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authorRoger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org>2025-10-15 04:50:53 -0700
committerRoger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org>2025-10-15 04:50:53 -0700
commit3a180f38464d5bd7144174416f1f03ed4b58f638 (patch)
tree51dfae1298b424275193b8725a5e6e49c254a67e /17327-h
initial commit of ebook 17327HEADmain
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+<?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, by Maspero, Volume 7
+ </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, Chaldæa, Syria,
+Babylonia, and Assyria, Volume 7 (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, Chaldæa, Syria, Babylonia, and Assyria, Volume 7 (of 12)
+
+Author: G. Maspero
+
+Editor: A.H. Sayce
+
+Translator: M.L. McClure
+
+Release Date: December 16, 2005 [EBook #17327]
+Last Updated: September 8, 2016
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HISTORY OF EGYPT, CHALDÆA ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Widger
+
+
+
+
+Character set: ISO-8859-1
+
+
+</pre>
+
+ <p>
+ <br /> <a name="linkimage-0001" id="linkimage-0001">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/spines.jpg" width="100%" alt="Spines " />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0002" id="linkimage-0002">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/cover.jpg" width="100%" alt="Cover " />
+ </div>
+ <h1>
+ HISTORY OF EGYPT <br /><br /> CHALDEA, SYRIA, BABYLONIA, AND ASSYRIA
+ </h1>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ By G. MASPERO, <br /><br /> Honorable Doctor of Civil Laws, and Fellow of
+ Queen&rsquo;s College, <br /> Oxford; Member of the Institute and Professor at
+ the College of France
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ Edited by A. H. SAYCE, <br /> Professor of Assyriology, Oxford
+ </h3>
+ <h4>
+ Translated by M. L. McCLURE, <br /> Member of the Committee of the Egypt
+ Exploration Fund
+ </h4>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ CONTAINING OVER TWELVE HUNDRED COLORED PLATES AND ILLUSTRATIONS
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ Volume VII.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ LONDON <br /> THE GROLIER SOCIETY <br /> PUBLISHERS
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/frontispiece.jpg" width="100%" alt="Frontispiece " />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ <br /> Slumber Song&mdash;After painting bv P. Grot. Johann <br /> <br /> <a
+ name="linkimage-0004" id="linkimage-0004">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/titlepage.jpg" width="100%" alt="Titlepage " />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0005" id="linkimage-0005">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img alt="001 (150K)" src="images/001.jpg" width="100%" />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img alt="002 (159K)" src="images/002.jpg" width="100%" />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ <i>THE ASSYRIAN REVIVAL AND THE STRUGGLE FOR SYRIA</i>
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <i>ASSUR-NAZIR-PAL (885-860 B.C.) AND SHALMANESER III. (860-825 B.C.)&mdash;THE
+ KINGDOM OF URARTU AND ITS CONQUERING PRINCES: MENUAS AND ARGISTIS.</i>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>The line of Assyrian kings after Assurirba, and the Babylonian
+ dynasties: the war between Rammân-nirâri III. and Shamash-mudammiq; his
+ victories over Babylon; Tukulti-ninip II. (890-885 B.C.)&mdash;The empire
+ at the accession of Assur-nazir-pal: the Assyrian army and the progress of
+ military tactics; cavalry, military engines; the condition of Assyria&rsquo;s
+ neighbours, methods of Assyrian conquest.</i>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>The first campaigns of Assur-nazir-pal in Nairi and on the Khabur
+ (885-882 B.C.): Zamua reduced to an Assyrian province (881 B.C.)&mdash;The
+ fourth campaign in Naîri and the war on the Euphrates (880 B.C.); the
+ first conquest of BU-Adini&mdash;Northern Syria at the opening of the IXth
+ century: its civilisation, arts, army, and religion&mdash;The submission
+ of the Hittite states and of the Patina: the Assyrians reach the
+ Mediterranean.</i>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>The empire after the wars of Assur-nazir-pal&mdash;Building of the
+ palace at Calah: Assyrian architecture and sculpture in the IXth century&mdash;The
+ tunnel of Negub and the palace of Balawât&mdash;The last years of
+ Assur-nazir-pal: His campaign of the year 867 in Naîri&mdash;The death of
+ Assur-nazir-pal (860 B.C.); his character.</i>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Shalmaneser III. (860-825 B.C.): the state of the empire at his
+ accession&mdash;Urartu: its physical features, races, towns, temples, its
+ deities&mdash;Shalmaneser&rsquo;s first campaign in Urartu: he penetrates as far
+ as Lake Van (860 B.C.)&mdash;The conquest of Bît-Adini and of Naîri
+ (859-855 B.C.)</i>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>The attack on Damascus: the battle of Qarqar (854 B.C.) and the war
+ against Babylon (852-851 B.C.)&mdash;The alliance between Judah and
+ Israel, the death of Ahab (853 B.C.); Damascus successfully resists the
+ attacks of Assyria (849-846 B.C.)&mdash;Moab delivered from Israel, Mesha;
+ the death of Ben-hadad (Adadidri) and the accession of Hazael; the fall of
+ the house of Omri-Jehu (843 B.C.)&mdash;The defeat of Hazael and the
+ homage of Jehu (842-839 B.C.). Wars in Cilicia and in Namri (838-835
+ B.c.): the last battles of Shalmaneser III.; his building works, the
+ revolt of Assur-dain-pal&mdash;Samsi-rammân IV. (825-812 B.C.), his first
+ three expeditions, his campaigns against Babylon&mdash;Bammdn-nirdri IV,
+ (812-783 B.C.)&mdash;Jehu, Athaliah, Joash: the supremacy of Hazael over
+ Israel and Judah&mdash;Victory of Bammdn-nirdri over Mari, and the
+ submission of all Syria to the Assyrians (803 B.C.).</i>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>The growth of Urartu: the conquests of Menuas and Argistis I., their
+ victories over Assyria&mdash;Shalmaneser IV. (783-772 B.C.)&mdash;Assurdân
+ III. (772-754 B.C.)&mdash;Assur-niruri III. (754-745 B.C.)&mdash;The
+ downfall of Assyria and the triumph of Urartu.</i>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <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&mdash;THE ASSYRIAN REVIVAL AND THE
+ STRUGGLE FOR SYRIA </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkB2HCH0001"> CHAPTER II&mdash;TIGLATH-PILESER III. AND THE
+ ORGANISATION OF THE ASSYRIAN </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkC2HCH0001"> CHAPTER III&mdash;SARGON OF ASSYRIA (722-705
+ B.C.) </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"> Spines </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0002"> Cover </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0004"> Titlepage </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0005"> 002.jpg Page Image </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0006"> 003.jpg Page Image </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0007"> 006.jpg Table of Kings </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0008"> 009.jpg an Assyrian Horseman Armed With the
+ Sword </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0009"> 010.jpg a Mounted Assyrian Archer With
+ Attendant </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0010"> 012.jpg the Movable Sow Making a Breach in
+ The Wall of A Fortress </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0011"> 013.jpg the Turreted Battering-ram Attacking
+ The Walls Of A Town </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0012"> 014.jpg the Besieged Endeavouring to Cripple
+ Or Destroy The Battering-ram </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0013"> 017.jpg the Escarpments of The Zab </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0014"> 021.jpg the Campaigns of Assur-nazir-pal in
+ Nairi </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0015"> 022.jpg the Site of Shadikanni at Arban, on
+ The Khabur </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0016"> 024.jpg One of the Winged Bulls Found at
+ Arban </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0017"> 024b.jpg No. 1. Enameled Brick (nimrod). No.
+ 2. Fragment Of Mural Painting (nimrod). </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0018"> 025.jpg Stele from Arban </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0019"> 033.jpg the Campaigns of Assur-nazir-pal in
+ Zamua </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0020"> 037.jpg the Zab Below The Passes of Alan, The
+ Ancient Ilaniu </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0021"> 044.jpg the Campaigns of Assur-nazir-pal in
+ Mesopotamia </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0022"> 050.jpg Campaigns of Assur-nazir-pal in Syria
+ </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0023"> 052.jpg Bas-relief from a Building at
+ Sinjirli </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0024"> 053.jpg JibrÎn, a Village of Conical Huts, on
+ the Plateau Of Aleppo </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0025"> 054.jpg the War-chariot of The KhÂti Op The
+ Ninth Century </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0026"> 055.jpg the Assyrian War-chariot of The Ninth
+ Century B.c. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0027"> 056.jpg a King of the KhÂti Hunting A Lion in
+ His Chariot </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0028"> 057.jpg the God Hadad </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0029"> 058.jpg Religious Scene Displaying Egyptian
+ Features </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0030"> 067.jpg the Mounds of Calah </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0031"> 068.jpg Stele of Assur-nazir-pal at Calah
+ </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0032"> 070.jpg the Winged Bulls Op Assur-nazir-pal
+ </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0033"> 071.jpg Glazed Tile from Palace of Calah </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0034"> 072.jpg Lion from Assur-nazir-pal&rsquo;s Palace
+ </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0035"> 074.jpg a Corner of the Ruined Palace Of
+ Assur-nazir-pal </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0036"> 077.jpg Shalmaneser Iii. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0037"> 079.jpg the Two Peaks of Mount Ararat </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0038"> 080.jpg End of the Harvest&mdash;cutting
+ Straw </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0039"> 082.jpg the Kingdom of Uratu </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0040"> 083.jpg Fragment of a Votive Shield Of
+ Urartian Work </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0041"> 084.jpg Site of an Urartian Town at
+ Toprah-kaleh </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0042"> 085.jpg the Ruins of a Palace Of Urartu at
+ Toprah-kaleh </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0043"> 086.jpg Temple of Khaldis at Muzazir </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0044"> 089.jpg Assyrian Soldiers Carrying off Or
+ Destroying The Furniture of an Urartian Temple </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0045"> 090.jpg Shalmanesee Iii. Crossing the
+ Mountains </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0046"> 093.jpg the People of Shugunia Fighting
+ Against The Assyrians </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0047"> 094.jpg Prisoners from Shugunia, With Their
+ Arms Tied And Yokes on Their Necks </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0048"> 094b.jpg Sacrifice Offered by Shalmaneser
+ Iii. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0049"> 095.jpg Costumes Found in the Fifth Tomb </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0050"> 100.jpg Shua, King of Gilzan, Bringing a
+ War-horse Fully Caparisoned to Shalmaneser </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0051"> 101.jpg Dromedaries from Gilzan </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0052"> 102.jpg Tribute from Gilzan </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0053"> 105.jpg Tribute from Garparuda, King of the
+ Patina </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0054"> 123.jpg the Moabite Stone of Stele Of Mesha
+ </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0055"> 131.jpg Jehu, King of Israel, Sends Presents
+ To Shalmaneser </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0056"> 134.jpg a Mountain Village </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0057"> 137.jpg Elephant and Monkeys Brought As a
+ Tribute To Nineveh by the People of Muzbi </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0059"> 142.jpg Stag and Lions of the Country Of
+ Sukhi </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0060"> 144.jpg the Bronze-covered Gates of BalawÀt
+ </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0061"> 156.jpg Triumphal Stele of Menuas at Kelishin
+ </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0062"> 164.jpg Urartian Stele on the Rocks of
+ Ak-keupbu </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkimage-0063"> 169.jpg Table of the Dynasty Of The Kings Of
+ Assyria </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkBimage-0005"> 173.jpg Page Image </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkBimage-0006"> 174.jpg Page Image </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkBimage-0007"> 180.jpg a Vista of the Asianic Steppe </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkBimage-0008"> 188.jpg Specimens of Hebrew Pottery </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkBimage-0009"> 189.jpg Israelites of the Higher Class in
+ The Time Of Shalmaneser Iii </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkBimage-0010"> 190.jpg JudÆan Peasants </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkBimage-0011"> 200.jpg Prayer at Sunset </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkBimage-0012"> 200-text.jpg </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkBimage-0013"> 202.jpg Egyptian Altar at Deik-el-bahari
