + the ways, burn bran for perfume; but if any of them, drawn + by some that passeth by, lie with him, she reproacheth her + fellow, that she was not thought as worthy as herself, nor + her cord broken." + +The gods, who had begun by being the actual material of the element +which was their attribute, became successively the spirit of it, then +its ruler.* They continued at first to reside in it, but in the course +of time they were separated from it, and each was allowed to enter the +domain of another, dwell in it, and even command it, as they could +have done in their own, till finally the greater number of them were +identified with the firmament. + + * Pk. Lbnoemant, _La Magie chez les Chaldeens_, p. 144, et + seq., where the author shows how Anu, after having at + first been the Heaven itself, the starry vault stretched + above the earth, became successively the Spirit of Heaven + (_Zi-ana_), and finally the supreme ruler of the world: + according to Lenormant, it was the Semites in particular who + transformed the primitive spirit into an actual god-king. + +Bel, the lord of the earth, and Ea, the ruler of the waters, passed info +the heavens, which did not belong to them, and took their places beside +Ami: the pathways were pointed out which they had made for themselves +across the celestial vault, in order to inspect their kingdoms from the +exalted heights to which they had been raised; that of Bel was in the +Tropic of Cancer, that of Ea in the Tropic of Capricorn. They gathered +around them all the divinities who could easily be abstracted from the +function or object to which they were united, and they thus constituted +a kind of divine aristocracy, comprising all the most powerful +beings who guided the fortunes of the world. The number of them was +considerable, for they reckoned seven supreme and magnificent gods, +fifty great gods of heaven and earth, three hundred celestial +spirits, and six hundred terrestrial spirits. Each of them deputed +representatives here below, who received the homage of mankind for him, +and signified to them his will. The god revealed himself in dreams to +his seers and imparted to them the course of coming events,* or, in +some cases, inspired them suddenly and spoke by their mouth: their +utterances, taken down and commented on by their assistants, were +regarded as infallible oracles. But the number of mortal men possessing +adequate powers, and gifted with sufficiently acute senses to bear +without danger the near presence of a god, was necessarily limited; +communications were, therefore, more often established by means of +various objects, whose grosser substance lessened for human intelligence +and flesh and blood the dangers of direct contact with an immortal. The +statues hidden in the recesses of the temples or erected on the summits +of the "ziggurats" became imbued, by virtue of their consecration, with +the actual body of the god whom they represented, and whose name was +written either on the base or garment of the statue.** The sovereign +who dedicated them, summoned them to speak in the days to come, and from +thenceforth they spoke: when they were interrogated according to the +rite instituted specially for each one, that part of the celestial soul, +which by means of the prayers had been attracted to and held captive +by the statue, could not refuse to reply.** Were there for this purpose +special images, as in Egypt, which were cleverly contrived so as to +emit sounds by the pulling of a string by the hidden prophet? Voices +resounded at night in the darkness of the sanctuaries, and particularly +when a king came there to prostrate himself for the purpose of learning +the future: his rank alone, which raised him halfway to heaven, prepared +him to receive the word from on high by the mouth of the image. + + * A prophetic dream is mentioned upon, one of the statues of + Telloh. In the records of Assurbanipal we find mention of + several "seers"--_shabru_--one of whom predicts the + general triumph of the king over his enemies, and of whom + another announces in the name of Ishtar the victory over the + Elamites and encourages the Assyrian army to cross a torrent + swollen by rains, while a third sees in a dream the defeat + and death of the King of Elam. These "seers" are mentioned in + the texts of Gudea with the prophetesses "who tell the + message" of the gods. + + ** In a formula drawn up against evil spirits, for the + purpose of making talismanic figures for the protection of + houses, it is said of Merodach that he "inhabits the image" + --_ashibu salam_--which has been made of him by the magician. + + ** This is what Gudea says, when, describing his own statue + which he had placed in the temple of Telloh, he adds that + "he gave the order to the statue: 'To the statue of my king, + speak!'" The statue of the king, inspired by that of the + god, would thenceforth speak when interrogated according to + the formularies. Cf. what is said of the divine or royal + statues dedicated in the temples of Egypt, vol. i. pp. 169, + 170. A number of oracles regularly obtained in the time of + Asarhaddon and Assurbanabal have been published by Knudtzon. + +[Illustration: 152.jpg THE ADORATION OF THE MACE AND THE WHIP.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from the Chaldaean intaglio + reproduced in Heuzey-Sarzec, _Decouvertes en Chaldee_, pl. + 30bis, No. 13b. + +More frequently a priest, accustomed from childhood to the office, +possessed the privilege of asking the desired questions and of +interpreting to the faithful the various signs by means of which the +divine will was made known. The spirit of the god inspired, moreover, +whatever seemed good to him, and frequently entered into objects +where we should least have expected to find it. It animated stones, +particularly such as fell from heaven; also trees, as, for example, the +tree of Eridu which pronounced oracles; and, besides the battle-mace, +with a granite head fixed on a wooden handle, the axe of Ramman, lances +made on the model of Gilgames' fairy javelin, which came and went at its +master's orders, without needing to be touched. Such objects, when it +was once ascertained that they were imbued with the divine spirit, were +placed upon the altar and worshipped with as much veneration as were the +statues themselves. + +[Illustration: 153.jpg A protecting amulet.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from the terra-cotta figurine of + Assyrian date now in the Louvre. + +Animals never became objects of habitual worship as in Egypt: some of +them, however, such as the bull and lion, were closely allied to the +gods, and birds unconsciously betrayed by their flight or cries the +secrets of futurity.* In addition to all these, each family possessed +its household gods, to whom its members recited prayers and poured +libations night and morning, and whose statues set up over the domestic +hearth defended it from the snares of the evil ones.** The State +religion, which all the inhabitants of the same city, from the king down +to the lowest slave, were solemnly bound to observe, really represented +to the Chaldaeans but a tithe of their religious life: it included some +dozen gods, no doubt the most important, but it more or less left out of +account all the others, whose anger, if aroused by neglect, might become +dangerous. The private devotion of individuals supplemented the State +religion by furnishing worshippers for most of the neglected divinities, +and thus compensated for what was lacking in the official public worship +of the community. + + * Animal forms are almost always restricted either to the + genii, the constellations, or the secondary forms of the + greater divinities: Ea, however, is represented by a man + with a fish's tail, or as a man clothed with a fish-skin, + which would appear to indicate that at the outset he was + considered to be an actual fish. + + ** The images of these gods acted as amulets, and the fact + of their presence alone repelled the evil spirits. At + Khorsabad they were found buried under the threshold of the + city gates. A bilingual tablet in the British Museum has + preserved for us the formula of consecration which was + supposed to invest these protecting statuettes with divine + powers. + +If the idea of uniting all these divine beings into a single supreme +one, who would combine within himself all their elements and the whole +of their powers, ever for a moment crossed the mind of some Chaldaean +theologian, it never spread to the people as a whole. Among all the +thousands of tablets or inscribed stones on which we find recorded +prayers and magical formulas, we have as yet discovered no document +treating of the existence of a supreme god, or even containing the +faintest allusion to a divine unity. We meet indeed with many passages +in which this or that divinity boasts of his power, eloquently +depreciating that of his rivals, and ending his discourse with the +injunction to worship him alone: "Man who shall come after, trust +in Nebo, trust in no other god!" The very expressions which are used, +commanding future races to abandon the rest of the immortals in +favour of Nebo, prove that even those who prided themselves on being +worshippers of one god realized how far they were from believing in the +unity of God. They strenuously asserted that the idol of their choice +was far superior to many others, but it never occurred to them to +proclaim that he had absorbed them all into himself, and that he +remained alone in his glory, contemplating the world, his creature. Side +by side with those who expressed this belief in Nebo, an inhabitant +of Babylon would say as much and more of Merodach, the patron of +his birthplace, without, however, ceasing to believe in the actual +independence and royalty of Nebo. "When thy power manifests itself, who +can withdraw himself from it?--Thy word is a powerful net which thou +spreadest in heaven and over the earth:--it falls upon the sea, and +the sea retires,--it falls upon the plain, and the fields make great +mourning,--it falls upon the upper waters of the Euphrates, and the word +of Merodach stirs up the flood in them.--O Lord, thou art sovereign, +who can resist thee?--Merodach, among the gods who bear a name, thou art +sovereign." Merodach is for his worshippers the king of the gods, he is +not the sole god. Each of the chief divinities received in a similar +manner the assurance of his omnipotence, but, for all that, his most +zealous followers never regarded them as the only God, beside whom there +was none other, and whose existence and rule precluded those of any +other. The simultaneous elevation of certain divinities to the supreme +rank had a reactionary influence on the ideas held with regard to the +nature of each. Anu, Bel, and Ea, not to mention others, had enjoyed +at the outset but a limited and incomplete personality, confined to a +single concept, and were regarded as possessing only such attributes as +were indispensable to the exercise of their power within a prescribed +sphere, whether in heaven, or on the earth, or in the waters; as each in +his turn gained the ascendency over his rivals, he became invested with +the qualities which were exercised by the others in their own domain. +His personality became enlarged, and instead of remaining merely a +god of heaven or earth or of the waters, he became god of all three +simultaneously. Anu reigned in the province of Bel or of Ea as he ruled +in his own; Bel joined to his own authority that of Anu and Ea; Ea +treated Anu and Bel with the same absence of ceremony which they had +shown to him, and added their supremacy to his own. The personality +of each god was thenceforward composed of many divers elements: each +preserved a nucleus of his original being, but superadded to this were +the peculiar characteristics of all the gods above whom he had been +successively raised. Anu took to himself somewhat of the temperaments +of Bel and of Ea, and the latter in exchange borrowed from him +many personal traits. The same work of levelling which altered the +characteristics of the Egyptian divinities, and transformed them +little by little into local variants of Osiris and the Sun, went on as +vigorously among the Chaldaean gods: those who were incarnations of +the earth, the waters, the stars, or the heavens, became thenceforth +so nearly allied to each other that we are tempted to consider them +as being doubles of a single god, worshipped under different names +in different localities. Their primitive forms can only be clearly +distinguished when they are stripped of the uniform in which they are +all clothed. + +The sky-gods and the earth-gods had been more numerous at the outset +than they were subsequently. We recognize as such Anu, the immovable +firmament, and the ancient Bel, the lord of men and of the soil on which +they live, and into whose bosom they return after, death; but there +were others, who in historic times had partially or entirely lost their +primitive character,--such as Nergal, Ninib, Dumuzi; or, among the +goddesses, Damkina, Esharra, and even Ishtar herself, who, at the +beginning of their existence, had represented only the earth, or one +of its most striking aspects. For instance, Nergal and Ninib were the +patrons of agriculture and protectors of the soil, Dumuzi was the +ground in spring whose garment withered at the first approach of summer, +Damkina was the leafy mould in union with fertilizing moisture, Esharra +was the field whence sprang the crops, Ishtar was the clod which again +grew green after the heat of the dog days and the winter frosts. All +these beings had been forced to submit in a greater or less degree to +the fate which among most primitive races awaits those older earth-gods, +whose manifestations are usually too vague and shadowy to admit of their +being grasped or represented by any precise imagery without limiting and +curtailing their spheres. New deities had arisen of a more definite and +tangible kind, and hence more easily understood, and having a real or +supposed province which could be more easily realized, such as the sun, +the moon, and the fixed or wandering stars. The moon is the measure of +time; it determines the months, leads the course of the years, and the +entire life of mankind and of great cities depends upon the regularity +of its movements: the Chaldaeans, therefore, made it, or rather the +spirit which animated it, the father and king of the gods; but +its suzerainty was everywhere a conventional rather than an actual +superiority, and the sun, which in theory was its vassal, attracted more +worshippers than the pale and frigid luminary. Some adored the sun under +its ordinary title of Shamash, corresponding to the Egyptian Ra; others +designated it as Merodach, Ninib, Nergal, Dumuzi, not to mention other +less usual appellations. Nergal in the beginning had nothing in common +with Ninib, and Merodach differed alike from Shamash, Ninib, Nergal, +and Dumuzi; but the same movement which instigated the fusion of so many +Egyptian divinities of diverse nature, led the gods of the Chaldaeans to +divest themselves little by little of their individuality and to lose +themselves in the sun. Each one at first became a complete sun, and +united in himself all the innate virtues of the sun--its brilliancy +and its dominion over the world, its gentle and beneficent heat, its +fertilizing warmth, its goodness and justice, its emblematic character +of truth and peace; besides the incontestable vices which darken certain +phases of its being--the fierceness of its rays at midday and in summer, +the inexorable strength of its will, its combative temperament, its +irresistible harshness and cruelty. By degrees they lost this uniform +character, and distributed the various attributes among themselves. If +Shamash continued to be the sun in general, Ninib restricted himself, +after the example of the Egyptian Harmakhis, to being merely the rising +and setting sun, the sun on the two horizons. Nergal became the feverish +and destructive summer sun.* Merodach was transformed into the youthful +sun of spring and early morning;** Dumuzi, like Merodach, became the sun +before the summer. Their moral qualities naturally were affected by the +process of restriction which had been applied to their physical being, +and the external aspect now assigned to each in accordance with their +several functions differed considerably from that formerly attributed +to the unique type from which they had sprung. Ninib was represented as +valiant, bold, and combative; he was a soldier who dreamed but of +battle and great feats of arms. Nergal united a crafty fierceness to +his bravery: not content with being lord of battles, he became the +pestilence which breaks out unexpectedly in a country, the death which +comes like a thief, and carries off his prey before there is time +to take up arms against him. Merodach united wisdom with courage and +strength: he attacked the wicked, protected the good, and used his power +in the cause of order and justice. A very ancient legend, which was +subsequently fully developed among the Canaanites, related the story of +the unhappy passion of Ishtar for Dumuzi. The goddess broke out yearly +into a fresh frenzy, but the tragic death of the hero finally moderated +the ardour of her devotion. She wept distractedly for him, went to beg +the lords of the infernal regions for his return, and brought him back +triumphantly to the earth: every year there was a repetition of the same +passionate infatuation, suddenly interrupted by the same mourning. The +earth was united to the young sun with every recurring spring, and under +the influence of his caresses became covered with verdure; then followed +autumn and winter, and the sun, grown old, sank into the tomb, from +whence his mistress had to call him up, in order to plunge afresh with +him by a common impulse into the joys and sorrows of another year. + + * The solar character of Nergal, at least in later times, is + admitted, but with restrictions, by all Assyriologists. The + evident connection between him and Ninib, of which we have + proofs, was the ground of Delitzsch's theory that he was + likewise the burning and destructive sun, and also of + Jensen's analogous concept of a midday and summer sun. + + ** Pr. Lenormant seems to have been the first to distinguish + in Merodach, besides the god of the planet Jupiter, a solar + personage. This notion, which has been generally admitted by + most Assyriologists, has been defined with greater + exactitude by Jensen, who is inclined to see in Merodach + both the morning sun and the spring sun; and this is the + opinion held at present. + +The differences between the gods were all the more accentuated, for the +reason that many who had a common origin were often separated from one +another by, relatively speaking, considerable distances. Having divided +the earth's surface between them, they formed, as in Egypt, a complete +feudal system, whose chiefs severally took up their residence in a +particular city. Anu was worshipped in Uruk, Enlil-Bel reigned in Nipur, +Eridu belonged to Ea, the lord of the waters. The moon-god, Sin, alone +governed two large fiefs, Uru in the extreme south, and Harran towards +the extreme north-west; Shamash had Larsam and one of the Sipparas for +his dominion, and the other sun-gods were not less well provided for, +Nergal possessing Kutha, Zamama having Kish, Ninib side by side with Bel +reigning in Nipur, while Merodach ruled at Babylon. Each was absolute +master in his own territory, and it is quite exceptional to find two of +them co-regnant in one locality, as were Ninib and Bel at Nipur, or Ea +and Ishtar in Uruk; not that they raised any opposition on principle +to the presence of a stranger divinity in their dominions, but they +welcomed them only under the titles of allies or subjects. Each, +moreover, had fair play, and Nebo or Shamash, after having filled +the _role_ of sovereign at Borsippa or at Larsam, did not consider it +derogatory to his dignity to accept a lower rank in Babylon or at Uru. +Hence all the feudal gods played a double part, and had, as it were, +a double civil portion--that of suzerain in one or two localities, and +that of vassals everywhere else--and this dual condition was the surest +guarantee not only of their prosperity, but of their existence. Sin +would have run great risk of sinking into oblivion if his resources had +been confined to the subventions from his domain temples of Harran and +Uru. Their impoverishment would in such case have brought about his +complete failure: after having enjoyed an existence amid riches and +splendour in the beginning of history, he would have ended his life in a +condition of misery and obscurity. But the sanctuaries erected to him in +the majority of the other cities, the honours which these bestowed upon +him, and the offerings which they made to him, compensated him for the +poverty and neglect which he experienced in his own domains; and he was +thus able to maintain his divine dignity on a suitable footing. All +the gods were, therefore, worshipped by the Chaldeans, and the only +difference among them in this respect arose from the fact that some +exalted one special deity above the others. The gods of the richest and +most ancient principalities naturally enjoyed the greatest popularity. +The greatness of Uru had been the source of Sin's prestige, and Merodach +owed his prosperity to the supremacy which Babylon had acquired over the +districts of the north. Merodach was regarded as the son of Ba, as the +star which had risen from the abyss to illuminate the world, and to +confer upon mankind the decrees of eternal wisdom. He was proclaimed as +lord--"bilu"--_par excellence_, in comparison with whom all other lords +sank into insignificance, and this title soon procured for him a second, +which was no less widely recognized than the first: he was spoken of +everywhere as the Bel of Babylon, Bel-Merodach--before whom Bel of Nipur +was gradually thrown into the shade. The relations between these feudal +deities were not always pacific: jealousies arose among them like those +which disturbed the cities over which they ruled; they conspired against +each other, and on occasions broke out into open warfare. Instead of +forming a coalition against the evil genii who threatened their rule, +and as a consequence tended to bring everything into jeopardy, they +sometimes made alliances with these malign powers and mutually betrayed +each other. Their history, if we could recover it in its entirety, would +be marked by as violent deeds as those which distinguished the princes +and kings who worshipped them. Attempts were made, however, and that too +from an early date, to establish among them a hierarchy like that which +existed among the great ones of the earth. The faithful, who, instead of +praying to each one separately, preferred to address them all, invoked +them always in the same order: they began with Anu, the heaven, and +followed with Bel, Ea, Sin, Shamash, and Bamman. They divided these six +into two groups of three, one trio consisting of Anu, Bel, and Ea, the +other of Sin, Shamash, and Bamman. All these deities were associated +with Southern Chaldoa, and the system which grouped them must have taken +its rise in this region, probably at Uruk, whose patron Anu V occupied +the first rank among them. The theologians who classified them in this +manner seem never to have dreamt of explaining, like the authors of +the Heliopolitan Ennead, the successive steps in their creation: these +triads were not, moreover, copies of the human family, consisting of +a father and mother whose marriage brings into the world a new being. +Others had already given an account of the origin of things, and of +Merodach's struggles with chaos; these theologians accepted the universe +as it was, already made, and contented themselves with summing up its +elements by enumerating the gods which actuated them.* They assigned the +first place to those elements which make the most forcible impression +upon man--beginning with Anu, for the heaven was the god of their city; +following with Bel of Nipur, the earth which from all antiquity has +been associated with the heaven; and concluding with Ea of Eridu, the +terrestrial waters and primordial Ocean whence Anu and Bel, together +with all living creatures, had sprung--Ea being a god whom, had they +not been guided by local vanity, they would have made sovereign lord +of all. Anu owed his supremacy to an historical accident rather than a +religious conception: he held his high position, not by his own merits, +but because the prevailing theology of an early period had been the work +of his priesthood. + + * I know of Sayce only who has endeavoured to explain the + historical formation of the triads. They are considered by + him as of Accadian origin, and probably began in an + astronomical triad, composed of the moon-god, the sun-god, + and the evening star, Sin, Shamash, and Ishtar; alongside + this elementary trinity, "the only authentic one to be found + in the religious faith of primitive Chaldaea," the Semites + may have placed the cosmogonical trinity of Anu, Bel, and + Ea, formed by the reunion of the gods of Uruk, Nipur, and + Eridu. + +The characters of the three personages who formed the supreme triad can +be readily deduced from the nature of the elements which they represent. +Anu is the heaven itself--"ana"--the immense vault which spreads itself +above our heads, clear during the day when glorified by the sun, obscure +and strewn with innumerable star clusters during the night. Afterwards +it becomes the spirit which animates the firmament, or the god which +rules it: he resides in the north towards the pole, and the ordinary +route chosen by him when inspecting his domain is that marked out by our +ecliptic. He occupies the high regions of the universe, sheltered from +winds and tempests, in an atmosphere always serene, and a light always +brilliant. The terrestrial gods and those of middle-space take refuge in +this "heaven of Anu," when they are threatened by any great danger, but +they dare not penetrate its depths, and stop, shortly after passing its +boundary, on the ledge which supports the vault, where they loll and +howl like dogs. It is but rarely that it may be entered, and then +only by the highly privileged--kings whose destiny marked them out for +admittance, and heroes who have fallen valiantly on the field of +battle. In his remote position on unapproachable summits Anu seems to +participate in the calm and immobility of his dwelling. If he is quick +in forming an opinion and coming to a conclusion, he himself never puts +into execution the plans which he has matured or the judgments which +he has pronounced: he relieves himself of the trouble of acting, by +assigning the duty to Bel-Merodach, Ea, or Eamman, and he often employs +inferior genii to execute his will. "They are seven, the messengers of +Anu their king; it is they who from town to town raise the stormy wind; +they are the south wind which drives mightily in the heavens; they are +the destroying clouds which overturn the heavens; they are the rapid +tempests which bring darkness in the midst of clear day, they roam here +and there with the wicked wind and the ill-omened hurricane." Anu sends +forth all the gods as he pleases, recalls them again, and then, to make +them his pliant instruments, enfeebles their personality, reducing it to +nothing by absorbing it into his own. He blends himself with them, and +their designations seem to be nothing more than doublets of his own: he +is Anu the Lakhmu who appeared on the first days of creation; Ahu Urash +or Ninib is the sun-warrior of Nipur; and Anu is also the eagle Alala +whom Ishtar enfeebled by her caresses. Anu regarded in this light ceases +to be the god _par excellence_: he becomes the only chief god, and the +idea of authority is so closely attached to his name that the latter +alone is sufficient in common speech to render the idea of God. Bel +would have been entirely thrown into the shade by him, as the earth-gods +generally are by the sky-gods, if it had not been that he was confounded +with his namesake Bel-Merodach of Babylon: to this alliance he owed +to the end the safety of his life, in presence of Anu. Ea was the +most active and energetic member of the triad.* As he represented the +bottomless abyss, the dark waters which had filled the universe until +the day of the creation, there had been attributed to him a complete +knowledge of the past, present, and future, whose germs had lain within +him, as in a womb. The attribute of supreme wisdom was revered in Ea, +the lord of spells and charms, to which gods and men were alike subject: +no strength could prevail against his strength, no voice against his +voice: when once he opened his mouth to give a decision, his will became +law, and no one might gainsay it. If a peril should arise against +which the other gods found themselves impotent, they resorted to +him immediately for help, which was never refused. He had saved +Shamashnapishtirn from the Deluge; every day he freed his votaries from +sickness and the thousand demons which were the causes of it. He was +a potter, and had modelled men out of the clay of the plains. From him +smiths and workers in gold obtained the art of rendering malleable +and of fashioning the metals. Weavers and stone-cutters, gardeners, +husbandmen, and sailors hailed him as their teacher and patron. From his +incomparable knowledge the scribes derived theirs, and physicians and +wizards invoked spirits in his name alone by the virtue of prayers which +he had condescended to teach them. + + * The name of this god was read "Nisrok" by Oppert, + "Nouah" by Hincks and Lenormant. The true reading is Ia, Ea, + usually translated "house," "water-house"; this is a popular + interpretation which appears to have occurred to the + Chaldaeans from the values of the signs entering into the + name of the god. From the outset H. Rawlinson recognized in + Ea, which he read Hea, Hoa, the divinity presiding over the + abyss of waters; he compared him with the serpent of Holy + Scripture, in its relation to the Tree of Knowledge and the + Tree of Life, and deduced therefrom his character of lord of + wisdom. His position as lord of the primordial waters, from + which all things proceeded, clearly denned by Lenormant, is + now fully recognized. His name was transcribed Aos by + Damascius, a form which is not easily explained; the most + probable hypothesis is that of Hommel who considers Aos as a + shortened form of Iaos = Ia, Ea. + +Subordinate to these limitless and vague beings, the theologians placed +their second triad, made up of gods of restricted power and invariable +form. They recognized in the unswerving regularity with which the moon +waxed and waned, or with which the sun rose and set every day, a +proof of their subjection to the control of a superior will, and they +signalized this dependence by making them sons of one or other of the +three great gods. Sin was the offspring of Bel, Shamash of Sin, +Kamman of Anu. Sin was indebted for this primacy among the subordinate +divinities to the preponderating influence which Uru exercised over +Southern Chaldaea. Mar, where Ramman was the chief deity, never emerged +from its obscurity, and Larsam acquired supremacy only many centuries +after its neighbour, and did not succeed in maintaining it for any +length of time. The god of the suzerain city necessarily took precedence +of those of the vassal towns, and when once his superiority was admitted +by the people, he was able to maintain his place in spite of all +political revolutions. Sin was called in Uru, "Uruki," or "Nannar the +glorious," and his priests sometimes succeeded in identifying him +with Anu. "Lord, prince of the gods, who alone in heaven and earth is +exalted,--father Nannar, lord of the hosts of heaven, prince of the +gods,--father Nannar, lord, great Anu, prince of the gods,--father +Nannar, lord, moon-god, prince of the gods,--father Nannar, lord of Uni, +prince of the gods....--Lord, thy deity fills the far-off heavens, +like the vast sea, with reverential fear! Master of the earth, thou who +fixest there the boundaries [of the towns] and assignest to them their +names,--father, begetter of gods and men, who establishest for them +dwellings and institutest for them that which is good, who proclaimest +royalty and bestowest the exalted sceptre on those whose destiny was +determined from distant times,--chief, mighty, whose heart is great, god +whom no one can name, whose limbs are steadfast, whose knees never bend, +who preparest the paths of thy brothers the gods....--In heaven, who is +supreme? As for thee, it is thou alone who art supreme! As for thee, thy +decree is made known in heaven, and the Igigi bow their faces!--As for +thee, thy decree is made known upon earth, and the spirits of the abyss +kiss the dust!--As for thee, thy decree blows above like the wind, +and stall and pasture become fertile!--As for thee, thy decree is +accomplished upon earth below, and the grass and green things grow!--As +for thee, thy degree is seen in the cattle-folds and in the lairs of the +wild beasts, and it multiplies living things!--As for thee, thy +decree has called into being equity and justice, and the peoples have +promulgated thy law!--As for thee, thy decree, neither in the far-off +heaven, nor in the hidden depths of the earth, can any one recognize +it!--As for thee, thy decree, who can learn it, who can try conclusions +with it?--O Lord, mighty in heaven, sovereign upon earth, among the gods +thy brothers, thou hast no rival." Outside Uru and Harran, Sin did not +obtain this rank of creator and ruler of things; he was simply the +moon-god, and was represented in human form, usually accompanied by a +thin crescent, upon which he sometimes stands upright, sometimes appears +with the bust only rising out of it, in royal costume and pose. + +[Illustration: 169.jpg THE GOD SUN RECEIVES THE HOMAGE OF TWO +WORSHIPPERS.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a heliogravure by Menant. + +His mitre is so closely associated with him that it takes his place on +the astrological tablets; the name he bears--"agu"--often indicates +the moon regarded simply as a celestial body and without connotation +of deity. Babbar-Shamash, "the light of the gods, his fathers," "the +illustrious scion of Sin," passed the night in the depths of the north, +behind the polished metal walls which shut in the part of the firmament +visible to human eyes. + +[Illustration: 170.jpg SHAMASH SETS OUT, IN THE MORNING, FROM THE +INTERIOR OF THE HEAVEN BY THE EASTERN GATE.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a Chaldaean intaglio of green + jasper in the Louvre. The original measures about 1 3/10 + inch in height. + +As soon as the dawn had opened the gates for him, he rose in the east +all aflame, his club in his hand, and he set forth on his headlong +course over the chain of mountains which surrounds the world;* six hours +later he had attained the limit of his journey towards the south, he +then continued his journey to the west, gradually lessening his heat, +and at length re-entered his accustomed resting-place by the western +gate, there to remain until the succeeding morning. He accomplished his +journey round the earth in a chariot conducted by two charioteers, +and drawn by two vigorous onagers, "whose legs never grew weary;" the +flaming disk which was seen from earth was one of the wheels of his +chariot.** + + * His course along the embankment which runs round the + celestial vault was the origin of the title, _Line of Union + between Heaven and Earth_; he moved, in fact, where the + heavens and the earth come into contact, and appeared to + weld them into one by the circle of fire which he described. + Another expression of this idea occurs in the preamble of + Nergal and Ninib, who were called "the separators"; the + course of the sun might, in fact, be regarded as separating, + as well as uniting, the two parts of the universe. + + ** The disk has sometimes four, sometimes eight rays + inscribed on it, indicating wheels with four or eight spokes + respectively. Rawlinson supposed "that these two figures + indicate a distinction between the male and female power of + the deity, the disk with four rays symbolizing Shamash, the + orb with eight rays being the emblem of Ai, Gula, or + Anunit." + +[Illustration: 171.jpg SHAMASH IN HIS SHRINE, HIS EMBLEM BEFORE HIM ON +THE ALTAR.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a photograph by Rassam. The + busts of the two deities on the front of the roof of the + shrine are the two charioteers of the sun; they uphold and + guide the rayed disk upon the altar. Cf. in the Assyrian + period the winged disk led with cords by two genii. + +As soon as he appeared he was hailed with the chanting of hymns: "O Sun, +thou appearest on the foundation of the heavens,--thou drawest back the +bolts which bar the scintillating heavens, thou openest the gate of +the heavens! O Sun, thou raisest thy head above the earth,--Sun, thou +extendest over the earth the brilliant vaults of the heavens." +The powers of darkness fly at his approach or take refuge in their +mysterious caverns, for "he destroys the wicked, he scatters them, the +omens and gloomy portents, dreams, and wicked ghouls--he converts evil +to good, and he drives to their destruction the countries and men--who +devote themselves to black magic." In addition to natural light, he sheds +upon the earth truth and justice abundantly; he is the "high judge" +before whom everything makes obeisance, his laws never waver, his +decrees are never set at naught. "O Sun, when thou goest to rest in the +middle of the heavens--may the bars of the bright heaven salute thee +in peace, and may the gate of heaven bless thee!--May Misharu, thy +well-beloved servant, guide aright thy progress, so that on Rbarra, +the seat of thy rule, thy greatness may rise, and that A, thy cherished +spouse, may receive thee joyfully! May thy glad heart find in her thy +rest!--May the food of thy divinity be brought to thee by her,--warrior, +hero, sun, and may she increase thy vigour;--lord of Ebarra, when +thou ap-proachest, mayest thou direct thy course aright!---0 Sun, urge +rightly thy way along the fixed road determined for thee,--O Sun, thou +who art the judge of the land, and the arbiter of its laws!" + +It would appear that the triad had begun by having in the third place a +goddess, Ishtar of Dilbat. Ishtar is the evening star which precedes the +appearance of the moon, and the morning star which heralds the approach +of the sun: the brilliance of its light justifies the choice which +made it an associate of the greater heavenly bodies. "In the days of +the past.... Ea charged Sin, Shamash, and Ishtar with the ruling of the +firmament of heaven; he distributed among them, with Anu, the command +of the army of heaven, and among these three gods, his children, +he apportioned the day and the night, and compelled them to work +ceaselessly." + +[Illustration: 173.jpg ISHTAR HOLDING HER STAR BEFORE SIN.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from an intaglio at Rome. + +Ishtar was separated from her two companions, when the group of the +planets was definitely organized and claimed the adoration of the +devout; the theologians then put in her place an individual of a less +original aspect, Ramman. Ramman embraced within him the elements of many +very ancient genii, all of whom had been set over the atmosphere, and +the phenomena which are daily displayed in it--wind, rain, and thunder. +These genii occupied an important place in the popular religion which +had been cleverly formulated by the theologians of Uruk, and there have +come down to us many legends in which their incarnations play a part. +They are usually represented as enormous birds flocking on their swift +wings from below the horizon, and breathing flame or torrents of water +upon the countries over which they hovered. The most terrible of them +was Zu, who presided over tempests: he gathered the clouds together, +causing them to burst in torrents of rain or hail; he let loose the +winds and lightnings, and nothing remained standing where he had passed. +He had a numerous family: among them cross-breeds of extraordinary +species which would puzzle a modern naturalist, but were matters of +course to the ancient priests. His mother Siris, lady of the rain and +clouds, was a bird like himself; but Zu had as son a vigorous bull, +which, pasturing in the meadows, scattered abundance and fertility +around him. The caprices of these strange beings, their malice, and +their crafty attacks, often brought upon them vexatious misfortunes. +Shutu, the south wind, one day beheld Adapa, one of the numerous +offspring of Ea, fishing in order to provide food for his family. In +spite of his exalted origin, Adapa was no god; he did not possess the +gift of immortality, and he was not at liberty to appear in the presence +of Anu in heaven. He enjoyed, nevertheless, certain privileges, thanks +to his familiar intercourse with his father Ea, and owing to his birth +he was strong enough to repel the assaults of more than one deity. When, +therefore, Shutu, falling upon him unexpectedly, had overthrown him, his +anger knew no bounds: "'Shutu, thou hast overwhelmed me with thy hatred, +great as it is,--I will break thy wings! 'Having thus spoken with his +mouth unto Shutu, Adapa broke his wings. For seven days,--Shutu breathed +no longer upon the earth." Anu, being disturbed at this quiet, which +seemed to him not very consonant with the meddling temperament of the +wind, made inquiries as to its cause through his messenger Ilabrat. "His +messenger Ilabrat answered him: 'My master,--Adapa, the son of Ea, +has broken Shutu's wings.'--Anu, when he heard these words, cried out: +'Help!'" and he sent to Ea Barku, the genius of the lightning, with an +order to bring the guilty one before him. Adapa was not quite at his +ease, although he had right on his side; but Ea, the cleverest of the +immortals, prescribed a line of conduct for him. He was to put on at +once a garment of mourning, and to show himself along with the messenger +at the gates of heaven. Having arrived there, he would not fail to meet +the two divinities who guarded them,--Dumuzi and Gishzida: "'In whose +honour this garb, in whose honour, Adapa, this garment of mourning?' +'On our earth two gods have disappeared--it is on this account I am as +I am.' Dumuzi and Gishzida will look at each other,* they will begin +to lament, they will say a friendly word--to the god Anu for thee, they +will render clear the countenance of Anu,--in thy favour. When thou +shalt appear before the face of Anu, the food of death, it shall be +offered to thee, do not eat it. The drink of death, it shall be offered +to thee, drink it not. A garment, it shall be offered to the, put it on. +Oil, it shall be offered to thee, anoint thyself with it. The command I +have given thee observe it well.'" + + * Dumuzi and Gishzida are the two gods whom Adapa indicates + without naming them; insinuating that he has put on mourning + on their account, Adapa is secure of gaining their sympathy, + and of obtaining their intervention with the god Anu in his + favour. As to Dumuzi, see pp. 158, 159 of the present work; + the part played by Gishzida, as well as the event noted in + the text regarding him, is unknown. + +Everything takes place as Ea had foreseen. Dumuzi and Gishzida +welcome the poor wretch, speak in his favour, and present him: "as he +approached, Anu perceived him, and said to him: 'Come, Adapa, why didst +thou break the wings of Shutu?' Adapa answered Anu: 'My lord,--for the +household of my lord Ea, in the middle of the sea,---I was fishing, +and the sea was all smooth.--Shutu breathed, he, he overthrew me, and +I plunged into the abode of fish. Hence the anger of my heart,--that he +might not begin again his acts of ill will,--I broke his wings.'" Whilst +he pleaded his cause the furious heart of Anu became calm. The presence +of a mortal in the halls of heaven was a kind of sacrilege, to be +severely punished unless the god should determine its expiation by +giving the philtre of immortality to the intruder. Anu decided on the +latter course, and addressed Adapa: "'Why, then, did Ea allow an unclean +mortal to see--the interior of heaven and earth?' He handed him a cup, +he himself reassured him.--'We, what shall we give him? The food of +life--take some to him that he may eat.' The food of life, some was +taken to him, but he did not eat of it. The water of life, some was +taken to him, but he drank not of it. A garment, it was taken to him, +and he put it on. Oil, some was taken to him, and he anointed himself +with it." Anu looked upon him; he lamented over him: "'Well, Adapa, why +hast thou not eaten--why hast thou not drunk? Thou shalt not now have +eternal life.' Ea, my lord, has commanded me: thou shalt not eat, thou +shalt not drink." Adapa thus lost, by remembering too well the commands +of his father, the opportunity which was offered to him of rising to +the rank of the immortals; Anu sent him back to his home just as he had +come, and Shutu had to put up with his broken wings. + +Bamman absorbed one after the other all these genii of tempest and +contention, and out of their combined characters his own personality of +a hundred diverse aspects was built up. + +[Illustration: 177.jpg THE BIRDS OF THE TEMPEST] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a Chaldaean cylinder in the + Museum of New York. Lenormant, in a long article, which he + published under the pseudonym of Mansell, fancied he + recognized here the encounter between Sabitum and Gilgames + on the shores of the Ocean. + +He was endowed with the capricious and changing disposition of the +element incarnate in him, and passed from tears to laughter, from anger +to calm, with a promptitude which made him one of the most disconcerting +deities. The tempest was his favourite role. Sometimes he would burst +suddenly on the heavens at the head of a troop of savage subordinates, +whose chiefs were known as Matu, the squall, and Barku, the lightning; +sometimes these were only the various manifestations of his own nature, +and it was he himself who was called Matu and Barku. He collected the +clouds, sent forth the thunder-bolt, shook the mountains, and "before +his rage and violence, his bellowings, his thunder, the gods of heaven +arose to the firmament--the gods of the earth sank into the earth" in +their terror. The monuments represent him as armed for battle with +club, axe, or the two-bladed flaming sword which was usually employed to +signify the thunderbolt. As he destroyed everything in his blind +rage, the kings of Chaldaea were accustomed to invoke him against their +enemies, and to implore him to "hurl the hurricane upon the rebel +peoples and the insubordinate nations." When his wrath was appeased, and +he had returned to more gentle ways, his kindness knew no limits. From +having been the waterspout which overthrew the forests, he became the +gentle breeze which caresses and refreshes them: with his warm showers +he fertilizes the fields: he lightens the air and tempers the summer +heat. + +[Illustration: 178.jpg RAMMAN ARMED WITH AN AXE.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a sketch by Loftus. The + original, a small stele of terra-cotta, is in the British + Museum. The date of this representation is uncertain. Ramman + stands upon the mountain which supports the heaven. + +He causes the rivers to swell and overflow their banks; he pours out the +waters over the fields, he makes channels for them, he directs them to +every place where the need of water is felt. + +But his fiery temperament is stirred up by the slightest provocation, +and then "his flaming sword scatters pestilence over the land: he +destroys the harvest, brings the ingathering to nothing, tears up trees, +and beats down and roots up the corn." + +[Illustration: 179.jpg RAMMAN, THE GOD OF TEMPESTS AND THUNDER.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from Layard. Properly speaking, this + is a Susian deity brought by the soldiers of Assurbanipal + into Assyria, but it carries the usual insignia of Ramman. + +In a word, the second triad formed a more homogeneous whole when Ishtar +still belonged to it, and it is entirely owing to the presence of this +goddess in it that we are able to understand its plan and purpose; it +was essentially astrological, and it was intended that none should be +enrolled in it but the manifest leaders of the constellations. Ramman, +on the contrary, had nothing to commend him for a position alongside the +moon and sun; he was not a celestial body, he had no definitely shaped +form, but resembled an aggregation of gods rather than a single deity. +By the addition of Ramman to the triad, the void occasioned by the +removal of Ishtar was filled up in a blundering way. We must, however, +admit that the theologians must have found it difficult to find any one +better fitted for the purpose: when Venus was once set along with the +rest of the planets, there was nothing left in the heavens which +was sufficiently brilliant to replace her worthily. The priests were +compelled to take the most powerful deity they knew after the other +five--the lord of the atmosphere and the thunder.* + + * Their embarrassment is shown in the way in which they have + classed this god. In the original triad, Ishtar, being the + smallest of the three heavenly bodies, naturally took the + third place. Ramman, on the contrary, had natural affinities + with the elemental group, and belonged to Anu, Bel, Ea, + rather than to Sin and Shamash. So we find him sometimes in + the third place, sometimes in the first of the second triad, + and this post of eminence is so natural to him, that + Assyriologists have preserved it from the beginning, and + describe the triad as composed, not of Sin, Shamash, and + Ramman, but of Ramman, Sin, and Shamash, or even of Sin, + Ramman, and Shamash. + +The gods of the triads were married, but their goddesses for the most +part had neither the liberty nor the important functions of the Egyptian +goddesses.* They were content, in their modesty, to be eclipsed behind +the personages of their husbands, and to spend their lives in the shade, +as the women of Asiatic countries still do. It would appear, moreover, +that there was no trouble taken about them until it was too late--when +it was desired, for instance, to explain the affiliation of the +immortals. Anu and Bel were bachelors to start with. When it was +determined to assign to them female companions, recourse was had to the +procedure adopted by the Egyptians in a similar case: there was added to +their names the distinctive suffix of the feminine gender, and in this +manner two grammatical goddesses were formed, Anat and Belit, whose +dispositions give some indications of this accidental birth. There was +always a vague uncertainty about the parts they had to play, and their +existence itself was hardly more than a seeming one. Anat sometimes +represented a feminine heaven, and differed from Anu only in her sex. +At times she was regarded as the antithesis of Anu, i.e. as the earth in +contradistinction to the heaven. Belit, as far as we can distinguish her +from other persons to whom the title "lady" was attributed, shared with +Bel the rule over the earth and the regions of darkness where the dead +were confined. The wife of Ea was distinguished by a name which was not +derived from that of her husband, but she was not animated by a more +intense vitality than Anat or Belit: she was called Damkina, the lady +of the soil, and she personified in an almost passive manner the earth +united to the water which fertilized it. The goddesses of the second +triad were perhaps rather less artificial in their functions. Ningal, +doubtless, who ruled along with Sin at Uru, was little more than an +incarnate epithet. Her name means "the great lady," "the queen," and her +person is the double of that of her husband; as he is the man-moon, she +is the woman-moon, his beloved, and the mother of his children Shamash +and Ishtar. But A or Sirrida enjoyed an indisputable authority alongside +Shamash: she never lost sight of the fact that she had been a sun like +Shamash, a disk-god before she was transformed into a goddess. Shamash, +moreover, was surrounded by an actual harem, of which Sirrida was the +acknowledged queen, as he himself was its king, and among its members +Gula, the great, and Anunit, the daughter of Sin, the morning star, +found a place. Shala, the compassionate, was also included among them; +she was subsequently bestowed upon Ramman. They were all goddesses of +ancient lineage, and each had been previously worshipped on her own +account when the Sumerian people held sway in Chaldaea: as soon as the +Semites gained the upper hand, the powers of these female deities became +enfeebled, and they were distributed among the gods. There was but one +of them, Nana, the doublet of Ishtar, who had succeeded in preserving +her liberty: when her companions had been reduced to comparative +insignificance, she was still acknowledged as queen and mistress in her +city of Eridu. The others, notwithstanding the enervating influence +to which they were usually subject in the harem, experienced at times +inclinations to break into rebellion, and more than one of them, shaking +off the yoke of her lord, had proclaimed her independence: Anunit, for +instance, tearing herself away from the arms of Shamash, had vindicated, +as his sister and his equal, her claim to the half of his dominion. +Sippara was a double city, or rather there were two neighbouring +Sipparas, one distinguished as the city of the Sun, "Sippara sha +Shamash," while the other gave lustre to Anunit in assuming the +designation of "Sippara sha Anunitum." Rightly interpreted, these family +arrangements of the gods had but one reason for their existence--the +necessity of explaining without coarseness those parental connections +which the theological classification found it needful to establish +between the deities constituting the two triads. In Chaldaea as in Egypt +there was no inclination to represent the divine families as propagating +their species otherwise than by the procedure observed in human +families: the union of the goddesses with the gods thus legitimated +their offspring. + + * The passive and almost impersonal character of the + majority of the Babylonian and Assyrian goddesses is well + known. The majority must have been independent at the + outset, in the Sumerian period, and were married later on, + under the influence of Semitic ideas. + +The triads were, therefore, nothing more than theological fictions. Each +of them was really composed of six members, and it was thus really a +council of twelve divinities which the priests of Uruk had instituted to +attend to the affairs of the universe; with this qualification, that the +feminine half of the assembly rarely asserted itself, and contributed +but an insignificant part to the common work. When once the great +divisions had been arranged, and the principal functionaries designated, +it was still necessary to work out the details, and to select v agents +to preserve an order among them. Nothing happens by chance in this +world, and the most insignificant events are determined by previsional +arrangements, and decisions arrived at a long time previously. The gods +assembled every morning in a hall, situated near the gates of the sun in +the east, and there deliberated on the events of the day. The sagacious +Ea submitted to them the fates which are about to be fulfilled, and +caused a record of them to be made in the chamber of destiny on tablets +which Shamash or Merodach carried with them to scatter everywhere on his +way; but he who should be lucky enough to snatch these tablets from him +would make himself master of the world for that day. This misfortune had +arisen only once, at the beginning of the ages. Zu, the storm-bird, who +lives with his wife and children on Mount Sabu under the protection of +Bel, and who from this elevation pounces down upon the country to ravage +it, once took it into his head to make himself equal to the supreme +gods. He forced his way at an early hour into the chamber of destiny +before the sun had risen: he perceived within it the royal insignia of +Bel, "the mitre of his power, the garment of his divinity,--the fatal +tablets of his divinity, Zu perceived them. He perceived the father +of the gods, the god who is the tie between heaven and earth,--and the +desire of ruling took possession of his heart;--yea, Zu perceived +the father of the gods, the god who is the tie between heaven and +earth,--and the desire of ruling took possession of his heart,--'I will +take the fatal tablets of the gods, I myself,--and the oracles of all +the gods, it is I who will give them forth;--I will install myself on +the throne, I will send forth decrees,--I will manage the whole of the +Igigi.'--And his heart plotted warfare;--lying in wait on the threshold +of the hall, he watched for the dawn.--When Bel had poured out the +shining waters,--had installed himself on the throne, and donned the +crown, Zu took away the fatal tablets from his hand,--he seized power, +and the authority to give forth decrees,--the god Zu, he flew away and +concealed himself in the mountains." Bel immediately cried out, he was +inflamed with anger, and ravaged the world with the fire of his +wrath. "Anu opened his mouth, he spake,--he said to the gods his +offspring:--'Who will conquer the god Zu?--He will make his name great +in every land.'--Bamman, the supreme, the son of Anu, was called, and +Anu himself gave to him his orders;--yea, Bamman, the supreme, the son +of Anu, was called, and Anu himself gave to him his orders.--'Go, my son +Kamman, the valiant, since nothing resists thy attack;--conquer Zu by +thine arm, and thy name shall be great among the great gods,--among the +gods, thy brothers, thou shalt have no equal: sanctuaries shall be built +to thee, and if thou buildest for thyself thy cities in the "four houses +of the world,"* --thy cities shall extend over all the terrestrial +mountain! 'Be valiant, then, in the sight of the gods, and may thy +name be strong.' Bamman answers, he addresses this bpeech to Anu his +father:--'Father, who will go to the inaccessible mountains? Who is the +equal of Zu among the gods, thy offspring? He has carried off in his +hand the fatal tablets,--he has seized power and authority to give forth +decrees,--Zu thereupon flew away and hid himself in his mountain.--Now, +the word of his mouth is like that of the god who unites heaven and +earth;---my power is no more than clay,--and all the gods must bow +before him.'" Anu sent for the god Bara, the son of Ishtar, to help him, +and exhorted him in the same language he had addressed to Ramman: Bara +refused to attempt the enterprise. Shamash, called in his turn, at +length consented to set out for Mount Sabu: he triumphed over the +storm-bird, tore the fatal tablets from him, and brought him before Ea +as a prisoner. + + * Literally, "Construct thy cities in the four regions of + the world (cf. pp. 12, 13 of the present work), and thy + cities will extend to the mountain of the earth." Anu would + appear to have promised to Ramman a monopoly; if he wished + to build cities which would recognize him as their patron, + these cities will cover the entire earth. + +[Illustration: 186.jpg SHAMASH FIGHTS WITH ZU AND THE STORM BIRDS.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from Layard. + +[Illustration: 186a.jpg The Plenisphere taken from the Temple of +Tentyra] + +[Illustration: 186b.jpg Text of The Plenisphere] + +The sun of the complete day, the sun in the full possession of his +strength, could alone win back the attributes of power which the morning +sun had allowed himself to be despoiled of. From that time forth the +privilege of delivering immortal decrees to mortals was never taken out +of the hands of the gods of light. + +Destinies once fixed on the earth became a law--"mamit"--a good or bad +fate, from which no one could escape, but of which any one might learn +the disposition beforehand if he were capable of interpreting the +formulas of it inscribed on the book of the sky. The stars, even those +which were most distant from the earth, were not unconcerned in the +events which took place upon it. They were so many living beings endowed +with various characteristics, and their rays as they passed across the +celestial spaces exercised from above an active control on everything +they touched. Their influences became modified, increased or weakened +according to the intensity with which they shed them, according to the +respective places they occupied in the firmament, and according to the +hour of the night and the month of the year in which they rose or +set. Each division of time, each portion of space, each category of +existences--and in each category each individual--was placed under their +rule and was subject to their implacable tyranny. The infant was born +their slave, and continued in this condition of slavery until his life's +end: the star which was in the ascendent at the instant of his birth +became his star, and ruled his destiny. The Chaldaeans, like the +Egyptians, fancied they discerned in the points of light which +illuminate the nightly sky, the outline of a great number of various +figures--men, animals, monsters, real and imaginary objects, a lance, a +bow, a fish, a scorpion, ears of wheat, a bull, and a lion. The majority +of these were spread out above their heads on the surface of the +celestial vault; but twelve of these figures, distinguishable by their +brilliancy, were arranged along the celestial horizon in the pathway of +the sun, and watched over his daily course along the walls of the world. +These divided this part of the sky into as many domains or "houses," in +which they exercised absolute authority, and across which the god could +not go without having previously obtained their consent, or having +brought them into subjection beforehand. This arrangement is a +reminiscence of the wars by which Bel-Merodach, the divine bull, the +god of Babylon, had succeeded in bringing order out of chaos: he had not +only killed Tiamat, but he had overthrown and subjugated the monsters +which led the armies of darkness. He meets afresh, every year and every +day, on the confines of heaven and earth, the scorpion-men of his ancient +enemy, the fish with heads of men or goats, and many more. The twelve +constellations were combined into a zodiac, whose twelve signs, +transmitted to the Greeks and modified by them, may still be read on +our astronomical charts. The constellations, immovable, or actuated by a +slow motion, in longitude only, contain the problems of the future, +but they are not sufficient of themselves alone to furnish man with the +solution of these problems. The heavenly bodies capable of explaining +them, the real interpreters of destiny, were at first the two divinities +who rule the empires of night and day--the moon and the sun; afterwards +there took part in this work of explanation the five planets which we +call Jupiter, Venus, Saturn, Mars, and Mercury, or rather the five gods +who actuate them, and who have controlled their course from the moment +of creation--Merodach, Ishtar, Ninib, Nergal, and Nebo. The planets +seemed to traverse the heavens in every direction, to cross their own +and each other's paths, and to approach the fixed stars or recede from +them; and the species of rhythmical dance in which they are carried +unceasingly across the celestial spaces revealed to men, if they +examined it attentively, the irresistible march of their own destinies, +as surely as if they had made themselves master of the fatal tablets of +Shamash, and could spell them out line by line. + +The Chaldaens were disposed to regard the planets as perverse sheep who +had escaped from the fold of the stars to wander wilfully in search of +pasture.* At first they were considered to be so many sovereign deities, +without other function than that of running through the heavens and +furnishing there predictions of the future; afterwards two of them +descended to the earth, and received upon it the homage of men* --Ishtar +from the inhabitants of the city of Dilbat, and Nebo* from those of +Borsippa. Nebo assumed the _role_ of a soothsayer and a prophet. He +knew and foresaw everything, and was ready to give his advice upon any +subject: he was the inventor of the method of making clay tablets, +and of writing upon them. Ishtar was a combination of contradictory +characteristics.**** + + * Their generic name, read as "lubat," in Sumero-Accadian, + "bibbu" in Semitic speech (Fr. Lenormant, _Essai de + Commentaire de Berose_, pp. 370, 371), denoted a quadruped, + the species of which Lenormant was not able to define; + Jensen (_Die Kosmologie_, pp. 95-99) identified it with the + sheep and the ram. At the end of the account of the + creation, Merodach-Jupiter is compared with a shepherd who + feeds the flock of the gods on the pastures of heaven (cf. + p. 15 of the present work). + + ** The site of Dilbat is unknown: it has been sought in the + neighbourhood of Kishu and Babylon (Delitzsch, _Wo lag das + Paradies?_ p. 219); it is probable that it was in the + suburbs of Sippara. The name given to the goddess was + transcribed AeXckit (Hesychius, _sub voce_), and signifies + the herald, the messenger of the day. + + *** The role of Nebo was determined by the early + Assyriologists (Rawlin-son, _On the Religion of the + Babylonians and Assyrians_, pp. 523-52G; Oppeet, _Expedition + en Mesopotamie_, vol. ii. p. 257; Lenormant, _Essai de + Commentaire de Berose_, pp. 114-116). He owed his functions + partly to his alliance with other gods (Sayce, _Religion of + the Ancient Babylonians_, pp. 118, 119). + + **** See the chapter devoted by Sayce to the consideration + of Ishtar in his Religion of the Ancient Babylonians (IV. + Tammuz and Ishtar, p. 221, et seq.), and the observations + made by Jeremias on the subject in the sequel of his + Izdubar-Nimrod (Ishtar-Astarte im Izdubar-Epos), pp. 56-66. + +[Illustration: 190.jpg ISHTAR AS A WARRIOR-GODDESS] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a heliogravure in Menant's + _Recherches sur la Glyptique orientale_. + +In Southern Chaldaea she was worshipped under the name of Nana, +the supreme mistress.* The identity of this lady of the gods, +"Belit-ilanit," the Evening Star, with Anunit, the Morning Star, was +at first ignored, and hence two distinct goddesses were formed from the +twofold manifestation of a single deity: having at length discovered +their error, the Chaldaeans merged these two beings in one, and their +names became merely two different designations for the same star under a +twofold aspect. The double character, however, which had been attributed +to them continued to be attached to the single personality. + + * With regard to Nana, consult, with reserve, Fk. Lenormant, + Essai de Commentaire de Berose, pp. 100-103, 378, 379, where + the identity of Ishtar and Nana is still unrecognized. + +[Illustration: 191.jpg NEBO] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from an Assyrian statue in alabaster + in the British Museum. + +The Evening Star had symbolized the goddess of love, who attracted +the sexes towards one another, and bound them together by the chain +of desire; the Morning Star, on the other hand, was regarded as the +cold-blooded and cruel warrior who despised the pleasures of love and +rejoiced in warfare: Ishtar thus combined in her person chastity and +lasciviousness, kindness and ferocity, and a peaceful and warlike +disposition, but this incongruity in her characteristics did not seem +to disconcert the devotion of her worshippers. The three other planets +would have had a wretched part to play in comparison with Nebo and +Ishtar, if they had not been placed under new patronage. The secondary +solar gods, Merodach, Ninib, and Nergal, led, if we examine their role +carefully, but an incomplete existence: they were merely portions of the +sun, while Shamash represented the entire orb. What became of them apart +from the moment in the day and year in which they were actively engaged +in their career? Where did they spend their nights, the hours during +which Shamash had retired into the firmament, and lay hidden behind the +mountains of the north? As in Egypt the Horuses identified at first with +the sun became at length the rulers of the planets, so in Chaldaea +the three suns of Ninib, Merodach, and Nergal became respectively +assimilated to Saturn, Jupiter, and Mars;* and this identification was +all the more easy in the case of Saturn, as he had been considered from +the beginning as a bull belonging to Shamash. Henceforward, therefore, +there was a group of five powerful gods--distributed among the stars +of heaven, and having abodes also in the cities of the earth--whose +function it was to announce the destinies of the universe. Some, +deceived by the size and brilliancy of Jupiter, gave the chief command +to Merodach, and this opinion naturally found a welcome reception at +Babylon, of which he was the feudal deity. Others, taking into account +only the preponderating influence exercised by the planets over the +fortunes of men, accorded the primacy to Ninib, placing Merodach next, +followed respectively by Ishtar, Nergal, and Nebo. The five planets, +like the six triads, were not long before they took to themselves +consorts, if indeed they had not already been married before they were +brought together in a collective whole. Ninib chose for wife, in the +first place, Bau, the daughter of Anu, the mistress of Uru, highly +venerated from the most remote times; afterwards Gula, the queen of +physicians, whose wisdom alleviated the ills of humanity, and who was +one of the goddesses sometimes placed in the harem of Shamash himself. +Merodach associated with him Zirbanit, the fruitful, who secures from +generation to generation the permanence and increase of living beings. +Nergal distributed his favours sometimes to Laz, and sometimes to +Esharra, who was, like himself, warlike and always victorious in battle. +Nebo provided himself with a mate in Tashmit, the great bride, or +even in Ishtar herself. But Ishtar could not be content with a single +husband: after she had lost Dumuzi-Tammuz, the spouse of her youth, she +gave herself freely to the impulses of her passions, distributing her +favours to men as well as gods, and was sometimes subject to be repelled +with contempt by the heroes upon whom she was inclined to bestow her +love. The five planets came thus to be actually ten, and advantage was +taken of these alliances to weave fresh schemes of affiliation: Nebo was +proclaimed to be the son of Merodach and Zirbanit, Merodach the son of +Ba, and Ninib the offspring of Bel and Esharra. + + * Ishtar, Nebo, Sin, and Shamash being heavenly bodies, to + begin with, and the other great gods, Anu, Bel, Ea, and + Ramman having their stars in the heavens, the Chaldaeans + were led by analogy to ascribe to the gods which represented + the phases of the sun, Merodach, Ninib, and Nergal, three + stars befitting their importance, i.e. three planets. + +There were two councils, one consisting of twelve members, the other +of ten; the former was composed of the most popular gods of Southern +Chaldaea, representing the essential elements of the world, while +the latter consisted of the great deities of Northern Chaldaea, whose +function it was to regulate or make known the destinies of men. The +authors of this system, who belonged to Southern Chaldaea, naturally +gave the position to their patron gods, and placed the twelve above +the ten. It is well known that Orientals display a great respect for +numbers, and attribute to them an almost irresistible power; we can +thus understand how it was that the Chaldaeans applied them to designate +their divine masters, and we may calculate from these numbers the +estimation in which each of these masters was held. The goddesses had +no value assigned to them in this celestial arithmetic, Ishtar excepted, +who was not a mere duplication, more or less ingenious, of a previously +existing deity, but possessed from the beginning an independent life, +and could thus claim to be called goddess in her own right. The members +of the two triads were arranged on a descending scale, Anu taking the +highest place: the scale was considered to consist of a soss of sixty +units in length, and each of the deities who followed Anu was placed ten +of these units below his predecessor, Bel at 50 units, Ea at 40, Sin at +30, Shamash at 20, Ramman at 10 or 6. The gods of the planets were not +arranged in a regular series like those of the triads, but the numbers +attached to them expressed their proportionate influence on terrestrial +affairs: to Ninib was assigned the same number as had been given to Bel, +50, to Merodach perhaps 25, to Ishtar 15, to Nergal 12, and to Nebo +10. The various spirits were also fractionally estimated, but this as a +class, and not as individuals: the priests would not have known how to +have solved the problem if they had been obliged to ascribe values +to the infinity of existences.* As the Heliopolitans were obliged to +eliminate from the Ennead many feudal divinities, so the Chaldaeans +had left out of account many of their sovereign deities, especially +goddesses, Bau of Uru, Nana of Uruk, and Allat; or if they did introduce +them into their calculations, it was by a subterfuge, by identifying +them with other goddesses, to whom places had been already assigned; +Bau being thus coupled with Ohila, Nana with Ishtar, and Allat with +Ninhl-Beltis. If figures had been assigned to the latter proportionate +to the importance of the parts they played, and the number of their +votaries, how comes it that they were excluded from the cycle of the +great gods? They were actually placed alongside rather than below the +two councils, and without insistence upon the rank which they enjoyed +in the hierarchy. But the confusion which soon arose among divinities +of identical or analogous nature opened the way for inserting all the +neglected personalities in the framework already prepared for them. A +sky-god, like Dagan, would mingle naturally with Anu, and enjoy like +honours with him. The gods of all ranks associated with the sun or fire, +Nusku, Gibil, and Dumuzi, who had not been at first received among the +privileged group, obtained a place there by virtue of their assimilation +to Shamash, and his secondary forms, Bel-Merodach, Ninib, and Nergal. +Ishtar absorbed all her companions, and her name put in the plural, +Ishtarati, "the Ishtars," embraced all goddesses in general, just as the +name Hani took in all the gods. Thanks to this compromise, the system +flourished, and was widely accepted: local vanity was always able to +find a means for placing in a prominent place within it the feudal +deity, and for reconciling his pretensions to the highest rank with the +order of precedence laid down by the theologians of Uruk. The local +god was always the king of the gods, the father of the gods, he who +was worshipped above the others in everyday life, and whose public cult +constituted the religion of the State or city. + + * As far as we can at present determine, the most ancient + series established was that of the planetary gods, whose + values, following each other irregularly, are not calculated + on a scheme of mathematical progression, but according to + the empirical importance, which a study of predictions had + ascribed to each planet. The regular series, that of the + great gods, bears in its regularity the stamp of its later + introduction: it was instituted after the example of the + former, but with corrections of what seemed capricious, and + fixing the interval between the gods always at the same + figure. + +The temples were miniature reproductions of the arrangement of the +universe. The "ziggurat" represented in its form the mountain of the +world, and the halls ranged at its feet resembled approximately +the accessory parts of the world: the temple of Merodach at Babylon +comprised them all up to the chambers of fate, where the sun received +every morning the tablets of destiny. The name often indicated the +nature of the patron deity or one of his attributes: the temple of +Shamash at Larsam, for instance was called E-Babbara, "the house of +the sun," and that of Nebo at Borsippa, E-Zida, "the eternal house." No +matter where the sanctuary of a specific god might be placed, it always +bore the same name; Shamash, for example, dwelt at Sippara as at Larsam +in an E-Babbara. In Chaldaea, as in Egypt, the king or chief of the +State was the priest _par excellence_, and the title of "vicegerent," +so frequent in the early period, shows that the chief was regarded as +representing the divinity among his own people; but a priestly body, +partly hereditary, partly selected, fulfilled for him his daily +sacerdotal functions, and secured the regularity of the services. A +chief priest--"ishshakku"--was at their head, and his principal duty was +the pouring out of the libation. Each temple had its "ishshakku," but he +who presided over the worship of the feudal deity took precedence of +all the others in the city, as in the case of the chief priests of +Bel-Merodach at Babylon, of Sin at Uru, and of Shamash at Larsam or +Sippara. He presided over various categories of priests and priestesses +whose titles and positions in the hierarchy are not well known. The +"sangutu" appear to have occupied after him the most important place, as +chamberlains attached to the house of the god, and as his liegemen. +To some of these was entrusted the management of the harem of the god, +while others were overseers of the remaining departments of his +palace. The "kipu" and the "shatammu" were especially charged with the +management of his financial interests, while the "pashishu" anointed +with holy and perfumed oil his statues of stone, metal, or wood, the +votive stelae set up in the chapels, and the objects used in worship +and sacrifice, such as the great basins, the "seas" of copper which +contained the water employed in the ritual ablutions, and the victims +led to the altar. After these came a host of officials, butchers and +their assistants, soothsayers, augurs, prophets,--in fact, all the +attendants that the complicated rites, as numerous in Chaldaea as in +Egypt, required, not to speak of the bands of women and men who honoured +the god in meretricious rites. Occupation for this motley crowd was +never lacking. Every day and almost every hour a fresh ceremony required +the services of one or other member of the staff, from the monarch +himself, or his deputy in the temple, down to the lowest sacristan. The +12th of the month Blul was set apart at Babylon for the worship of Bel +and Beltis: the sovereign made a donation to them according as he was +disposed, and then celebrated before them the customary sacrifices, and +if he raised his hand to plead for any favour, he obtained it without +fail. The 13th was dedicated to the moon, the supreme god; the 14th to +Beltis and Nergal; the 15th to Shamash; the 16th was a fast in honour +of Merodach and Zirbanit; the 17th was the annual festival of Nebo and +Tashmit; the 18th was devoted to the laudation of Sin and Shamash; while +the 19th was a "white day" for the great goddess Gula. The whole year +was taken up in a way similar to this casual specimen from the calendar. +The kings, in founding a temple, not only bestowed upon it the objects +and furniture required for present exigencies, such as lambs and oxen, +birds, fish, bread, liquors, incense, and odoriferous essences; +they assigned to it an annual income from the treasury, slaves, and +cultivated lands; and their royal successors were accustomed to renew +these gifts or increase them on every opportunity. Every victorious +campaign brought him his share in the spoils and captives; every +fortunate or unfortunate event which occurred in connection with the +State or royal family meant an increase in the gifts to the god, as +an act of thanksgiving on the one hand for the divine favour, or as an +offering on the other to appease the wrath of the god. Gold, silver, +copper, lapis-lazuli, gems and precious woods, accumulated in the sacred +treasury; fields were added to fields, flocks to flocks, slaves to +slaves; and the result of such increase would in a few generations +have made the possessions of the god equal to those of the reigning +sovereign, if the attacks of neighbouring peoples had not from time to +time issued in the loss of a part of it, or if the king himself had not, +under financial pressure, replenished his treasury at the expense of the +priests. To prevent such usurpations as far as possible, maledictions +were hurled at every one who should dare to lay a sacrilegious hand on +the least object belonging to the divine domain; it was predicted of +such "that he would be killed like an ox in the midst of his prosperity, +and slaughtered like a wild urus in the fulness of his strength!... May +his name be effaced from his stelae in the temple of his god! May his +god see pitilessly the disaster of his country, may the god ravage his +land with the waters of heaven, ravage it with the waters of the +earth. May he be pursued as a nameless wretch, and his seed fall under +servitude! May this man, like every one who acts adversely to his +master, find nowhere a refuge, afar off, under the vault of the skies or +in any abode of man whatsoever." These threats, terrible as they were, +did not succeed in deterring the daring, and the mighty men of the +time were willing to brave them, when their interests promoted them. +Gulkishar, Lord of the "land of the sea," had vowed a wheat-field to +Nina, his lady, near the town of