+ </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkBimage-0014"> 216.jpg Map of Campaigns Of Tiglath-pileser
+ Iii. In Media </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkBimage-0015"> 218.jpg Principal Pak of Mount Bikni
+ (demavend) </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkBimage-0016"> 221.jpg View of the Mountains Which Guard
+ The Southern Border of Uartu </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkBimage-0017"> 226a.jpg Plan of the Ancient City Of
+ Zinjirli. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkBimage-0018"> 226b.jpg One of the Gates Of Zinjirli
+ Restored </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkBimage-0019"> 227.jpg Bird&rsquo;s-eye View of the Royal Castle
+ Of Zinjirli As Restored </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkBimage-0020"> 232.jpg Tiglath-pileser Iii. In his State
+ Chariot </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkBimage-0021"> 235.jpg the Rock and Citadel of Van at The
+ Present Day </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkBimage-0022"> 236.jpg Entrance to the Modern Citadel of
+ Van from The Westward </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkBimage-0023"> 241.jpg Hebrew Inscription on the Siloam
+ Aqueduct </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkBimage-0024"> 242.jpg Bronze </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkBimage-0025"> 243.jpg the Great Temple of Bubastis
+ Duringnaville&rsquo;s Excavations </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkBimage-0026"> 244.jpg Picture in the Hall of The Harps In
+ The Fifth Tomb </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkBimage-0027"> 245.jpg Gate of the Festival Hall at
+ Bubastis </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkBimage-0028"> 248.jpg Small Bronze Sphinx of Siamun </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkBimage-0029"> 249.jpg Ruins of the Temple at Khninsu After
+ Naville&rsquo;s Excavations </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkBimage-0030"> 252.jpg Table of Pharaohs Of the Xxiith
+ Dynasty </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkBimage-0031"> 253.jpg King Petubastis at Prayer </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkBimage-0032"> 255.jpg View of a Part Of the Ruins Of
+ Napata </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkBimage-0033"> 256.jpg Gebel-barkal, the Sacred Mountain of
+ Napata </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkBimage-0034"> 257.jpg Ruins of the Temple Of Amon at
+ Napata </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkBimage-0035"> 258.jpg Plan of the Temple Of Amon at Napata
+ </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkBimage-0036"> 260a.jpg a Nearly Pure Ethiopian Type </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkBimage-0037"> 260b.jpg Mixed Negro and Ethiopian Type </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkBimage-0038"> 262.jpg Map of Middle Egypt During the
+ Campaign Of Pionkhi </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkBimage-0039"> 262.jpg Ruins of Oxyrrhynchos and the Modern
+ Town Of Bahnesa </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkBimage-0040"> 266.jpg King NamrÔti Leading a Horse to
+ PiÔnkhi </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkBimage-0041"> 267.jpg Ruins of the Temple Of Thoth, at
+ Hermopolis The Great </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkBimage-0042"> 276.jpg King Tafnakhti Presents a Field to
+ Tumu and To Bastit </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkBimage-0043"> 282.jpg Map the Kingdom of Damascus </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkBimage-0044"> 288.jpg Mount Hermon </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkBimage-0045"> 289.jpg an Arab </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkBimage-0046"> 289b.jpg List of the Kings Of Damascus </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkBimage-0047"> 290.jpg Arab Meharis Ridden Down by the
+ Assyrian Cavalry </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkBimage-0048"> 292.jpg Table of This Babylonian Dynasty
+ </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkBimage-0049"> 294.jpg a Kaldu </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkBimage-0050"> 298.jpg Map of the Assyrian Empire Under
+ Tiglath-pileser Iii. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkBimage-0051"> 312.jpg Tiglath-pileser Iii. Besieging a
+ Revellious City. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkBimage-0052"> 314.jpg a Herd of Horses Brought in As
+ Tribute </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkBimage-0053"> 315.jpg a Typical Cappadocian Horse </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkBimage-0054"> 316.jpg a Syrian BÎt-khilÂni </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkBimage-0055"> 317.jpg the Foundatins of a Bît-khil.ni </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkBimage-0056"> 318.jpg Base of a Column at Zinjireli </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkBimage-0057"> 320.jpg Stele Or Bel-harran-beluzur. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkBimage-0058"> 322.jpg Manuscript on Papyrus in
+ Hieroglyphics </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkBimage-0059"> 323.jpg Cone Bearing the Name of Kashta and
+ Of His Daughter Amenertas </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkBimage-0060"> 328.jpg the Sword Dance </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkBimage-0061"> 333.jpg Table of Kings Of Israel </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkBimage-0062"> 334.jpg Sargon of Assyria and his Vizier
+ </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkBimage-0063"> 336.jpg Tailpiece </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkCimage-0005"> 337.jpg Page Image </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkCimage-0006"> 338.jpg Page Image </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkCimage-0007"> 339.jpg Page Image </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkCimage-0008"> 343.jpg Assyrian Soldiers Pursuing Kalda
+ Refugees in A Bed of Reeds </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkCimage-0009"> 344.jpg a Reed-hut of the Bedawin Of Irak
+ </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkCimage-0010"> 346.jpg Brick Bearing the Name of The Susian
+ King Shilkhak-inshushinak </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkCimage-0011"> 348.jpg Bas-relief of Nakam-sin, Tkansported
+ to Susa By Shutkuk-nakhunta </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkCimage-0012"> 349.jpg the Great Rock Bas-relief of MalamÎr
+ </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkCimage-0013"> 356.jpg IaubÎdi of Hamath Being Flayed
+ Alive. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkCimage-0014"> 364.jpg Taking of a Castle in Zikartu </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkCimage-0015"> 369.jpg Taking of the City Of KishÎsim by
+ The Assyrians </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkCimage-0016"> 372.jpg the Town of BÎt-bagaÎa Burnt by The
+ Assyrians </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkCimage-0017"> 373.jpg Table of Dynasties Of Tanis and Sais
+ </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkCimage-0018"> 374.jpg King Bocchoris Giving Judgment
+ Between Two Women, Rival Claimants to a Child </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkCimage-0019"> 375.jpg Sabaco </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkCimage-0020"> 378.jpg Taking of a Town in Urartu by the
+ Assyrians </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkCimage-0021"> 379.jpg the Seal of Urzana, King Of MuzazÎr
+ </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkCimage-0022"> 379.jpg the Assyrians Taking a Median Town
+ </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkCimage-0023"> 396.jpb Stele at Larnaka </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkCimage-0024"> 398.jpg Plan of the Royal City Of
+ Dur-sharrukÎn </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkCimage-0025"> 400.jpg Part of the Enamelled Course Of a
+ Gate </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkCimage-0026"> 402.jpg Bird&rsquo;s Eye View of Sargon&rsquo;s Palace
+ At Dur-sharrukîn </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkCimage-0027"> 403.jpg One of the Gates Of The Palace at
+ Dur-sharrukÎn </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkCimage-0028"> 404.jpg Plan of the Excavated Portions Of
+ The Palace At Dur-sharrukÎn </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkCimage-0029"> 405.jpg One of the Bronze Lions from
+ Dur-sharrukÎn </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkCimage-0030"> 406.jpg a Hunting Expedition in the Woods
+ Near Dur-sharrukÎn </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkCimage-0031"> 408.jpg the Ziggurat at Dur-sharrukin </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkCimage-0032"> 409.jpg Section of a Bedroom in the Harem
+ </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#linkCimage-0033"> 410.jpg Main Door of the Harem at
+ Duk-sharrukÎn </a>
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br /> <a name="link2HCH0001" id="link2HCH0001">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a> <a name="linkimage-0006" id="linkimage-0006">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/003.jpg" width="100%" alt="003.jpg Page Image " />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER I&mdash;THE ASSYRIAN REVIVAL AND THE STRUGGLE FOR SYRIA
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <i>Assur-nazir-pal (885-860) and Shalmaneser III. (860-825)&mdash;The
+ kingdom of Urartu and its conquering princes: Menuas and Argistis.</i>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Assyria was the first to reappear on the scene of action. Less hampered by
+ an ancient past than Egypt and Chaldæa, she was the sooner able to recover
+ her strength after any disastrous crisis, and to assume again the
+ offensive along the whole of her frontier line.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Image Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a bas-relief at Koyunjik
+ of the time of Sennacherib. The initial cut, which is also
+ by Faucher-Gudin, represents the broken obelisk of Assur-
+ nazir-pal, the bas-reliefs of which are as yet unpublished.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ During the years immediately following the ephemeral victories and
+ reverses of Assurirba, both the country and its rulers are plunged in the
+ obscurity of oblivion. Two figures at length, though at what date is
+ uncertain, emerge from the darkness&mdash;a certain Irbarammân and an
+ Assur-nadinakhê II., whom we find engaged in building palaces and making a
+ necropolis. They were followed towards 950 by a Tiglath-pileser II., of
+ whom nothing is known but his name.* He in his turn was succeeded about
+ the year 935 by one Assurdân II., who appears to have concentrated his
+ energies upon public works, for we hear of him digging a canal to supply
+ his capital with water, restoring the temples and fortifying towns.
+ Kammân-nirâri III., who followed him in 912, stands out more distinctly
+ from the mists which envelop the history of this period; he repaired the
+ gate of the Tigris and the adjoining wall at Assur, he enlarged its
+ principal sanctuary, reduced several rebellious provinces to obedience,
+ and waged a successful warfare against the neighbouring inhabitants of
+ Karduniash. Since the extinction of the race of Nebuchadrezzar I., Babylon
+ had been a prey to civil discord and foreign invasion. The Aramaean tribes
+ mingled with, or contiguous to the remnants of the Cossoans bordering on
+ the Persian gulf, constituted possibly, even at this period, the powerful
+ nation of the Kaldâ.**
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Our only knowledge of Tiglath-pileser II. is from a brick,
+ on which he is mentioned as being the grandfather of Rammân-
+ nirâri II.
+
+ ** The names Chaldæa and Chaldæans being ordinarily used to
+ designate the territory and people of Babylon, I shall
+ employ the term Kaldu or Kaldâ in treating of the Aramæan
+ tribes who constituted the actual Chaldæan nation.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ It has been supposed, not without probability, that a certain
+ Simashshikhu, Prince of the Country of the Sea, who immediately followed
+ the last scion of the line of Pashê,* was one of their chiefs. He
+ endeavoured to establish order in the city, and rebuilt the temple of the
+ Sun destroyed by the nomads at Sippar, but at the end of eighteen years he
+ was assassinated. His son Eâmukinshurnu remained at the head of affairs
+ some three to six months; Kashshu-nadinakhê ruled three or six years, at
+ the expiration of which a man of the house of Bâzi, Eulbar-shakinshumi by
+ name, seized upon the crown.** His dynasty consisted of three members,
+ himself included, and it was overthrown after a duration of twenty years
+ by an Elamite, who held authority for another seven.***
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The name of this prince has been read Simbarshiku by
+ Peiser, a reading adopted by Rost; Simbarshiku would have
+ been shortened into Sibir, and we should have to identify it
+ with that of the Sibir mentioned by Assur-nazir-pal in his
+ Annals, col. ii. 1. 84, as a king of Karduniash who lived
+ before his (Assur-nazir-pal&rsquo;s) time (see p. 38 of the
+ present volume).
+
+ ** The name of this king may be read Edubarshakîn-shumi. The
+ house of Bâzi takes its name from an ancestor who must have
+ founded it at some unknown date, but who never reigned in
+ Chaldæa. Winckler has with reason conjectured that the name
+ subsequently lost its meaning to the Babylonians, and that
+ they confused the Chaldæan house of Bâzi with the Arab
+ country of Bâzu: this may explain why in his dynasties
+ Berosos attributes an Arab origin to that one which
+ comprises the short-lived line of Bît-Bâzi.