Deri, on the Tigris. Seven hundred +years later, in the reign of Belnadinabal, Ekarrakais, governor of +Bitsinmagir, took possession of it, and added it to the provincial +possessions, contrary to all equity. The priest of the goddess appealed +to the king, and prostrating himself before the throne with many prayers +and mystic formulas, begged for the restitution of the alienated land. +Belnadinabal acceded to the request, and renewed the imprecations which +had been inserted on the original deed of gift: "If ever, in the +course of days, the man of law, or the governor of a suzerain who will +superintend the town of Bitsinmagir, fears the vengeance of the god +Zikum or the goddess Nina, may then Zikum and Nina, the mistress of the +goddesses, come to him with the benediction of the prince of the gods; +may they grant to him the destiny of a happy life, and may they accord +to him days of old age, and years of uprightness! But as for thee, who +hast a mind to change this, step not across its limits, do not covet +the land: hate evil and love justice." If all sovereigns were not so +accommodating in their benevolence as Belnadinabal, the piety of private +individuals, stimulated by fear, would be enough to repair the loss, +and frequent legacies would soon make up for the detriment caused to +the temple possessions by the enemy's sword or the rapacity of an +unscrupulous lord. The residue, after the vicissitudes of revolutions, +was increased and diminished from time to time, to form at length in the +city an indestructible fief whose administration was a function of the +chief priest for life, and whose revenue furnished means in abundance +for the personal exigencies of the gods as well as the support of his +ministers. + +This was nothing more than justice would prescribe. A loyal and +universal faith would not only acknowledge the whole world to be the +creation of the gods, but also their inalienable domain. It belonged to +them at the beginning; every one in the State of which the god was +the sovereign lord, all those, whether nobles or serfs, vicegerents +or kings, who claimed to have any possession in it, were but ephemeral +lease-holders of portions of which they fancied themselves the owners. +Donations to the temples were, therefore, nothing more than voluntary +restitutions, which the gods consented to accept graciously, deigning +to be well pleased with the givers, when, after all-, they might have +considered the gifts as merely displays of strict honesty, which merited +neither recognition nor thanks. They allowed, however, the best part of +their patrimony to remain in the hands of strangers, and they contented +themselves with what the pretended generosity of the faithful might see +fit to assign to them. Of their lands, some were directly cultivated by +the priests themselves; others were leased to lay people of every rank, +who took off the shoulders of the priesthood all the burden of managing +them, while rendering at the same time the profit that accrued from +them; others were let at a fixed rent according to contract. The +tribute of dates, corn, and fruit, which was rendered to the temples to +celebrate certain commemorative ceremonies in the honour of this or that +deity, were fixed charges upon certain lands, which at length usually +fell entirely into the hands of the priesthood as mortmain possessions. +These were the sources of the fixed revenues of the gods, by means of +which they and their people were able to live, if not luxuriously, at +least in a manner befitting their dignity. The offerings and sacrifices +were a kind of windfall, of which the quantity varied strangely with the +seasons; at certain times few were received, while at other times there +was a superabundance. The greatest portion of them was consumed on +the spot by the officials of the sanctuary; the part which could be +preserved without injury was added to the produce of the domain, and +constituted a kind of reserve for a rainy day, or was used to produce +more of its kind. The priests made great profit out of corn and metals, +and the skill with which they conducted commercial operations in silver +was so notorious that no private person hesitated to entrust them with +the management of his capital: they were the intermediaries between +lenders and borrowers, and the commissions which they obtained in these +transactions was not the smallest or the least certain of their profits. +They maintained troops of slaves, labourers, gardeners, workmen, and +even women-singers and sacred courtesans of which mention has been made +above, all of whom either worked directly for them in their several +trades, or were let out to those who needed their services. The god was +not only the greatest cultivator in the State after the king, sometimes +even excelling him in this respect, but he was also the most active +manufacturer, and many of the utensils in daily use, as well as articles +of luxury, proceeded from his workshops. His possessions secured for him +a paramount authority in the city, and also an influence in the councils +of the king: the priests who represented him on earth thus became mixed +up in State affairs, and exercised authority on his behalf in the same +measure as the officers of the crown. + +[Illustration: 203.jpg A VOTARY LED TO THE GOD TO RECEIVE THE REWARD OF +THE SACRIFICE] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a Chaldaean intaglio in the + Berlin Museum. + +He, had, indeed, as much need of riches and renown as the least of his +clients. As he was subject to all human failings, and experienced all +the appetites of mankind, he had to be nourished, clothed, and amused, +and this could be done only at great expense. The stone or wooden +statues erected to him in the sanctuaries furnished him with bodies, +which he animated with his breath, and accredited to his clients as the +receivers of all things needful to him in his mysterious kingdom. The +images of the gods were clothed in vestments, they were anointed with +odoriferous oils, covered with jewels, served with food and drink; and +during these operations the divinities themselves, above in the heaven, +or down in the abyss, or in the bosom of the earth, were arrayed in +garments, their bodies were perfumed with unguents, and their appetites +fully satisfied: all that was further required for this purpose was the +offering of sacrifices together with prayers and prescribed rites. The +priest began by solemnly inviting the gods to the feast: as soon as they +sniffed from afar the smell of the good cheer that awaited them, they +ran "like a swarm of flies" and prepared themselves to partake of it. + +[Illustration: 204.jpg THE SACRIFICE: A GOAT PRESENTED TO ISHTAR.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from an Assyrian intaglio + illustrated in A. Rich, _Narrative of a Journey to the Site + of Babylon in 1811_. The sacrifice of the goat, or rather + its presentation to the god, is not infrequently represented + on the Assyrian bas-reliefs. + +The supplications having been heard, water was brought to the gods for +the necessary ablutions before a repast. "Wash thy hands, cleanse thy +hands,--may the gods thy brothers wash their hands!--From a clean dish +eat a pure repast,--from a clean cup drink pure water." The statue, from +the rigidity of the material out of which it was carved, was at a loss +how to profit by the exquisite things which had been lavished upon it: +the difficulty was removed by the opening of its mouth at the moment +of consecration, thus enabling it to partake of the good fare to its +satisfaction.* The banquet lasted a long time, and consisted of every +delicacy which the culinary skill of the time could prepare: the courses +consisted of dates, wheaten flour, honey, butter, various kinds of +wines, and fruits, together with roast and boiled meats. + + * This operation, which was also resorted to in Egypt in the + case of the statues of the gods and deceased persons, is + clearly indicated in a text of the second Chaldaean empire + published in _W. A. Insc_, vol. iv. pi. 25. The priest who + consecrates an image makes clear in the first place that + "its mouth not being open it can partake of no refreshment: + it neither eats food nor drinks water." Thereupon he performs + certain rites, which he declares were celebrated, if not at + that moment, at least for the first time by Ea himself: "Ea + has brought thee to thy glorious place,--to thy glorious + place he has brought thee,--brought thee with his splendid + hand,--brought also butter and honey;--_he has poured + consecrated water into thy mouth--and by magic has opened + thy mouth._" Henceforward the statue can eat and drink like + an ordinary living being the meat and beverages offered to + it during the sacrifice. + +[Illustration: 205.jpg THE GOD SHAMASH SEIZES WITH HIS LEFT HAND THE +SMOKE OF THE SACRIFICE.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a Chaldaean intaglio pointed out + by Heuzey-Sarzcc; the original is in the Louvre. The scene + depicted behind Shamash deals with a legend still unknown. A + goddess, pursued by a genius with a double face, has taken + refuge under a tree, which bows down to protect her; while + the monster endeavours to break down the obstacle branch by + branch, a god rises from the stem and hands to the goddess a + stone-headed mace to protect her against her enemy. + +In the most ancient times it would appear that even human sacrifices +were offered, but this custom was obsolete except on rare occasions, and +lambs, oxen, sometimes swine's flesh, formed the usual elements of +the sacrifice. The gods seized as it arose from the altar the unctuous +smoke, and fed on it with delight. When they had finished their repast, +the supplication of a favour was adroitly added, to which they gave a +favourable hearing. Services were frequent in the temples: there was one +in the morning and another in the evening on ordinary days, in addition +to those which private individuals might require at any hour of the day. +The festivals assigned to the local god and his colleagues, together +with the acts of praise in which the whole nation joined, such as that +of the New Year, required an abundance of extravagant sacrifices, in +which the blood of the victims flowed like water. Days of sorrow and +mourning alternated with these days of joy, during which the people and +the magnates gave themselves up to severe fasting and acts of penitence. +The Chaldeans had a lively sense of human frailty, and of the risks +entailed upon the sinner by disobedience to the gods. The dread of +sinning haunted them during their whole life; they continually +subjected the motives of their actions to a strict scrutiny, and once +self-examination had revealed to them the shadow of an evil intent, they +were accustomed to implore pardon for it in a humble manner. "Lord, my +sins are many, great are my misdeeds!--O my god, my sins are many, great +my misdeeds!--O my goddess, my sins are many, great my misdeeds!--I have +committed faults and I knew them not; I have committed sin and I knew +it not; I have fed upon misdeeds and I knew them not; I have walked in +omissions and I knew them not.--The lord, in the anger of his heart, +he has stricken me,--the god, in the wrath of his heart, has abandoned +me,--Ishtar is enraged against me, and has treated me harshly!--I make +an effort, and no one offers me a hand,--I weep, and no one comes to +me,--I cry aloud, and no one hears me:--I sink under affliction, I am +overwhelmed, I can no longer raise up my head,--I turn to my merciful +god to call upon him, and I groan!... Lord reject not thy servant,--and +if he is hurled into the roaring waters, stretch to him thy hand;--the +sins I have committed, have mercy upon them,--the misdeeds I have +committed, scatter them to the winds--and my numerous faults, tear them +to pieces like a garment." Sin in the eyes of the Chaldaean was not, as +with us, an infirmity of the soul; it assaulted the body like an actual +virus, and the fear of physical suffering or death engendered by it, +inspired these complaints with a note of sincerity which cannot be +mistaken. + +Every individual is placed, from the moment of his birth, under the +protection of a god and goddess, of whom he is the servant, or rather +the son, and whom he never addresses otherwise than as his god and +his goddess. These deities accompany him night and day, not so much to +protect him from visible dangers, as to guard him from the invisible +beings which ceaselessly hover round him, and attack him on every side. +If he is devout, piously disposed towards his divine patrons and the +deities of his country, if he observes the prescribed rites, recites the +prayers, performs the sacrifices--in a word, if he acts rightly--their +aid is never lacking; they bestow upon him a numerous posterity, a +happy old age, prolonged to the term fixed by fate, when he must resign +himself to close his eyes for ever to the light of day. If, on the +contrary, he is wicked, violent, one whose word cannot be trusted, "his +god cuts him down like a reed," extirpates his race, shortens his days, +delivers him over to demons who possess themselves of his body and +afflict it with sicknesses before finally despatching him. Penitence +is of avail against the evil of sin, and serves to re-establish a right +course of life, but its efficacy is not permanent, and the moment at +last arrives in which death, getting the upper hand, carries its victim +away. The Chaldaeans had not such clear ideas as to what awaited them in +the other world as the Egyptians possessed: whilst the tomb, the mummy, +the perpetuity of the funeral revenues, and the safety of the double, +were the engrossing subjects in Egypt, the Chaldaean texts are almost +entirely silent as to the condition of the soul, and the living seem to +have had no further concern about the dead than to get rid of them +as quickly and as completely as possible. They did not believe that +everything was over at the last breath, but they did not on that account +think that the fate of that which survived was indissolubly associated +with the perishable part, and that the disembodied soul was either +annihilated or survived, according as the flesh in which it was +sustained was annihilated or survived in the tomb. The soul was +doubtless not utterly unconcerned about the fate of the _larva_ it had +quitted: its pains were intensified on being despoiled of its earthly +case if the latter were mutilated, or left without sepulture, a prey +to the fowls, of the air. This feeling, however, was not sufficiently +developed to create a desire for escape from corruption entirely, and to +cause a resort to the mummifying process of the Egyptians. + +[Illustration: 208.jpg DECORATED WRAPPINGS FROM A MUMMY (Color)] + +The Chaldaeans did not subject the body, therefore, to those injections, +to those prolonged baths in preserving fluids, to that laborious +swaddling which rendered it indestructible; whilst the family wept and +lamented, old women who exercised the sad function of mourners washed +the dead body, perfumed it, clad it in its best apparel, painted its +cheeks, blackened its eyelids, placed a collar on its neck, rings on its +fingers, arranged its arms upon its breast, and stretched it on a bed, +setting up at its head a little altar for the customary offerings of +water, incense, and cakes. + +[Illustration: 209.jpg Chaldaean coffin in the form of a jar] + +[Illustration: 209a.jpg A VAULTED TOMB IN URU] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a sketch by Taylor. + +[Illustration: 210.jpg CHALDAEAN TOMB WITH DOMED ROOF.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a sketch by Taylor. + +Evil spirits, prowled incessantly around the dead bodies of the +Chaldaeans, either to feed upon them, or to use them in their sorcery: +should they succeed in slipping into a corpse, from that moment it could +be metamorphosed into a vampire, and return to the world to suck the +blood of the living. The Chaldaeans were, therefore, accustomed to invite +by prayers beneficent genii and gods to watch over the dead. Two of +these would take their invisible places at the head and foot of the bed, +and wave their hands in the act of blessing: these were the vassals +of Ea, and, like their master, were usually clad in fish-skins. Others +placed themselves in the sepulchral chamber, and stood ready to strike +any one who dared to enter: these had human figures, or lions' heads +joined to the bodies of men. Others, moreover, hovered over the house in +order to drive off the spectres who might endeavour to enter through the +roof. During the last hours in which the dead body remained among its +kindred, it reposed under the protection of a legion of gods. + +We must not expect to find on the plains of the Euphrates the rock-cut +tombs, the mastabas or pyramids, of Egypt. No mountain chain ran on +either side of the river, formed of rock soft enough to be cut and +hollowed easily into chambers or sepulchral halls, and at the same time +sufficiently hard to prevent the tunnels once cut from falling in. + +[Illustration: 111.jpg CHALDEAN TOMB WITH FLAT ROOF.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a sketch by Taylor. + +The alluvial soil upon which the Chaldaean cities were built, far from, +preserving the dead body, rapidly decomposed it under the influence of +heat and moisture: vaults constructed in it would soon be invaded by +water in spite of masonry; paintings and sculpture would soon be +eaten away by nitre, and the funereal furniture and the coffin quickly +destroyed. The dwelling-house of the Chaldaean dead could not, therefore, +properly be called, as those of Egypt, an "eternal house." It was +constructed of dried or burnt brick, and its form varied much from +the most ancient times. Sometimes it was a great vaulted chamber, the +courses forming the roof being arranged corbel-wise, and contained the +remains of one or two bodies walled up within it.* At other times +it consisted merely of an earthen jar, in which the corpse had +been inserted in a bent-up posture, or was composed of two enormous +cylindrical jars, which, when united and cemented with bitumen, formed a +kind of barrel around the body. Other tombs are represented by wretched +structures, sometimes oval and sometimes round in shape, placed upon a +brick base and covered by a flat or domed roof. The interior was not of +large dimensions, and to enter it was necessary to stoop to a creeping +posture. The occupant of the smallest chambers was content to have with +him his linen, his ornaments, some bronze arrowheads, and metal or clay +vessels. Others contained furniture which, though not as complete as +that found in Egyptian sepulchres, must have ministered to all the +needs of the spirit. The body was stretched, fully clothed, upon a +mat impregnated with bitumen, the head supported by a cushion or flat +brick,** the arms laid across the breast, and the shroud adjusted by +bands to the loins and legs. Sometimes the corpse was placed on its left +side, with the legs slightly bent, and the right hand, extending +over the left shoulder, was inserted into a vase, as if to convey the +contents to the mouth. + + * Vaulted chambers are confined chiefly to the ancient + cemeteries of Uru at Mugheir; they are rather over six to + seven feet long, with a breadth of five and a half feet. The + walls are not quite perpendicular, but are somewhat splayed + up to two-thirds of their height, where they begin to narrow + into the vaulted roof. + + ** The object placed under the head of the skeleton is the + dried brick mentioned in the text; the vessel to which the + hand is stretched out was of copper; the other vessels were + of earthenware, and contained water, or dates, of which the + stones were found. The small cylinders on the side were of + stone; the two large cylinders, between the copper vessel + and those of earthenware, were pieces of bamboo, of whose + use we are ignorant. + +[Illustration: 213.jpg THE INTERIOR OF THE TOMB] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a sketch by Taylor + +Clay jars and dishes, arranged around the body, contained the food and +drink required for the dead man's daily fare--his favourite wine, +dates, fish, fowl, game, occasionally also a boar's head--and even stone +representations of provisions, which, like those of Egypt, were lasting +substitutes for the reality. The dead man required weapons also to +enable him to protect his food-store, and his lance, javelins and baton +of office were placed alongside him, together with a cylinder bearing +his name, which he had employed as his seal in his lifetime. Beside +the body of a woman or young girl was arranged an abundance of spare +ornaments, flowers, scent-bottles, combs, cosmetic pencils, and cakes +of the black paste with which they were accustomed to paint the eyebrows +and the edges of the eyelids. + +Cremation seems in many cases to have been preferred to burial in a +tomb. The funeral pile was constructed at some distance from the town, +on a specially reserved area in the middle of the marshes. The body, +wrapped up in coarse matting, was placed upon a heap of reeds and rushes +saturated with bitumen: a brick wall, coated with moist clay, was built +around this to circumscribe the action of the flames, and, the customary +prayers having been recited, the pile was set on fire, masses of fresh +material, together with the funerary furniture and usual viaticum, +being added to the pyre. When the work of cremation was considered to +be complete, the fire was extinguished, and an examination made of the +residue. It frequently happened that only the most accessible and most +easily destroyed parts of the body had been attacked by the flames, and +that there remained a black and disfigured mass which the fire had +not consumed. The previously prepared coating of mud was then made to +furnish a clay covering for the body, so as to conceal the sickening +spectacle from the view of the relatives and spectators. Sometimes, +however, the furnace accomplished its work satisfactorily, and there was +nothing to be seen at the end but greasy ashes and scraps of calcined +bones. The remains were frequently left where they were, and the funeral +pile became their tomb. They were, however, often collected and disposed +of in a manner which varied with their more or less complete combustion. +Bodies insufficiently burnt were interred in graves, or in public +chapels; while the ashes of those fully cremated, together with the +scraps of bones and the _debris_ of the offerings, were placed in long +urns. The heat had contorted the weapons and half melted the vessels +of copper; and the deceased was thus obliged to be content with the +fragments only of the things provided for him. These were, however, +sufficient for the purpose, and his possessions, once put to the test +of the flames, now accompanied him whither he went: water alone was +lacking, but provision was made for this by the construction on the +spot of cisterns to collect it. For this purpose several cylinders of +pottery, some twenty inches broad, were inserted in the ground one +above the other from a depth of from ten to twelve feet, and the last +cylinder, reaching the level of the ground, was provided with a narrow +neck, through which the rainwater or infiltrations from the river flowed +into this novel cistern. Many examples of these are found in one and the +same chamber,* thus giving the soul an opportunity of finding water in +one or other of them. The tombs at Uruk, arranged closely together +with coterminous walls, and gradually covered by the sand or by the +accumulation and _debris_ of new tombs, came at length to form an actual +mound. In cities where space was less valuable, and where they were free +to extend, the tombs quickly disappeared without leaving any vestiges +above the surface, and it would now be necessary to turn up a great +deal of rubbish before discovering their remains. The Chaldaea of to-day +presents the singular aspect of a country almost without cemeteries, and +one would be inclined to think that its ancient inhabitants had taken +pains to hide them.** The sepulture of royal personages alone furnishes +us with monuments of which we can determine the site. At Babylon these +were found in the ancient palaces in which the living were no longer +inclined to dwell: that of Shargina, for instance, furnished a +burying-place for kings more than two thousand years after the death +of its founder. The chronicles devoutly indicate the spot where each +monarch, when his earthly reign was over, found a last resting-place; +and where, as the subject of a ceremonial worship similar to that of +Egypt, his memory was preserved from the oblivion which had overtaken +most of his illustrious subjects. + + * The German expedition of 1886-87 found four of these + reservoirs in a single chamber, and nine distributed in the + chambers of a house entirely devoted to the burial of the + dead. + + ** Various explanations have been offered to account for + this absence of tombs, Without mentioning the desperate + attempt to get rid of the difficulty by the assumption that + the dead bodies were cast into the river, Loftus thinks that + the Chaldaeans and Assyrians were accustomed to send them to + some sanctuary in Southern Chaldaea, especially to Uru and + Uruk, whose vast cemeteries, he contends, would have + absorbed during the centuries the greater part of the + Euphratean population; his opinion has been adopted by some + historians, and, as far only as the later period is + concerned, by Hommel. + +The dead man, or rather that part of him which survived--his +"ekimmu"--dwelt in the tomb, and it was for his comfort that there were +provided, at the time of sepulture or cremation, the provisions and +clothing, the ornaments and weapons, of which he was considered to stand +in need. Furnished with these necessities by his children and heirs, he +preserved for the donors the same affection which he had felt for them +in his lifetime, and gave evidence of it in every way he could, watching +over their welfare, and protecting them from malign influences. If +they abandoned or forgot him, he avenged himself for their neglect by +returning to torment them in their homes, by letting sickness attack +them, and by ruining them with his imprecations: he became thus no +less hurtful than the "luminous ghost" of the Egyptians, and if he were +accidentally deprived of sepulture, he would not be merely a plague +to his relations, but a danger to the entire city. The dead, who were +unable to earn an honest living, showed little pity to those who were +in the same position as themselves: when a new-comer arrived among them +without prayers, libations, or offerings, they declined to receive him, +and would not give him so much as a piece of bread out of their meagre +store. The spirit of the unburied dead man, having neither place of +repose nor means of subsistence, wandered through the town and country, +occupied with no other thought than that of attacking and robbing the +living. He it was who, gliding into the house during the night, revealed +himself to its inhabitants with such a frightful visage as to drive them +distracted with terror. Always on the watch, no sooner does he surprise +one of his victims than he falls upon him, "his head against his +victim's head, his hand against his hand, his foot against his foot." +He who has been thus attacked, whether man or beast, would undoubtedly +perish if magic were not able to furnish its all-powerful defence +against this deadly embrace.* This human survival, who is so forcibly +represented both in his good and evil aspects, was nevertheless nothing +more than a sort of vague and fluid existence--a double, in fact, +analogous in appearance to that of the Egyptians. + + * The majority of the spells employed against sickness + contain references to the spirits against which they + contend--"the wicked ekimmu who oppresses men during the + night," or simply "the wicked ekimmu," the ghost. + +With the faculty of roaming at will through space, and of going forth +from and returning to his abode, it was impossible to regard him as +condemned always to dwell in the case of terra-cotta in which his body +lay mouldering: he was transferred, therefore, or rather he +transferred himself, into the dark land--the Aralu--situated very far +away--according to some, beneath the surface of the earth; according to +others, in the eastern or northern extremities of the universe. A river +which opens into this region and separates it from the sunlit earth, +finds its source in the primordial waters into whose bosom this world +of ours is plunged. This dark country is surrounded by seven high walls, +and is approached through seven gates, each of which is guarded by a +pitiless warder. Two deities rule within it--Nergal, "the lord of the +great city," and Beltis-Allat, "the lady of the great land," whither +everything which has breathed in this world descends after death. A +legend relates that Allat, called in Sumerian Erishkigal, reigned alone +in Hades, and was invited by the gods to a feast which they had prepared +in heaven. Owing to her hatred of the light, she sent a refusal by her +messenger Narntar, who acquitted himself on this mission with such a +bad grace, that Ann and Ea were incensed against his mistress, and +commissioned Nergal to descend and chastise her; he went, and finding +the gates of hell open, dragged the queen by her hair from the throne, +and was about to decapitate her, but she mollified him by her prayers, +and saved her life by becoming his wife. The nature of Nergal fitted +him well to play the part of a prince of the departed: for he was the +destroying sun of summer, and the genius of pestilence and battle. His +functions, however, in heaven and earth took up so much of his time +that he had little leisure to visit his nether kingdom, and he was +consequently obliged to content himself with the _role_ of providing +subjects for it by despatching thither the thousands of recruits which +he gathered daily from the abodes of men or from the field of battle. +Allat was the actual sovereign of the country. She was represented with +the body of a woman, ill-formed and shaggy, the grinning muzzle of a +lion, and the claws of a bird of prey. She brandished in each hand a +large serpent--a real animated javelin, whose poisonous bite inflicted +a fatal wound upon the enemy. Her children were two lions, which she is +represented as suckling, and she passed through her empire, not seated +in the saddle, but standing upright or kneeling on the back of a +horse, which seems oppressed by her weight. Sometimes she set out on +an expedition upon the river which communicates with the countries +of light, in order to meet the procession of newly arrived souls +ceaselessly despatched to her: she embarked in this case upon an +enchanted vessel, which made its way without sail or oars, its prow +projecting like the beak of a bird, and its stern terminating in the +head of an ox. She overcomes all resistance, and nothing can escape from +her: the gods themselves can pass into her empire only on the condition +of submitting to death like mortals, and of humbly avowing themselves +her slaves. + +[Illustration: 220.jpg THE GODDESS ALLAT PASSES THROUGH THE NETHER +REGIONS IN HER BARK.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a bronze plaque of which an + engraving was published by Clermont-Ganneau. The original, + which belonged to M. Peretie, is now in the collection of M. + de Clercq + +[Illustration: 221.jpg NERGAL, THE GOD OF HADES; BACK VIEW.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin. This is the back of the bronze plate + represented on the preceding page; the animal-head of the + god appears in relief at the top of the illustration. + +The warders at the gates despoiled the new-comers of everything which +they had brought with them, and conducted them in a naked condition +before Allat, who pronounced sentence upon them, and assigned to each +his place in the nether world. The good or evil committed on earth by +such souls was of little moment in determining the sentence: to secure +the favour of the judge, it was of far greater importance to have +exhibited devotion to the gods and to Allat herself, to have lavished +sacrifices and offerings upon them and to have enriched their temples. +The souls which could not justify themselves were subjected to horrible +punishment: leprosy consumed them to the end of time, and the most +painful maladies attacked them, to torture them ceaselessly without any +hope of release. Those who were fortunate enough to be spared from +her rage, dragged out a miserable and joyless existence. They were +continually suffering from the pangs of thirst and hunger, and found +nothing to satisfy their appetites but clay and dust. They shivered with +cold, and they obtained no other garment to protect them than mantles of +feathers--the great silent wings of the night-birds, invested with which +they fluttered about and filled the air with their screams. This gloomy +and cruel conception of ordinary life in this strange kingdom was still +worse than the idea formed of the existence in the tomb to which it +succeeded. In the cemetery the soul was, at least, alone with the dead +body; in the house of Allat, on the contrary, it was lost as it were +among spirits as much afflicted as itself, and among the genii born of +darkness. None of these genii had a simple form, or approached the +human figure in shape; each individual was a hideous medley of human +and animal parts, in which the most repellent features were artistically +combined. Lions' heads stood out from the bodies of scorpion-tailed +jackals, whose feet were armed with eagles' claws: and among such +monsters the genii of pestilence, fever, and the south-west wind took +the chief place. When once the dead had become naturalized among this +terrible population, they could not escape from their condition, +unless by the exceptional mandate of the gods above. They possessed +no recollection of what they had done upon earth. Domestic affection, +friendships, and the memory of good offices rendered to one +another,--all were effaced from their minds: nothing remained there but +an inexpressible regret at having been exiled from the world of light, +and an excruciating desire to reach it once more. The threshold of +Allat's palace stood upon a spring which had the property of restoring +to life all who bathed in it or drank of its waters: they gushed forth +as soon as the stone was raised, but the earth-spirits guarded it with a +jealous care, and kept at a distance all who attempted to appropriate a +drop of it. They permitted access to it only by order of Ea himself, or +one of the supreme gods, and even then with a rebellious heart at seeing +their prey escape them. Ancient legends related how the shepherd Dumuzi, +son of Ea and Damkina, having excited the love of Ishtar while he was +pasturing his flocks under the mysterious tree of Eridu, which covers +the earth with its shade, was chosen by the goddess from among all +others to be the spouse of her youth, and how, being mortally wounded by +a wild boar, he was cast into the kingdom of Allat. One means remained +by which he might be restored to the light of day: his wounds must be +washed in the waters of the wonderful spring, and Ishtar resolved to +go in quest of this marvellous liquid. The undertaking was fraught with +danger, for no one might travel to the infernal regions without having +previously gone through the extreme terrors of death, and even the gods +themselves could not transgress this fatal law. "To the land without +return, to the land which thou knowest--Ishtar, the daughter of Sin, +turned her thoughts: she, the daughter of Sin, turned her thoughts--to +the house of darkness, the abode of Irkalla--to the house from which he +who enters can never emerge--to the path upon which he who goes shall +never come back--to the house into which he who enters bids farewell +to the light--the place where dust is nourishment and clay is food; the +light is not seen, darkness is the dwelling, where the garments are the +wings of birds--where dust accumulates on door and bolt." Ishtar +arrives at the porch, she knocks at it, she addresses the guardian in an +imperious voice: "'Guardian of the waters, open thy gate--open thy +gate that I may enter, even I.--If thou openest not the door that I may +enter, even I,--I will burst open the door, I will break the bars, I +will break the threshold, I will burst in the panels, I will excite the +dead that they may eat the living,--and the dead shall be more numerous +than the living.'--The guardian opened his mouth and spake, he announced +to the mighty Ishtar: 'Stop, O lady, and do not overturn the door until +I go and apprise the Queen Allat of thy name.' Allat hesitates, and then +gives him permission to receive the goddess: 'Go, guardian, open the +gate to her--but treat her according to the ancient laws. Mortals +enter naked into the world, and naked must they leave it: and since +Ishtar has decided to accept their lot, she too must be prepared to +divest herself of her garments.'" The guardian went, he opened his mouth: +'Enter, my lady, and may Kutha rejoice--may the palace and the land +without return exult in thy presence! 'He causes her to pass through the +first gate, divests her, removes the great crown from her head:--'Why, +guardian, dost thou remove the great crown from my head?'--'Enter, my +lady, such is the law of Allat.' The second gate, he causes her to pass +through it, he divests her--removes the rings from her ears:--'Why, +guardian, dost thou remove the rings from my ears?'--'Enter, my lady, +such is the law of Allat.'" And from gate to gate he removes some +ornament from the distressed lady--now her necklace with its attached +amulets, now the tunic which covers her bosom, now her enamelled girdle, +her bracelets, and the rings on her ankles: and at length, at the +seventh gate, takes from her her last covering. When she at length +arrives in the presence of Allat, she throws herself upon her in order +to wrest from her in a terrible struggle the life of Dumuzi; but Allat +sends for Namtar, her messenger of misfortune, to punish, the rebellious +Ishtar. "Strike her eyes with the affliction of the eyes--strike +her loins with the affliction of the loins--strike her feet with the +affliction of the feet--strike her heart with the affliction of the +heart--strike her head with the affliction of the head--strike violently +at her, at her whole body!" While Ishtar was suffering the torments of +the infernal regions, the world of the living was wearing mourning on +account of her death. In the absence of the goddess of love, the rites +of love could no longer be performed. The passions of animals and men +were suspended. If she did not return quickly to the daylight, the +races of men and animals would become extinct, the earth would become a +desert, and the gods would have neither votaries nor offerings. + +[Illustration: 226.jpg ISHTAR DESPOILED OF HER GARMENTS IN HADES] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a Chaldaean intaglio in the + Hague Museum. Salomon Reinach has demonstrated that the + naked figure is not the goddess herself, but a statue of the + goddess which was adored in one of the temples. + +"Papsukal, the servant of the great gods, tore his face before +Shamash--clothed in mourning, filled with sorrow. Shamash went--he +wept in the presence of Sin, his father,--and his tears flowed in the +presence of Ea, the king:--'Ishtar has gone down into the earth, and +she has not come up again!--And ever since Ishtar has descended into +the land without return... [the passions of men and beasts have been +suspended]... the master goes to sleep while giving his command, the +servant goes to sleep on his duty.'" The resurrection of the goddess +is the only remedy for such ills, but this is dependent upon the +resurrection of Damuzi: Ishtar will never consent to reappear in the +world, if she cannot bring back her husband with her. Ea, the supreme +god, the infallible executor of the divine will--he who alone can modify +the laws imposed upon creation--at length decides to accord to her +what she desires. "Ea, in the wisdom of his heart, formed a male +being,--formed Uddushunamir, the servant of the gods:--'Go then, +Uddushunamir, turn thy face towards the gate of the land without return; +--the seven gates of the land without return--may they become open at +thy presence--may Allat behold thee, and rejoice in thy presence! When +her heart shall be calm, and her wrath appeased, charm her in the name +of the great gods--turn thy thoughts to the spring'--'May the spring, my +lady, give me of its waters that I may drink of them.'" Allat broke +out into a terrible rage, when she saw herself obliged to yield to her +rival; "she beat her sides, she gnawed her fingers," she broke out into +curses against the messenger of misfortune. "'Thou hast expressed to me +a wish which should not be made!