+
+ *** Our knowledge of these events is derived solely from the
+ texts of the Babylonian Canon published and translated by G.
+ Smith, by Pinches, and by Sayce. The inscription of
+ Nabubaliddin informs us that Kashu-nadînakhê and Eulbar-
+ shâkinshumu continued the works begun by Simashshiku in the
+ temple of the Sun at Sippar.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ It was a period of calamity and distress, during which the Arabs or the
+ Aramæans ravaged the country, and pillaged without compunction not only
+ the property of the inhabitants, but also that of the gods. The Elamite
+ usurper having died about the year 1030, a Babylonian of noble extraction
+ expelled the intruders, and succeeded in bringing the larger part of the
+ kingdom under his rule.*
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ * The names of the first kings of this dynasty are destroyed in the copies
+ of the Royal Canon which have come down to us. The three preceding
+ dynasties are restored as follows:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0007" id="linkimage-0007">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/006.jpg" width="100%" alt="006.jpg Table of Kings " />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Five or six of his descendants had passed away, and a certain
+ Shamash-mudammiq was feebly holding the reins of government, when the
+ expeditions of Rammân-nirâri III. provoked war afresh between Assyria and
+ Babylon. The two armies encountered each other once again on their former
+ battlefield between the Lower Zab and the Turnat. Shamash-mudammiq, after
+ being totally routed near the Yalmân mountains, did not long survive, and
+ Naboshumishkun, who succeeded him, showed neither more ability nor energy
+ than his predecessor. The Assyrians wrested from him the fortresses of
+ Bambala and Bagdad, dislodged him from the positions where he had
+ entrenched himself, and at length took him prisoner while in flight, and
+ condemned him to perpetual captivity.*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Shamash-mudammiq appears to have died about 900.
+ Naboshumishkun probably reigned only one or two years, from
+ 900 to 899 or to 898. The name of his successor is destroyed
+ in the <i>Synchronous History</i>; it might be Nabubaliddin, who
+ seems to have had a long life, but it is wiser, until fresh
+ light is thrown on the subject, to admit that it is some
+ prince other than Nabubaliddin, whose name is as yet unknown
+ to us.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ His successor abandoned to the Assyrians most of the districts situated on
+ the left bank of the Lower Zab between the Zagros mountains and the
+ Tigris, and peace, which was speedily secured by a double marriage,
+ remained unbroken for nearly half a century. Tukulti-ninip II. was fond of
+ fighting; &ldquo;he overthrew his adversaries and exposed their heads upon
+ stakes,&rdquo; but, unlike his predecessor, he directed his efforts against
+ Naîri and the northern and western tribes. We possess no details of his
+ campaigns; we can only surmise that in six years, from 890 to 885,* he
+ brought into subjection the valley of the Upper Tigris and the mountain
+ provinces which separate it from the Assyrian plain. Having reached the
+ source of the river, he carved, beside the image of Tiglath-pileser I.,
+ the following inscription, which may still be read upon the rock. &ldquo;With
+ the help of Assur, Shamash, and Rammân, the gods of his religion, he
+ reached this spot. The lofty mountains he subjugated from the sun-rising
+ to its down-setting; victorious, irresistible, he came hither, and like
+ unto the lightning he crossed the raging rivers.&rdquo; **
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The parts preserved of the Eponym canon begin their record
+ in 893, about the end of the reign of Rammân-nirâri IL The
+ line which distinguishes the two reigns from one another is
+ drawn between the name of the personage who corresponds to
+ the year 890, and that of Tukulti-ninip who corresponds to
+ the year 889: Tukulti-ninip II., therefore, begins his reign
+ in 890, and his death is six years later, in 885.
+
+ ** This inscription and its accompanying bas-relief are
+ mentioned in the <i>Annals of Assur-nazir-pal</i>.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ He did not live long to enjoy his triumphs, but his death made no
+ impression on the impulse given to the fortunes of his country. The
+ kingdom which he left to Assur-nazir-pal, the eldest of his sons, embraced
+ scarcely any of the countries which had paid tribute to former sovereigns.
+ Besides Assyria proper, it comprised merely those districts of Naîri which
+ had been annexed within his own generation; the remainder had gradually
+ regained their liberty: first the outlying dependencies&mdash;Cilicia,
+ Melitene, Northern Syria, and then the provinces nearer the capital, the
+ valleys of the Masios and the Zagros, the steppes of the Khabur, and even
+ some districts such as Lubdi and Shupria, which had been allotted to
+ Assyrian colonists at various times after successful campaigns. Nearly the
+ whole empire had to be reconquered under much the same conditions as in
+ the first instance. Assyria itself, it is true, had recovered the vitality
+ and elasticity of its earlier days. The people were a robust and energetic
+ race, devoted to their rulers, and ready to follow them blindly and
+ trustingly wherever they might lead. The army, while composed chiefly of
+ the same classes of troops as in the time of Tiglath-pileser I.,&mdash;spearmen,
+ archers, sappers, and slingers,&mdash;now possessed a new element, whose
+ appearance on the field of battle was to revolutionize the whole method of
+ warfare; this was the cavalry, properly so called, introduced as an
+ adjunct to the chariotry. The number of horsemen forming this contingent
+ was as yet small; like the infantry, they wore casques and cuirasses, but
+ were clothed with a tight-fitting loin-cloth in place of the long kilt,
+ the folds of which would have embarrassed their movements. One-half of the
+ men carried sword and lance, the other half sword and bow, the latter of a
+ smaller kind than that used by the infantry. Their horses were bridled,
+ and bore trappings on the forehead, but had no saddles; their riders rode
+ bareback without stirrups; they sat far back with the chest thrown
+ forward, their knees drawn up to grip the shoulder of the animal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0008" id="linkimage-0008">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/009.jpg" width="100%"
+ alt="009.jpg an Assyrian Horseman Armed With the Sword " />
+ </div>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a bas-relief in bronze on the
+ gate of Balawât. The Assyrian artist has shown the head and
+ legs of the second horse in profile behind the first, but he
+ has forgotten to represent the rest of its body, and also
+ the man riding it.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Each horseman was attended by a groom, who rode abreast of him, and held
+ his reins during an action, so that he might be free to make use of his
+ weapons. This body of cavalry, having little confidence in its own powers,
+ kept in close contact with the main body of the army, and was not used in
+ independent manouvres; it was associated with and formed an escort to the
+ chariotry in expeditions where speed was essential, and where the ordinary
+ foot soldier would have hampered the movements of the charioteers.*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Isolated horsemen must no doubt have existed in the
+ Assyrian just as in the Egyptian army, but we never find any
+ mention of a <i>body</i> of cavalry in inscriptions prior to the
+ time of Assur-nazir-pal; the introduction of this new corps
+ must consequently have taken place between the reigns of
+ Tiglath-pileser and Assur-nazir-pal, probably nearer the
+ time of the latter. Assur-nazir-pal himself seldom speaks of
+ his cavalry, but he constantly makes mention of the horsemen
+ of the Aramaean and Syrian principalities, whom he
+ incorporated into his own army.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0009" id="linkimage-0009">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/010.jpg" width="100%"
+ alt="010.jpg a Mounted Assyrian Archer With Attendant " />
+ </div>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from one of the bronze bas-reliefs
+ of the gate of Balawât.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The army thus reinforced was at all events more efficient, if not actually
+ more powerful, than formerly; the discipline maintained was as severe, the
+ military spirit as keen, the equipment as perfect, and the tactics as
+ skilful as in former times. A knowledge of engineering had improved upon
+ the former methods of taking towns by sapping and scaling, and though the
+ number of military engines was as yet limited, the besiegers were well
+ able, when occasion demanded, to improvise and make use of machines
+ capable of demolishing even the strongest walls.*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The battering-ram had already reached such a degree of
+ perfection under Assur-nazir-pal, that it must have been
+ invented some time before the execution of the first bas-
+ reliefs on which we see it portrayed. Its points of
+ resemblance to the Greek battering-ram furnished Hoofer with
+ one of his mam arguments for placing the monuments of
+ Khorsabad and Koyunjik as late as the Persian or Parthian
+ period.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The Assyrians were familiar with all the different kinds of battering-ram;
+ the hand variety, which was merely a beam tipped with iron, worked by some
+ score of men; the fixed ram, in which the beam was suspended from a
+ scaffold and moved by means of ropes; and lastly, the movable ram, running
+ on four or six wheels, which enabled it to be advanced or withdrawn at
+ will. The military engineers of the day allowed full rein to their fancy
+ in the many curious shapes they gave to this latter engine; for example,
+ they gave to the mass of bronze at its point the form of the head of an
+ animal, and the whole engine took at times the form of a sow ready to root
+ up with its snout the foundations of the enemy&rsquo;s defences. The scaffolding
+ of the machine was usually protected by a carapace of green leather or
+ some coarse woollen material stretched over it, which broke the force of
+ blows from projectiles: at times it had an additional arrangement in the
+ shape of a cupola or turret in which archers were stationed to sweep the
+ face of the wall opposite to the point of attack.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0010" id="linkimage-0010">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/012.jpg" width="100%"
+ alt="012.jpg the Movable Sow Making a Breach in The Wall of A Fortress " />
+ </div>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from one of the bronze bas-reliefs
+ of the gate of Balawât.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The battering-rams were set up and placed in line at a short distance from
+ the ramparts of the besieged town; the ground in front of them was then
+ levelled and a regular causeway constructed, which was paved with bricks
+ wherever the soil appeared to be lacking in firmness. These preliminaries
+ accomplished, the engines were pushed forward by relays of troops till
+ they reached the required range. The effort needed to set the ram in
+ motion severely taxed the strength of those engaged in the work; for the
+ size of the beam was enormous, and its iron point, or the square mass of
+ metal at the end, was of no light weight. The besieged did their best to
+ cripple or, if possible, destroy the engine as it approached them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0011" id="linkimage-0011">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/013.jpg" width="100%"
+ alt="013.jpg the Turreted Battering-ram Attacking The Walls Of A Town " />
+ </div>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a bas-relief brought from
+ Nimroud, now in the British Museum.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Torches, lighted tow, burning pitch, and stink-pots were hurled down upon
+ its roofing: attempts were made to seize the head of the ram by means of
+ chains or hooks, so as to prevent it from moving, or in order to drag it
+ on to the battlements; in some cases the garrison succeeded in crushing
+ the machinery with a mass of rock. The Assyrians, however, did not allow
+ themselves to be discouraged by such trifling accidents; they would at
+ once extinguish the fire, release, by sheer force of muscle, the beams
+ which the enemy had secured, and if, notwithstanding all their efforts,
+ one of the machines became injured, they had others ready to take its
+ place, and the ram would be again at work after only a few minutes&rsquo; delay.