--Fly, Uddushunamir, or I will shut thee +up in the great prison--the mud of the drains of the city shall be thy +food--the gutters of the town shall be thy drink--the shadow of +the walls shall be thy abode--the thresholds shall be thy +habitation--confinement and isolation shall weaken thy strength.'"* She +is obliged to obey, notwithstanding; she calls her messenger Namtar and +commands him to make all the preparations for resuscitating the goddess. +It was necessary to break the threshold of the palace in order to get at +the spring, and its waters would have their full effect only in presence +of the Anunnas. "Namtar went, he rent open the eternal palace,--he +twisted the uprights so that the stones of the threshold trembled;--he +made the Anunnaki come forth, and seated them on thrones of gold,--he +poured upon Ishtar the waters of life, and brought her away." She +received again at each gate the articles of apparel she had abandoned +in her passage across the seven circles of hell: as soon as she saw the +daylight once more, it was revealed to her that the fate of her husband +was henceforward in her own hands. Every year she must bathe him in pure +water, and anoint him with the most precious perfumes, clothe him in a +robe of mourning, and play to him sad airs upon a crystal flute, whilst +her priestesses intoned their doleful chants, and tore their breasts +in sorrow: his heart would then take fresh life, and his youth flourish +once more, from springtime to springtime, as long as she should +celebrate on his behalf the ceremonies already prescribed by the deities +of the infernal world. + + * It follows from this passage that Ishtar could be + delivered only at the cost of another life: it was for this + reason, doubtless, that Ea, instead of sending the ordinary + messenger of the gods, created a special messenger. Allat, + furious at the insignificance of the victim sent to her, + contents herself with threatening Uddushanamir with an + ignominious treatment if he does not escape as quickly as + possible. + +Dumuzi was a god, the lover, moreover, of a goddess, and the deity +succeeded where mortals failed.* Ea, Nebo, Gula, Ishtar, and their +fellows possessed, no doubt, the faculty of recalling the dead to life, +but they rarely made use of it on behalf of their creatures, and their +most pious votaries pleaded in vain from temple to temple for the +resurrection of their dead friends; they could never obtain the favour +which had been granted by Allat to Dumuzi. + + * Merodach is called "the merciful one who takes pleasure in + raising the dead to life," and "the lord of the pure + libation," the "merciful one who has power to give life." In + Jeremias may be found the list of the gods who up to the + present are known to have had the power to resuscitate the + dead; it is probable that this power belonged to all the + gods and goddesses of the first rank. + +[Illustration: 229.jpg DUMUZI REJUVENATED ON THE KNEES OF ISHTAR.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a Chaldaean intaglio. + +When the dead body was once placed in the tomb, it rose up no more, it +could no more be reinstated in the place in the household it had +lost, it never could begin once more a new earthly existence. The +necromancers, indeed, might snatch away death's prey for a few moments. +The earth gaped at the words of their invocations, the soul burst forth +like a puff of wind and answered gloomily the questions proposed to it; +but when the charm was once broken, it had to retrace its steps to +the country without return, to be plunged once more in darkness. This +prospect of a dreary and joyless eternity was not so terrifying to the +Chaldaeans as it was to the Egyptians. The few years of their earthly +existence were of far more concern to them than the endless ages which +were to begin their monotonous course on the morrow of their funeral. +The sum of good and evil fortune assigned to them by destiny they +preferred to spend continuously in the light of day on the fair plains +of the Euphrates and Tigris: if they were to economize during this +period with the view of laying up a posthumous treasure of felicity, +their store would have no current value beyond the tomb, and would thus +become so much waste. The gods, therefore, whom they served faithfully +would recoup them, here in their native city, with present prosperity, +with health, riches, power, glory, and a numerous offspring, for the +offerings of their devotion; while, if they irritated the deities +by their shortcomings, they had nothing to expect but overwhelming +calamities and sufferings. The gods would "cut them down like a reed," +and their "names would be annihilated, their seed destroyed;--they would +end their days in affliction and hunger,--their dead bodies would be at +the mercy of chance, and would receive no sepulture." They were content +to resign themselves, therefore, to the dreary lot of eternal misery +which awaited them after death, provided they enjoyed in this world a +long and prosperous existence. Some of them felt and rebelled against +the injustice of the idea, which assigned one and the same fate, without +discrimination, to the coward and the hero killed on the battle-field, +to the tyrant and the mild ruler of his people, to the wicked and +the righteous. These therefore supposed that the gods would make +distinctions, that they would separate such heroes from the common herd, +welcome them in a fertile, sunlit island, separated from the abode of +men by the waters of death--the impassable river which leads to the +house of Allat. The tree of life flourished there, the spring of life +poured forth there its revivifying waters; thither Ea transferred +Xisuthros after the Deluge; Gilgames saw the shores of this island and +returned from it, strong and healthy as in the days of his youth. The +site of this region of delights was at first placed in the centre of +the marshes of the Euphrates, where this river flows into the sea; +afterwards when the country became better known, it was transferred +beyond the ocean. In proportion as the limits of the Chaldaean +horizon were thrust further and further away by mercantile or warlike +expeditions, this mysterious island was placed more and more to the +east, afterwards to the north, and at length at a distance so great that +it tended to vanish altogether. As a final resource, the gods of heaven +themselves became the hosts, and welcomed into their own kingdom the +purified souls of the heroes. + +These souls were not so securely isolated from humanity that the +inhabitants of the world were not at times tempted to rejoin them before +their last hour had come. Just as Gilgames had dared of old the +dangers of the desert and the ocean in order to discover the island of +Khasisadra, so Etana darted through the air in order to ascend to the +sky of Anu, to become incorporated while still living in the choir of +the blessed. The legend gives an account of his friendship with the +eagle of Shamash, and of the many favours he had obtained from and +rendered to the bird. It happened at last, that his wife could not bring +forth the son which lay in her womb; the hero, addressing himself to +the eagle, asked from her the plant which alleviates the birth-pangs +of women and facilitates their delivery. This was only to be found, +however, in the heaven of Anu, and how could any one run the risk of +mounting so high, without being destroyed on the way by the anger of the +gods? The eagle takes pity upon the sorrow of his comrade, and resolves +to attempt the enterprise with him. "'Friend,' she says, 'banish the +cloud from thy face! Come, and I will carry thee to the heaven of the +god Anu. Place thy breast against my breast--place thy two hands upon +the pinions of my wings--place thy side against my side.' He places his +breast against the breast of the eagle, he places his two hands upon the +pinions of the wings, he places his side against her side;--he adjusts +himself firmly, and his weight was great." The Chaldaean artists have +more than once represented the departure of the hero. They exhibit him +closely attached to the body of his ally, and holding her in a strong +embrace. A first flight has already lifted them above the earth, and the +shepherds scattered over the country are stupefied at the unaccustomed +sight: one announces the prodigy to another, while their dogs seated at +their feet extend their muzzles as if in the act of howling with terror. +"For the space of a double hour the eagle bore him--then the eagle spake +to him, to him Etana: 'Behold, my friend, the earth what it is; regard +the sea which the ocean contains! See, the earth is no more than a +mountain, and the sea is no more than a lake.' The space of a second +double hour she bore him, then the eagle spake to him, to him Etana: +'Behold, my friend, the earth what it is; the sea appears as the girdle +of the earth! 'The space of a third double hour she bore him, then the +eagle spake to him, to him Etana: 'See, my friend, the earth, what it +is:--the sea is no more than the rivulet made by a gardener.'" + +[Illustration: 233.jpg ETANA CARRIED TO HEAVEN BY AN EAGLE.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a Chaldaean intaglio. + +"They at length arrive at the heaven of Anu, and rest there for a +moment. Etana sees around him nothing but empty space--no living thing +within it--not even a bird: he is struck with terror, but the eagle +reassures him, and tells him to proceed on his way to the heaven of +Ishtar. "'Come, my friend, let me bear thee to Ishtar,--and I will place +thee near Ishtar, the lady,--and at the feet of Ishtar, the lady, thou +shalt throw thyself.--Place thy side against my side, place thy hands +on the pinions of my wings.' The space of a double hour she bore him: +'Friend, behold the earth what it is.--The face of the earth stretches +out quite flat--and the sea is no greater than a mere.' The space of +a second double hour she bore him: 'Friend, behold the earth what it +is,--the earth is no more than a square plot in a garden, and the great +sea is not greater than a puddle of water.'" At the third hour Etana +lost courage, and cried, "Stop!" and the eagle immediately descended +again; but, Etana's strength being exhausted, he let go his hold, and +was dashed to pieces on the ground. + +The eagle escaped unhurt this time, but she soon suffered a more painful +death than that of Etana. She was at war with the serpent, though the +records which we as yet possess do not vouchsafe the reason, when she +discovered in the roots of a tree the nest in which her enemy concealed +its brood. She immediately proposed to her young ones to pounce down +upon the growing snakes; one of her eaglets, wiser than the rest, +reminded her that they were under the protection of Shamash, the great +righter of wrongs, and cautioned her against any transgression of the +divine laws. The old eagle felt herself wiser than her son, and rebuked +him after the manner of wise mothers: she carried away the serpent's +young, and gave them as food to her own brood. The hissing serpent +crawled as far as Shamash, crying for vengeance: "The evil she has done +me, Shamash--behold it! Come to my help, Shamash! thy net is as wide as +the earth--thy snares reach to the distant mountain--who can escape +thy net?--The criminal Zu, Zu who was the first to act wickedly, did he +escape it?" Shamash refused to interfere personally, but he pointed out +to the serpent an artifice by which he might satisfy his vengeance as +securely as if Shamash himself had accomplished it. "Set out upon the +way, ascend the mountain,--and conceal thyself in a dead bull;--make +an incision in his inside--tear open his belly,--take up thy +abode--establish thyself in his belly. All the birds of the air will +pounce upon it....--and the eagle herself will come with them, ignorant +that thou art within it;--she will wish to possess herself of the +flesh, she will come swiftly--she will think of nothing but the entrails +within. As soon as she begins to attack the inside, seize her by her +wings, beat down her wings, the pinions of her wings and her claws, tear +her and throw her into a ravine of the mountain, that she may die there +a death of hunger and thirst." + +The serpent did as Shamash advised, and the birds of the air began to +flock round the carcase in which she was hidden. The eagle came with the +rest, and at first kept aloof, looking for what should happen. When she +saw that the birds flew away unharmed all fear left her. In vain did the +wise eaglet warn her of the danger that was lurking within the prey; she +mocked at him and his predictions, dug her beak into the carrion, and +the serpent leaping out seized her by the wing. Then "the eagle her +mouth opened, and spake unto the snake, 'Have mercy upon me, and +according to thy pleasure a gift I will lavish upon thee!' The snake +opened her mouth and spake unto the eagle, 'Did I release thee, Shamash +would take part against me; and the doom would fall upon me, which now +I fulfil upon thee.' She tore out her wings, her feathers, her pinions; +she tore her to pieces, she threw her into a cleft, and there she died a +death of hunger and of thirst." + +The gods allowed no living being to penetrate with impunity into their +empire: he who was desirous of ascending thither, however brave he might +be, could do so only by death. The mass of humanity had no pretensions +to mount so high. Their religion gave them the choice between a +perpetual abode in the tomb, or confinement in the prison of Allat; if +at times they strove to escape from these alternatives, and to picture +otherwise their condition in the world beyond, their ideas as to the +other life continued to remain vague, and never approached the minute +precision of the Egyptian conception. The cares of the present life were +too absorbing to allow them leisure to speculate upon the conditions of +a future existence. + +[Illustration: 230.jpg Endplate] + + + + +CHAPTER III--CHALDAEAN CIVILIZATION + + +_CHALDAEAN CIVILIZATION--ROYALTY--THE CONSTITUTION OF THE FAMILY AND ITS +PROPERTY--CHALMAN COMMERCE AND INDUSTRY._ + +_The kings not gods, but the vicegerents of the gods: their sacerdotal +character--The queens and the women of the royal family: the sons and +the order of succession to the throne--The royal palaces: description +of the palace of Gudea at Lagash, the facades, the zigurat, the private +apartments, the furniture, the external decoration--Costume of the +men and women: the employees of the palace and the method of royal +administration; the military and the great lords._ + +_The scribe and the clay books.--Cuneiform writing: its hieroglyphic +origin; the Protean character of the sounds which may be assigned to the +ideograms, grammatical tablets, and dictionaries--Their contracts, and +their numerous copies of them: the finger-nail mark, the seal._ + +_The constitution of the family: the position held by the +wife--Marriage, the contract, the religious ceremonies--Divorce: +the rights of wealthy women; woman and marriage among the lower +classes--Adopted children, their position in the family; ordinary +motives for adoption--Slaves, their condition, their enfranchisement._ + +_The Chaldaean towns: the aspect and distribution of the houses, domestic +life--The family patrimony: division of the inheritance--Lending +on usury, the rate of interest, commercial intercourse by land and +sea--Trade corporations: brick-making, industrial implements in stone +and metal, goldsmiths, engravers of cylinders, weavers; the state of the +working classes._ + +_Farming and cultivation of the ground: landmarks, slaves, +and agricultural labourers--Scenes of pastoral life: fishing, +hunting--Archaic literature; positive sciences: arithmetic and geometry, +astronomy and astrology, the science of foretelling the future--The +physician; magic and its influence on neighbouring countries._ + +[Illustration: 239.jpg CHAPTER III.] + + Drawn by Boudier, from the sketch by Loftus. The initial + vignette, which is by Faucher-Gudin, represents a royal + figure kneeling and holding a large nail in both hands. The + nail serves to keep the figure fixed firmly in the earth. It + is a reproduction of the bronze figurine in the Louvre, + already published by Heuzey-Sakzeo, _Decouvertes en + Chaldee_, pl. 28, No. 4. + + + + +CHAPTER III--CHALDAEAN CIVILIZATION + + +_Royalty--The constitution of the family and its property--Chaldaean +commerce and industry_. + + +The Chaldaean kings, unlike their contemporaries the Pharaohs, rarely +put forward any pretensions to divinity. They contented themselves with +occupying an intermediate position between their subjects and the gods, +and for the purpose of mediation they believed themselves to be endowed +with powers not possessed by ordinary mortals. They sometimes designated +themselves the sons of Ea, or of Ninsun, or some other deity, but +this involved no belief in a divine parentage, and was merely pious +hyperbole: they entertained no illusions with regard to any descent from +a god or even from one of his doubles, but they desired to be recognized +as his vicegerents here below, as his prophets, his well-beloved, +his pastors, elected by him to rule his human flocks, or as priests +devotedly attached to his service. While, however, the ordinary priest +chose for himself a single master to whom he devoted himself, the +priest-king exercised universal sacerdotal functions and claimed to be +pontiff of all the national religions. His choice naturally was directed +by preference to the patrons of his city, those who had raised his +ancestors from the dust, and had exalted him to the supreme rank, but +there were other divinities who claimed their share of his homage +and expected of him a devotion suited to their importance. If he had +attempted to carry out these duties personally in detail, he would have +had to spend his whole life at the foot of the altar; even when he had +delegated as many of them as he could to the regular clergy, there still +remained sufficient to occupy a large part of his time. Every month, +every day, brought its inevitable round of sacrifices, prayers, and +processions. On the 1st of the second Elul, the King of Babylon had to +present a gazelle without blemish to Sin; he then made an offering of +his own choosing to Shamash, and cut the throats of his victims +before the god. These ceremonies were repeated on the 2nd without any +alteration, but from the 3rd to the 12th they took place during the +night, before the statues of Merodach and Ishtar, in turn with those +of Nebo and Tashmit, of Mullil and Ninlil, of Eamman and of Zirbanit; +sometimes at the rising of a particular constellation--as, for instance, +that of the Great Bear, or that of the sons of Ishtar; sometimes at the +moment when the moon "raised above the earth her luminous crown." On such +a date a penitential psalm or a litany was to be recited; at another +time it was forbidden to eat of meat either cooked or smoked, to change +the body-linen, to wear white garments, to drink medicine, to sacrifice, +to put forth an edict, or to drive out in a chariot. Not only at +Babylon, but everywhere else, obedience to the religious rites weighed +heavily on the local princes; at Uru, at Lagash, at Nipur, and in +the ruling cities of Upper and Lower Chaldaea. The king, as soon as he +succeeded to the throne, repaired to the temple to receive his solemn +investiture, which differed in form according to the gods he worshipped: +at Babylon, he addressed himself to the statue of Bel-Merodach in the +first days of the month Nisan which followed his accession, and he "took +him by the hands" to do homage to him. From thenceforth, he officiated +for Merodach here below, and the scrupulously minute devotions, which +daily occupied hours of his time, were so many acts of allegiance which +his fealty as a vassal constrained him to perform to his suzerain. They +were, in fact, analogous to the daily audiences demanded of a great +lord by his steward, for the purpose of rendering his accounts and of +informing him of current business: any interruption not justified by a +matter of supreme importance would be liable to be interpreted as a want +of respect or as revealing an inclination to rebel. By neglecting the +slightest ceremonial detail the king would arouse the suspicions of +the gods, and excite their anger against himself and his subjects: the +people had, therefore, a direct interest in his careful fulfilment of +the priestly functions, and his piety was not the least of his virtues +in their eyes. All other virtues--bravery, equity, justice--depended on +it, and were only valuable from the divine aid which piety obtained for +them. The gods and heroes of the earliest ages had taken upon themselves +the task of protecting the faithful from all their enemies, whether men +or beasts. If a lion decimated their flocks, or a urus of gigantic size +devastated their crops, it was the king's duty to follow the example +of his fabulous predecessors and to set out and overcome them. The +enterprise demanded all the more courage and supernatural help, since +these beasts were believed to be no mere ordinary animals, but were +looked on as instruments of divine wrath the cause of which was often +unknown, and whoever assailed these monsters, provoked not only them but +the god who instigated them. Piety and confidence in the patron of the +city alone sustained the king when he set forth to drive the animal back +to its lair; he engaged in close combat with it, and no sooner had he +pierced it with his arrows or his lance, or felled it with axe and +dagger, than he hastened to pour a libation upon it, and to dedicate it +as a trophy in one of the temples. His exalted position entailed on him +no less perils in time of war: if he did not personally direct the first +attacking column, he placed himself at the head of the band composed of +the flower of the army, whose charge at an opportune moment was wont to +secure the victory. + +What would have been the use of his valour, if the dread of the gods had +not preceded his march, and if the light of their countenances had not +struck terror into the ranks of the enemy? As soon as he had triumphed +by their command, he sought before all else to reward them amply for the +assistance they had given him. He poured a tithe of the spoil into the +coffers of their treasury, he made over a part of the conquered country +to their domain, he granted them a tale of the prisoners to cultivate +their lands or to work at their buildings. Even the idols of the +vanquished shared the fate of their people: the king tore them from +the sanctuaries which had hitherto sheltered them, and took them as +prisoners in his train to form a court of captive gods about his patron +divinity. Shamash, the great judge of heaven, inspired him with justice, +and the prosperity which his good administration obtained for the people +was less the work of the sovereign than that of the immortals. + +We know too little of the inner family life of the kings, to attempt +to say how they were able to combine the strict sacerdotal obligations +incumbent on them with the routine of daily life. We merely observe that +on great days of festival or sacrifice, when they themselves officiated, +they laid aside all the insignia of royalty during the ceremony and were +clad as ordinary priests. We see them on such occasions represented +with short-cut hair and naked breast, the loin-cloth about their waist, +advancing foremost in the rank, carrying the heavily laden "kufa," or +reed basket, as if they were ordinary slaves; and, as a fact, they +had for the moment put aside their sovereignty and were merely temple +servants, or slaves appearing before their divine master to do his +bidding, and disguising themselves for the nonce in the garb of +servitors. The wives of the sovereign do not seem to have been invested +with that semi-sacred character which led the Egyptian women to be +associated with the devotions of the man, and made them indispensable +auxiliaries in all religious ceremonies; they did not, moreover, occupy +that important position side by side with the man which the Egyptian +law assigned to the queens of the Pharaohs. Whereas the monuments on the +banks of the Nile reveal to us princesses sharing the throne of their +husbands whom they embrace with a gesture of frank affection, in Chaldaea +the wives of the prince, his mother, sisters, daughters, and even his +slaves, remain invisible to posterity. + +[Illustration: 244.jpg THE KING URNINA BEARING THE "KUFA."] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from Heuzey Sarzec. + +The harem in which they were shut up by custom, rarely opened its doors: +the people seldom caught sight of them, their relatives spoke of them +as little as possible, those in power avoided associating them in any +public acts of worship or government, and we could count on our fingers +the number of those whom the inscriptions mention by name. Some of them +were drawn from the noble families of the capital, others came from the +kingdoms of Chaldaea or from foreign courts; a certain number never rose +above the condition of mere concubines, many assumed the title of queen, +while almost all served as living pledges of alliances made with rival +states, or had been given as hostages at the concluding of a peace on +the termination of a war.* As the kings, who put forward no pretensions +to a divine origin, were not constrained, after the fashion of the +Pharaohs, to marry their sisters in order to keep up the purity of their +race, it was rare to find one among their wives who possessed an equal +right to the crown with themselves: such a case could be found only in +troublous times, when an aspirant to the throne, of base extraction, +legitimated his usurpation by marrying a sister or daughter of his +predecessor. + + * Political marriage-alliances between Egypt and Chaldaea + were of frequent occurrence, according to the Tel el-Amarna + tablets, and at a later period between Chaldaea and Assyria; + among the few queens of the very earliest times, the wife of + Nammaghani is the daughter of Urbau, vicegerent of Lagash, + and consequently the cousin or niece of her husband, while + the wife of Rimsin appears to be the daughter of a nobleman + of the name of Rimnannar. + +The original status of the mother almost always determined that of her +children, and the sons of a princess were born princes, even if their +father were of obscure or unknown origin.* These princes exercised +important functions at court, or they received possessions which +they administered under the suzerainty of the head of the family; +the daughters were given to foreign kings, or to scions of the most +distinguished families. The sovereign was under no obligation to hand +down his crown to any particular member of his family; the eldest son +usually succeeded him, but the king could, if he preferred, select his +favourite child as his successor even if he happened to be the youngest, +or the only one born of a slave. As soon as the sovereign had made known +his will, the custom of primogeniture was set aside, and his word became +law. We can well imagine the secret intrigues formed both by mothers and +sons to curry favour with the father and bias his choice; we can picture +the jealousy with which they mutually watched each other, and the bitter +hatred which any preference shown to one would arouse in the breasts +of all the others. Often brothers who had been disappointed in their +expectations would combine secretly against the chosen or supposed heir; +a conspiracy would break out, and the people suddenly learn that their +ruler of yesterday had died by the hand of an assassin and that a new +one filled his place. + + * This fact is apparent from the introduction to the + inscription in which Sargon I. is supposed to give an + account of his life: "My father was unknown, my mother was a + princess;" and it was, indeed, from his mother that he + inherited his rights to the crown of Agade. + +Sometimes discontent spread beyond the confines of the palace, the army +became divided into two hostile camps, the citizens took the side of one +or other of the aspirants, and civil war raged for several years till +some decisive action brought it to a close. Meantime tributary vassals +took advantage of the consequent disorder to shake off the yoke, the +Blamites and various neighbouring cities joined in the dispute and +ranged themselves on the side of the party from which there was most +to be gained: the victorious faction always had to pay dearly for this +somewhat dubious help, and came out impoverished from the struggle. Such +an internecine war often caused the downfall of a dynasty--at times, +indeed, that of the entire state.* + + * The above is perfectly true of the later Assyrian and + Chalaean periods: it is scarcely needful to recall to the + reader the murders of Sargon II. and Sennacherib, or the + revolt of Assurdainpal against his father Shalmaneser III. + With regard to the earliest period we have merely + indications of what took place; the succession of King + Urnina of Lagash appears to have been accompanied by + troubles of this kind, and it is certain that his successor + Akurgal was not the eldest of his sons, but we do not at + present know to what events Akurgal owed his elevation. + +The palaces of the Chaldaean kings, like those of the Egyptians, +presented the appearance of an actual citadel: the walls had to be +sufficiently thick to withstand an army for an indefinite period, and +to protect the garrison from every emergency, except that of treason or +famine. One of the statues found at Telloh holds in its lap the plan +of one of these residences: the external outline alone is given, but by +means of it we can easily picture to ourselves a fortified place, with +its towers, its forts, and its gateways placed between two bastions. +It represents the ancient palace of Lagash, subsequently enlarged and +altered by Oudea or one of the vicegerents who succeeded him, in which +many a great lord of the place must have resided down to the time of the +Christian era. The site on which it was built in the Girsu quarter of. +the city was not entirely unoccupied at the time of its foundation. +Urbau had raised a ziggurat on that very spot some centuries previously, +and the walls which he had constructed were falling into ruin. + +[Illustration: 248.jpg THE PLAN OF A PALACE BUILT BY GUDEA.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from Heuzey-Sarzec. The plan is + traced upon the tablet held in the lap of Statue E in the + Louvre. Below the plan can be seen the ruler marked with the + divisions used by the architect for drawing his designs to + the desired scale; the scribe's stylus is represented lying + on the left of the plan. [Prof. Petrie has shown that the + unit of measurement represented on this ruler is the cubit + of the Pyramid-builders of Egypt.--Te.] + +Gudea did not destroy the work of his remote predecessor, he merely +incorporated it into the substructures of the new building, thus +showing an indifference similar to that evinced by the Pharaohs for the +monuments of a former dynasty. The palaces, like the temples, never +rose directly from the soil, but were invariably built on the top of an +artificial mound of crude brick. At Lagash, this solid platform rises to +the height of 40 feet above the plain, and the only means of access +to the top is by a single narrow steep staircase, easily cut off or +defended. + +[Illustration: 249.jpg TERRA-COTTA BARREL-right] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from the facsimile by Place. + +The palace which surmounts this artificial eminence describes a sort of +irregular rectangle, 174 feet long by 69 feet wide, and had, contrary +to the custom in Egypt, the four angles orientated to the four cardinal +points. The two principal sides are not parallel, but swell out slightly +towards the middle, and the flexion of the lines almost follows the +contour of one of those little clay cones upon which the kings were wont +to inscribe their annals or dedications. This flexure was probably +not intentional on the part of the architect, but was owing to the +difficulty of keeping a wall of such considerable extent in a straight +line from one end to another; and all Eastern nations, whether Chaldaeans +or Egyptians, troubled themselves but little about correctness of +alignment, since defects of this kind were scarcely ever perceptible in +the actual edifice, and are only clearly revealed in the plan drawn out +to scale with modern precision.* + + * Mons. Heuzey thinks that the outward deflection of the + lines is owing "merely to a primitive method of obtaining + greater solidity of construction, and of giving a better + foundation to these long facades, which are placed upon + artificial terraces of crude brick always subject to cracks + and settlements." I think that the explanation of the facts + which I have given in the text is simpler than that + ingeniously proposed by Mons. Heuzey: the masons, having + begun to build the wall at one end, were unable to carry it + on in a straight line until it reached the spot denoted on + the architect's plan, and therefore altered the direction of + the wall when they detected their error; or, having begun to + build the wall from both ends simultaneously, were not + successful in making the two lines meet correctly, and they + have frankly patched up the junction by a mass of projecting + brickwork which conceals their unskilfulness. + +[Illustration: 250.jpg PLAN OF THE EXISTING BUILDINGS OF TELLOH.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from Heuzey-Sarzec. + +The facade of the building faces south-east, and is divided into three +blocks of unequal size. The centre of the middle block for a length +of 18 feet projects some 3 feet from the main front, and, by directly +facing the spectator, ingeniously masks the obtuse angle formed by the +meeting of the two walls. This projection is flanked right and left by +rectangular grooves, similar to those which ornament the facades of the +fortresses and brick houses of the Ancient Empire in Egypt: the regular +alternation of projections and hollows breaks the monotony of the facing +by the play of light and shade. Beyond these, again, the wall surface +is broken by semicircular pilasters some 17 inches in diameter, without +bases, capitals, or even a moulding, but placed side by side like so +many tree-trunks or posts forming a palisade. + +[Illustration: 251.jpg DECORATION OF COLOURED CONES ON THE FACADE AT URUK] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from the sketch by Loftus. + +Various schemes of decoration succeed each other in progressive +sequence, less ornate and at greater distances apart, the further +they recede from the central block and the nearer they approach to the +extremities of the facade. They stop short at the southern angle, and +the two sides of the edifice running from south to west, and again from +west to north, are flat, bare surfaces, unbroken by projection or groove +to relieve the poverty and monotony of their appearance. The decoration +reappears on the north-east front, where the arrangement of the +principal facade is partly reproduced. The grooved divisions here start +from the angles, and the engaged columns are wanting, or rather they +are transferred to the central projection, and from a distance have the +effect of a row of gigantic organ-pipes. We may well ask if this squat +and heavy mass of building, which must have attracted the eye from all +parts of the town, had nothing to relieve the dull and dismal colour of +its component bricks. + +[Illustration: 252.jpg PILASTERS OF THE FACADE OF GUDEA'S PALACE] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from Heuzey-Sarzec + +The idea might not have occurred to us had we not found elsewhere an +attempt to lessen the gloomy appearance of the architecture by coloured +plastering. At Uruk, the walls of the palace are decorated by means of +terra-cotta cones, fixed deep into the solid plaster and painted red, +black, or yellow, forming interlaced or diaper patterns of chevrons, +spirals, lozenges, and triangles, with a very fair result: this mosaic +of coloured plaster covered all the surfaces, both flat and curved, +giving to the building a cheerful aspect entirely wanting in that of +Lagash. + +A long narrow trough of yellowish limestone stood in front of the +palace, and was raised on two steps: it was carved in relief on the +outside with figures of women standing with outstretched hands, passing +to each other vases from which gushed forth two streams of water. This +trough formed a reservoir, which was filled every morning for the use of +the men and beasts, and those whom some business or a command brought to +the palace could refresh themselves there while waiting to be received +by the master. The gates which gave access to the interior were placed +at somewhat irregular intervals: two opened from the principal facade, +but on each of the other sides there was only one entrance. They were +arched and so low that admittance was not easily gained; they were +closed with two-leaved doors of cedar or cypress, provided with bronze +hinges, which turned upon two blackish stones firmly set in the masonry +on either side, and usually inscribed with the name of the founder or +that of the reigning sovereign. Two of the entrances possessed a sort +of covered way, in which the soldiers of the external watch could take +shelter from the heat of the sun by day, from the cold at night, and +from the dews at dawn. On crossing the threshold, a corridor, flanked +with two small rooms for porters or warders, led into a courtyard +surrounded with buildings of sufficient depth to take up nearly half +of the area enclosed within the walls. This court was moreover a +semi-public place, to which tradesmen, merchants, suppliants, and +functionaries of all ranks had easy access. A suite of three rooms shut +off in the north-east angle did duty for a magazine or arsenal. The +southern portion of the building was occupied by the State apartments, +the largest of which measures only 40 feet in length. In these rooms +Gudea and his successors gave audience to their nobles and administered +justice. The administrative officers and the staff who had charge of +them were probably located in the remaining part of the building. The +roof was flat, and ran all round the enclosing wall, forming a terrace, +access to it being gained by a staircase built between the principal +entrance and the arsenal. At the northern angle rose a ziggurat. Custom +demanded that the sovereign should possess a temple within his dwelling, +where he could fulfil his religious duties without going into the town +and mixing with the crowd. At Lagash the sacred tower was of older date +than the palace, and possibly formed part of the ancient building of +Urbau. It was originally composed of three stories, but the lower one +was altered by Gudea, and disappeared entirely in the thickness of the +basal platform. The second story thus became the bottom one; it was +enlarged, slightly raised above the neighbouring roofs, and was probably +crowned by a sanctuary dedicated to Ningirsu. It was, indeed, a monument +of modest proportions, and most of the public temples soared far above +it; but, small as it was, the whole town might be seen from the summit, +with its separate quarters and its belt of gardens; and beyond, the +open country intersected with streams, studded with isolated villages, +patches of wood, pools and weedy marshes left by the retiring +inundation, and in the far distance the lines of trees and bushes which +bordered the banks of the Euphrates and its confluents. Should a troop +of enemies venture within the range of sight, or should a suspicious +tumult arise within the city, the watchers posted on the highest terrace +would immediately give the alarm, and 'through their warning the king +would have time to close his gates, and take measures to resist the +invading enemy or crush the revolt of his subjects. + +[Illustration: 255.jpg STONE SOCKET OF ONE OF THE DOORS IN THE PALACE OF +GUDEA.( right)] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from Heuzey-Sarzec. + +The northern apartments of the palace were appropriated to Gudea and his +family. They were placed with their back to the entrance court, and +were divided into two groups; the sovereign, his male children and their +attendants, inhabited the western one, while the women and their slaves +were cloistered, so to speak, in the northern set. The royal dwelling +had an external exit by means of a passage issuing on the north-west of +the enclosure, and it also communicated with the great courtyard by a +vaulted corridor which ran along one side of the base of the ziggurat: +the doors which, closed these two entrances opened wide enough to admit +only one person at a time, and to the right and left were recesses in +the wall which enabled the guards to examine all comers unobserved, and +stab them promptly if there were anything suspicious in their behaviour. +Eight chambers were lighted from the courtyard. In one of them were kept +all the provisions for the day, while another served as a kitchen: +the head, cook carried on his work at a sort of rectangular dresser of +moderate size, on which several fireplaces were marked out by little +dividing walls of burnt bricks, to accommodate as many pots or pans +of various sizes. A well sunk in the corner right down below the +substructure provided the water needed for culinary purposes. The king +and his belongings accommodated themselves in the remaining five or six +rooms as best they could. A corridor, guarded as carefully as the one +previously described, led to his private apartments and to those of his +wives: these comprised a yard, some half-dozen cells varying in size, +a kitchen, a well, and a door through which the servants could come and +go, without passing through the men's quarters. The whole description in +no way corresponds with the marvellous ideal of an Oriental palace which +we form for ourselves: the apartments are mean and dismal, imperfectly +lighted by the door or by some small aperture timidly cut in the +ceiling, arranged so as to protect the inmates from the heat and +dust, but without a thought given to luxury or display. The walls were +entirely void of any cedar woodwork inlaid with gold, or panels of +mosaic such as we find in the temples, nor were they hung with dyed or +embroidered draperies such as we moderns love to imagine, and which we +spread about in profusion, when we attempt to reproduce the interior of +an ancient house or palace.* + + * Mons. de Sarzec expressly states that he was unable to + find anywhere in the palace of Gudea "the slightest trace of + any coating on the walls, either of colour or glazed brick. + The walls appear to have been left bare, without any + decoration except the regular joining of the courses of + brickwork." The wood panelling was usually reserved for the + temples or sacred edifices: Mons. de Sarzec found the + remains of carbonized cedar panels in the ruins of a + sanctuary dedicated to Ningirsu. According to Mons. Heuzey, + the wall-hangings were probably covered with geometrical + designs, similar to tho"e formed by the terra-cotta cones on + the walls of the palace at Uruk; the inscriptions, however, + which are full of minute details with regard to the + construction and ornamentation of the temples and palaces, + have hitherto contained nothing which would lead us to infer + that hangings were used for mural decoration in Chaldoa or + Assyria. + +The walls had to remain bare for the sake of coolness: at the most they +were only covered with a coat of white plaster, on which were painted, +in one or two colours, some scene of civil or religious life, or troops +of fantastic monsters struggling with one another, or men each with a +bird seated on his Wrist. The furniture was not less scanty than the +decoration; there were mats on the ground, coffers in which were kept +the linen and wearing apparel, low beds inlaid with ivory and metal and +provided with coverings and a thin mattress, copper or wooden stands to +support lamps or vases, square stools on four legs united by crossbars, +armchairs with lions' claw feet, resembling the Egyptian armchairs +in outline, and making us ask if they were brought into Chaldaea by +caravans, or made from models which had come from some other country. +A few rare objects of artistic character might be found, which bore +witness to a certain taste for elegance and refinement; as, for +instance, a kind of circular trough of black stone, probably used to +support a vase. Three rows of imbricated scales surrounded the base of +this, while seven small sitting figures lean back against the upper +part with an air of satisfaction which is most cleverly rendered. +The decoration of the larger chambers used for public receptions and +official ceremonies, while never assuming the monumental character which +we observe in contemporary Egyptian buildings, afforded more scope for +richness and variety than was offered by the living-rooms. + +[Illustration: 258.jpg STAND OF BLACK STONE FROM THE PALACE OF TELLOH.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from Heuzey-Sarzec. + +Small tablets of brownish limestone, let into the wall or affixed to +its surface by terra-cotta pegs, and decorated with inscriptions, +represented in a more or less artless fashion the figure of the +sovereign officiating before some divinity, while his children and +servants took part in the ceremony by their chanting. Inscribed +bricks celebrating the king's exploits were placed here and there in +conspicuous places. These were not embedded like the others in two +layers of bitumen or lime, but were placed in full view upon bronze +statues of divinities or priests, fixed into the ground or into some +part of the masonry as magical nails destined to preserve the bricks +from destruction, and consequently to keep the memory of the dedicator +continually before posterity. Stelaa engraved on both sides recalled the +wars of past times, the battle-field, the scenes of horror which took +place there, and the return of the victor and his triumph. Sitting +or standing figures of diorite, silicious sandstone or hard limestone, +bearing inscriptions on their robes or shoulders, perpetuated the +features of the founder or of members of his family, and commemorated +the pious donations which had obtained for him the favour of the gods: +the palace of Lagash contained dozens of such statues, several of which +have come down to us almost intact--one of the ancient Urbau, and nine +of Gudea. + +To judge by the space covered and the arrangement of the rooms, the +vicegerents of Lagash and the chiefs of towns of minor importance +must, as a rule, have been content with a comparatively small number of +servants; their court probably resembled that of the Egyptian barons who +lived much about the same period, such as Khnumhotpu of the nome of the +Gazelle, or Thothotpu of Hermopolis. In great cities such as Babylon +the palace occupied a much larger area, and the crowd of courtiers was +doubtless as great as that which thronged about the Pharaohs. No exact +enumeration of them has come down to us, but the titles which we come +across show with what minuteness they defined the offices about the +person of the sovereign. His costume alone required almost as many +persons as there were garments. The men wore the light loin-cloth or +short-sleeved tunic which scarcely covered the knees; after the fashion +of the Egyptians, they threw over the loin-cloth and the tunic a large +"abayah," whose shape and material varied with the caprice of fashion. +They often chose for this purpose a sort of shawl of a plain material, +fringed or ornamented with a flat stripe round the edge; often they seem +to have preferred it ribbed, or artificially kilted from top to bottom.* + + * The relatively modern costume was described by Herodotus, + i. 114; it was almost identical with the ancient one, as + proved by the representations on the cylinders and monuments + of Telloh. The short-sleeved tunic is more rarely + represented, and the loin-cloth is usually hidden under the + abayah in the case of nobles and kings. We see the princes + of Lagash wearing the simple loin-cloth, on the monuments of + Urnina, for example. For the Egyptian abayah, and the manner + of representing it, cf. vol. i. pp. 69, 71. + +The favourite material in ancient times, however, seems to have been +a hairy, shaggy cloth or woollen stuff, whose close fleecy thread hung +sometimes straight, sometimes crimped or waved, in regular rows like +flounces one above another. This could be arranged squarely around the +neck, like a mantel, but was more often draped crosswise over the left +shoulder and brought under the right arm-pit, so as to leave the upper +part of the breast and the arm bare on that side. It made a convenient +and useful garment--an excellent protection in summer from the sun, and +from the icy north wind in the winter. The feet were shod with sandals, +a tight-fitting cap covered the head, and round it was rolled a thick +strip of linen, forming a sort of rudimentary turban, which completed +the costume.* + + *Cf. the head belonging to one of the statues of Telloh, + which is reproduced on p. 112 of this volume. We notice the + same head-dress on several intaglios and monuments, and also + on the terra-cotta plaque which will be found on p. 330 of + this volume, and which represents a herdsman wrestling with + a lion. Until we have further evidence, we cannot state, as + G. Raw-linson did, that this strip forming a turban was of + camel's hair; the date of the introduction of the camel into + Chaldoa still remains uncertain. + +It is questionable whether, as in Egypt, wigs and false beards formed +part of the toilette. On some monuments we notice smooth faces and +close-cropped heads; on others the men appear with long hair, either +falling loose or twisted into a knot on the back of the neck.* While +the Egyptians delighted in garments of thin white linen, but slightly +plaited or crimped, the dwellers on the banks of the Euphrates preferred +thick and heavy stuffs patterned and striped with many colours. The +kings wore the same costume as their subjects, but composed of richer +and finer materials, dyed red or blue, decorated with floral, animal, +or geometrical designs;** a high tower-shaped tiara covered the +forehead,*** unless replaced by a diadem of Sin or some of the other +gods, which was a conical mitre supporting a double pair of horns, and +sometimes surmounted by a sort of diadem of feathers and mysterious +figures, embroidered or painted on the cap. Their arms were loaded with +massive bracelets and their fingers with rings; they wore necklaces and +earrings, and carried each a dagger in the belt. + + * Dignitaries went bareheaded and shaved the chin; see, for + example, the two bas-reliefs given on pp. 105 and 244 of + this volume; cf. the heads reproduced as tailpieces on pp. + 2, 124. The knot of hair behind on the central figure is + easily distinguished in the vignette on p. 266 of this + volume. + + ** The details of colour and ornamentation, not furnished by + the Chaldaean monuments, are given in the wall-painting at + Beni-Nasan representing the arrival of Asiatics in Egypt, + which belongs to a period contemporary with or slightly + anterior to the reign of Gudea. The resemblance of the + stuffs in which they are clothed to those of the Chaldaean + garments, and the identity of the patterns on them with the + geometrical decoration of painted cones on the palace at + Uruk, have been pointed out with justice by H. G. Tomkins + + *** The high tiara is represented among others on the head + of Mardukna-dinakhe, King of Babylon: cf. what is said of + the conical mitre, the headdress of Sin, on pp. 14, 169 of + this volume. + +[Illustration: 262.jpg FEMALE SERVANT BARE TO THE WAIST.(left)] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from the bronze figure in the + Louvre, published by Heuzey-Sarzec, _Decouvertes en + Chaldee_, pl. 14. + +The royal wardrobe, jewels, arms, and insignia formed so many distinct +departments, and each was further divided into minor sections for +body-linen, washing, or for this or that kind of headdress or sceptre. +The dress of the women, which was singularly like that of the men, +required no less a staff of attendants. The female servants, as well +as the male, went about bare to the waist, at all events while working +indoors. When they went out, they wore the same sort of tunic or +loin-cloth, but longer and more resembling a petticoat; they had the +same "abayah" drawn round the shoulders or rolled about the body like +a cloak, but with the women it nearly touched the ground; sometimes an +actual dress seems to have been substituted for the "abayah," drawn in +to the figure by a belt and cut out of the same hairy material as that +of which the mantles were made. The boots were of soft leather, laced, +and without heels; the women's ornaments were more numerous than those +of the men, and comprised necklaces, bracelets, ankle, finger, and ear +rings; their hair was separated into bands and kept in place on the +forehead by a fillet, falling in thick plaits or twisted into a coil on +the nape of the neck. + +[Illustration: 262.jpg COSTUME OF A CHALDAEN LADY (right)] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from the alabaster statuette in the + Louvre, published in Heuzey. She holds in her hand the jar + full of water, analogous to the streaming vase mentioned + above. + +A great deal of the work was performed by foreign or native slaves, +generally under the command of eunuchs, to whom the king and royal +princes entrusted most of the superintendence of their domestic +arrangements; they guarded and looked after the sleeping apartments, +they fanned and kept the flies from their master, and handed him his +food and drink. Eunuchs in Egypt were either unknown or but little +esteemed: they never seem to have been used, even in times when +relations with Asia were of daily occurrence, and when they might have +been supplied from the Babylonian slave-markets. + +All these various officials closely attached to the person of the +sovereign--heads of the wardrobe, chamberlains, cupbearers, bearers of +the royal sword or of the flabella, commanders of the eunuchs or of +the guards--had, by the nature of their duties, daily opportunities of +gaining a direct influence over their master and his government, +and from among them he often chose the generals of his army or the +administrators of his domains. Here, again, as far as the few +monuments and the obscurity of the texts permit of our judging, we find +indications of a civil and military organization analogous to that +of Egypt: the divergencies which contemporaries may have been able to +detect in the two national systems are effaced by the distance of +time, and we are struck merely by the resemblances. As all business +transactions were carried on by barter or by the exchange of merchandise +for weighed quantities of the precious metals, the taxes were +consequently paid in kind: the principal media being corn and other +cereals, dates, fruits, stuffs, live animals and slaves, as well as +gold, silver, lead, and copper, either in its native state or melted +into bars fashioned into implements or ornamented vases. Hence we +continually come across fiscal storehouses, both in town and country, +which demanded the services of a whole troop of functionaries and +workmen: administrators of corn, cattle, precious metals, wine and oil; +in fine, as many administrators as there were cultures or industries in +the country presided over the gathering of the products into the +central depots and regulated their redistribution. A certain portion +was reserved for the salaries of the employes and the pay of the workmen +engaged in executing public works: the surplus accumulated in the +treasury and formed a reserve, which was not drawn upon except in cases +of extreme necessity. Every palace, in addition to its living-rooms, +contained within its walls large store-chambers filled with provisions +and weapons, which made it more or less a fortress, furnished with +indispensable requisites for sustaining a prolonged siege either against +an enemy's troops or the king's own subjects in revolt. The king always +kept about him bodies of soldiers who perhaps were foreign mercenaries, +like the Mazaiu of the armies of the Pharaohs, and who formed his +permanent body-guard in times of peace. When a war was imminent, a +military levy was made upon his domains, but we are unable to find out +whether the recruits thus raised were drawn indiscriminately from the +population in general, or merely from a special class, analogous to that +of the warriors which we find in Egypt, who were paid in the same way by +grants of land. The equipment of these soldiers was of the rudest kind: +they had no cuirass, but carried a rectangular shield, and, in the case +of those of higher rank at all events, a conical metal helmet, probably +of beaten copper, provided with a piece to protect the back of the neck; +the heavy infantry were armed with a pike tipped with bronze ox-copper, +an axe or sharp adze, a stone-headed mace, and a dagger; the light +troops were provided only with the bow and sling. As early as the third +millennium b.c., the king went to battle in a chariot drawn by onagers, +or perhaps horses; he had his own peculiar weapon, which was a curved +baton probably terminating in a metal point, and resembling the sceptre +of the Pharaohs. Considerable quantities of all these arms were stored +in the arsenals, which contained depots for bows, maces, and pikes, and +even the stones needed for the slings had their special department for +storage. At the beginning of each campaign, a distribution of weapons +to the newly levied troops took place; but as soon as the war was at an +end, the men brought back their accoutrements, which were stored till +they were again required. The valour of the soldiers and their chiefs +was then rewarded; the share of the spoil for some consisted of cattle, +gold, corn, a female slave, and vessels of value; for others, lands or +towns in the conquered country, regulated by the rank of the recipients +or the extent of the services they had rendered. + +[Illustration: 266.jpg A SOLDIER BRINGING PRISONERS AND SPOIL.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from the Chaldaean intaglio in the + British. Museum. + +Property thus given was hereditary, and privileges were often added to +it which raised the holder to the rank of a petty prince: for instance, +no royal official was permitted to impose a tax upon such lands, or take +the cattle off them, or levy provisions upon them; no troop of soldiers +might enter them, not even for the purpose of arresting a fugitive. Most +of the noble families possessed domains of this kind, and constituted in +each kingdom a powerful and wealthy feudal aristocracy, whose relations +to their sovereign were probably much the same as those which bound +the nomarchs to the Pharaoh. The position of these nobles was not more +stable than that of the dynasties under which they lived: while some +among them gained power by marriages or by continued acquisitions of +land, others fell into disgrace and were ruined. As the soil belonged to +the gods, it is possible that these nobles were supposed, in theory, 'to +depend upon the gods; but as the kings were the vicegerents of the gods +upon earth, it was to the king, as a matter of fact, that they owed +their elevation. Every state, therefore, comprised two parts, each +subject to a distinct regime: one being the personal domain of the +suzerain, which he managed himself, and from which he drew the revenues; +the other was composed of fiefs, whose lords paid tribute and owed +certain obligations to the king, the nature of which we are as yet +unable to define. + +The Chaldaean, like the Egyptian scribe, was the pivot on which the +machinery of this double royal and seignorial administration turned. +He does not appear to have enjoyed as much consideration as his +fellow-official in the Nile Valley: the Chaldaean princes, nobles, +priests, soldiers, and temple or royal officials, did not covet the +title of scribe, or pride themselves upon holding that office side +by side with their other dignities, as we see was the case with their +Egyptian contemporaries. The position of a scribe, nevertheless, was an +important one. We continually meet with it in all grades of society--in +the palace, in the temples, in the storehouses, in private dwellings; in +fine, the scribe was ubiquitous, at court, in the town, in the country, +in the army, managing affairs both small and great, and seeing that they +were carried on regularly. His education differed but little from that +given to the Egyptian scribe; he learned the routine of administrative +or judicial affairs, the formularies for correspondence either with +nobles or with ordinary people, the art of writing, of calculating +quickly, and of making out bills correctly. We may well ask whether he +ever employed papyrus or prepared skins for these purposes. It would, +indeed, seem strange that, after centuries of intercourse, no caravan +should have brought into Chaldaean any of those materials which were in +such constant use for literary purposes in Africa;* yet the same clay +which furnished the architect with such an abundant building material +appears to have been the only medium for transmitting the language which +the scribes possessed. They were always provided with slabs of a fine +plastic clay, carefully mixed and kept sufficiently moist to take easily +the impression of an object, but at the same time sufficiently firm to +prevent the marks once made from becoming either blurred or effaced. +When a scribe had a text to copy or a document to draw up, he chose out +one of his slabs, which he placed flat upon his left palm, and taking in +the right hand a triangular stylus of flint, copper, bronze, or bone,** +he at once set to work. The instrument, in early times, terminated in a +fine point, and the marks made by it when it was gently pressed upon +the clay were slender and of uniform thickness; in later times, the +extremity of the stylus was cut with a bevel, and the impression then +took the shape of a metal nail or a wedge. + + * On the Assyrian monuments we frequently see scribes taking + a list of the spoil, or writing letters on tablets and some + other soft material, either papyrus or prepared skin. Sayce + has given good reasons for believing that the Chaldaeanns of + the early dynasties knew of the papyrus, and either made it + themselves, or had it brought from Egypt. + + ** See the triangular stylus of copper or bronze reproduced + by the side of the measuring-rule, and the plan on the + tablet of Gudea, p. 248 of this volume. The Assyrian Museum + in the Louvre possesses several large, flat styli of bone, + cut to a point at one end, which appear to have belonged to + the Assyrian scribes. Taylor discovered in a tomb at Eridu a + flint tool, which may have served for the same purpose as + the metal or bone styli. + +[Illustration: 268.jpg MANUSCRIPT ON PAPYRUS IN HEIROGLYPHICS] + +They wrote from left to right along the upper part of the tablet, and +covered both sides of it with closely written lines, which sometimes ran +over on to the edges. When the writing was finished, the scribe sent his +work to the potter, who put it in the kiln and baked it, or the writer +may have had a small oven at his own disposition, as a clerk with us +would have his table or desk. The shape of these documents varied, and +sometimes strikes us as being peculiar: besides the tablets and the +bricks, we find small solid cones, or hollow cylinders of considerable +size, on which the kings related their exploits or recorded the history +of their wars or the dedication of their buildings. This method had a +few inconveniences, but many advantages. These clay books were heavy to +hold and clumsy to handle, while the characters did not stand out well +from the brown, yellow, and whitish background of the material; but, on +the other hand, a poem, baked and incorporated into the page itself, +ran less danger of destruction than if scribbled in ink on sheets of +papyrus. Fire could make no impression on it; it could withstand water +for a considerable length of time; even if broken, the pieces were still +of use: as long as it was not pulverized, the entire document could be +restored, with the exception, perhaps, of a few signs, or 'some +scraps of a sentence. The inscriptions which have been saved from the +foundations of the most ancient temples, several of which date back +forty or fifty centuries, are for the most part as clear and legible +as when they left the hands of the writer who engraved them or of the +workmen who baked them. It is owing to the material to which they were +committed that we possess the principal works of Chaldaean literature +which have come down to us--poems, annals, hymns, magical incantations; +how few fragments of these would ever have reached us had their authors +confided them to parchment or paper, after the manner of the Egyptian +scribes! The greatest danger that they ran was that of being left +forgotten in the corner of the chamber in which they had been kept, +or buried under the rubbish of a building after a fire or some violent +catastrophe; even then the _debris_ were the means of preserving them, +by falling over them and covering them up. Protected under the ruins, +they would lie there for centuries, till the fortunate explorer should +bring them to light and deliver them over to the patient study of the +learned. + +The cuneiform character in itself is neither picturesque nor decorative. +It does not offer that delightful assemblage of birds and snakes, of men +and quadrupeds, of heads and limbs, of tools, weapons, stars, trees, +and boats, which succeed each other in perplexing order on the Egyptian +monuments, to give permanence to the glory of Pharaoh and the greatness +of his gods. Cuneiform writing is essentially composed of thin short +lines, placed in juxtaposition or crossing each other in a somewhat +clumsy fashion; it has the appearance of numbers of nails scattered +about at haphazard, and its angular configuration, and its stiff and +spiny appearance, gives the inscriptions a dull and forbidding aspect +which no artifice of the engraver can overcome. + +[Illustration: 271.jpg Page image] + +[Illustration: 272.jpg Page Image] + +Yet, in spite of their seemingly arbitrary character, this mass of +strokes had its source in actual hieroglyphs. As in the origin of the +Egyptian script the earliest writers had begun by drawing on stone or +clay the outline of the object of which they desired to convey the idea. +But, whereas in Egypt the artistic temperament of the race, and the +increasing skill of their sculptors, had by degrees brought the drawing +of each sign to such perfection that it became a miniature portrait of +the being or object to be reproduced, in Chaldaea, on the contrary, +the signs became degraded from their original forms on account of the +difficulty experienced in copying them with the stylus on the clay +tablets: they lost their original vertical position, and were placed +horizontally, retaining finally but the very faintest resemblance to the +original model. For instance, the Chaldaean conception of the sky was +that of a vault divided into eight segments by diameters running from +the four cardinal points and from their principal subdivisions [symbol] +the external circle was soon omitted, the transverse lines alone +remaining [symbol], which again was simplified into a kind of irregular +cross [symbol]. The figure of a man standing, indicated by the lines +resembling his contour, was placed on its side [symbol] and reduced +little by little till it came to be merely a series of ill-balanced +lines [symbol] [symbol]. We may still recognize in [symbol] the five +fingers and palm of a human hand [symbol]; but who would guess at the +first glance that [symbol] stands for the foot which the scribes strove +to place beside each character the special hieroglyph from which it had +been derived. Several fragments of these still exist, a study of which +seems to show that the Assyrian scribes of a more recent period were at +times as much puzzled as we are ourselves when they strove to get at the +principles of their own script: they had come to look on it as nothing +more than a system of arbitrary combinations, whose original form had +passed all the more readily into oblivion, because it had been borrowed +from a foreign race, who, as far as they were concerned, had ceased to +have a separate existence. The script had been invented by the Sumerians +in the very earliest times, and even they may have brought it in an +elemental condition from their distant fatherland. The first articulate +sounds which, being attached to the hieroglyphs, gave to each +an unalterable pronunciation, were words in the Sumerian tongue; +subsequently, when the natural progress of human thought led +thi Chaldaeans to replace, as in Egypt, the majority of the signs +representing ideas by those representing sounds, the syllabic values +which were developed side by side with the ideographic values were +purely Sumerian. The group [symbol] throughout all its forms, +designates in the first place the sky, then the god of the sky, and +finally the concept of divinity in general. In its first two senses it +is read ana, but in the last it becomes dingir, dimir; and though it +never lost its double force, it was soon separated from the ideas which +it evoked, to be used merely to denote the syllable an wherever it +occurred, even in cases where it had no connection with the sky or +heavenly things. The same process was applied to other signs with +similar results: after having merely denoted ideas, they came to stand +for the sounds corresponding to them, and then passed on to be mere +syllables--complex syllables in which several consonants may be +distinguished, or simple syllables composed of only one consonant and +one vowel, or vice versa. The Egyptians had carried this system still +further, and in many cases had kept only one part of the syllable, +namely, a mute consonant: they detached, for example, the final u from +pu and bu, and gave only the values b and p to the human leg J and the +mat Q. The peoples of the Euphrates stopped halfway, and admitted actual +letters for the vowel sounds a, i, and u only. Their system remained a +syllabary interspersed with ideograms, but excluded an alphabet. + +[Illustration: 274.jpg Page image] + +It was eminently wanting in simplicity, but, taken as a whole, it would +not have presented as many difficulties as the script of the Egyptians, +had it not been forced, at a very early period, to adapt itself to the +exigencies of a language for which it had not been made. When it came to +be appropriated by the Semites, the ideographs, which up till then had +been read in Sumerian, did not lose the sounds which they possessed in +that tongue, but borrowed others from the new language. For example, +"god" was called ilu, and "heaven" called shami: [symbol], when +encountered in inscriptions by the Semites, were read [symbol] when +the context showed the sense to be "god," and shami when the character +evidently meant "heaven." They added these two vocables to the preceding +ana, an, dingir, dimir; but they did not stop there: they confounded +the picture of the star [symbol] with that of the sky, and sometimes +attributed to [symbol], the pronunciation kakkabu, and the meaning of +star. The same process was applied to all the groups, and the Semitic +values being added to the Sumerian, the scribes soon found themselves in +possession of a double set of syllables both simple and compound. This +multiplicity of sounds, this polyphonous character attached to their +signs, became a cause of embarrassment even to them. For instance, +[symbol] when found in the body of a word, stood for the syllables hi +or hat, mid, mit, til, ziz; as an ideogram it was used for a score of +different concepts: that of lord or master, inu, bilu; that of blood, +damu; for a corpse, pagru, shalamtu; for the feeble or oppressed, kahtu, +nagpu; as the hollow and the spring, nakbu; for the state of old age, +labaru; of dying, matu; of killing, mitu; of opening, pitu; besides +other meanings. Several phonetic complements were added to it; it was +preceded by ideograms which determined the sense in which it was to be +read, but which, like the Egyptian determinatives, were not pronounced, +and in this manner they succeeded in limiting the number of mistakes +which it was possible to make. With a final [symbol] it would always +mean [symbol] bilu, the master, but with an initial [symbol] (thus +[symbol]) it denoted the gods Bel or Ea; with [symbol]. which indicates +a man [symbol], it would be the corpse, pagru and shalamtu; with +[symbol] prefixed, it meant [symbol]--mutanu, the plague or death and +so on. In spite of these restrictions and explanations, the obscurity of +the meaning was so great, that in many cases the scribes ran the risk of +being unable to make out certain words and understand certain passages; +many of the values occurred but rarely, and remained unknown to those +who did not take the trouble to make a careful study of the syllabary +and its history. It became necessary to draw up tables for their use, +in which all the signs were classified and arranged, with their meanings +and phonetic transcriptions. These signs occupied one column, and in +three or four corresponding columns would be found, first, the name +assigned to it; secondly, the spelling, in syllables, of the phonetic +values which the signs expressed, thirdly, the Sumerian and Assyrian +words which they served to render, and sometimes glosses which completed +the explanation. + +[Illustration: 276.jpg Tables] + +Even this is far from exhausting the matter. Several of these +dictionaries went back to a very early date, and tradition ascribes to +Sargon of Agade the merit of having them drawn up or of having collected +them in his palace. The number of them naturally increased in the course +of centuries; in the later times of the Assyrian empire they were so +numerous as to form nearly one-fourth of the works in the library at +Nineveh under Assurbanipal. Other tablets contained dictionaries of +archaic or obsolete terms, grammatical paradigms, extracts from laws +or ancient hymns analyzed sentence by sentence and often word by word, +interlinear glosses, collections of Sumerian formulas translated into +Semitic speech--a child's guide, in fact, which the savants of those +times consulted with as much advantage as those of our own day have +done, and which must have saved them from many a blunder. + +When once accustomed to the difficulties and intricacies of their +calling, the scribes were never at a standstill. The stylus was plied +in Chaldaea no less assiduously than was the calamus in Egypt, and the +indestructible clay, which the Chaldaeans were as a rule content to use, +proved a better medium in the long run than the more refined material +employed by their rivals: the baked or merely dried clay tablets have +withstood the assaults of time in surprising quantities, while the +majority of papyri have disappeared without leaving a trace behind. +If at Babylon we rarely meet with those representations, which we find +everywhere in the tombs of Saqqara or Gizeh, of the people themselves +and their families, their occupations, amusements, and daily +intercourse, we possess, on the other hand, that of which the ruins of +Memphis have furnished us but scanty instances up to the present time, +namely, judicial documents, regulating the mutual relations of the +people and conferring a legal sanction on the various events of their +life. Whether it were a question of buying lands or contracting a +marriage, of a loan on interest, or the sale of slaves, the scribe was +called in with his soft tablets to engross the necessary agreement. In +this he would insert as many details as possible--the day of the month, +the year of the reigning sovereign, and at times, to be still more +precise, an allusion to some important event which had just taken place, +and a memorial of which was inserted in official annals, such as the +taking of a town, the defeat of a neighbouring king, the dedication of +a temple, the building of a wall or fortress, the opening of a canal, or +the ravages of an inundation: the names of the witnesses and magistrates +before whom the act was confirmed were also added to those of the +contracting parties. The method of sanctioning it was curious. An +indentation was made with the finger-nail on one of the sides of the +tablet, and this mark, followed or preceded by the mention of a name, +"Nail of Zabudamik," "Nail of Abzii," took the place of our more or less +complicated sign-manuals. In later times, only the buyer and witnesses +approved by a nail-mark, while the seller appended his seal; an +inscription incised above the impress indicating the position of the +signatory. Every one of any importance possessed a seal, which he wore +attached to his wrist or hung round his neck by a cord; he scarcely +ever allowed it to be separated from his person during his lifetime, and +after death it was placed with him in the tomb in order to prevent any +improper use being made of it. It was usually a cylinder, sometimes +a truncated cone with a convex base, either of marble, red or green +jasper, agate, cornelian, onyx or rock crystal, but rarely of metal. +Engraved upon it in intaglio was an emblem or subject chosen by +the owner, such as the single figure of a god or goddess, an act of +adoration, a sacrifice, or an episode in the story of Gilgames, followed +sometimes by the inscription of a name and title. The cylinder was +rolled, or, in the case of the cone, merely pressed on the clay, in the +space reserved for it. In several localities the contracting parties had +recourse to a very ingenious procedure to prevent the agreements being +altered or added to by unscrupulous persons. When the document had been +impressed on the tablet, it was enveloped in a second coating of clay, +upon which an exact copy of the original was made, the latter thus +becoming inaccessible to forgers: if by chance, in course of time, any +disagreement should take place, and an alteration of the visible text +should be suspected, the outer envelope was broken in the presence of +witnesses, and a comparison was made to see if the exterior corresponded +exactly with the interior version. Families thus had their private +archives, to which additions were rapidly made by every generation; +every household thus accumulated not only the evidences of its own +history, but to some extent that of other families with whom they had +formed alliances, or had business or friendly relations.* + + * The tablets of Tell-Sifr come from one of these family + collections. They all, in number about one hundred, rested + on three enormous bricks, and they had been covered with a + mat of which the half-decayed remains were still visible: + three other crude bricks covered the heap. The documents + contained in them relate for the most part to the families + of Sininana and Amililani, and form part of their archives. + +[Illustration: 279.jpg THE TABLET OF TELL-SIFR, BROKEN TO SHOW THE TWO +TEXTS.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from Loftus. + + +[Illustration: 280.jpg TABLET BEARING THE IMPRESS OF A SEAL] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a sketch by Layard. + +The constitution of the family was of a complex character. It would +appear that the people of each city were divided into clans, all of +whose members claimed to be descended from a common ancestor, who had +flourished at a more or less remote period. The members of each clan +were by no means all in the same social position, some having gone down +in the world, others having raised themselves; and amongst them we find +many different callings--from agricultural labourers to scribes, and +from merchants to artisans. No mutual tie existed among the majority +of these members except the remembrance of their common origin, perhaps +also a common religion, and eventual rights of succession or claims upon +what belonged to each one individually. The branches which had become +gradually separated from the parent stock, and which, taken all +together, formed the clan, possessed each, on the contrary, a very +strict organization. It is possible that, at the outset, the woman +occupied the more important position, but at an early date the man +became the head of the family,* and around him were ranged the wives, +children, servants, and slaves, all of whom had their various duties and +privileges. + + * The change in the condition of women would be due to the + influence of Semitic ideas and customs in Chaldaea. + +He offered the household worship to the gods of his race, in accordance +with special rites which had come down to him from his father; he made +at the tombs of his ancestors, at such times as were customary, the +offerings and prayers which assured their repose in the other world, and +his powers were as extensive in civil as in religious matters. He had +absolute authority over all the members of his household, and anything +undertaken by them without his consent was held invalid in the eyes of +the law; his sons could not marry unless he had duly authorized them +to do so. For this purpose he appeared before the magistrate with the +future couple, and the projected union could not be held as an actual +marriage, until he had affixed his seal or made his nail-mark on the +contract tablet. It amounted, in fact, to a formal deed of sale, and the +parents of the girl parted with her only in exchange for a proportionate +gift from the bridegroom. One girl would be valued at a silver shekel by +weight, while another was worth a mina, another much less;* the handing +over of the price was accompanied with a certain solemnity. When the +young man possessed no property as yet of his own, his family advanced +him the sum needed for the purchase. On her side, the maiden did not +enter upon her new life empty handed; her father, or, in the case of +his death, the head of the family at the time being, provided her with +a dowry suited to her social position, which was often augmented by +considerable presents from her grandmother, aunts, and cousins.