+ Walls, even when of burnt brick or faced with small stones, stood no
+ chance against such an attack.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0012" id="linkimage-0012">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/014.jpg" width="100%"
+ alt="014.jpg the Besieged Endeavouring to Cripple Or Destroy The Battering-ram " />
+ </div>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a bas-relief from Nimroud, now
+ in the British Museum.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The first blow of the ram sufficed to shake them, and an opening was
+ rapidly made, so that in a few days, often in a few hours, they became a
+ heap of ruins; the foot soldiers could then enter by the breach which the
+ pioneers had effected.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It must, however, be remembered that the strength and discipline which the
+ Assyrian troops possessed in such a high degree, were common to the
+ military forces of all the great states&mdash;Elam, Damascus, Naîri, the
+ Hittites, and Chaldæa. It was owing to this, and also to the fact that the
+ armies of all these Powers were, as a rule, both in strength and numbers,
+ much on a par, that no single state was able to inflict on any of the rest
+ such a defeat as would end in its destruction. What decisive results had
+ the terrible struggles produced, which stained almost periodically the
+ valleys of the Tigris and the Zab with blood? After endless loss of life
+ and property, they had nearly always issued in the establishment of the
+ belligerents in their respective possessions, with possibly the cession of
+ some few small towns or fortresses to the stronger party, most of which,
+ however, were destined to come back to its former possessor in the very
+ next campaign. The fall of the capital itself was not decisive, for it
+ left the vanquished foe chafing under his losses, while the victory cost
+ his rival so dear that he was unable to maintain the ascendency for more
+ than a few years. Twice at least in three centuries a king of Assyria had
+ entered Babylon, and twice the Babylonians had expelled the intruder of
+ the hour, and had forced him back with a blare of trumpets to the
+ frontier. Although the Ninevite dynasties had persisted in their
+ pretensions to a suzerainty which they had generally been unable to
+ enforce, the tradition of which, unsupported by any definite decree, had
+ been handed on from one generation to another; yet in practice their kings
+ had not succeeded in &ldquo;taking the hands of Bel,&rdquo; and in reigning personally
+ in Babylon, nor in extorting from the native sovereign an official
+ acknowledgment of his vassalage. Profiting doubtless by past experience,
+ Assur-nazir-pal resolutely avoided those direct conflicts in which so many
+ of his predecessors had wasted their lives. If he did not actually
+ renounce his hereditary pretensions, he was content to let them lie
+ dormant. He preferred to accommodate himself to the terms of the treaty
+ signed a few years previously by Rammân-nirâri, even when Babylon
+ neglected to observe them; he closed his eyes to the many ill-disguised
+ acts of hostility to which he was exposed,* and devoted all his energies
+ to dealing with less dangerous enemies.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * He did not make the presence of Cossoan troops among the
+ allies of the Sukhi a casus belli, even though they were
+ commanded by a brother and by one of the principal officers
+ of the King of Babylon.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Even if his frontier touched Karduniash to the south, elsewhere he was
+ separated from the few states strong enough to menace his kingdom by a
+ strip of varying width, comprising several less important tribes and
+ cities;&mdash;to the east and north-east by the barbarians of obscure race
+ whose villages and strongholds were scattered along the upper affluents of
+ the Tigris or on the lower terraces of the Iranian plateau: to the west
+ and north-west by the principalities and nomad tribes, mostly of Aramoan
+ extraction, who now for a century had peopled the mountains of the Tigris
+ and the steppes of Mesopotamia. They were high-spirited, warlike, hardy
+ populations, proud of their independence and quick to take up arms in its
+ defence or for its recovery, but none of them possessed more than a
+ restricted domain, or had more than a handful of soldiers at its disposal.
+ At times, it is true, the nature of their locality befriended them, and
+ the advantages of position helped to compensate for their paucity of
+ numbers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0013" id="linkimage-0013">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/017.jpg" width="100%"
+ alt="017.jpg the Escarpments of The Zab " />
+ </div>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Drawn by Boudier, from a photograph by M. Binder.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Sometimes they were entrenched behind one of those rapid watercourses like
+ the Radanu, the Zab, or the Turnat, which are winter torrents rather than
+ streams, and are overhung by steep banks, precipitous as a wall above a
+ moat; sometimes they took refuge upon some wooded height and awaited
+ attack amid its rocks and pine woods. Assyria was superior to all of them,
+ if not in the valour of its troops, at least numerically, and, towering in
+ the midst of them, she could single out at will whichever tribe offered
+ the easiest prey, and falling on it suddenly, would crush it by sheer
+ force of weight. In such a case the surrounding tribes, usually only too
+ well pleased to witness in safety the fall of a dangerous rival, would not
+ attempt to interfere; but their turn was ere long sure to come, and the
+ pity which they had declined to show to their neighbours was in like
+ manner refused to them. The Assyrians ravaged their country, held their
+ chiefs to ransom, razed their strongholds, or, when they did not demolish
+ them, garrisoned them with their own troops who held sway over the
+ country. The revenues gleaned from these conquests would swell the
+ treasury at Nineveh, the native soldiers would be incorporated into the
+ Assyrian army, and when the smaller tribes had all in turn been subdued,
+ their conqueror would, at length, find himself confronted with one of the
+ great states from which he had been separated by these buffer communities;
+ then it was that the men and money he had appropriated in his conquests
+ would embolden him to provoke or accept battle with some tolerable
+ certainty of victory.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Immediately on his accession, Assur-nazir-pal turned his attention to the
+ parts of his frontier where the population was most scattered, and
+ therefore less able to offer any resistance to his projects.*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The principal document for the history of Assur-nazir-pal
+ is the &ldquo;Monolith of Nimrud,&rdquo; discovered by Layard in the
+ ruins of the temple of Ninip; it bears the same inscription
+ on both its sides. It is a compilation of various documents,
+ comprising, first, a consecutive account of the campaigns of
+ the king&rsquo;s first six years, terminating in a summary of the
+ results obtained during that period; secondly, the account
+ of the campaign of his sixth year, followed by three
+ campaigns not dated, the last of which was in Syria; and
+ thirdly, the history of a last campaign, that of his
+ eighteenth year, and a second summary. A monolith found in
+ the ruins of Kurkh, at some distance from Diarbekir,
+ contains some important additions to the account of the
+ campaigns of the fifth year. The other numerous inscriptions
+ of Assur-nazir-pal which have come down to us do not contain
+ any information of importance which is not found in the text
+ of the Annals. The inscription of the broken Obelisk, from
+ which I have often quoted, contains in the second column
+ some mention of the works undertaken by this king.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ He marched towards the north-western point of his territory, suddenly
+ invaded Nummi,* and in an incredibly short time took Gubbe, its capital,
+ and some half-dozen lesser places, among them Surra, Abuku, Arura, and
+ Arubi. The inhabitants assembled upon a mountain ridge which they believed
+ to be inaccessible, its peak being likened to &ldquo;the point of an iron
+ dagger,&rdquo; and the steepness of its sides such that &ldquo;no winged bird of the
+ heavens dare venture on them.&rdquo; In the short space of three days
+ Assur-nazir-pal succeeded in climbing its precipices and forcing the
+ entrenchments which had been thrown up on its summit: two hundred of its
+ defenders perished sword in hand, the remainder were taken prisoners. The
+ Kirruri,** terrified by this example, submitted unreservedly to the
+ conqueror, yielded him their horses, mules, oxen, sheep, wine, and brazen
+ vessels, and accepted the Assyrian prefects appointed to collect the
+ tribute.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Nummi or Nimmi, mentioned already in the Annals of
+ Tiglath-pileser I., has been placed by Hommel in the
+ mountain group which separates Lake Van from Lake Urumiah,
+ but by Tiele in the regions situated to the southeast of
+ Nineveh; the observations of Delattre show that we ought
+ perhaps to look for it to the north of the Arzania,
+ certainly in the valley of that river. It appears to me to
+ answer to the cazas of Varto and Boulanîk in the sandjak of
+ Mush. The name of the capital may be identified with the
+ present Gop, chief town of the caza of Boulanîk; in this
+ case Abuku might be represented by the village of Biyonkh.
+
+ ** The Kirruri must have had their habitat in the depression
+ around Lake frumiah, on the western side of the lake, if we
+ are to believe Schrader; Jelattre has pointed out that it
+ ought to be sought elsewhere, near the sources of the
+ Tigris, not far from the Murad-su. The connection in which
+ it is here cited obliges us to place it in the immediate
+ neighbourhood of Nummi, and its relative position to Adaush
+ and Gilzân makes it probable that it is to be sought to the
+ west and south-west of Lake Van, in the cazas of Mush and
+ Sassun in the sandjak of Mush.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The neighbouring districts, Adaush, Gilzân, and Khubushkia, followed their
+ example;* they sent the king considerable presents of gold, silver, lead,
+ and copper, and their alacrity in buying off their conqueror saved them
+ from the ruinous infliction of a garrison. The Assyrian army defiling
+ through the pass of Khulun next fell upon the Kirkhi, dislodged the troops
+ stationed in the fortress of Nishtun, and pillaged the cities of Khatu,
+ Khatara, Irbidi, Arzania, Tela, and Khalua; ** Bubu, the Chief of
+ Nishtun,*** was sent to Arbela, flayed alive, and his skin nailed to the
+ city wall.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Kirzâu, also transcribed Gilzân and Guzân, has been
+ relegated by the older Assyriologists to Eastern Armenia,
+ and the site further specified as being between the ancient
+ Araxes and Lake Urumiah, in the Persian provinces of Khoî
+ and Marand. The indications given in our text and the
+ passages brought together by Schrader, which place Gilzân in
+ direct connection with Kirruri on one side and with Kurkhi
+ on the other, oblige us to locate the country in the upper
+ basin of the Tigris, and I should place it near Bitlis-
+ tchaî, where different forms of the word occur many times on
+ the map, such as Ghalzan in Ghalzan-dagh; Kharzan, the name
+ of a caza of the sandjak of Sert; Khizan, the name of a caza
+ of the sandjak of Bitlis. Girzân-Kilzân would thus be the
+ Roman province of Arzanene, Ardzn in Armenian, in which the
+ initial g or h of the ancient name has been replaced in the
+ process of time by a soft aspirate. Khubushkia or Khutushkia
+ has been placed by Lenormant to the east of the Upper Zab,
+ and south of Arapkha, and this identification has been
+ approved by Schrader and also by Delitzsch; according to the
+ passages that Schrader himself has cited, it must, however,
+ have stretched northwards as far as Shatakh-su, meeting
+ Gilzân at one point of the sandjaks of Van and Hakkiari.
+
+ ** Assur-nazir-pal, in going from Kirruri to Kirkhi in the
+ basin of the Tigris, could go either by the pass of Bitlis
+ or that of Sassun; that of Bitlis is excluded by the fact
+ that it lies in Kirruri, and Kirruri is not mentioned in
+ what follows. But if the route chosen was by the pass of
+ Sassun, Khulun necessarily must have occupied a position at
+ the entrance of the defiles, perhaps that of the present
+ town of Khorukh. The name Khatu recalls that of the Khoith
+ tribe which the Armenian historians mention as in this
+ locality. Khaturu is perhaps Hâtera in the caza of Lidjô, in
+ the sandjak of Diarbekîr, and Arzania the ancient Arzan,
+ Arzn, the ruins of which may be seen near Sheikh-Yunus.
+ Tila-Tela is not the same town as the Tela in Mesopotamia,
+ which we shall have occasion to speak of later, but is
+ probably to be identified with Til or Tilleh, at the
+ confluence of the Tigris and the Bohtan-tcha. Finally, it is
+ possible that the name Khalua may be preserved in that of
+ Halewi, which Layard gives as belonging to a village
+ situated almost halfway between Rundvan and Til.
+
+ *** Nishtun was probably the most important spot in this
+ region: from its position on the list, between Khulun and
+ Khataru on one side and Arzania on the other, it is evident
+ we must look for it somewhere in Sassun or in the direction
+ of Mayafarrikin.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0014" id="linkimage-0014">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/021.jpg" width="100%"
+ alt="021.jpg the Campaigns of Assur-nazir-pal in Nairi " />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ In a small town near one of the sources of the Tigris, Assur-nazir-pal
+ founded a colony on which he imposed his name; he left there a statue of
+ himself, with an inscription celebrating his exploits carved on its base,
+ and having done this, he returned to Nineveh laden with booty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0015" id="linkimage-0015">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/022.jpg" width="100%"
+ alt="022.jpg the Site of Shadikanni at Arban, on The Khabur " />
+ </div>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Drawn by Boudier, from a sketch taken by Layard.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ A few weeks had sufficed for him to complete, on this side, the work
+ bequeathed to him by his father, and to open up the neighbourhood of the
+ northeast provinces; he was not long in setting out afresh, this time to
+ the north-west, in the direction of the Taurus.*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The text of the &ldquo;Annals&rdquo; declares that these events took
+ place &ldquo;in this same limmu,&rdquo; in what the king calls higher up
+ in the column &ldquo;the beginning of my royalty, the first year
+ of my reign.&rdquo; We must therefore suppose that he ascended the
+ throne almost at the beginning of the year, since he was
+ able to make two campaigns under the same eponym.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ He rapidly skirted the left bank of the Tigris, burned some score of
+ scattered hamlets at the foot of Nipur and Pazatu,* crossed to the right
+ bank, above Amidi, and, as he approached the Euphrates, received the
+ voluntary homage of Kummukh and the Mushku.** But while he was
+ complacently engaged in recording the amount of vessels of bronze, oxen,
+ sheep, and jars of wine which represented their tribute, a messenger of
+ bad tidings appeared before him. Assyria was bounded on the east by a line
+ of small states, comprising the Katna*** and the Bît-Khalupi,**** whose
+ towns, placed alternately like sentries on each side the Khabur, protected
+ her from the incursions of the Bedâwin.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Nipur or Nibur is the Nibaros of Strabo. If we consider
+ the general direction of the campaign, we are inclined to
+ place Nipur close to the bank of the Tigris, east of the
+ regions traversed in the preceding campaign, and to identify
+ it, as also Pazatu, with the group of high hills called at
+ the present day the Ashit-dagh, between the Kharzan-su and
+ the Batman-tchai.
+
+ ** The Mushku (Moschiano or Meshek) mentioned here do not
+ represent the main body of the tribe, established in
+ Cappadocia; they are the descendants of such of the Mushku
+ as had crossed the Euphrates and contested the possession of
+ the regions of Kashiari with the Assyrians.
+
+ *** The name has been read sometimes Katna, sometimes Shuna.
+ The country included the two towns of Kamani and Dur-
+ Katlimi, and on the south adjoined Bît-Khalupi; this
+ identifies it with the districts of Magada and Sheddadîyeh,
+ and, judging by the information with which Assur-nazir-pal
+ himself furnishes us, it is not impossible that Dur-Katline
+ may have been on the site of the present Magarda, and Kamani
+ on that of Sheddadîyeh. Ancient ruins have been pointed out
+ on both these spots.
+
+ **** Suru, the capital of Bît-Khalupi, was built upon the
+ Khabur itself where it is navigable, for Assur-nazir-pal
+ relates further on that he had his royal barge built there
+ at the time of the cruise which he undertook on the
+ Euphrates in the VIth year of his reign. The itineraries of
+ modern travellers mention a place called es-Sauar or es-
+ Saur, eight hours&rsquo; march from the mouth of the Khabur on the
+ right bank of the river, situated at the foot of a hill some
+ 220 feet high; the ruins of a fortified enclosure and of an
+ ancient town are still visible. Following Tomkins, I should
+ there place Suru, the chief town of Khalupi; Bît-Khalupi
+ would be the territory in the neighbourhood of es-Saur.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ They were virtually Chaldæan cities, having been, like most of those which
+ flourished in the Mesopotamian plains, thoroughly impregnated with
+ Babylonian civilisation. Shadikanni, the most important of them, commanded
+ the right bank of the Khabur, and also the ford where the road from
+ Nineveh crossed the river on the route to Hariân and Carche-mish. The
+ palaces of its rulers were decorated with winged bulls, lions, stelae, and
+ bas-reliefs carved in marble brought from the hills of Singar. The people
+ seem to have been of a capricious temperament, and, nothwithstanding the
+ supervision to which they were subjected, few reigns elapsed in which it
+ was not necessary to put down a rebellion among them. Bît-Khalupi and its
+ capital Suru had thrown off the Assyrian yoke after the death of
+ Tukulti-ninip; the populace, stirred up no doubt by Aramæan emissaries,
+ had assassinated the Harnathite who governed them, and had sent for a
+ certain Akhiababa, a man of base extraction from Bît-Adini, whom they had
+ proclaimed king. This defection, if not promptly dealt with, was likely to
+ entail serious consequences, since it left an important point on the
+ frontier exposed: and there now remained nothing to prevent the people of
+ Adini or their allies from spreading over the country between the Khabur
+ and the Tigris, and even pushing forward their marauding bands as far as
+ the very walls of Singar and Assur.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0017" id="linkimage-0017">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/024b.jpg" width="100%"
+ alt="024b.jpg No. 1. Enameled Brick (Nimrod). No. 2. Fragment Of Mural Painting (Nimrod). " />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0018" id="linkimage-0018">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="figleft" style="width:33%;">
+ <img width="100%" src="images/025.jpg" alt="025.jpg Stele from Arban " />
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Drawn by Faucher-Gudin,
+from Layard&rsquo;s sketch
+</pre>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Without losing a moment, Assur-nazir-pal marched down the course of the
+ Khabur, hastily collecting the tribute of the cities through which he
+ passed. The defenders of Sura were disconcerted by his sudden appearance
+ before their town, and their rulers came out and prostrated themselves at
+ the king&rsquo;s feet: &ldquo;Dost thou desire it? it is life for us;&mdash;dost thou
+ desire it? it is death;&mdash;dost thou desire it? what thy heart
+ chooseth, that do to us!&rdquo; But the appeal to his clemency was in vain; the
+ alarm had been so great and the danger so pressing, that Assur-nazir-pal
+ was pitiless. The town was handed over to the soldiery, all the treasure
+ it contained was confiscated, and the women and children of the best
+ families were made slaves; some of the ringleaders paid the penalty of
+ their revolt on the spot; the rest, with Akhiabaha, were carried away and
+ flayed alive, some at Nineveh, some elsewhere. An Assyrian garrison was
+ installed in the citadel, and an ordinary governor, Azilu by name,
+ replaced the dynasty of native princes. The report of this terrible
+ retribution induced the Laqî* to tender their submission, and their
+ example was followed by Khaian, king of Khindanu on the Euphrates. He
+ bought off the Assyrians with gold, silver, lead, precious stones,
+ deep-hued purple, and dromedaries; he erected a statue of Assur-nazir-pal
+ in the centre of his palace as a sign of his vassalage, and built into the
+ wall near the gates of his town an inscription dedicated to the gods of
+ the conqueror.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The Laqî were situated on both banks of the Euphrates,
+ principally on the right bank, between the Khabur and the
+ Balikh, interspersed among the Sukhi, of whom they were
+ perhaps merely a dissentient fraction.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Six, or at the most eight, months had sufficed to achieve these rapid
+ successes over various foes, in twenty different directions&mdash;the
+ expeditions in Nummi and Kirruri, the occupation of Kummukh, the flying
+ marches across the mountains and plains of Mesopotamia&mdash;during all of
+ which the new sovereign had given ample proof of his genius. He had, in
+ fine, shown himself to be a thorough soldier, a conqueror of the type of
+ Tiglath-pileser, and Assyria by these victories had recovered her rightful
+ rank among the nations of Western Asia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The second year of his reign was no less fully occupied, nor did it prove
+ less successful than the first. At its very beginning, and even before the
+ return of the favourable season, the Sukhi on the Euphrates made a public
+ act of submission, and their chief, Ilubâni, brought to Nineveh on their
+ behalf a large sum of gold and silver. He had scarcely left the capital
+ when the news of an untoward event effaced the good impression he had
+ made. The descendants of the colonists, planted in bygone times by
+ Shalmaneser I. on the western slope of the Masios, in the district of
+ Khalzidipkha, had thrown off their allegiance, and their leader, Khulaî,
+ was besieging the royal fortress of Damdamusa.* Assur-nazir-pal marched
+ direct to the sources of the Tigris, and the mere fact of his presence
+ sufficed to prevent any rising in that quarter. He took advantage of the
+ occasion to set up a stele beside those of his father Tukulti-ninip and
+ his ancestor Tiglath-pileser, and then having halted to receive the
+ tribute of Izalla,** he turned southwards, and took up a position on the
+ slopes of the Kashiari.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The position of Khalzidipkha or Khalzilukha, as well as
+ that of Kina-bu, its stronghold, is shown approximately by
+ what follows. Assur-nazir-pal, marching from the sources of
+ the Supnat towards Tela, could pass either to the east or
+ west of the Karajah-dagh; as the end of the campaign finds
+ him at Tushkhân, to the south of the Tigris, and he returns
+ to Naîri and Kirkhi by the eastern side of the Karajah-dagh,
+ we are led to conclude that the outgoing march to Tela was
+ by the western side, through the country situated between
+ the Karajah-dagh and the Euphrates. On referring to a modern
+ map, two rather important places will be found in this
+ locality: the first, Arghana, commanding the road from
+ Diarbekîr to Khar-put; the other, Severek, on the route from
+ Diarbekîr to Orfah. Arghana appears to me to correspond to
+ the royal city of Damdamusa, which would, thus have
+ protected the approach to the plain on the north-west.
+ Severek corresponds fairly well to the position which,
+ according to the Assyrian text, Kinabu must have occupied;
+ hence the country of Khalzidipkha (Khalzilukha) must be the
+ district of Severek.
+
+ ** Izalla, written also Izala, Azala, paid its tribute in
+ sheep and oxen, and also produced a wine for which it
+ continued to be celebrated down to the time of
+ Nebuchadrezzar II. Lenormant and Finzi place this country-
+ near to Nisibis, where the Byzantine and Syrian writers
+ mention a district and a mountain of the same name, and this
+ conjecture is borne out by the passages of the <i>Annals of
+ Assur-nazir-pal</i> which place it in the vicinity of Bît-Adini
+ and Bît-Bakhiâni. It has also been adopted by most of the
+ historians who have recently studied the question.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ At the first news of his approach, Khulai had raised the blockade of
+ Damdamusa and had entrenched himself in Kinabu; the Assyrians, however,
+ carried the place by storm, and six hundred soldiers of the garrison were
+ killed in the attack. The survivors, to the number of three thousand,
+ together with many women and children, were, thrown into the flames. The
+ people of Mariru hastened to the rescue;* the Assyrians took three hundred
+ of them, prisoners and burnt them alive; fifty others were ripped up, but
+ the victors did not stop to reduce their town. The district of Nirbu was
+ next subjected to systematic ravaging, and half of its inhabitants fled
+ into the Mesopotamian desert, while the remainder sought refuge in Tela at
+ the foot of the Ukhira.**
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The site of Mariru is unknown; according to the text of
+ the Annals, it ought to lie near Severek (Kinabu) to the
+ south-east, since after having mentioned it, Assur-nazir-pal
+ speaks of the people of Nirbu whom he engaged in the desert
+ before marching against Tela.
+
+ ** Tila or Tela is the Tela Antoninopolis of the writers of
+ the Roman period and the present Veranshehr. The district of
+ Nirbu, of which it was the capital, lay on the southern
+ slope of the Karajah-dagh at the foot of Mount Urkhira, the
+ central group of the range. The name Kashiari is applied to
+ the whole mountain group which separates the basins of the
+ Tigris and Euphrates to the south and south-west.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The latter place was a strong one, being surrounded by three enclosing
+ walls, and it offered an obstinate resistance. Notwithstanding this, it at
+ length fell, after having lost three thousand of its defenders:&mdash;some
+ of its garrison were condemned to the stake, some had their hands, noses,
+ or ears cut off, others were deprived of sight, flayed alive, or impaled
+ amid the smoking ruins. This being deemed insufficient punishment, the
+ conqueror degraded the place from its rank of chief town, transferring
+ this, together with its other privileges, to a neighbouring city,
+ Tushkhân, which had belonged to the Assyrians from the beginning of their
+ conquests.* The king enlarged the place, added to it a strong enclosing
+ wall, and installed within it the survivors of the older colonists who had
+ been dispersed by the war, the majority of whom had taken refuge in
+ Shupria.**
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * From this passage we learn that Tushkhân, also called
+ Tushkha, was situated on the border of Nirbu, while from
+ another passage in the campaign of the Vth year we find that
+ it was on the right bank of the Tigris. Following H.