** + + * Shamashnazir receives, as the price of his daughter, ten + shekels of silver, which appears to have been an average + price in the class of life to which he belonged. + + ** The nature of the dowry in ancient times is clear from + the Sumero-Assyrian tablets in which the old legal texts are + explained, and again from the contents of the contracts of + Tell-Sifr, and the documents on stone, such as the Micliaux + stone, in which we see women bringing their possessions into + the community by marriage, and yet retaining the entire + disposition of them. + +The dowry would consist of a carefully marked out field of corn, a grove +of date-palms, a house in the town, a trousseau, furniture, slaves, or +ready money; the whole would be committed to clay, of which there +would be three copies at least, two being given by the scribe to the +contracting parties, while the third would be deposited in the hands of +the magistrate. When the bride and bridegroom both belonged to the same +class, or were possessed of equal fortunes, the relatives of the woman +could exact an oath from the man that he would abstain from taking +a second wife during her lifetime; a special article of the marriage +agreement permitted the woman to go free should the husband break his +faith, and bound him to pay an indemnity as a compensation for the +insult he had offered her. This engagement on the part of the man, +however, did not affect his relations with his female servants. In +Chaldaea, as in Egypt, and indeed in the whole of the ancient world, +they were always completely at the mercy of their purchaser, and the +permission to treat them as he would had become so much of a custom +that the begetting of children by their master was desired rather than +otherwise: the complaints of the despised slave, who had not been taken +into her master's favour, formed one of the themes of popular poetry at +a very early period. When the contract tablet was finally sealed, one +of the witnesses, who was required to be a free man, joined the hands +of the young couple; nothing then remained to be done but to invite the +blessing of the gods, and to end the day by a feast, which would unite +both families and their guests. The evil spirits, however, always in +quest of an easy prey, were liable to find their way into the nuptial +chamber, favoured by the confusion inseparable from all household +rejoicing: prudence demanded that their attempts should be frustrated, +and that the newly married couple should be protected from their +attacks. The companions of the bridegroom took possession of him, and, +hand to hand and foot to foot, formed as it were a rampart round him +with their bodies, and carried him off solemnly to his expectant bride. +He then again repeated the words which he had said in the morning: "I +am the son of a prince, gold and silver shall fill thy bosom; thou, even +thou, shalt be my wife, I myself will be thy husband;" and he continued: +"As the fruits borne by an orchard, so great shall be the abundance +which I shall pour out upon this woman."* The priest then called down +upon him benedictions from on high: "Therefore, O ye (gods), all that is +bad and that is not good in this man, drive it far from him and give him +strength. As for thee, O man, exhibit thy manhood, that this woman may +be thy wife; thou, O woman, give that which makes thy womanhood, that +this man may be thy husband." On the following morning, a thanksgiving +sacrifice celebrated the completion of the marriage, and by purifying +the new household drove from it the host of evil spirits.** + + * This part of the ceremony is described on a Sumero- + Assyrian tablet, of which two copies exist, discovered and + translated by Pinches. The interpretation appears to me to + result from the fact that mention is made, at the + commencement of the column, of impious beings without gods, + who might approach the man; in other places magical + exorcisms indicate how much those spirits were dreaded "who + deprived the bride of the embraces of the man." As Pinches + remarks, the formula is also found in the part of the poem + of Gilgames, where Ishtar wishes to marry the hero, which + shows that the rite and its accompanying words belong to a + remote past. + + ** The text that describes these ceremonies was discovered + and published by Pinches. As far as I can judge, it + contained an exorcism against the "knotting of the tag," and + the mention of this subject called up that of the marriage + rites. The ceremony commanded on the day following the + marriage was probably a purification: as late as the time of + Herodotus, the union of man and woman rendered both impure, + and they had to perform an ablution before recommencing + their occupations. + +The woman, once bound, could only escape from the sovereign power of her +husband by death or divorce; but divorce for her was rather a trial to +which she submitted than a right of which she could freely make use. Her +husband could repudiate her at will without any complicated ceremonies. +It was enough for him to say: "Thou art not my wife!" and to restore +to her a sum of money equalling in value the dowry he had received with +her;* he then sent her back to her father, with a letter informing +him of the dissolution of the conjugal tie.** But if in a moment of +weariness or anger she hurled the fatal formula at him: "Thou are not +my husband!" her fate was sealed: she was thrown into the river and +drowned.*** + + * The sum is fixed at half a mina by the text of the + Sumerian laws; but it was sometimes less, e.g. ten shekels, + and sometimes more, e.g. a whole mina. + + ** Repudiation of a wife, and the ceremonial connected with + it, are summarized, as far as ancient times are concerned, + by a passage in the Sumero-Assyrian tablet, published by + Rawlinson, and translated by Oppert-Menant. Bertin, on the + contrary, takes the same text to be a description of the + principal marriage-rites, and from it he draws the + conclusion that the possibility of divorce was not admitted + in Chaldaea between persons of noble family. Meissner very + rightly returns to Oppert's interpretation, a few details in + which he corrects. + + *** This fact was evident from the text of the so-called + _Sumerian Laws concerning the Organization of the Family_, + according to the generally received interpretation: + according to that proposed by Oppert-Menant, it was the + woman who had the right of causing the husband who had + wronged her to be thrown into the river. The publication of + the contracts of Iltani and of Bashtum appear to have shown + conclusively the correctness of the ordinary translation: + uncertainty with regard to one word prevents us from knowing + whether the guilty wife were strangled before being thrown + into the water, or if she were committed to the river alive. + +The adulteress was also punished with death, but with death by the +sword: and when the use of iron became widespread, the blade was to be +of that metal. Another ancient custom only spared the criminal to devote +her to a life of infamy: the outraged husband stripped her of her fleecy +garments, giving her merely the loin-cloth in its place, which left her +half naked, and then turned-her out of the house into the street, where +she was at the mercy of the first passer-by. Women of noble or wealthy +families found in their fortune a certain protection from the abuse of +marital authority. The property which they brought with them by their +marriage contract, remained at their own disposal.* They had the entire +management of it, they farmed it out, they sold it, they spent the +income from it as they liked, without interference from any one: the man +enjoyed the comforts which it procured, but he could not touch it, and +his hold upon it was so slight that his creditors could not lay their +hands on it. + + * In the documents of the New Chaldaean Empire we find + instances of married women selling their property + themselves, and even of their being present, seated, at the + conclusion of the sale, or of their ceding to a married + daughter some property in their own possession, thus + renouncing the power of disposing of it, and keeping merely + the income from it; we have also instances of women + reclaiming valuables of gold which their husbands had given + away without their authorisation, and also obtaining an + indemnity for the wrong they had suffered; also of their + lending money to the mother-in-law of their brother; in + fine, empowered to deal with their own property in every + respect like an ordinary proprietor. + +If by his own act he divorced his wife, he not only lost all benefit +from her property, but he was obliged to make her an allowance or to pay +her an indemnity;* at his death, the widow succeeded to these, without +prejudice to what she was entitled to by her marriage contract or the +will of the deceased. The woman with a dowry, therefore, became more or +less emancipated by virtue of her money. As her departure deprived the +household of as much as, and sometimes more than, she had brought into +it, every care was taken that she should have no cause to retire from +it, and that no pretext should be given to her parents for her recall +to her old home; her wealth thus obtained for her the consideration and +fair treatment which the law had, at the outset, denied to her. + + * The restitution of the dowry after divorce is ascertained, + as far as later times are concerned, from documents similar + to that published by Kohler-Peiser, in which we see the + second husband of a divorced wife claiming the dowry from + the first husband. The indemnity was fixed beforehand at six + silver minae, in the marriage contract published by Oppert. + +When, however, the wife was poor, she had to bear without complaint the +whole burden of her inferior position. Her parents had no other resource +than to ask the highest possible price for her, according to the rank +in which they lived, or in virtue of the personal qualities she was +supposed to possess, and this amount, paid into their hands when they +delivered her over to the husband, formed, if not an actual dowry for +her, at least a provision for her in case of repudiation or widowhood: +she was not, however, any less the slave of her husband--a privileged +slave, it is true, and one whom he could not sell like his other +slaves,* but of whom he could easily rid himself when her first youth +was passed, or when she ceased to please him.** + + * It appears, however, in certain cases not clearly + specified, that the husband could sell his wife, if she were + a shrew, as a slave. + + ** This form of marriage, which was of frequent occurrence + in ancient times, fell into disuse among the upper classes, + at least of Babylonian society. A few examples, however, are + found in late times. It continued in use among the lower + classes, and Herodotus affirms that in his time marriage + markets were held regularly, as in our own time fairs are + held for hiring male and female servants. + +In many cases the fiction of purchase was set aside, and mutual consent +took the place of all other formalities, marriage then becoming merely +cohabitation, terminating at will. The consent of the father was not +required for this irregular union, and many a son contracted a marriage +after this fashion, unknown to his relatives, with some young girl +either in his own or in an inferior station: but the law refused to +allow her any title except that of concubine, and forced her to wear a +distinctive mark, perhaps that of servitude, namely, the representation +of an olive in some valuable stone or in terra-cotta, bearing her own +and her husband's name, with the date of their union, which she kept +hung round her neck by a cord. Whether they were legitimate wives +or not, the women of the lower and middle classes enjoyed as much +independence as did the Egyptian women of a similar rank. As all the +household cares fell to their share, it was necessary that they should +be free to go about at all hours of the day: and they could be seen +in the streets and the markets, with bare feet, their head and face +uncovered, wearing their linen loin-cloth or their long draped garments +of hairy texture.* Their whole life was expended in a ceaseless toil for +their husbands and children: night and morning they went to fetch water +from the public well or the river, they bruised the corn, made the +bread, spun, wove, and clothed the entire household in spite of the +frequent demands of maternity.** The Chaldaean women of wealth or noble +birth, whose civil status gave them a higher position, did not enjoy so +much freedom. They were scarcely affected by the cares of daily life, +and if they did any work within their houses, it was more from a natural +instinct, a sense of duty, or to relieve the tedium of their existence, +than from constraint or necessity; but the exigencies of their rank +reduced them to the state of prisoners. All the luxuries and comforts +which money could procure were lavished on them, or they obtained them +for themselves, but all the while they were obliged to remain shut in +the harem within their own houses; when they went out, it was only to +visit their female friends or their relatives, to go to some temple +or festival, and on such occasions they were surrounded with servants, +eunuchs, and pages, whose serried ranks shut out the external world. + + * For the long garment of the women, see the statue + represented on p. 263 of the present work; for the loin- + cloth, which left the shoulders and bust exposed, see the + bronze figure on p. 262. The latter was no doubt the garment + worn at home by respectable women; we see by the punishment + inflicted on adulteresses that it was an outdoor garment for + courtesans, and also, doubtless, for slaves and women of the + lower classes. + + ** Women's occupations are mentioned in several texts and on + several ancient monuments. On the seal, an impress of which + is given on p. 233 of this volume, we see above, on the + left, a woman kneeling and crushing the corn, and before her + a row of little disks, representing, no doubt, the loaves + prepared for baking. The length of time for suckling a child + is fixed at three years by the Sumero-Assyrian tablet + relating the history of the foundling; protracted suckling + was customary also in Egypt. + +There was no lack of children in these houses when the man had several +mistresses, either simultaneously or successively. Maternity was before +all things a woman's first duty: should she delay in bearing children, +or should anything happen to them, she was considered as accursed or +possessed, and she was banished from the family lest her presence should +be a source of danger to it.* In spite of this many households remained +childless, either because a clause inserted in the contract prevented +the dismissal of the wife if barren, or because the children had died +when the father was stricken in years, and there was little hope of +further offspring. In such places adoption filled the gaps left by +nature, and furnished the family with desired heirs. For this purpose +some chance orphan might be brought into the household--one of those +poor little creatures consigned by their mothers to the river, as in +the case of Shargani, according to the ancient legend; or who had been +exposed at the cross-roads to excite the pity of passers-by,** like the +foundling whose story is given us in an old ballad. "He who had neither +father nor mother,--he who knew not his father or mother, but whose +earliest memory is of a well--whose entry into the world was in the +street," his benefactor "snatched him from the jaws of dogs--and took +him from the beaks of ravens.--He seized the seal before witnesses--and +he marked him on the sole of the foot with the seal of the +witness,--then he entrusted him to a nurse,--and for three years he +provided the nurse with flour, oil, and clothing." When the weaning was +accomplished, "he appointed him to be his child,--he brought him up +to be his child,--he inscribed him as his child,--and he gave him the +education of a scribe." The rites of adoption in these cases did not +differ from those attendant upon birth. On both occasions the newly born +infant was shown to witnesses, and it was marked on the soles of its +feet to establish its identity; its registration in the family archives +did not take place until these precautions had been observed, and +children adopted in this manner were regarded thenceforward in the eyes +of the world as the legitimate heirs of the family. + + * Divorce for sterility was customary in very early times. + Complete sterility or miscarriage was thought to be + occasioned by evil spirits; a woman thus possessed with a + devil came to be looked on as a dangerous being whom it was + necessary to exorcise. + + + ** Many of these children were those of courtesans or women + who had been repudiated, as we learn from the Sumero- + Assyrian tablet of Rawlinson: "She will expose her child + alone in the street, where the serpents in the road may bite + it, and its father and mother will know it no more." + +People desiring to adopt a child usually made inquiries among their +acquaintances, or poor friends, or cousins who might consent to give up +one of their sons, in the hope of securing a better future for him. When +he happened to be a minor, the real father and mother, or, in the case +of the death of one, the surviving parent, appeared before the scribe, +and relinquished all their rights in favour of the adopting parents; the +latter, in accepting this act of renunciation, promised henceforth to +treat the child as if he were of their own flesh and blood, and often +settled upon him, at the same time, a certain sum chargeable on their +own patrimony. When the adopted son was of age, his consent to the +agreement was required, in addition to that of his parents. The adoption +was sometimes prompted by an interested motive, and not merely by the +desire for posterity or its semblance. Labour was expensive, slaves were +scarce, and children, by working for their father, took the place of +hired servants, and were content, like them, with food and clothing. The +adoption of adults was, therefore, most frequent in ancient times. The +introduction of a person into a fresh household severed the ties which +bound him to the old one; he became a stranger to those who had borne +him; he had no filial obligations to discharge to them, nor had he +any right to whatever property they might possess, unless, indeed, any +unforeseen circumstance prevented the carrying out of the agreement, and +legally obliged him to return to the status of his birth. In return, he +undertook all the duties and enjoyed the privileges of his new position; +he owed to his adopted parents the same amount of work, obedience, and +respect that he would have given to his natural parents; he shared +in their condition, whether for good or ill, and he inherited their +possessions. Provision was made for him in case of his repudiation by +those who had adopted him, and they had to make him compensation: he +received the portion which would have accrued to him after their death, +and he then left them. Families appear to have been fairly united, in +spite of the elasticity of the laws which governed them, and of the +divers elements of which they were sometimes composed. No doubt polygamy +and frequently divorce exercised here as elsewhere a deleterious +influence; the harems of Babylon were constantly the scenes of endless +intrigues and quarrels among the women and children of varied condition +and different parentage who filled them. Among the people of the middle +classes, where restricted means necessarily prevented a man having +many wives, the course of family life appears to have been as calm +and affectionate as in Egypt, under the unquestioned supremacy of the +father: and in the event of his early death, the widow, and later the +son or son-in-law, took the direction of affairs. Should quarrels arise +and reach the point of bringing about a complete rupture between parents +and children, the law intervened, not to reconcile them, but to repress +any violence of which either side might be guilty towards the other. +It was reckoned as a misdemeanour for any father or mother to disown a +child, and they were punished by being kept shut up in their own house, +as long, doubtless, as they persisted in disowning it; but it was a +crime in a son, even if he were an adopted son, to renounce his parents, +and he was punished severely. If he had said to his father, "Thou art +not my father!" the latter marked him with a conspicuous sign and sold +him in the market. If he had said to his mother, "As for thee, thou art +not my mother!" he was similarly branded, and led through the streets or +along the roads, where with hue and cry he was driven from the town and +province.* + + * I have adopted the generally received meaning of this + document as a whole, but I am obliged to state that Oppert- + Menant admit quite a different interpretation. According to + them, it would appear to be a sweeping renunciation of + children by parents, and of parents by children, at the + close of a judicial condemnation. Oppert has upheld this + interpretation against Haupt, and still keeps to his + opinion. The documents published by Meissner show that the + text of the ancient Sumerian laws applied equally to adopted + children, but made no distinction between the insult offered + to the father and that offered to the mother: the same + penalty was applicable in both cases. + +The slaves were numerous, but distributed in unequal proportion among +the various classes of the population: whilst in the palace they might +be found literally in crowds, it was rare among the middle classes to +meet with any family possessing more than two or three at a time. They +were drawn partly from foreign races; prisoners who had been wounded and +carried from the field of battle, or fugitives who had fallen into the +hands of the victors after a defeat, or Elamites or Gutis who had been +surprised in their own villages during some expedition; not to mention +people of every category carried off by the Bedouin during their raids +in distant parts, such as Syria or Egypt, whom they were continually +bringing for sale to Babylon and Uru, and, indeed, to all those cities +to which they had easy access. The kings, the vicegerents, the temple +administration, and the feudal lords, provided employment for vast +numbers in the construction of their buildings or in the cultivation of +their domains; the work was hard and the mortality great, but gaps were +soon filled up by the influx of fresh gangs. The survivors intermarried, +and their children, brought up to speak the Chaldaean tongue and +conforming to the customs of the country, became assimilated to the +ruling race; they formed, beneath the superior native Semite and +Sumerian population,an inferior servile class, spread alike throughout +the towns and country, who were continually reinforced by individuals of +the native race, such as foundlings, women and children sold by husband +or father, debtors deprived by creditors of their liberty, and criminals +judicially condemned. The law took no individual account of them, +but counted them by heads, as so many cattle: they belonged to their +respective masters in the same fashion as did the beasts of his flock or +the trees of his garden, and their life or death was dependent upon +his will, though the exercise of his rights was naturally restrained +by interest and custom. He could use them as pledges or for payment of +debt, could exchange them or sell them in the market. The price of a +slave never rose very high: a woman might be bought for four and a half +shekels of silver by weight, and the value of a male adult fluctuated +between ten shekels and the third of a mina. The bill of sale was +inscribed on clay, and given to the purchaser at the time of payment: +the tablets which were the vouchers of the rights of the former +proprietor were then broken, and the transfer was completed. The +master seldom ill-treated his slaves, except in cases of reiterated +disobedience, rebellion, or flight; he could arrest his runaway slaves +wherever he could lay his hands on them; he could shackle their ankles, +fetter their wrists, and whip them mercilessly. As a rule, he permitted +them to marry and bring up a family; he apprenticed their children, +and as soon as they knew a trade, he set them up in business in his own +name, allowing them a share in the profits. The more intelligent among +them were trained to be clerks or stewards; they were taught to read, +write, and calculate, the essential accomplishments of a skilful scribe; +they were appointed as superintendents over their former comrades, or +overseers of the administration of property, and they ended by becoming +confidential servants in the household. The savings which they had +accumulated in their earlier years furnished them with the means of +procuring some few consolations: they could hire themselves out for +wages, and could even acquire slaves who would go out to work for them, +in the same way as they themselves had been a source of income to their +proprietors. If they followed a lucrative profession and were successful +in it, their savings sometimes permitted them to buy their own freedom, +and, if they were married, to pay the ransom of their wife and children. +At times, their master, desirous of rewarding long and faithful service, +liberated them of his own accord, without waiting till they had saved +up the necessary money or goods for their enfranchisement: in such cases +they remained his dependants, and continued in his service as freemen +to perform the services they had formerly rendered as slaves. They then +enjoyed the same rights and advantages as the old native race; they +could leave legacies, inherit property, claim legal rights, and acquire +and possess houses and lands. Their sons could make good matches among +the daughters of the middle classes, according to their education and +fortune; when they were intelligent, active, and industrious, there was +nothing to prevent them from rising to the highest offices about the +person of the sovereign. + +[Illustration: 294.jpg AN EGYPTIAN SLAVE MERCHANT] + +[Illustration: 294-text.jpg] + +If we knew more of the internal history of the great Chaldaean cities, we +should no doubt come to see what an important part the servile element +played in them; and could we trace it back for a few generations, we +should probably discover that there were few great families who did +not reckon a slave or a freedman among their ancestors. It would be +interesting to follow this people, made up of such complex elements, in +all their daily work and recreation, as we are able to do in the case +of contemporary Egyptians; but the monuments which might furnish us with +the necessary materials are scarce, and the positive information to be +gleaned from them amounts to but little. We are tolerably safe, however, +in supposing the more wealthy cities to have been, as a whole, very +similar in appearance to those existing at the present day in the +regions which as yet have been scarcely touched by the advent of +European civilization. Sinuous, narrow, muddy streets, littered with +domestic refuse and organic detritus, in which flocks of ravens and +wandering packs of dogs perform with more or less efficiency the duties +of sanitary officers; whole quarters of the town composed of huts made +of reeds and puddled clay, low houses of crude brick, surmounted perhaps +even in those times with the conical domes we find later on the Assyrian +bas-reliefs; crowded and noisy bazaars, where each trade is located in +its special lanes and blind alleys; silent and desolate spaces occupied +by palaces and gardens, in which the private life of the wealthy +was concealed from public gaze; and looking down upon this medley of +individual dwellings, the palaces and temples with their ziggurats +crowned with gilded and painted sanctuaries. In the ruins of Uru, +Eridu, and Uruk, the remains of houses belonging doubtless to well-to-do +families have been brought to light. They are built of fine bricks, +whose courses are cemented together with a thin layer of bitumen, but +they they are only lighted internally by small appertures pierced at +irregular distances in the upper part of the walls: the low arched +doorway, closed by a heavy two-leaved door, leads into a blind passage, +which opens as a rule on the courtyard in the centre of the building. + + +[Illustration: 208a.jpg Chaldean houses at Uru.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from the sketch by Taylor. + +[Illustration: 208b plans of houses excavated at Eridu and Ubu.] + + These plans were drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from sketches by + Taylor. The houses reproduced to the left of the plan were + those uncovered in the ruins of Uru; those on the right + belong to the ruins of Eridu. On the latter, the niches + mentioned in the text will be found indicated. + +In the interior may still be distinguished the small oblong rooms, +sometimes vaulted, sometimes roofed with a flat, ceiling supported by +trunks of palm trees;* the walls are often of a considerable thickness, +in which are found narrow niches here and there. The majority of the +rooms were merely store-chambers, and contained the family provisions +and treasures; others served as living-rooms, and were provided with +furniture. The latter, in the houses of the richer citizens no less +than in those of the people, was of a very simple kind, and was mostly +composed of chairs and stools, similar to those in the royal palaces; +the bedrooms contained the linen chests and the beds with their thin +mattresses, coverings, and cushions, and perhaps wooden head-rests, +resembling those found in Africa,** but the Chaldaeans slept mostly on +mats spread on the ground. + + * Taylor, _Notes on the Ruins of Mugeyer_, in the _Journ. of + the Royal As. Soc_, vol. xv. p. 266, found the remains of + the palm-tree beams which formed the terrace still existing. + He thinks (_Notes on Tel-el-Lahm_, etc., in the _Journ, of + the Royal As. Soc._, vol. xv. p. 411) with Loftus that some + of the chambers were vaulted. Cf. upon the custom of + vaulting in Chaldaean houses, Piereot-Cupiez, _Histoire de + l'Art_, vol. ii. p. 163, et seq. + + ** The dressing of the hair in coils and elaborate + erections, as seen in the various figures engraved upon + Chaldaean intaglios (cf. what is said of the different ways + of arranging the hair on p. 262 of this volume), appears to + have necessitated the use of these articles of furniture; + such complicated erections of hair must have lasted several + days at least, and would not have kept in condition so long + except for the use of the head-rest. + +An oven for baking occupied a corner of the courtyard, side by side with +the stones for grinding the corn; the ashes on the hearth were always +aglow, and if by chance the fire went out, the fire-stick was always +at hand to relight it, as in Egypt. The kitchen utensils and household +pottery comprised a few large copper pans and earthenware pots rounded +at the base, dishes, water and wine jars, and heavy plates of coarse +ware; metal had not as yet superseded stone, and in the same house we +meet with bronze axes and hammers side by side with the same implements +in cut flint, besides knives, scrapers, and mace-heads.* + + * Implements in flint and other kinds of stone have been + discovered by Taylor, and are now in the British Museum. The + bronze implements come partly from the tombs of Mugheir, and + partly from the ruins explored by Loftus at Tell-Sifr--that + is to say, the ancient cities of Uru and Larsam: the name of + Tell-Sifr, the "mound of copper," comes from the quantity of + objects in copper which have been discovered there. + +[Illustration: 300.jpg CHALDAEAN HOUSEHOLD UTENSILS IN TERRA-COTTA] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from the sketch by G. Rawlinson, and + the heliogravure in Heuzey-Sarzec. + + +At the present day the women of the country of the Euphrates spend a +great part of their time on the roofs of their dwellings.* They install +themselves there in the morning, till they are driven away by the heat; +as soon as the sun gets low in the heavens, they return to their post, +and either pass the day on neighbouring roofs whilst they bake, cook, +wash and dry the linen; or, if they have slaves to attend to such menial +occupations, they sew and embroider in the open air. + + * Olivier, _Voyage dans l'Empire Othoman,_ vol. ii. pp. 356, + 357, 381, 382, 392, 393. + +They come down into the interior of the house during the hottest hours +of the day. In most of the wealthy houses, the coolest room is one below +the level of the courtyard, into which but little light can penetrate. +It is paved with plaques of polished gypsum, which resembles our finest +grey-and-white marble, and the walls are covered with a coat of delicate +plastering, smooth to the touch and agreeable to the eye. This is +watered several times during the day in hot weather, and the evaporation +from it cools the air. The few ruined habitations which have as yet been +explored seem to bear witness to a considerable similarity between the +requirements and customs of ancient times and those of to-day. Like the +modern women of Bagdad and Mosul, the Chaldaean women of old preferred +an existence in the open air, in spite of its publicity, to a seclusion +within stuffy rooms or narrow courts. The heat of the sun, cold, rain, +and illness obliged them at times to seek a refuge within four walls, +but as soon as they could conveniently escape from them, they climbed up +on to their roof to pass the greater part of their time there. + +Many families of the lower and middle classes owned the houses which +they occupied. They constituted a patrimony which the owners made every +effort to preserve intact through all reverses of fortune.* The head +of the family bequeathed it to his widow or his eldest son, or left it +undivided to his heirs, in the assurance, no doubt, that one of them +would buy up the rights of the others. + + * A house could be let for various lengths of time--for + three months, for a year, for five years, for an indefinite + term, but with a minimum of six months, since the rent is + payable at the beginning and in the middle of each year. + +The remainder of his goods, farms, gardens, corn-lands, slaves, +furniture, and jewels, were divided among the brothers or natural +descendants, "from the mouth to the gold;" that is to say, from the +moment of announcing the beginning of the business, to that when +each one received his share. In order to invest this act with greater +solemnity, it took place usually in the presence of a priest. Those +interested repaired to the temple, "to the gate of the god;" they placed +the whole of the inheritance in the hands of the chosen arbitrator, +and demanded of him to divide it justly; or the eldest brother perhaps +anticipated the apportionment, and the priest had merely to sanction +the result, or settle the differences which might arise among the lawful +recipients in the course of the operation. When this was accomplished, +the legatees had to declare themselves satisfied; and when no further +claims arose, they had to sign an engagement before the priestly +arbitrator that they would henceforth refrain from all quarrelling on +the subject, and that they would never make a complaint one against the +other. By dint of these continual redistributions from one generation +to another, the largest fortunes soon became dispersed: the individual +shares became smaller and smaller, and scarcely sufficed to keep a +family, so that the slightest reverse obliged the possessor to +have recourse to usurers. The Chaldaeans, like the Egyptians, were +unacquainted with the use of money, but from the earliest times the +employment of precious metals for purposes of exchange was practised +among them to an enormous extent. Though copper and gold were both used, +silver was the principal medium in these transactions, and formed the +standard value of all purchaseable objects. It was never cut into flat +rings or twists of wire, as was the case with the Egyptian "tabnu;" it +was melted into small unstamped ingots, which were passed from hand +to hand by weight, being tested in the scales at each transaction. +"To weigh" was in the ordinary language the equivalent for "payment in +metal," whereas "to measure" denoted that the payment was in grain. +The ingots for exchange were, therefore, designated by the name of +the weights to which they corresponded. The lowest unit was a shekel, +weighing on an average nearly half an ounce, sixty shekels making a +mina, and sixty minas a talent. It is a question whether the Chaldaeanns +possessed in early times, as did the Assyrians of a later period, two +kinds of shekels and minas, one heavy and the other light. Whether the +loan were in metal, grain, or any other substance, the interest was very +high.* A very ancient law fixed it in certain cases at twelve drachmas +per mina, per annum--that is to say, at twenty per cent.--and more +recent texts show us that, when raised to twenty-five per cent., it did +not appear to them abnormal. + + * We find several different examples, during the Second + Chaldaeann Empire, of an exchange of corn for provisions and + liquids, or of beams for dates. As a fact, exchange has + never completely died out in these regions, and at the + present day, in Chaldaea, as in Egypt, corn is used in many + cases either to pay Government taxes or to discharge + commercial debts. + +The commerce of the chief cities was almost entirely concentrated in the +temples. The large quantities of metals and cereals constantly brought +to the god, either as part of the fixed temple revenue, or as daily +offerings, accumulated so rapidly, that they would have overflowed the +storehouses, had not a means been devised of utilizing them quickly: the +priests treated them as articles of commerce and made a profit out of +them.* Every bargain necessitated the calling in of a public scribe. The +bill, drawn up before witnesses on a clay tablet, enumerated the sums +paid out, the names of the parties, the rate per cent., the date +of repayment, and sometimes a penal clause in the event of fraud or +insolvency; the tablet remained in the possession of the creditor until +the debt had been completely discharged. The borrower often gave as a +pledge either slaves, a field, or a house, or certain of his friends +would pledge on his behalf their own personal fortune; at times he would +pay by the labour of his own hands the interest which he would otherwise +have been unable to meet, and the stipulation was previously made in the +contract of the number of days of corvee which he should periodically +fulfil for his creditor. If, in spite of all this, the debtor was unable +to procure the necessary funds to meet his engagements, the principal +became augmented by a fixed sum--for instance, one-third--and continued +to increase at this rate until the total value of the amount reached +that of the security:** the slave, the field, or the house then ceased +to belong to their former, master, subject to a right of redemption, of +which he was rarely able to avail himself for lack of means.*** + + * It was to the god himself--Shamash, for example--that the + loan was supposed to be made, and it is to him that the + contracts stipulate that the capital and interest shall be + paid. It is curious to lind among the most successful money- + lenders several princesses consecrated to the sun-god. + + ** It is easy to foresee, from the contracts of the New + Assyrian or Babylonian Empire, how in this manner the + original sum lent became doubled and trebled; generally the + interest accumulated till it was quadrupled, after which, no + doubt, the security was taken by the creditor. They probably + calculated that the capital and compound interest was by + then equal in value to the person or object given as a + security. + + *** The creditors protected themselves against this right of + redemption by a maledictory formula inserted at the end of + the contracts against those who should avail themselves of + it; it is generally inscribed on the boundary stones of the + First Chaldaean Empire. + +The small tradesman or free workman, who by some accident had become +involved in debt, seldom escaped this progressive impoverishment except +by strenuous efforts and incessant labour. Foreign commerce, it is true, +entailed considerable risk, but the chances of acquiring wealth were so +great that many individuals launched upon it in preference to more +sure but less lucrative undertakings. They would set off alone or in +companies for Elam or the northern regions, for Syria, or even for so +distant a country as Egypt, and they would bring back in their caravans +all that was accounted precious in those lands. Overland routes were not +free from dangers; not only were nomad tribes and professional bandits +constantly hovering round the traveller, and obliging him to exercise +ceaseless vigilance, but the inhabitants of the villages through which +he passed, the local lords and the kings of the countries which he +traversed, had no scruple in levying blackmail upon him in obliging him +to pay dearly for right of way through their marches or territory.** +There were less risks in choosing a sea route: the Euphrates on one +side, the Tigris, the Ulai, and the Uknu on the other, ran through a +country peopled with a rich industrial population, among whom Chaldaean +merchandise was easily and profitably sold or exchanged for commodities +which would command a good price at the end of the voyage. The vessels +generally were keleks or "kufas," but the latter were of immense size. + + * We have no information from Babylonian sources relating to + the state of the roads, and the dangers which merchants + encountered in foreign lands; the Egyptian documents partly + supply what is here lacking. The "instructions" contained in + the _Sallier Papyrus,_ No. ii., show what were the miseries + of the traveller, and the _Adventures of Sinuhit_ allude to + the insecurity of the roads in Syria, by the very care with + which the hero relates all the precautions which he took for + his protection. These two documents are of the XIIth or + XIIIth dynasty--that is to say, contemporaneous with the + kings, of Uru and with Gudea. + +Several individuals, as a rule, would club together to hire one of these +boats and freight it with a suitable cargo.* The body of the boat +was very light, being made of osier or willow covered with skins sewn +together; a layer of straw was spread on the bottom, on which were piled +the bales or chests, which were again protected by a rough thatch of +straw. The crew was composed of two oarsmen at least, and sometimes a +few donkeys: the merchants then pursued their way up stream till they +had disposed of their cargo, and taken in a sufficient freight for their +return voyage. The dangers, though apparently not so great as those by +the land route, were not the less real. The boat was liable to sink +or run aground near the bank, the dwellers in the neighbourhood of the +river might intercept it and pillage its contents, a war might break out +between two contiguous kingdoms and suspend all commerce: the merchants' +career continually vacillated between servitude, death, and fortune. + + * The payment demanded was something considerable: the only + contract which I know of existing for such a transaction is + of the time of Darius I., and exacts a silver shekel per day + for the hire of boat and crew. + +Business carried on at home in the towns was seldom the means of +enriching a man, and sometimes scarcely afforded him a means of +livelihood. Rent was high for those who had not a house of their own; +the least they could expect to pay was half a silver shekel per annum, +but the average price was a whole shekel. On taking possession they paid +a deposit which sometimes amounted to one-third of the whole sum, the +remainder being due at the end of the year. The leases lasted, as a +rule, merely a twelvemonth, though sometimes they were extended for +terms of greater length, such as two, three, or even eight years. The +cost of repairs and of keeping the house in good condition fell usually +upon the lessee, who was also allowed to build upon the land he had +leased, in which case it was declared free of all charges for a period +of about ten years, but the house, and, as a rule, all he had built, +then reverted to the landlord. Most possessors of shops made their own +goods for sale, assisted by slaves or free apprentices. Every workman +taught his own trade to his children, and these in their turn would +instruct theirs; families which had an hereditary profession, or from +generation to generation had gathered bands of workmen about them, +formed themselves into various guilds, or, to use the customary term, +into tribes, governed by chiefs and following specified customs. A +workman belonged to the tribe of the weavers, or of the blacksmiths, or +of the corn-merchants, and the description of an individual would not +have been considered as sufficiently exact, if the designation of his +tribe were not inserted after his name in addition to his paternal +affiliation. The organization was like that of Egypt, but more fully +developed. The various trades, moreover, were almost the same among the +two peoples, the exceptions being such as are readily accounted for by +the differences in the nature of the soil and physical constitution of +the respective countries. We do not meet on the banks of the Euphrates +with those corporations of stone-cutters and marble workers which were +so numerous in the valley of the Nile. The vast Chaldaean plain, in the +absence of mountains or accessible quarries, would have furnished no +occupation for them: the Chaldaeans had to go a long way in quest of +the small quantities of limestone, alabaster, or diorite which they +required, and which they reserved only for details of architectural +decoration for which a small number of artisans and sculptors were amply +sufficient. The manufacture of bricks, on the other hand, made great +progress; the crude bricks were larger than those of Egypt, and they +were more enduring, composed of finer clay and better executed; the +manufacture of burnt brick too was carried to a degree of perfection to +which Memphis or Thebes never attained. An ancient legend ascribes +the invention of the bricks, and consequently the construction of the +earliest cities, jointly to Sin, the eldest son of Bel, and Ninib his +brother: this event was said to have taken place in May-June, and from +that time forward the third month of the year, over which the twins +presided, was called, Murga in Sumerian, Simanu in the Semitic speech, +the month of brick. This was the season which was especially devoted to +the processes of their manufacture: the flood in the rivers, which was +very great in the preceding months, then began to subside, and the clay +which was deposited by the waters during the weeks of overflow, washed +and refined as it was, lent itself readily to the operation. The sun, +moreover, gave forth sufficient heat to dry the clay blocks in a uniform +and gradual manner: later, in July and August, they would crack under +the ardour of his rays, and become converted externally into a friable +mass, while their interior would remain too moist to allow them to be +prudently used in carefully built structures. The work of brick-making +was inaugurated with festivals and sacrifices to Sin, Merodach, Nebo, +and all the deities who were concerned in the art of building: further +religious ceremonies were observed at intervals during the month to +sanctify the progress of the work. The manufacture did not cease on the +last day of the month, but was continued with more or less activity, +according to the heat of the sun, and the importance of the orders +received, until the return of the inundation: but the bricks intended +for public buildings, temples, or palaces, could not be made outside a +prescribed limit of time. The shades of colour produced naturally in the +process of burning--red or yellow, grey or brown--were not pleasant to +the eye, and they were accustomed, therefore, to coat the bricks with an +attractive enamel which preserved them from the disintegrating effects +of sun and rain. The paste was laid on the edges or sides while +the brick was in a crude state, and was incorporated with it by +vitrification in the heat of the kiln. The process was known from an +early date in Egypt, but was rarely employed there in the decoration +of buildings, while in Chaldaea the use of such enamelled plaques was +common. The substructures of palaces and the exterior walls of temples +were left unadorned, but the shrines which crowned the "ziggurat," +the reception-halls, and the headings of doors were covered with these +many-coloured tiles. Fragments of them are found to-day in the ruins of +the cities, and the analysis of these pieces shows the marvellous skill +of the ancient workers in enamel; the shades of colour are pure and +pleasant to the eye, while the material is so evenly put on and so +solid, that neither centuries of burial in a sodden soil, nor the wear +and tear of transport, nor the exposure to the damp of our museums, have +succeeded in diminishing their brilliance and freshness. + +To get a clear idea of the industrial operations of the country, it +would be necessary to see the various corporations at their work, as we +are able to do, in the case of Egypt in the scenes of the mastabas of +Saqqara, or of the rock-chambers of Beni-Hasan. The manufacture of stone +implements gave considerable employment, and the equipment of the dead +in the tombs of Uru would have been a matter of small moment, if we were +to exclude its flint implements, its knives, cleavers, scrapers, adzes, +axes, and hammers. The cutting of these objects is bold, and the final +touches show skill, but we rarely meet with that purity of contour and +intensity of polish which distinguish similar objects among Western +peoples. A few examples, it is true, are of fairly artistic shape, and +bear engraved inscriptions: one of these, a flint hammer of beautiful +form, belonged to a god, probably Eamman, and seems to have come from a +temple in which one of its owners had deposited it. + +[Illustration: 311a.jpg CHALDAEAN STONE IMPLEMENTS.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from the sketches published by + Taylor and by 'G. Rawlinson. On the left a scraper and two + knives one above the other, an axe in the middle, on the + right an axe and a hammer. All these objects were found in + Taylor's excavations, and are now in the British Museum. + +It is an exception, and a remarkable exception. Stone was the material +of the implements of the poor--implements which were coarse in shape, +and cost little: if much care were given to their execution, they would +come to be so costly that no one would buy them, or, if sold for a +moderate sum, the seller would obtain no profit from the transaction. +Beyond a certain price, it was more advantageous to purchase metal +implements, of copper in the early ages, afterwards of bronze, and +lastly of iron. Among the metal-founders and smiths all kinds of +examples of these were to be found--axes of an elegant and graceful +design, hammers and knives, as well as culinary and domestic utensils, +cups, cauldrons, dishes, mountings of doors and coffers, statuettes of +men, bulls, monsters, and gods--which could be turned to weapons of +all descriptions--arrow and lance heads, swords, daggers, and rounded +helmets with neck-piece or visor. + +[Illustration: 311b.jpg CHALDAEAN STONE HAMMER BEARING AN INSCRIPTION.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from the illustration published by + Fr. Lenormant. + +[Illustration: CHALDAEN IMPLEMENTS OF BRONZE] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from Rawlinson's _Five Great + Monarchies_. On the right two axes, in the middle a hammer, + on the left a knife, and below the head of a lance. + +Some of the metal objects manufactured by the Chaldaeans attained large +dimensions; for instance, the "brazen seas" which were set up before +each sanctuary, either for the purpose of receiving the libations, or +for the prescribed rites of purification. As is often the case among +half-civilized peoples, the goldsmiths worked in the precious metals +with much facility and skill. We have not, succeeded up to the present +in finding any of those golden images which the kings were accustomed +to dedicate in the temples out of their own possessions, or the spoil +obtained from the enemy; but a silver vase dedicated to Ningirsu by +Entena, vicegerent of Lagash, gives us some idea of this department +of the temple furniture. It stands upright on a small square bronze +pedestal with four feet. A piously expressed inscription runs round +the neck, and the bowl of the vase is divided horizontally into two +divisions, framed above and below by twisted cord-work. Four two-headed +eagles, with outspread wings and tail, occupy the lower division; they +are in the act of seizing with their claws two animals, placed back +to back, represented in the act of walking: the intervals between the +eagles are filled up alternatively by two lions, two wild goats, and +two stags. Above, and close to the rise of the neck, are disposed seven +heifers lying down and all looking in the same direction: they are all +engraved upon the flat metal, and are without relief or incrustation. +The whole composition is harmoniously put together, the posture of the +animals and their general form are well conceived and boldly rendered, +but the details of the mane of the lions and the feathers of the eagles +are reproduced with a realism and attention to minutio which belong to +the infancy of art. This single example of ancient goldsmiths'work would +be sufficient to prove that the early Chaldaens were not a whit behind +the Egyptians in this handicraft, even if we had not the golden +ornaments, the bracelets, ear and finger rings to judge from, with which +the tombs have furnished us in considerable numbers. + +[Illustration: VASE OF SILVER. AND BULL OF COPPER.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from Heuzey-Sarzec + +Alongside the goldsmiths there must have been a whole army of lapidaries +and gem-cutters occupied in the engraving of cylinders. Numerous and +delicate operations were required to metamorphose a scrap of crude +rock, marble, granite, agate, onyx, green and red jasper, crystal or +lapis-lazuli, into one of those marvellous seals which are now found by +the hundred scattered throughout the museums of Europe. They had to be +rounded, reduced to the proper proportions, and polished, before the +subject or legend could be engraved upon them with the burin. To drill a +hole through them required great dexterity, and some of the lapidaries, +from a dread of breaking the cylinder, either did not pierce it at all, +or merely bored a shallow hole into each extremity to allow it to +roll freely in its metallic mounting. The tools used in engraving were +similar to those employed at the present day, but of a rougher kind. The +burin, which was often nothing more than a flint point, marked out the +area of the design, and sketched out the figures; the saw was largely +employed to cut away the depressions when these required no detailed +handling; and lastly, the drill, either worked with the hand or in +a kind of lathe, was made to indicate the joints and muscles of the +individual by a series of round holes. The object thus summarily dealt +with might be regarded as sufficiently worked for ordinary clients; but +those who were willing to pay for them could obtain cylinders from which +every mark of the tool had been adroitly removed, and where the beauty +of the workmanship vied with the costliness of the material. + +[Illustration: 315.jpg CHALDAEAN CYLINDER EXHIBITING TRACES OF THE +DIFFERENT TOOLS USED BY THE ENGRAVER] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a heliogravure in Menant's + _Catalogue de la collection de M. de Clercq_ + + +The seal of Shargani, King of Agade, that of Bingani-shar-ali, and many +others which have been picked up by chance in the excavations, are +true bas-reliefs, reduced and condensed, so to speak, to the space of +something like a square inch of surface, but conceived with an artistic +ingenuity and executed with a boldness which modern engravers have +rarely equalled and never surpassed. There are traces on them, it is +true, of some of the defects which disfigured the latter work of the +Assyrians--heaviness of form, exaggerated prominence of muscles +and hardness of outline--but there are also all the qualities which +distinguish an original and forcible art. + +The countries of the Euphrates were renowned in classic times for the +beauty of the embroidered and painted stuffs which they manufactured.* +Nothing has come down to us of these Babylonian tissues of which the +Greek and Latin writers extolled the magnificence, but we may form some +idea, from the statues and the figures engraved on cylinders, of what +the weavers and embroiderers of this ancient time were capable. The loom +which they made use of differed but slightly from the horizontal loom +commonly employed in the Nile Valley, and everything tends to show that +their plain linen cloths were of the kind represented in the swathings +and fragments of clothing still to be found in the sepulchral chambers +of Memphis and Thebes. The manufacture of fleecy woollen garments so +much affected by men and women alike indicates a great dexterity. When +once the threads of the woof had been stretched, those of the warp +were attached to them by knots in as many parallel lines--at regular +intervals--as there were rows of fringe to be displayed on the surface +of the cloth, the loops thus formed being allowed to hang down in their +respective places: sometimes these loops were retained just as they +stood, sometimes they were cut and the ends frayed out so as to give the +appearance of a shaggy texture. + + * Most modern writers understand by tapestry what the + ancients were accustomed to call needle embroidery or + painting on stuffs: I can find no indication on the most + ancient monuments of Chaldaean or Egypt of the manufacturing + of real tapestry. + +[Illustration: 316.jpg Egyptian Manuscript] + + Part of an Egyptian Manuscript found in the Swathing of a + Mummy + +[Illustration: 316-text.jpg Egyptian Manuscript] + + +Most of these stuffs preserved their original white or creamy +colour--especially those woven at home by the women for the requirements +of their own toilet, and for the ordinary uses of the household. The +Chaldaeans, however, like many other Asiatic peoples, had a strong +preference for lively colours, and the outdoor garments and gala attire +of the rich were distinguished by a profusion of blue patterns on a red +ground, or red upon blue, arranged in stripes, zigzags, checks, and +dots or circles. There must, therefore, have been as much occupation +for dyers as there was for weavers; and it is possible that the two +operations were carried out by the same hands. We know nothing of the +bakers, butchers, carriers, masons, and other artisans who supplied the +necessities of the cities: they were doubtless able to make two ends +meet and nothing more, and if we should succeed some day in obtaining +information about them, we shall probably find that their condition was +as miserable as that of their Egyptian contemporaries. The course +of their lives was monotonous enough, except when it was broken at +prescribed intervals by the ordinary festivals in honour of the gods +of the city, or by the casual suspensions of work occasioned by the +triumphant return of the king from some warlike expedition, or by his +inauguration of a new temple. + +The gaiety of the people on such occasions was the more exuberant in +proportion to the undisturbed monotony or misery of the days which +preceded them. As soon, for instance, as Gudea had brought to completion +Ininnu, the house of his patron Ningirsu, "he felt relieved from the +strain and washed his hands. For seven days, no grain was bruised in the +quern, the maid was the equal of her mistress, the servant walked in the +same rank as his master, the strong and the weak rested side by side in +the city." The world seemed topsy-turvy as during the Roman Saturnalia; +the classes mingled together, and the inferiors were probably accustomed +to abuse the unusual licence which they momentarily enjoyed: when the +festival was over, social distinctions reasserted themselves, and each +one fell back into his accustomed position. Life was not so pleasant +in Chaldaea as in Egypt. The innumerable promissory notes, the receipted +accounts, the contracts of sale and purchase--these cunningly drawn up +deeds which have been deciphered by the hundred--reveal to us a people +greedy of gain, exacting, litigious, of artisans in Egypt. This is taken +from a source belonging to the XIIth or possibly the XIIIth dynasty. We +may assume, from the fact that the two civilizations were about on +the same level, that the information supplied in this respect by the +Egyptian monuments is generally applicable to the condition of Chaldaean +workmen of the same period. + +(Unreadable) and almost exclusively absorbed by material concerns. +The climate, too, variable and oppressive in summer and winter alike, +imposed upon the Chaldaean painful exactions, and obliged him to work +with an energy of which the majority of Egyptians would not have felt +themselves capable. The Chaldaean, suffering greater and more prolonged +hardships, earned more doubtless, but was not on this account the +happier. However lucrative his calling might be, it was not sufficiently +so to supply him always with domestic necessities, and both tradespeople +and operatives were obliged to run into debt to supplement their +straitened means. When they had once fallen into the hands of the +usurer, the exorbitant interest which they had to pay kept them a long +time in his power. If when the bill fell due there was nothing to meet +it, it had to be renewed under still more disastrous conditions; as the +pledge given was usually the homestead, or the slave who assisted in the +trade, or the garden which supplied food for the family, the mortgagor +was reduced to the extreme of misery if he could not satisfy his +creditors, This plague of usury was not, moreover, confined to the +towns; it raged with equal violence in the country, and the farmers also +became its victims. + +If, theoretically, the earth belonged to the gods, and under them to +the kings, the latter had made, and continued daily to make, such large +concessions of it to their vassals, that the greater part of their +domains were always in the hands of the nobles or private individuals. +These could dispose of their landed property at pleasure, farm it out, +sell it or distribute it among their heirs and friends. + +They paid on account of it a tax which varied at different epochs, but +which was always burthensome; but when they had once satisfied this +exaction, and paid the dues which the temples might claim on behalf +of the gods, neither the State nor any individual had the right to +interfere in their administration of it, or put any restrictions upon +them. Some proprietors cultivated their lands themselves--the poor by +their own labour, the rich by the aid of some trustworthy slave whom +they interested in the success of his farming by assigning him a certain +percentage on the net return. Sometimes the lands were leased out in +whole or in part to free peasants who relieved the proprietors of all +the worry and risks of managing it themselves. A survey of the area of +each state had been made at an early age, and the lots into which it had +been divided were registered on clay tablets containing the name of +the proprietor as well as those of his neighbours, together with such +indications of the features of the land, dykes, canals, rivers, +and buildings as would serve to define its boundaries: rough plans +accompanied the description, and in the most complicated instances +interpreted it to the eye. This survey was frequently repeated, and +enabled the sovereign to arrange his scheme of taxation on a solid +basis, and to calculate the product of it without material error. +Gardens and groves of date-palms, together with large regions devoted +to rough attempts at vegetable culture, were often to be met with, +especially in the neighbourhood of towns; these paid their contributions +to the State, as well as the owners'rent, in kind--in fruit, vegetables, +and fresh or dried dates. The best soil was reserved, for the growth of +wheat and other cereals, and its extent was measured in terms of corn; +corn was also the standard in which the revenue was reckoned both in +public and private contracts. Such and such a field required about fifty +litres of seed to the arura. Another needed sixty-two or seventy-five +according to the fertility of the land and its locality. Landed property +was placed under the guardianship of the gods, and its transfer or +cession was accompanied by formalities of a half-religious, half-magical +character: the party giving delivery of it called down upon the head +of any one who would dare in the future to dispute the validity of the +deed, imprecations of which the text was inserted on a portion of the +surface of an egg-shaped nodule of flint, basalt, or other hard stone. +These little monuments display on their cone-shaped end a series +of figures, sometimes arranged in two parallel divisions, sometimes +scattered over the surface, which represent the deities invoked to watch +over the sanctity of the contract. It was a kind of representation in +miniature of the aspect which the heavens presented to the Chaldaeans. +The disks of the sun and moon, together with Venus-Ashtar, are the +prominent elements in the scene: the zodiacal figures, or the symbols +employed to represent them, are arranged in an apparent orbit around +these--such as the Scorpion, the Bird, the Dog, the Thunderbolt of +Ramman, the mace, the horned monsters, half hidden by the temples they +guard, and the enormous Dragon who embraces in his folds half the entire +firmament. "If ever, in the course of days, any one of the brothers, +children, family, men or women, slaves or servants of the house, or any +governor or functionary whatsoever, arises and intends to steal this +field, and remove this landmark, either to make a gift of it to a god, +or to assign it to a competitor, or to appropriate it to himself; if he +modifies the area of it, the limits and the landmark; if he divides it +into portions, and if he says: 'The field has no owner, since there has +been no donation of it; '--if, from dread of the terrible imprecations +which protect this stele and this field, he sends a fool, a deaf or +blind person, a wicked wretch, an idiot, a stranger, or an ignorant one, +and should cause this stele to be taken away,* and should throw it +into the water, cover it with dust, mutilate it by scratching it with a +stone, burn it in the fire and destroy it, or write anything else upon +it, or carry,it away to a place where it will be no longer seen,--this +man, may Anu, Bel, Ea, the exalted lady, the great gods, cast upon him +looks of wrath, may they destroy his strength, may they exterminate his +race." All the immortals are associated in this excommunication, and +each one promises in his turn the aid of his power. + + * All the people enumerated in this passage might, in + ignorance of what they were doing, be induced to tear up the + stone, and unconsciously commit a sacrilege from which every + Chaldaean in his senses would have shrunk back. The formula + provides for such cases, and it secures that the curse shall + fall not only on the irresponsible instruments, but reach + the instigator of the crime, even when he had taken no + actual part in the deed. + +[Illustration: 322.jpg THE MICHAUX STONE (left)] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin. The original is in the medal cabinet + of the Bibliotheque Nationale. + +[Illustration: 323.jpg THE OTHER SIDE OF THE MICHAUX STONE (right)] + +Merodach, by whose spells the sick are re stored, will inflict upon the +guilty one a dropsy which no incantation can cure. Shamas, the supreme +judge, will send forth against him one of his inexorable judgments. Sin, +the inhabitant of the brilliant heavens, will cover him with leprosy as +with a garment. Adar, the warrior, will break his weapons; and Zamama, +the king of strifes, will not stand by him on the field of battle. +Eamman will let loose his tempest upon his fields, and will overwhelm +them. The whole band of the invisibles hold themselves ready to defend +the rights of the proprietor against all attacks. In no part of the +ancient world was the sacred character of property so forcibly laid +down, or the possession of the soil more firmly secured by religion. + +In instruments of agriculture and modes of cultivation Chaldaea was no +better off than Egypt. The rapidity with which the river rose in the +spring, and its variable subsidence from year to year, furnished little +inducement to the Chaldaeans to entrust to it the work of watering their +lands; on the contrary, they were compelled to protect themselves from +it, and to keep at a distance the volume of waters it brought down. +Each property, whether of square, triangular, or any other shape, was +surrounded with a continuous earth-built barrier which bounded it +on every side, and served at the same time as a rampart against the +inundation. + +[Illustration: 324.jpg TWO ROWS OF SHADUFS ON THE BANK OF A RIVER.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from an Assyrian bas-relief from + Koyunjik. + +Rows of shadufs installed along the banks of the canals or streams +provided for the irrigation of the lands.* The fields were laid out like +a chess-board, and the squares, separated from each other by earthen +ridges, formed as it were so many basins: when the elevation of the +ground arrested the flow of the waters, these were collected into +reservoirs, whence by the use of other shadufs they were raised to a +higher level. + + * In Mesopotamia and Chaldaea there may still be seen + "everywhere ruins of ancient canals; and there are also to + be met with, in many places, ridges of earth, which stretch + for considerable distances in a straight line, and surround + lands perfectly level." (Olivier). + +The plough was nothing more than an obliquely placed mattock, whose +handle was lengthened in order to harness oxen to it. Whilst the +ploughman pressed heavily on the handle, two attendants kept incessantly +goading the beasts, or urging them forward with voice and whip, and +a third scattered the seed in the furrow. A considerable capital was +needed to ensure success in agricultural undertakings: contracts were +made for three years, and stipulated that payments should be made partly +in metal and partly in the products of the soil. + +[Illustration: 325.jpg CHALDAEAN FARMING OPERATIONS.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a Chaldaean intaglio reproduced + in Layard. The original is in the cabinet of medals in the + Bibliotheque Nationale. + +The farmer paid a small sum when entering into possession, and the +remainder of the debt was gradually liquidated at the end of each +twelve months, the payment being in silver one year, and in corn the two +following. The rent varied according to the quality of the soil and the +facilities which it afforded for cultivation: a field, for instance, of +three bushels was made to pay nine hundred measures, while another of +ten bushels had only eighteen hundred to pay. In many instances the +peasant preferred to take the proprietor into partnership, the latter +in such case providing all the expenses of cultivation, on the +understanding that he should receive two-thirds of the gross product. +The tenant was obliged to administer the estate as a careful householder +during the term of his lease: he was to maintain the buildings and +implements in good repair, to see that the hedges were kept up, to keep +the shadufs in working order, and to secure the good condition of the +watercourses. He had rarely enough slaves to manage the business with +profit: those he had purchased were sufficient, with the aid of his +wives and children, to carry on ordinary operations, but when any +pressure arose, especially at harvest-time, he had to seek elsewhere the +additional labourers he required. The temples were the chief sources for +the supply of these. The majority of the supplementary labourers were +free men, who were hired out by their family, or engaged themselves for +a fixed term, during which they were subject to a sort of slavery, the +conditions of which were determined by law. The workman renounced his +liberty for fifteen days, or a month, or for a whole year; he disposed, +so to speak, of a portion of his life to the provisional master of his +choice, and if he did not enter upon his work at the day agreed upon, +or if he showed himself inactive in the duties assigned to him, he was +liable to severe punishment. He received in exchange for his labour +his food, lodging, and clothing; and if an accident should occur to +him during the term of his service, the law granted him an indemnity in +proportion to the injury he had sustained. + +[Illustration: 327.jpg THE FARM OXEN] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a green marble cylinder in the + Louvre. + +His average wage was from four to six shekels of silver per annum. He +was also entitled by custom to another shekel in the form of a retaining +fee, and he could claim his pay, which was given to him mostly in corn, +in monthly instalments, if his agreement were for a considerable time, +and daily if it were for a short period. + +The mercenary never fell into the condition of the ordinary serf: he +retained his rights as a man, and possessed in the person of the patron +for whom he laboured, or whom he himself had selected, a defender of his +interests. When he came to the end of his engagement, he returned to +his family, and resumed his ordinary occupation until the next occasion. +Many of the farmers in a small way earned thus, in a few weeks, +sufficient means to supplement their own modest personal income. Others +sought out more permanent occupations, and hired themselves out as +regular farm-servants. + +The lands which neither the rise of the river nor the irrigation system +could reach so as to render fit for agriculture, were reserved for the +pasture of the flocks in the springtime, when they were covered with +rich grass. The presence of lions in the neighbourhood, however, obliged +the husbandmen to take precautions for the safety of their flocks. They +constructed provisional enclosures into which the animals were driven +every evening, when the pastures were too far off to allow of the flocks +being brought back to the sheepfold. The chase was a favourite pastime +among them, and few days passed without the hunter's bringing back with +him a young gazelle caught in a trap, or a hare killed by an arrow. +These formed substantial additions to the larder, for the Chaldaeans +do not seem to have kept about them, as the Egyptians did, such tamed +animals as cranes or herons, gazelles or deer: they contented themselves +with the useful species, oxen, asses, sheep, and goats. Some of the +ancient monuments, cylinders, and clay tablets reproduce in a rough +manner scenes from pastoral life. The door of the fold opens, and we see +a flock of goats sallying forth to the cracking of the herdsman's whip: +when they reach the pasture they scatter over the meadows, and while the +shepherd keeps his eye upon them, he plays upon his reed to the delight +of his dog. In the mean time the farm-people are engaged in the careful +preparation of the evening meal: two individuals on opposite sides of +the hearth watch the pot boiling between them, while a baker makes his +dough into round cakes. + +[Illustration: 329a.jpg COOKING: A QUARREL.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from one of the terra-cotta plaques + discovered by Loftus. + +Sometimes a quarrel breaks out among the comrades, and leads to a +stand-up fight with the fists; or a lion, perhaps, in quest of a meal, +surprises and kills one of the bulls: the shepherd runs up, his axe in +his hand, to contend bravely with the marauder for the possession of his +beast. The shepherd was accustomed to provide himself with assistance +in the shape of enormous dogs, who had no more hesitation in attacking +beasts of prey than they had in pursuing game. In these combats the +natural courage of the shepherd was stimulated by interest: for he was +personally responsible for the safety of his flock, and if a lion should +find an entrance into one of the enclosures. + +[Illustration: 329b.jpg SCENES OF PASTORAL LIFE IN CHALDAEA.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a Chaldaean intaglio from + Layard. Another cylinder of the same kind is reproduced at + p. 233 of the present work; it represents Etana arising to + heaven by the aid of his friend the eagle, while the + pastoral scene below resembles in nearly all particulars + that given above. + +[Illustration: 330.jpg FIGHT WITH A LION] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from one of the terra-cotta tablets + discovered by Loftus. + +Fishing was not so much a pastime as a source of livelihood; for fish +occupied a high place in the bill of fare of the common folk. Caught by +the line, net, or trap, it was dried,in the sun, smoked, or salted. The +chase was essentially the pastime of the great noble--the pursuit of +the lion and the bear in the wooded covers or the marshy thickets of the +river-bank; the pursuit of the gazelle, the ostrich, and bustard on +the elevated plains or rocky tablelands of the desert. The onager of +Mesopotamia is a very beautiful animal, with its grey glossy coat, and +its lively and rapid action. + +[Illustration: 331.jpg THE DOG IN TUB LEASH] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a terra-cotta tablet discovered + by Sir H. Rawlinson in the ruins of Babylon, and now in the + British Museum + +If it is disturbed, it gives forth a cry, kicks up its heels, and dashes +off: when at a safe distance, it stops, turns round, and faces its +pursuer: as soon as he approaches, it starts off again, stops, and takes +to its heels again, continuing this procedure as long as it is followed. +The Chaldaeans found it difficult to catch by the aid of dogs, but they +could bring it down by arrows, or perhaps catch it alive by stratagem. +A running noose was thrown round its neck, and two men held the ends of +the ropes. The animal struggled, made a rush, and attempted to bite, but +its efforts tended only to tighten the noose still more firmly, and +it at length gave in, half strangled; after alternating struggles and +suffocating paroxysms, it became somewhat calmer, and allowed itself to +be led. It was finally tamed, if not to the extent of becoming useful +in agriculture, at least for the purposes of war: before the horse was +known in Chaldaea, it was used to draw the chariot. The original habitat +of the horse was the great table-lands of Central Asia: it is doubtful +whether it was brought suddenly into the region of the Tigrus and +Euphrates by some barbaric invasion, or whether it was passed on from +tribe to tribe, and thus gradually reached that country. It soon became +acclimatized, and its cross-breeding with the ass led for centuries to +the production of magnificent mules. The horse was known to the kings +of Lagash, who used it in harness. The sovereigns of neighbouring cities +were also acquainted with it, but it seems to have been employed solely +by the upper classes of society, and never to have been generally used +in the war-chariot or as a charger in cavalry operations. + +[Illustration: 332.jpg CHALDAEAN CARRYING A FISH. (left)] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from one of the terra-cotta tablets + discovered by Loftus. + +The Chaldaeans carried agriculture to a high degree of perfection, and +succeeded in obtaining from the soil everything it could be made to +yield. + +[Illustration: 333.jpg THE ONAGER TAKEN WITH THE LASSO.