+ Rawlinson, I place it at Kurkh, near the Tigris, to the east
+ of Diarbekîr. The existence in that locality of an
+ inscription of Assur-nazir-pal appears to prove the
+ correctness of this identification; we are aware, in fact,
+ of the particular favour in which this prince held Tushkhân,
+ for he speaks with pride of the buildings with which he
+ embellished it. Hommel, however, identifies Kurkh with the
+ town of Matiâtô, of which mention is made further on.
+
+ ** Shupria or Shupri, a name which has been read Ruri, had
+ been brought into submission from the time of Shalmaneser I.
+ We gather from the passages in which it is mentioned that it
+ was a hilly country, producing wine, rich in flocks, and
+ lying at a short distance from Tushkhân; perhaps Mariru,
+ mentioned on p. 28, was one of its towns. I think we may
+ safely place it on the north-western slopes of the Kashiari,
+ in the modern caza of Tchernik, which possesses several
+ vineyards held in high estimation. Knudtzon, to whom we are
+ indebted for the reading of this name, places the country
+ rather further north, within the fork formed by the two
+ upper branches of the Tigris.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ He constructed a palace there, built storehouses for the reception of the
+ grain of the province; and, in short, transformed the town into a
+ stronghold of the first order, capable of serving as a base of operations
+ for his armies. The surrounding princes, in the meanwhile, rallied round
+ him, including Ammibaal of Bît-Zamani, and the rulers of Shupria, Naîri,
+ and Urumi;* the chiefs of Eastern Nirbu alone held aloof, emboldened by
+ the rugged nature of their mountains and the density of their forests.
+ Assur-nazir-pal attacked them on his return journey, dislodged them from
+ the fortress of Ishpilibria where they were entrenched, gained the pass of
+ Buliani, and emerged into the valley of Luqia.**
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The position of Bît-Zamani on the banks of the Euphrates
+ was determined by Delattre. Urumi was situated on the right
+ bank of the same river in the neighbourhood of Sumeisat, and
+ the name has survived in that of Urima, a town in the
+ vicinity so called even as late as Roman times. Nirdun, with
+ Madara as its capital, occupied part of the eastern slopes
+ of the Kashiari towards Ortaveran.
+
+ ** Hommel identifies the Luqia with the northern affluent of
+ the Euphrates called on the ancient monuments Lykos, and he
+ places the scene of the war in Armenia. The context obliges
+ us to look for this river to the south of the Tigris, to the
+ north-east and to the east of the Kashiari. The king coming
+ from Nirbu, the pass of Buliani, in which he finds the towns
+ of Kirkhi, must be the valley of Khaneki, in which the road
+ winds from Mardin to Diarbekir, and the Luqia is probably
+ the most important stream in this region, the Sheikhân-Su,
+ which waters Savur, chief town of the caza of Avinch. Ardupa
+ must have been situated near, or on the actual site of, the
+ present Mardîn, whose Assyrian name is unknown to us; it was
+ at all events a military station on the road to Nineveh,
+ along which the king returned victorious with the spoil.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0016" id="linkimage-0016">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="figleft" style="width:44%;">
+ <img width="100%" src="images/024.jpg"
+ alt="024.jpg One of the Winged Bulls Found at Arban " />
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Drawn by Faucher-Gudin,
+from a sketch by Layard.
+</pre>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ At Ardupa a brief halt was made to receive the ambassadors of one of the
+ Hittite sovereigns and others from the kings of Khanigalbat, after which
+ he returned to Nineveh, where he spent the winter. As a matter of fact,
+ these were but petty wars, and their immediate results appear at the first
+ glance quite inadequate to account for the contemporary enthusiasm they
+ excited. The sincerity of it can be better understood when we consider the
+ miserable state of the country twenty years previously. Assyria then
+ comprised two territories, one in the plains of the middle, the other in
+ the districts of the upper, Tigris, both of considerable extent, but
+ almost without regular intercommunication. Caravans or isolated messengers
+ might pass with tolerable safety from Assur and Nineveh to Singar, or even
+ to Nisibis; but beyond these places they had to brave the narrow defiles
+ and steep paths in the forests of the Masios, through which it was rash to
+ venture without keeping eye and ear ever on the alert. The mountaineers
+ and their chiefs recognized the nominal suzerainty of Assyria, but refused
+ to act upon this recognition unless constrained by a strong hand; if this
+ control were relaxed they levied contributions on, or massacred, all who
+ came within their reach, and the king himself never travelled from his own
+ city of Nineveh to his own town of Amidi unless accompanied by an army. In
+ less than the short space of three years, Assur-nazir-pal had remedied
+ this evil. By the slaughter of some two hundred men in one place, three
+ hundred in another, two or three thousand in a third, by dint of impaling
+ and flaying refractory sheikhs, burning villages and dismantling
+ strongholds, he forced the marauders of Naîri and Kirkhi to respect his
+ frontiers and desist from pillaging his country. The two divisions of his
+ kingdom, strengthened by the military colonies in Nirbu, were united, and
+ became welded together into a compact whole from the banks of the Lower
+ Zab to the sources of the Khabur and the Supnat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During the following season the course of events diverted the king&rsquo;s
+ efforts into quite an opposite direction (B.C. 882). Under the name of
+ Zamua there existed a number of small states scattered along the western
+ slope of the Iranian Plateau north of the Cossæans.* Many of them&mdash;as,
+ for instance, the Lullumê&mdash;had been civilized by the Chaldæans almost
+ from time immemorial; the most southern among them were perpetually
+ oscillating between the respective areas of influence of Babylon and
+ Nineveh, according as one or other of these cities was in the ascendant,
+ but at this particular moment they acknowledged Assyrian sway. Were they
+ excited to rebellion against the latter power by the emissaries of its
+ rival, or did they merely think that Assur-nazir-pal was too fully
+ absorbed in the affairs of Naîri to be able to carry his arms effectively
+ elsewhere? At all events they coalesced under Nurrammân, the sheikh of
+ Dagara, blocked the pass of Babiti which led to their own territory, and
+ there massed their contingents behind the shelter of hastily erected
+ ramparts.**
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * According to Hommol and Tiele, Zamua would be the country
+ extending from the sources of the Radanu to the southern
+ shores of the lake of Urumiah; Schrader believes it to have
+ occupied a smaller area, and places it to the east and
+ south-west of the lesser Zab. Delattre has shown that a
+ distinction must be made between Zamua on Lake Van and the
+ well-known Zamua upon the Zab. Zamua, as described by Assur-
+ nazir-pal, answers approximately to the present sandjak of
+ Suleimaniyeh in the vilayet of Mossul.
+
+ ** Hommol believes that Assur-nazir-pal crossed the Zab near
+ Altin-keupru, and he is certainly correct: but it appears to
+ me from a passage in the <i>Annals</i>, that instead of taking
+ the road which leads to Bagdad by Ker-kuk and Tuz-Khurmati,
+ he marched along that which leads eastwards in the direction
+ of Suleimaniyeh. The pass of Babiti must have lain between
+ Gawardis and Bibân, facing the Kissê tchai, which forms the
+ western branch of the Radanu. Dagara would thus be
+ represented by the district to the east of Kerkuk at the
+ foot of the Kara-dagh.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Assur-nazir-pal concentrated his army at Kakzi,* a little to the south of
+ Arbela, and promptly marched against them; he swept all obstacles before
+ him, killed fourteen hundred and sixty men at the first onslaught, put
+ Dagara to fire and sword, and soon defeated Nurrammân, but without
+ effecting his capture.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Kakzi, sometimes read Kalzi, must have been situated at
+ Shemamek of Shamamik, near Hazeh, to the south-west of
+ Erbil, the ancient Arbela, at the spot where Jones noticed
+ important Assyrian ruins excavated by Layard.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ As the campaign threatened to be prolonged, he formed an entrenched camp
+ in a favourable position, and stationed in it some of his troops to guard
+ the booty, while he dispersed the rest to pillage the country on all
+ sides.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0019" id="linkimage-0019">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/033.jpg" width="100%"
+ alt="033.jpg the Campaigns of Assur-nazir-pal in Zamua " />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ One expedition led him to the mountain group of Nizir, at the end of the
+ chain known to the people of Lullumê as the Kinipa.* He there reduced to
+ ruins seven towns whose inhabitants had barricaded themselves in urgent
+ haste, collected the few herds of cattle he could find, and driving them
+ back to the camp, set out afresh towards a part of Nizir as yet unsubdued
+ by any conqueror. The stronghold of Larbusa fell before the battering-ram,
+ to be followed shortly by the capture of Bara. Thereupon the chiefs of
+ Zamua, convinced of their helplessness, purchased the king&rsquo;s departure by
+ presents of horses, gold, silver, and corn.** Nurrammân alone remained
+ impregnable in his retreat at Nishpi, and an attempt to oust him resulted
+ solely in the surrender of the fortress of Birutu.*** The campaign, far
+ from having been decisive, had to be continued during the winter in
+ another direction where revolts had taken place,&mdash;in Khudun, in
+ Kissirtu, and in the fief of Arashtua,**** all three of which extended
+ over the upper valleys of the lesser Zab, the Radanu, the Turnat, and
+ their affluents.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Mount Kinipa is a part of Nizir, the Khalkhalân-dagh, if
+ we may-judge from the direction of the Assyrian campaign.
+
+ ** None of these places can be identified with certainty.
+ The gist of the account leads us to gather that Bara was
+ situated to the east of Dagara, and formed its frontier; we
+ shall not be far wrong in looking for all these districts in
+ the fastnesses of the Kara-dagh, in the caza of
+ Suleimaniyeh. Mount Nishpi is perhaps the Segirmc-dagh of
+ the present day.
+
+ *** The Assyrian compiler appears to have made use of two
+ slightly differing accounts of this campaign; he has twice
+ repeated the same facts without noticing his mistake.
+
+ **** The fief of Arashtua, situated beyond the Turnat, is
+ probably the district of Suleimaniyeh; it is, indeed, at
+ this place only that the upper course of the Turnat is
+ sufficiently near to that of the Radanu to make the marches
+ of Assur-nazir-pal in the direction indicated by the
+ Assyrian scribe possible. According to the account of the
+ <i>Annals</i>, it seems to me that we must seek for Khudun and
+ Kissirtu to the south of the fief of Arashtua, in the modern
+ cazas of Gulanbar or Shehrizôr.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The king once more set out from Kakzi, crossed the Zab and the Eadanu,
+ through the gorges of Babiti, and halting on the ridges of Mount Simaki,
+ peremptorily demanded tribute from Dagara.* This was, however, merely a
+ ruse to deceive the enemy, for taking one evening the lightest of his
+ chariots and the best of his horsemen, he galloped all night without
+ drawing rein, crossed the Turnat at dawn, and pushing straight forward,
+ arrived in the afternoon of the same day before the walls of Ammali, in
+ the very heart of the fief of Arashtua.** The town vainly attempted a
+ defence; the whole population was reduced to slavery or dispersed in the
+ forests, the ramparts were demolished, and the houses reduced to ashes.
+ Khudun with twenty, and Kissirtu with ten of its villages, Bara, Kirtiara,
+ Dur-Lullumê, and Bunisa, offered no further resistance, and the invading
+ host halted within sight of the defiles of Khashmar.***
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The <i>Annals of Assur-nazir-pal</i> go on to mention that
+ Mount Simaki extended as far as the Turnat, and that it was
+ close to Mount Azira. This passage, when compared with that
+ in which the opening of the campaign is described, obliges
+ us to recognise in Mounts Simaki and Azira two parts of the
+ Shehrizôr chain, parallel to the Seguirmé-dagh. The fortress
+ of Mizu, mentioned in the first of these two texts, may
+ perhaps be the present Gurân-kaleh.