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from the Assyrian bas-relief of + Nimrud. See p. 35 of the present work for an illustration of + onagers pierced by arrows in the chase. + +Their methods, transmitted in the first place to the Greeks, and +afterwards to the Arabs, were perpetuated long after their civilization +had disappeared, and were even practised by the people of Iraq under the +Abbasside Caliphs. Agricultural treatises on clay, which contained an +account of these matters, were deposited in one or other of the sacred +libraries in which the priests of each city were long accustomed to +collect together documents from every source on which they could lay +their hands. There were to be found in each of these collections a +certain number of works which were unique, either because the authors +were natives of the city, or because all copies of them had been +destroyed in the course of centuries--the Epic of Grilgames, for +instance, at Uruk; a history of the Creation, and of the battles of +the gods with the monsters at Kutha: all of them had their special +collections of hymns or psalms, religious and magical formulas, their +lists of words and grammatical phraseology, their glossaries and +syllabaries, which enabled them to understand and translate texts drawn +up in Sumerian, or to decipher those whose writing presented more than +ordinary difficulty. In these libraries there was, we find, as in +the inscriptions of Egypt, a complete literature, of which only some +shattered fragments have come down to us. The little we are able to +examine has produced upon our modern investigators a complex impression, +in which astonishment rather than admiration contends with a sense +of tedious-ness. There may be recognized here and there, among the +wearisome successions of phrases, with their rugged proper names, +episodes which seem something like a Chaldaean "Genesis" or "Veda;" now +and then a bold flight of fancy, a sudden exaltation of thought, or a +felicitous expression, arrests the attention and holds it captive for +a time. In the narrative of the adventures of Grilgames, for instance, +there is a certain nobility of character, and the sequence of events, in +their natural and marvellous development, are handled with gravity and +freedom: if we sometimes encounter episodes which provoke a smile or +excite our repugnance, we must take into account the rudeness of the age +with which they deal, and remember that the men and gods of the later +Homeric epic are not a whit behind the heroes of Babylonian story in +coarseness. The recognition of divine omnipotence, and the keenly felt +afflictions of the soul, awakened in the Chaldaean psalmist feelings of +adoration and penitence which still find, in spite of the differences of +religion, an echo in our own hearts; and the unknown scribe, who related +the story of the descent of Ishtar to the infernal regions, was able to +express with a certain gloomy energy the miseries of the "Land without +return. "These instances are to be regarded, however, as exceptional: +the bulk of Chaldaean literature seems nothing more than a heap of +pretentious trash, in which even the best-equipped reader can see no +meaning, or, if he can, it is of such a character as to seem unworthy +of record. His judgment is natural in the circumstances, for the ancient +East is not, like Greece and Italy, the dead of yesterday whose soul +still hovers around us, and whose legacies constitute more than the half +of our patrimony: on the contrary, it was buried soul and body, gods +and cities, men and circumstances, ages ago, and even its heirs, in the +lapse of years, have become extinct. In proportion as we are able to +bring its civilization to light, we become more and more conscious that +we have little or nothing in common with it. Its laws and customs, its +methods of action and its modes of thought, are so far apart from those +of the present day, that they seem to us to belong to a humanity utterly +different from our own. The names of its deities do not appeal to our +imagination like those of the Olympian cycle, and no traditional respect +serves to do away with the sense of uncouthness which we experience +from the jingle of syllables which enter into them. Its artists did not +regard the world from the same point of view as we do, and its writers, +drawing their inspiration from an entirely different source, made use of +obsolete methods to express their feelings and co-ordinate their ideas. +It thus happens that while we understand to a shade the classical +language of the Greeks and Romans, and can read their works almost +without effort, the great primitive literatures of the world, the +Egyptian and Chaldaean, have nothing to offer us for the most part but a +sequence of problems to solve or of enigmas to unriddle with patience. +How many phrases, how many words at which we stumble, require a +painstaking analysis before we can make ourselves master of their +meaning! And even when we have determined to our satisfaction their +literal signification, what a number of excursions we must make in the +domain of religious, ethical, and political history before we can compel +them to render up to us their full import, or make them as intelligible +to others as they are to ourselves! When so many commentaries are +required to interpret the thought of an individual or a people, some +difficulty must be experienced in estimating the value of the expression +which they have given to it. Elements of beauty were certainly, and +perhaps are still, within it; but in proportion as we clear away +the rubbish which encumbers it, the mass of glossaries necessary to +interpret it fall in and bury it so as to stifle it afresh. + +While the obstacles to our appreciation of Chaldaeann literature are of +such a serious character, we are much more at home in our efforts to +estimate the extent and depth of their scientific knowledge. They +were as well versed as the Egyptians, but not more, in arithmetic +and geometry in as far as these had an application to the affairs of +everyday life: the difference between the two peoples consisted chiefly +in their respective numerical systems--the Egyptians employing almost +exclusively the decimal system of notation, while the Chaldaeans combined +its use with the duodecimal. + +[Illustration: 337.jpg Page image] + +To express the units, they made use of so many vertical "nails" +placed one after, or above, each other, thus [symbols] etc.; tens were +represented by bent brackets [symbols], up to 60; beyond this figure +they had the choice of two methods of notation: they could express the +further tens by the continuous additions of brackets thus, [symbols] +or they could represent 50 by a vertical "nail," and add for every +additional ten a bracket to the right of it, thus: [symbols]. The +notation of a hundred was represented by the vertical "nail" with +a horizontal stroke to the right thus [symbols], and the number of +hundreds by the symbols placed before this sign, thus [symbols], etc.: +a thousand was written [symbols] i.e. ten times one hundred, and the +series of thousands by the combination of different notations which +served to express units, tens, and hundreds. They subdivided the unit, +moreover, into sixty equal parts, and each of these parts into sixty +further equal subdivisions, and this system of fractions was used in all +kinds of quantitive measurements. The fathom, the foot and its square, +talents and bushels, the complete system of Chaldaean weights and +measures, were based on the intimate alliance and parallel use of +the decimal and duodecimal systems of notation. The sixtieth was more +frequently employed than the hundredth when large quantities were in +question: it was called a "soss," and ten sosses were equal to a "ner," +while sixty ners were equivalent to a "sar;" the series, sosses, +ners, and sars, being employed in all estimations of values. Years and +measures of length were reckoned in sosses, while talents and bushels +were measured in sosses and sars. The fact that these subdivisions were +all divisible by 10 or 12, rendered calculations by means of them easy +to the merchant and workmen as well as to the mathematical expert. The +glimpses that we have been able to obtain up to the present of Chaldaean +scientific methods indicate that they were on a low level, but they +were sufficiently advanced to furnish practical rules for application in +everyday affairs: helps to memory of different kinds, lists of figures +with their names phonetically rendered in Sumerian and Semitic speech, +tables of squares and cubes, and rudimentary formulas and figures for +land-surveying, furnished sufficient instructions to enable any one +to make complicated calculations in a ready manner, and to work out in +figures, with tolerable accuracy, the superficial area of irregularly +shaped plots of land. The Chaldaeans could draw out, with a fair amount +of exactness, plans of properties or of towns, and their ambition +impelled them even to attempt to make maps of the world. The latter +were, it is true, but rough sketches, in which mythological beliefs +vitiated the information which merchants and soldiers had collected in +their journeys. The earth was represented as a disk surrounded by the +ocean stream: Chaldaea took up the greater part of it, and foreign +countries did not appear in it at all, or held a position out in the +cold at its extremities. Actual knowledge was woven in an extraordinary +manner with mystic considerations, in which the virtues of numbers, +their connections with the gods, and the application of geometrical +diagrams to the prediction of the future, played an important part. +We know what a brilliant fortune these speculations attained in +after-years, and the firm hold they obtained for centuries over Western +nations, as formerly over the Bast. It was not in arithmetic and +geometry alone, moreover, that the Chaldaeans were led away by such +deceits: each branch of science in its turn was vitiated by them, +and, indeed, it could hardly be otherwise when we come to consider the +Chaldaean outlook upon the universe. Its operations, in their eyes, were +not carried on under impersonal and unswerving laws, but by voluntary +and rational agents, swayed by an inexorable fate against which they +dared not rebel, but still free enough and powerful enough to avert by +magic the decrees of destiny, or at least to retard their execution. +From this conception of things each subordinate science was obliged to +make its investigations in two perfectly distinct regions: it had at +first to determine the material facts within its competence--such as the +position of the stars, for instance, or the symptoms of a malady; it +had then to discover the beings which revealed themselves through these +material manifestations, their names and their characteristics. When +once it had obtained this information, and could lay its hands upon +them, it could compel them to work on its behalf: science was thus +nothing else than the application of magic to a particular class of +phenomena. + +The number of astronomical facts with which the Chaldaeans had made +themselves acquainted was considerable. + +[Illustration: 340.jpg CHALDAEAN MAP OF THE WORLD.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a sketch by Peiser. + +It was a question in ancient times whether they or the Egyptians had +been the first to carry their investigations into the infinite depths +of celestial space: when it came to be a question as to which of the two +peoples had made the greater progress in this branch of knowledge, all +hesitation vanished, and the pre-eminence was accorded by the ancients +to the priests of Babylon rather than to those of Heliopolis and +Memphis.* + +* Clement of Alexandria, Lucien, Diogenes Laertius, Macrobius, attribute +the origin of astronomy to the Egyptians, and Diodorus Sioulus asserts +that they were the teachers of the Babylonians; Josephus maintains, on +the contrary, that the Egyptians were the pupils of the Chaldaeans. + +[Illustration: 340.jpg ASTRONOMICAL TABLE] + +The Chaldaeans had conducted astronomical observations from remote +antiquity.* Callisthenes collected and sent to his uncle Aristotle a +number of these observations, of which the oldest had been made nineteen +hundred and three years before his time--that is, about the middle of +the twenty-third century before our era: he could have transcribed +many of a still earlier date if the archives of Babylon had been fully +accessible to him. + + * Epigenes asserts that their observations extended back to + 720,000 years before the time of Alexander, while Berossus + and Critodemus limit their antiquity to 490,000 years, which + was further reduced to 473,000 years by Diodorus, to 470,000 + by Cicero, and to 270,000 by Hipparchus. + +The Chaldaean priests had been accustomed from an early date to record on +their clay tablets the aspect of the heavens and the changes which took +place in them night after night, the appearance of the constellations, +their comparative brilliancy, the precise moments of their rising and +setting and culmination, together with the more or less rapid movements +of the planets, and their motions towards or from one another. To their +unaided eyes, sharpened by practice and favoured by the transparency +of the air, many stars were visible, as to the Egyptians, which we can +perceive only by the aid of the telescope. These thousands of brilliant +bodies, scattered apparently at random over the face of the sky, moved, +however, with perfect regularity, and the period between their departure +from and their return to the same point in the heavens was determined +at an early date: their position could be predicted at any hour, their +course in the firmament being traced so accurately that its various +stages were marked out and indicated beforehand. The moon, they +discovered, had to complete two hundred and twenty-three revolutions of +twenty-nine days and a half each, before it returned to the point from +which it had set out. This period of its career being accomplished, it +began a second of equal length, then a third, and so on, in an infinite +series, during which it traversed the same celestial houses and repeated +in them the same acts of its life: all the eclipses which it had +undergone in one period would again afflict it in another, and would +be manifest in the same places of the earth in the same order of time.* +Whether they ascribed these eclipses to some mechanical cause, or +regarded them as so many unfortunate attacks made upon Sin by the seven, +they recognized their periodical character, and they were acquainted +with the system of the two hundred and twenty-three lunations by which +their occurrence and duration could be predicted. Further observations +encouraged the astronomers to endeavour to do for the sun what they had +so successfully accomplished in regard to the moon. + + * This period of two hundred and twenty-three lunations is + that described by Ptolemy in the fourth book of his + "Astronomy," in which he deals with the average motion of + the moon. The Chaldaeans seem not to have been able to make a + skilful use of it, for their books indicate the occurrence + of lunar eclipses outside the predicted periods. + +No long experience was needed to discover the fact that the majority of +solar eclipses were followed some fourteen days and a half after by an +eclipse of the moon; but they were unable to take sufficient advantage +of this experience to predict with certainty the instant of a future +eclipse of the sun, although they had been so struck with the connection +of the two phenomena as to believe that they were in a position to +announce it approximately.* They were frequently deceived in their +predictions, and more than one eclipse which they had promised did not +take place at the time expected:** but their successful prognostications +were sufficiently frequent to console them for their failures, and to +maintain the respect of the people and the rulers for their knowledge. +Their years were vague years of three hundred and sixty days. The twelve +equal months of which they were composed bore names which were borrowed, +on the one hand, from events in civil life, such as "Simanu," from the +making of brick, and "Addaru," from the sowing of seed, and, on the +other, from mythological occurrences whose origin is still obscure, such +as "Nisanu," from the altar of Ea, and "Elul," from a message of Ishtar. +The adjustment of this year to astronomical demands was roughly carried +out by the addition of a month every six years, which was called a +second Adar, Blul, or Nisan, according to the place in which it was +intercalated. + + * Tannery is of opinion that the Chaldaeans must have + predicted eclipses of the sun by means of the period of two + hundred and twenty-three lunations, and shows by what a + simple means they could have arrived at it. + + ** An astronomer mentions, in the time of Assurbanipal, that + on the 28th, 29th, and 30th of the month he prepared for the + observation of an eclipse; but the sun continued brilliant, + and the eclipse did not take place. + +The neglect of the hours and minutes in their calculation of the length +of the year became with them, as with the Egyptians, a source of serious +embarrassment, and we are still ignorant as to the means employed +to meet the difficulty. The months had relations to the signs of the +zodiac, and the days composing them were made up of twelve double hours +each. The Chaldaens had invented two instruments, both of them of a +simple character, to measure time--the clepsydra and the solar clock, +the latter of which in later times became the source of the Greek +"polos." The sun-dial served to determine a number of simple facts +which were indispensable in astronomical calculations, such as the +four cardinal points, the meridian of the place, the solstitial and +equinoctial epochs, and the elevation of the pole at the position of +observation. The construction of the sundial and clepsydra, if not of +the polos also, is doubtless to be referred back to a very ancient date, +but none of the texts already brought to light makes mention of the +employment of these instruments.* + + * Herodotus (ii. 109) formally attributes the invention of + the sun-dial and polos to the Babylonians. The "polos" was a + solar clock. It consisted of a concave hemisphere with a + style rising from its centre: the shadow of the style + described every day an arc of a circle parallel to the + equator, and the daily parallels were divided into twelve or + twenty-four equal parts. Smith discovered, in the palace of + Sennacherib at Koyunjik, a portion of an astrolabe, which is + now in the British Museum. + +All these discoveries, which constitute in our eyes the scientific +patrimony of the Chaldaeans, were regarded by themselves as the least +important results of their investigations. Did they not know, thanks to +these investigations, that the stars shone for other purposes than to +lighten up the nights--to rule, in fact, the destinies of men and kings, +and, in ruling that of kings, to determine the fortune of empires? Their +earliest astronomers, by their assiduous contemplation of the nightly +heavens, had come to the conclusion that the vicissitudes of the +heavenly bodies were in fixed relations with mundane phenomena and +events. If Mercury, for instance, displayed an unusual brilliancy at +his rising, and his disk appeared as a two-edged sword, riches and +abundance, due to the position of the luminous halo which surrounded +him, would be scattered over Chaldaea, while discords would cease +therein, and justice would triumph over iniquity. The first observer who +was struck by this coincidence noted it down; his successors confirmed +his observations, and at length deduced, in the process of the years, +from their accumulated knowledge, a general law. Henceforward, each time +that Mercury assumed the same aspect it was of favourable augury, and +kings and their subjects became the recipients of his bounty. As long as +he maintained this appearance no foreign ruler could install himself in +Chaldaea, tyranny would be divided against itself, equity would prevail, +and a strong monarch bear sway; while the landholders and the king +would be confirmed in their privileges, and obedience, together with +tranquillity, would rule everywhere in the land. The number of these +observations increased to such a degree that it was found necessary to +classify them methodically to avoid confusion. Tables of them were drawn +up, in which the reader could see at one and the same moment the aspect +of the heavens on such and such a night and hour, and the corresponding +events either then happening, or about to happen, in Chaldaean, Syria, +or some foreign land. If, for instance, the moon displayed the same +appearance on the 1st and 27th of the month, Elam was threatened; but +"if the sun, at his setting, appears double his usual size, with +three groups of bluish rays, the King of Chaldaea is ruined." To the +indications of the heavenly bodies, the Chaldaeans added the portents +which could be deduced from atmospheric phenomena: if it thundered on +the 27th of Tammuz, the wheat-harvest would be excellent and the produce +of the ears magnificent; but if this, should occur six days later, that +is, on the 2nd of Abu, floods and rains were to be apprehended in a +short time, together with the death of the king and the division of +his empire. It was not for nothing that the sun and moon surrounded +themselves in the evening with blood-red vapours or veiled themselves +in dark clouds; that they grew suddenly pale or red after having been +intensely bright; that unexpected fires blazed out on the confines of +the air, and that on certain nights the stars seemed to have become +detached from the firmament and to be falling upon the earth. These +prodigies were so many warnings granted by the gods to the people +and their kings before great crises in human affairs: the astronomer +investigated and interpreted them, and his predictions had a greater +influence than we are prepared to believe upon the fortunes of +individuals and even of states. The rulers consulted and imposed upon +the astronomers the duty of selecting the most favourable moment for +the execution of the projects they had in view. From an early date each +temple contained a library of astrological writings, where the people +might find, drawn up as in a. code, the signs which bore upon their +destinies. One of these libraries, consisting of not less than seventy +clay tablets, is considered to have been first drawn up in the reign +of Sargon of Agade, but to have been so modified and enriched with new +examples from time to time that the original is well-nigh lost. This was +the classical work on the subject in the VIIth century before our era, +and the astronomers-royal, to whom applications were accustomed to be +made to explain a natural phenomenon or a prodigy, drew their answers +ready-made from it. Astronomy, as thus understood, was not merely the +queen of sciences, it was the mistress of the world: taught secretly +in the temples, its adepts--at least, those who had passed through the +regular curriculum of study which it required--became almost a +distinct class in society. The occupation was a lucrative one, and +its accomplished professors had numerous rivals whose educational +antecedents were unknown, but who excited the envy of the experts in +their trading upon the credulity of the people. These quacks went about +the country drawing up horoscopes, and arranging schemes of birthday +prognostications, of which the majority were without any authentic +warranty. The law sometimes took note of the fact that they were +competing with the official experts, and interfered with their business: +but if they happened to be exiled from one city, they found some +neighbouring one ready to receive them. + +Chaldaea abounded with soothsayers and necromancers no less than with +astrologers; she possessed no real school of medicine, such as we find +in Egypt, in which were taught rational methods of diagnosing maladies +and of curing them by the use of simples. The Chaldaeans were content +to confide the care of their bodies to sorcerers and exorcists, who were +experts in the art of casting out demons and spirits, whose presence in +a living being brought about those disorders to which humanity is prone. +The facial expression of the patient during the crisis, the words which +escaped from him in delirium, were, for these clever individuals, so +many signs revealing the nature and sometimes the name of the enemy +to be combated--the Fever-god, the Plague-god, the Headache-god. +Consultations and medical treatment were, therefore, religious offices, +in which were involved purifications, offerings, and a whole ritual of +mysterious words and gestures. The magician lighted a fire of herbs +and sweet-smelling plants in front of his patient, and the clear flame +arising from this put the spectres to flight and dispelled the malign +influences, a prayer describing the enchantments and their effects being +afterwards recited. "The baleful imprecation like a demon has fallen +upon a man;--wail and pain have fallen upon him,--direful wail has +fallen upon him,--the baleful imprecation, the spell, the pains in +the head!--This man, the baleful imprecation slaughters him like a +sheep,--for his god has quitted his body--his goddess has withdrawn +herself in displeasure from him,--a wail of pain has spread itself as a +garment upon him and has overtaken him!" The harm done by the magician, +though terrible, could be repaired by the gods, and Merodach was moved +to compassion betimes. Merodach cast his eyes on the patient, Merodach +entered into the house of his father Ea, saying: "My father, the baleful +curse has fallen like a demon upon the man!" Twice he thus speaks, +and then adds: "What this man ought to do, I know not; how shall he be +healed?" Ea replies to his son Merodach: "My son, what is there that I +could add to thy knowledge?--Merodach, what is there that I could add +to thy knowledge?--That which I know, thou knowest it:--go then, my son, +Merodach,--lead him to the house of purification of the god who prepares +remedies,--and break the spell that is upon him, draw away the charm +which is upon him,--the ill which afflicts his body,--which he suffers +by reason of the curse of his father,--or the curse of his mother,--or +the curse of his eldest brother,--or by the curse of a murderess who is +unknown to the man.--The curse, may it be taken from him by the charm +of Ea,--like a clove of garlic which is stripped skin by skin,--like a +cluster of dates may it be cut off,--like a bunch of flowers may it be +uprooted! The spell, may heaven avert it,--may the earth avert it!" The +god himself deigned to point out the remedy: the sick man was to take +a clove of garlic, some dates, and a stalk bearing flowers, and was to +throw them into the fire, bit by bit, repeating appropriate prayers at +each stage of the operation. "In like manner as this garlic is peeled +and thrown into the fire,--and the burning flame consumes it,--as +it will never be planted in the vegetable garden, it will never draw +moisture from the pond or from the ditch,--its root will never again +spread in the earth,--its stalk will not pierce the ground and behold +the sun,--it will not serve as food for the gods or the king,--so may it +remove the baleful curse, so may it loose the bond--of sickness, of sin, +of shortcomings, of perversity, of crime!--The sickness which is in my +body, in my flesh, in my muscles,--like this garlic may it be stripped +off,--and may the burning flame consume it in this day;--may the spell +of the sorcerer be cast out, that I may behold the light!" The ceremony +could be prolonged at will: the sick person pulled to pieces the cluster +of dates, the bunch of flowers, a fleece of wool, some goats' hair, a +skein of dyed thread, and a bean, which were all in turn consumed in +the fire. At each stage of the operation he repeated the formula, +introducing into it one or two expressions characterizing the nature of +the particular offering; as, for instance, "the dates will no more hang +from their stalks, the leaves of the branch will never again be united +to the tree, the wool and the hair will never again lie on the back +of the animal on which they grew, and will never be used for weaving +garments." The use of magical words was often accompanied by remedies, +which were for the most part both grotesque and disgusting in their +composition: they comprised bitter or stinking wood-shavings, raw meat, +snake's flesh, wine and oil, the whole reduced to a pulp, or made into +a sort of pill and swallowed on the chance of its bringing relief. The +Egyptian physicians employed similar compounds, to which they +attributed wonderful effects, but they made use of them in exceptional +circumstances only. The medical authorities in Chaldaea recommended them +before all others, and their very strangeness reassured the patient as +to their efficacy: they filled the possessing spirits with disgust, and +became a means of relief owing to the invincible horror with which +they inspired the persecuting demons. The Chaldaeans were not, however, +ignorant of the natural virtues of herbs, and at times made use of them; +but they were not held in very high esteem, and the physicians preferred +the prescriptions which pandered to the popular craving for the +supernatural. Amulets further confirmed the effect produced by the +recipes, and prevented the enemy, once cast out, from re-entering the +body; these amulets were made of knots of cord, pierced shells, bronze +or terra-cotta statuettes, and plaques fastened to the arms or worn +round the neck. On each of the latter kind were roughly drawn the most +terrible images that they could conceive, a shortened incantation +was scrawled on its surface, or it was covered with extraordinary +characters, which when the spirits perceived they at once took flight, +and the possessor of the talisman escaped the threatened illness. + +However laughable, and at the same time deplorable, this hopeless medley +of exact knowledge and gross superstition may appear to us at the +present day, it was the means of bringing a prosperity to the cities of +Chaldaea which no amount of actual science would ever have produced. The +neighbouring barbaric peoples were imbued with the same ideas as the +Chaldaens regarding the constitution of the world and the nature of the +laws which governed it. They lived likewise in perpetual fear of those +invisible beings whose changeable and arbitrary will actuated all +visible phenomena; they attributed all the reverses and misfortunes +which overtook them to the direct action of these malevolent beings; +they believed firmly in the influence of stars on the course of events; +they were constantly on the look out for prodigies, and were greatly +alarmed by them, since they had no certain knowledge of the number and +nature of their enemies, and the means they had invented for protecting +themselves from them or of overcoming them too often proved inefficient. +In the eyes of these barbarians, the Chaldeans seemed to be possessed of +the very powers which they themselves lacked. The magicians of Chaldaea +had forced the demons to obey them and to unmask themselves before them; +they read with ease in the heavens the present and future of men and +nations; they interpreted the will of the immortals in its smallest +manifestations, and with them this faculty was not a limited and +ephemeral power, quickly exhausted by use: the rites and formulas known +to them enabled them to exercise it freely at all times, in all places, +alike upon the most exalted of the gods and the most dreaded of mortals, +without its ever becoming weakened. + +[Illustration:352.jpg A CHALDAEAN AMULET.] + + Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a sketch by Loftus. The + original is in the British Museum. + +A race so endowed with wisdom was, indeed, destined to triumph over +its neighbours, and the latter would have no chance of resisting such +a nation unless they borrowed from it its manners, customs, industry, +writing, and all the arts and sciences which had brought about their +superiority. Chaldaeann civilization spread into Elam and took possession +of the inhabitants of the shores of the Persian Gulf, and then, since +its course was impeded on the south by the sea, on the west by the +desert, and on the east by the mountains, it turned in the direction of +the great northern plains and proceeded up the two rivers, beside whose +lower waters it had been cradled. It was at this very time that the +Pharaohs of the XIIIth dynasty had just completed the conquest of +Nubia. Greater Egypt, made what she was by the efforts of twenty +generations, had become an African power. The sea formed her northern +boundary, the desert and the mountains enclosed her on all sides, and +the Nile appeared the only natural outlet into a new world: she followed +it indefatigably from one cataract to another, colonizing as she passed +all the lands fertilized by its waters. Every step which she made in +this direction increased the distance between her capitals and the +Mediterranean, and brought her armies further south. Asia would have +practically ceased to exist, as far as Egypt was concerned, had not the +repeated incursions of the Bedouin obliged her to make advances from +time to time in that direction; still she crossed the frontier as seldom +as possible, and recalled her troops as soon as they had reduced the +marauders to order: Ethiopia alone attracted her, and it was there that +she firmly established her empire. The two great civilized peoples of +the ancient world, therefore, had each their field of action clearly +marked out, and neither of them had ever ventured into that of the +other. There had been no lack of intercourse between them, and the +encounter of their armies, if it ever really had taken place, had been +accidental, had merely produced passing results, and up till then had +terminated without bringing to either side a decisive advantage. + +[Illustration: 354.jpg MAGIC NAIL OF TERRA COTTA] + +[Illustration: 355.jpg EGYPTIAN CORNICE BEARING THE CARTOUCHES OF RAMSES +I.] + + + + +APPENDIX--THE PHARAOHS OF THE ANCIENT AND MIDDLE EMPIRES + +(Dynasties I.-XIV.) + + +The lists of the Pharaohs of the Memphite period appear to have been +drawn up in much the same order as we now possess them, as early as +the XIIth dynasty: it is certain that the sequence was definitely fixed +about the time of the XXth dynasty, since it was under this that the +Canon of Turin was copied. The lists which have come down to us appear +to follow two traditions, which differ completely in certain cases: +one has been preserved for us by the abbreviators of Manetho, while +the other was the authority followed by the compilers of the tables of +Abydos and Saqqara, as well as by the author of the Turin Papyrus. + +There appear to have been in the first five dynasties a certain number +of kings whose exact order and filiation were supposed to be well known +to the compilers; but, at the same time, there were others whose names +were found on the monuments, but whose position with regard to their +predecessors was indicated neither by historical documents nor by +popular romance. We find, therefore, in these two traditional lists +a series of sovereigns always occupying the same position, and others +hovering around them, who have no decided place. The hieroglyphic lists +and the Royal Canon appear to have been chiefly concerned with the +former; but the authorities followed by Manetho have studiously +collected the names of the latter, and have intercalated them in +different places, sometimes in the middle, but mostly at the end of the +dynasty, where they form a kind of _caput mortuum_. The most striking +example of this arrangement is afforded us in the IVth dynasty. The +contemporary monuments show that its kings formed a compact group, to +which are appended the first three sovereigns of the Vth dynasty, +always in the same order: Menkauri succeeded Khafri, Shopsiskaf followed +Menkauri, Usirkaf followed Shopsiskaf, and so on to the end. The lists +of Manetho suppress Shopsiskaf, and substitute four other individuals +in his place, namely, Katoises, Bikheris, Seberkheres, Thamphthis, whose +reigns must have occupied more than half a century; these four were +doubtless aspirants to the throne, or local kings belonging to the time +between the IVth and Vth dynasties, whom Manetho's authorities inserted +between the compact groups made up of Kheops and his sons on the one +hand, and of Usirkaf and his two real of supposed brothers on the other, +omitting Shopsiskaf, and having no idea that Usirkaf was his immediate +successor, with or without rivals to the throne. + +In a course of lectures given at the _College de France_ (1893-95), I +have examined at length the questions raised by a study of the various +lists, and I may be able, perhaps, some day to publish the result of +my researches: for the present I must confine myself merely to what +is necessary to the elucidation of the present work, namely, the +Manethonian tradition on the one hand, and the tradition of the +monumental tables on the other. The text which I propose to follow for +the latter, during the first five dynasties, is that of the second table +of Abydos; the names placed between brackets [ ] are taken either from +the table of Saqqara or from the Royal Canon of Turin. The numbers of +the years, months, and days are those furnished by the last-mentioned +document. + +[Illustration: 357.jpg LISTS OF THE PHARAOHS OF THE ANCIENT EMPIRE] + +[Illustration: 358.jpg LISTS ON THE MONUMENTS] + +From the VIth to the XIIth dynasty, the lists of Manetho are at fault: +they give the origin and duration of the dynasties, without furnishing +us with the names of the kings. + +[Illustration: 359.jpg LISTS ON THE MONUMENTS] + +This blank is partially filled by the table of Abydos, by the fragments +of the Turin Papyrus, and by information supplied by the monuments. No +such definitely established sequence appears to have existed for this +period, as for the preceding ones. The Heracleopolitan dynasties +figure, perhaps, in the Canon of Turin only; as for the later Memphite +dynasties, the table of Abydos gives one series of Pharaohs, while the +Canon adopts a different one. After the close of the VIth dynasty, and +before the accession of the IXth, there was, doubtless, a period when +several branches of the royal family claimed the supremacy and ruled in +different parts of Egypt: this is what we know to have taken place later +between the XXIInd and the XXIVth dynasties. The tradition of Abydos +had, perhaps, adopted one of these contemporaneous dynasties, while +the Turin Papyrus had chosen another: Manetho, on the other hand, +had selected from among them, as representatives of the legitimate +succession, the line reigning at Memphis which immediately followed +the sovereigns of the VIth dynasty. The following table gives both the +series known, as far as it is possible for the present to re-establish +the order:-- + +[Illustration: 360.jpg LISTS ON THE MONUMENTS] + +The XIth (Theban) dynasty contains but a small number of kings according +to the official lists. The tables on the monuments recognize only two, +Nibkhrouri and Sonkhkari, but the Turin Canon admits at least half a +dozen. These differences probably arose from the fact that, the second +Heracleopolitan dynasty having reigned at the same time as the earlier +Theban princes, the tables on the monuments, while rejecting the +Heracleopolitans, recognized as legitimate Pharaohs only those of the +Theban kings who had ruled over the whole of Egypt, namely, the first +and last of the series; the Canon, on the contrary, replaced the later +Heracleopolitans by those among the contemporary Thebans who had +assumed the royal titles. Whatever may have been the cause of these +combinations, we find the lists again harmonizing with the accession of +the XIIth (Theban) dynasty. + +For the succeeding dynasties we possess merely the names enumerated on +the fragments of the Turin Papyrus, several of which, however, are +also found either in the royal chamber at Karnak, or on contemporary +monuments. The order of the names is not always certain: it is, perhaps, +best to transcribe the sequence as we are able to gather it from the +fragments of the Royal Papyrus, without attempting to distinguish +between those which belong to the XIIIth and those which must be. +relegated to the following dynasties. + +[Illustration: 361.jpg LISTS ON THE MONUMENTS] + +About fifty names still remain, but so mutilated and scattered over +such small fragments of papyrus, that their order is most uncertain. We +possess monuments of about one-fifth of these kings, and the lengths of +their reigns, as far as we know them, all appear to have been short: +we have no reason to doubt that they did really govern, and we can only +hope that in time the progress of excavation will yield us records of +them one after another. They bring us down to the period of the invasion +of the Shepherds, and it is possible that some among them may be found +to be contemporaries of the XVth and XVIth dynasties. + +[Illustration: 362.jpg Tailpiece] + + + + + +End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of History Of Egypt, Chaldaea, Syria, +Babylonia, and Assyria, Volume 3 (of 12), by G. 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