+
+ ** Hommel thinks that Ammali is perhaps the present
+ Suleimaniyeh; it is, at all events, on this side that we
+ must look for its site.
+
+ *** I do not know whether we may trace the name of the
+ ancient Mount Khashmar-Khashmir in the present Azmir-dagh;
+ it is at its feet, probably in the valley of Suleimanabad,
+ that we ought to place the passes of Khashmar.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ One kinglet, however, Amika of Zamru, showed no intention of capitulating.
+ Entrenched behind a screen of forests and frowning mountain ridges, he
+ fearlessly awaited the attack. The only access to the remote villages over
+ which he ruled, was by a few rough roads hemmed in between steep cliffs
+ and beds of torrents; difficult and dangerous at ordinary times, they were
+ blocked in war by temporary barricades, and dominated at every turn by
+ some fortress perched at a dizzy height above them. After his return to
+ the camp, where his soldiers were allowed a short respite, Assur-nazir-pal
+ set out against Zamru, though he was careful not to approach it directly
+ and attack it at its most formidable points. Between two peaks of the Lara
+ and Bidirgi ranges he discovered a path which had been deemed
+ impracticable for horses, or even for heavily armed men. By this route,
+ the king, unsuspected by the enemy, made his way through the mountains,
+ and descended so unexpectedly upon Zamru, that Amika had barely time to
+ make his escape, abandoning everything in his alarm&mdash;palace,
+ treasures, harem, and even his chariot.* A body of Assyrians pursued him
+ hotly beyond the fords of the Lallu, chasing him as far as Mount Itini;
+ then, retracing their steps to headquarters, they at once set out on a
+ fresh track, crossed the Idir, and proceeded to lay waste the plains of
+ Ilaniu and Suâni.**
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * This raid, which started from the same point as the
+ preceding one, ran eastwards in an opposite direction and
+ ended at Mount Itini. Leaving the fief of Arashtua in the
+ neighbourhood of Suleimaniyeh, Assur-nazir-pal crossed the
+ chain of the Azmir-dagh near Pir-Omar and Gudrun, where we
+ must place Mounts Lara and Bidirgi, and emerged upon Zamru;
+ the only-places which appear to correspond to Zamru in that
+ region are Kandishin and Suleimanabad. Hence the Lallu is
+ the river which runs by Kandishin and Suleimanabad, and
+ Itini the mountain which separates this river from the
+ Tchami-Kizildjik.
+
+ ** I think we may recognise the ancient name of Ilaniu in
+ that of Alan, now borne by a district on the Turkish and
+ Persian frontier, situated between Kunekd ji-dagh and the
+ town of Serdesht. The expedition, coming from the fief of
+ Arashtua, must have marched northwards: the Idir in this
+ case must be the Tchami-Kizildjik, and Mount Sabua the chain
+ of mountains above Serdesht.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Despairing of taking Amika prisoner, Assur-nazir-pal allowed him to lie
+ hidden among the brushwood of Mount Sabua, while he himself called a halt
+ at Parsindu,* and set to work to organise the fruits of his conquest.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Parsindu, mentioned between Mount Ilaniu and the town of
+ Zamru, ought to lie somewhere in the valley of Tchami-
+ Kizildjik, near Murana.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ He placed garrisons in the principal towns&mdash;-at Parsindu, Zamru, and
+ at Arakdi in Lullumê, which one of his predecessors had re-named
+ Tukulti-Ashshur-azbat,* &mdash;&ldquo;I have taken the help of Assur.&rdquo; He next
+ imposed on the surrounding country an annual tribute of gold, silver,
+ lead, copper, dyed stuffs, oxen, sheep, and wine. Envoys from neighbouring
+ kings poured in&mdash;from Khudun; Khubushkia, and Gilzân, and the whole
+ of Northern Zamua bowed &ldquo;before the splendour of his arms;&rdquo; it now needed
+ only a few raids resolutely directed against Mounts Azîra and Simaki, as
+ far as the Turn at, to achieve the final pacification of the South. While
+ in this neighbourhood, his attention was directed to the old town of
+ Atlîla,** built by Sibir,*** an ancient king of Karduniash, but which had
+ been half ruined by the barbarians. He re-named it Dur-Assur, &ldquo;the
+ fortress of Assur,&rdquo; and built himself within it a palace and storehouses,
+ in which he accumulated large quantities of corn, making the town the
+ strongest bulwark of his power on the Cossæan border.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ *The approximate site of Arakdi is indicated in the
+ itinerary of Assur-nazir-pal itself; the king comes from
+ Zamru in the neighbourhood of Sulei-manabad, crosses Mount
+ Lara, which is the northern part of the Azmir-dagh, and
+ arrives at Arakdi, possibly somewhere in Surtash. In the
+ course of the preceding campaign, after having laid waste
+ Bara, he set out from this same town (Arakdi) to subdue
+ Nishpi, all of which bears out the position I have
+ indicated. The present town of Baziân would answer fairly
+ well for the site of a place destined to protect the
+ Assyrian frontier on this side.
+
+ ** Given its position on the Chaldæan frontier, Atlîla is
+ probably to be identified with the Kerkuk of the present
+ day.
+
+ *** Hommel is inclined to believe that Sibir was the
+ immediate predecessor of Nabubaliddin, who reigned at
+ Babylon at the same time as Assur-nazir-pal at Nineveh;
+ consequently he would be a contemporary of Rammân-nirâri
+ III. and of Tukulti-ninip II. Peiser and Rost have
+ identified him with Simmash-shikhu.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0020" id="linkimage-0020">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/037.jpg" width="100%"
+ alt="037.jpg the Zab Below The Passes of Alan, The Ancient Ilaniu " />
+ </div>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Drawn by Boudier, from a photograph by M. de Morgan.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The two campaigns of B.C. 882 and 881 had cost Assur-nazir-pal great
+ efforts, and their results had been inadequate to the energy expended. His
+ two principal adversaries, Nurrammân and Amika, had eluded him, and still
+ preserved their independence at the eastern extremities of their former
+ states. Most of the mountain tribes had acknowledged the king&rsquo;s supremacy
+ merely provisionally, in order to rid themselves of his presence; they had
+ been vanquished scores of times, but were in no sense subjugated, and the
+ moment pressure was withdrawn, they again took up arms. The districts of
+ Zamua alone, which bordered on the Assyrian plain, and had been occupied
+ by a military force, formed a province, a kind of buffer state between the
+ mountain tribes and the plains of the Zab, protecting the latter from
+ incursions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Assur-nazir-pal, feeling himself tolerably safe on that side, made no
+ further demands, and withdrew his battalions to the westward part of his
+ northern frontier. He hoped, no doubt, to complete the subjugation of the
+ tribes who still contested the possession of various parts of the
+ Kashiari, and then to push forward his main guard as far as the Euphrates
+ and the Arzania, so as to form around the plain of Amidi a zone of vassals
+ or tutelary subjects like those of Zamua. With this end in view, he
+ crossed the Tigris near its source at the traditional fords, and made his
+ way unmolested in the bend of the Euphrates from the palace of Tilluli,
+ where the accustomed tribute of Kummukh was brought to him, to the
+ fortress of Ishtarâti, and from thence to Kibaki. The town of Matiatê,
+ having closed its gates against him, was at once sacked, and this example
+ so stimulated the loyalty of the Kurkhi chiefs, that they ha*tened to
+ welcome him at the neighbouring military station of Zazabukha. The king&rsquo;s
+ progress continued thence as before, broken by frequent halts at the most
+ favourable points for levying contributions on the inhabitants.1
+ Assur-nazir-pal encountered no serious difficulty except on the northern
+ slopes of the Kashiari, but there again fortune smiled on him; all the
+ contested positions were soon ceded to him, including even Madara, whose
+ fourfold circuit of walls did not avail to save it from the conqueror.**
+ After a brief respite at Tushkhân, he set out again one evening with his
+ lightest chariots and the pick of his horsemen, crossed the Tigris on
+ rafts, rode all night, and arrived unexpectedly the next morning before
+ Pitura, the chief town of the Dirrabans.*** It was surrounded by a strong
+ double enceinte, through which he broke after forty-eight hours of
+ continuous assault: 800 of its men perished in the breach, and 700 others
+ were impaled before the gates.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * It is difficult to place any of these localities on the
+ map: they ought all to be found between the ford of the
+ Tigris, at Diarbeldr and the Euphrates, probably at the foot
+ of the Mihrab-dagh and the Kirwântchernen-dagh.
+
+ ** Madara belonged to a certain Lapturi, son of Tubusi,
+ mentioned in the campaign of the king&rsquo;s second year. In
+ comparing the facts given in the two passages, we see it was
+ situated on the eastern slope of the Kashiari, not far from
+ Tushkhan on one side, and Ardupa&mdash;that is probably Mardin&mdash;?
+ on the other. The position of Ortaveran, or of one of the
+ &ldquo;tells&rdquo; in its neighbourhood, answers fairly well to these
+ conditions.
+
+ *** According to the details given in the <i>Annals</i>, we must
+ place the town of Bitura (or Pitura) at about 19 miles from
+ Kurkh, on the other side of the Tigris, in a north-easterly
+ direction, and consequently the country of Lirrâ would be
+ between the Hazu-tchaî and the Batman-tchaî. The Matni, with
+ its passes leading in to Naîri, must in this case be the
+ mountain group to the north of Mayafarrikîn, known as the
+ Dordoseh-dagh or the Darkôsh-dagh.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Arbaki, at the extreme limits of Eirkhi, was the next to succumb, after
+ which the Assyrians, having pillaged Dirra, carried the passes of Matni
+ after a bloody combat, spread themselves over Naîri, burning 250 of its
+ towns and villages, and returned with immense booty to Tushkhân. They had
+ been there merely a few days when the newt arrived that the people of
+ Bît-Zamâni, always impatient of the yoke, had murdered their prince
+ Ammibaal, and had proclaimed a certain Burramman in his place.
+ Assur-nazir-pal marched upon Sinabux and repressed the insurrection,
+ reaping a rich harvest of spoil&mdash;chariots fully equipped, 600
+ draught-horses, 130 pounds of silver and as much of gold, 6600 pounds of
+ lead and the same of copper, 19,800 pounds of iron, stuffs, furniture in
+ gold and ivory, 2000 bulls, 500 sheep, the entire harem of Ammibaal,
+ besides a number of maidens of noble family together with their dresses.
+ Burramman was by the king&rsquo;s order flayed alive, and Arteanu his brother
+ chosen as his successor. Sinabu* and the surrounding towns formed part of
+ that network of colonies which in times past Shalmaneser I. had organised
+ as a protection from the incursions of the inhabitants of Naîri;
+ Assur-nazir-pal now used it as a rallying-place for the remaining Assyrian
+ families, to whom he distributed lands and confided the guardianship of
+ the neighbouring strongholds.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Hommel thinks that Sinabu is very probably the same as the
+ Kinabu mentioned above; but it appears from Assur-nazir-
+ pal&rsquo;s own account that this Kinabu was in the province of
+ Khalzidipkha (Khalzilukha) on the Kashiari, whereas Sinabu
+ was in Bît-Zamâni.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The results of this measure were not long in making themselves felt:
+ Shupria, Ulliba, and Nirbu, besides other districts, paid their dues to
+ the king, and Shura in Khamanu,* which had for some time held out against
+ the general movement, was at length constrained to submit (880 B.C.).
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Shur is mentioned on the return to Nairi, possibly on the
+ road leading from Amidi and Tushkhân to Nineveh. Hommel
+ believes that the country of Khamanu was the Amanos in
+ Cilicia, and he admits, but unwillingly, that Assur-nazir-
+ pal made a detour beyond the Euphrates. I should look for
+ Shura, and consequently for Khamanu, in the Tur-Abdin, and
+ should identify them with Saur, in spite of the difference
+ of the two initial articulations.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ However high we may rate the value of this campaign, it was eclipsed by
+ the following one. The Aramæans on the Khabur and the middle Euphrates had
+ not witnessed without anxiety the revival of Ninevite activity, and had
+ begged for assistance against it from its rival. Two of their principal
+ tribes, the Sukhi and the Laqi, had addressed themselves to the sovereign
+ then reigning at Babylon. He was a restless, ambitious prince, named
+ Nabu-baliddin, who asked nothing better than to excite a hostile feeling
+ against his neighbour, provided he ran no risk by his interference of
+ being drawn into open warfare. He accordingly despatched to the Prince of
+ Sukhi the best of his Cossoan troops, commanded by his brother Zabdanu and
+ one of the great officers of the crown, Bel-baliddin. In the spring of 879
+ B.C., Assur-nazir-pal determined once for all to put an end to these
+ intrigues. He began by inspecting the citadels flanking the line of the
+ Kharmish* and the Khabur,&mdash;Tabiti,** Magarisi,*** Shadikanni, Shuru
+ in Bît-Khafupi, and Sirki.****
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The Kharmish has been identified with the Hirmâs, the
+ river flowing by Nisibis, and now called the Nahr-Jaghjagha.
+
+ ** Tabiti is the Thebeta (Thebet) of Roman itineraries and
+ Syrian writers, situated 33 miles from Nisibis and 52 from
+ Singara, on the Nahr-Hesawy or one of the neighbouring
+ wadys.
+
+ *** Magarisi ought to be found on the present Nahr-
+ Jaghjagha, near its confluence with the Nahr-Jerrâhi and its
+ tributaries; unfortunately, this part of Mesopotamia is
+ still almost entirely unexplored, and no satisfactory map of
+ it exists as yet.
+
+ **** Sirki is Circesium at the mouth of the Khabur.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Between the embouchures of the Khabur and the Balîkh, the Euphrates winds
+ across a vast table-land, ridged with marly hills; the left bank is dry
+ and sterile, shaded at rare intervals by sparse woods of poplars or groups
+ of palms. The right bank, on the contrary, is seamed with fertile valleys,
+ sufficiently well watered to permit the growth of cereals and the raising
+ of cattle. The river-bed is almost everywhere wide, but strewn with
+ dangerous rocks and sandbanks which render navigation perilous. On nearing
+ the ruins of Halebiyeh, the river narrows as it enters the Arabian hills,
+ and cuts for itself a regular defile of three or four hundred paces in
+ length, which is approached by the pilots with caution.*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * It is at this defile of El-Hammeh, and not at that of
+ Birejik at the end of the Taurus, that we must place the
+ <i>Khinqi sha Purati</i>&mdash;the narrows of the Euphrates&mdash;so often
+ mentioned in the account of this campaign.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Assur-nazir-pal, on leaving Sirki, made his way along the left bank,
+ levying toll on Supri, Naqarabâni, and several other villages in his
+ course. Here and there he called a halt facing some town on the opposite
+ bank, but the boats which could have put him across had been removed, and
+ the fords were too well guarded to permit of his hazarding an attack. One
+ town, however, Khindânu, made him a voluntary offering which, he affected
+ to regard as a tribute, but Kharidi and Anat appeared not even to suspect
+ his presence in their vicinity, and he continued on his way without having
+ obtained from them anything which could be construed into a mark of
+ vassalage.*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The detailed narrative of the <i>Annals</i> informs us that
+ Assur-nazir-pal encamped on a mountain between Khindânu and
+ Bît-Shabaia, and this information enables us to determine on
+ the map with tolerable certainty the localities mentioned in
+ this campaign. The mountain in question can be none other
+ than El-Hammeh, the only one met with on this bank of the
+ Euphrates between the confluents of the Euphrates and the
+ Khabur. Khindânu is therefore identical with the ruins of
+ Tabus, the Dabausa of Ptolemy; hence Supri and Naqabarâni
+ are situated between this point and Sirki, the former in the
+ direction of Tayebeh, the latter towards El-Hoseîniyeh. On
+ the other hand, the ruins of Kabr Abu-Atîsh would correspond
+ very well to Bît-Shabaia: is the name of Abu-Sbé borne by
+ the Arabs of that neighbourhood a relic of that of Shabaia.
+ Kharidi ought in that case to be looked for on the opposite
+ bank, near Abu-Subân and Aksubi, where Chesney points out
+ ancient remains. A day&rsquo;s march beyond Kabr Abu-Atîsh brings
+ us to El-Khass, so that the town of Anat would be in the
+ Isle of Moglah. Shuru must be somewhere near one of the two
+ Tell-Menakhîrs on this side the Balikh.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0021" id="linkimage-0021">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/044.jpg" width="100%"
+ alt="044.jpg the Campaigns of Assur-nazir-pal in Mesopotamia " />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ At length, on reaching Shuru, Shadadu, the Prince of Sukhi, trusting in
+ his Cossoans, offered him battle; but he was defeated by Assur-na&rsquo;zir-pal,
+ who captured the King of Babylon&rsquo;s brother, forced his way into the town
+ after an assault lasting two days, and returned to Assyria laden with
+ spoil. This might almost be considered as a repulse; for no sooner had the
+ king quitted the country than the Aramaeans in their turn crossed the
+ Euphrates and ravaged the plains of the Khabur.* Assur-nazir-pal resolved
+ not to return until he was in a position to carry his arms into the heart
+ of the enemy&rsquo;s country. He built a flotilla at Shuru in Bît-Khalupi on
+ which he embarked his troops. Wherever the navigation of the Euphrates
+ proved to be difficult, the boats were drawn up out of the water and
+ dragged along the banks over rollers until they could again be safely
+ launched; thus, partly afloat and partly on land, they passed through the
+ gorge of Halebiyeh, landed at Kharidi, and inflicted a salutary punishment
+ on the cities which had defied the king&rsquo;s wrath on his last expedition.
+ Khindânu, Kharidi, and Kipina were reduced to ruins, and the Sukhi and the
+ Laqi defeated, the Assyrians pursuing them for two days in the Bisuru
+ mountains as far as the frontiers of Bit-Adini.**
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The <i>Annals</i> do not give us either the <i>limmu</i> or the date
+ of the year for this new expedition. The facts taken
+ altogether prove that it was a continuation of the preceding
+ one, and it may therefore be placed in the year B.C. 878.
+
+ ** The campaign of B.C. 878 had for its arena that of the
+ Euphrates which lies between the Khabur and the Balikh; this
+ time, however, the principal operations took place on the
+ right bank. If Mount Bisuru is the Jebel-Bishri, the town of
+ Kipina, which is mentioned between it and Kharidi, ought to
+ be located between Maidân and Sabkha.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ A complete submission was brought about, and its permanency secured by the
+ erection of two strongholds, one of which, Kar-assur-nazir-pal, commanded
+ the left, and the other, Nibarti-assur, the right bank of the Euphrates.*
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This last expedition had brought the king into contact with the most
+ important of the numerous Aramaean states congregated in the western
+ region of Mesopotamia. This was Bît-Adini, which lay on both sides of the
+ middle course of the Euphrates.** It included, on the right bank, to the
+ north of Carchemish, between the hills on the Sajur and Arabân-Su, a
+ mountainous but fertile district, dotted over with towns and fortresses,
+ the names of some of which have been preserved&mdash;Pakarrukhbuni,
+ Sursunu, Paripa, Dabigu, and Shitamrat.*** Tul-Barsip, the capital, was
+ situated on the left bank, commanding the fords of the modern Birejîk,****
+ and the whole of the territory between this latter and the Balîkh
+ acknowledged the rule of its princes, whose authority also extended
+ eastwards as far as the basaltic plateau of Tul-Abâ, in the Mesopotamian
+ desert.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The account in the Annals is confused, and contains
+ perhaps some errors with regard to the facts. The site of
+ the two towns is nowhere indicated, but a study of the map
+ shows that the Assyrians could not become masters of the
+ country without occupying the passes of the Euphrates; I am
+ inclined to think that Kar-assur-nazir-pal is El-Halebiyeh,
+ and Nibarti-assur, Zalebiyeh, the Zenobia of Roman times.
+
+ ** Bît-Adini appears to have occupied, on the right bank of
+ the Euphrates, a part of the cazas of Aîn-Tab, Rum-kaleh,
+ and Birejîk, that of Suruji, minus the nakhiyeh of Harrân,
+ the larger part of the cazas of Membîj and of Rakkah, and
+ part of the caza of Zôr, the cazas being those represented
+ on the maps of Vital Cuinet.
+
+ *** None of these localities can be identified with
+ certainty, except perhaps Dabigu, a name we may trace in
+ that of the modern village of Dehbek.
+
+ **** Tul-Barsip has been identified with Birejîk.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ To the south-east, Bît-Adini bordered upon the country of the Sukhi and
+ the Laqi,* lying to the east of Assyria; other principalities, mainly of
+ Aramoan origin, formed its boundary to the north and north-west&mdash;Shugab
+ in the bend of the Euphrates, from Birejîk to Samosata,** Tul-Abnî around
+ Edessa,*** the district of Harrân,**** Bît-Zamani, Izalla in the
+ Tektek-dagh and on the Upper Khabur, and Bît-Bakhiâni in the plain
+ extending from the Khabur to the Kharmish.^
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * In his previous campaign Assur-nazir-pal had taken two
+ towns of Bît-Adini, situated on the right bank of the
+ Euphrates, at the eastern extremity of Mount Bisuru, near
+ the frontier of the Lâqi.
+
+ ** The country of Shugab is mentioned between Birejîk (Tul-
+ Barsip) and Bît-Zamani, in one of the campaigns of
+ Shalmaneser III., which obliges us to place it in the caza
+ of Rum-kaleh; the name has been read Sumu.
+
+ *** Tul-Abnî, which was at first sought for near the sources
+ of the Tigris, has been placed in the Mesopotamian plain.
+ The position which it occupies among the other names obliges
+ us to put it near Bît-Adini and Bît-Zamani: the only
+ possible site that I can find for it is at Orfah, the Edessa
+ of classical times.
+
+ **** The country of Harrân is nowhere mentioned as belonging
+ either to Bît-Adini or to Tul-Abnî: we must hence conclude
+ that at this period it formed a little principality
+ independent of those two states.
+
+ ^ The situation of Bît-Bakhiâni is shown by the position
+ which it occupies in the account of the campaign, and by the
+ names associated with it in another passage of the <i>Annals</i>.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Bît-Zamani had belonged to Assyria by right of conquest ever since the
+ death of Ammibaal; Izalla and Bît-Bakhiâni had fulfilled their duties as
+ vassals whenever Assur-nazir-pal had appeared in their neighbourhood;
+ Bît-Adini alone had remained independent, though its strength was more
+ apparent than real. The districts which it included had never been able to
+ form a basis for a powerful state. If by chance some small kingdom arose
+ within it, uniting under one authority the tribes scattered over the
+ burning plain or along the river banks, the first conquering dynasty which
+ sprang up in the neighbourhood would be sure to effect its downfall, and
+ absorb it under its own leadership. As Mitâni, saved by its remote
+ position from bondage to Egypt, had not been able to escape from
+ acknowledging the supremacy of the Khâti, so Bît-Adini was destined to
+ fall almost without a struggle under the yoke of the Assyrians. It was
+ protected from their advance by the volcanic groups of the Urâa and
+ Tul-Abâ, which lay directly in the way of the main road from the marshes
+ of the Khabur to the outskirts of Tul-Barsip. Assur-nazir-pal, who might
+ have worked round this line of natural defence to the north through Nirbu,
+ or to the south through his recently acquired province of Lâqi, preferred
+ to approach it in front; he faced the desert, and, in spite of the
+ drought, he invested the strongest citadel of Tul-Abâ in the month of
+ June, 877 B.C. The name of the place was Kaprabi, and its inhabitants
+ believed it impregnable, clinging as it did to the mountain-side &ldquo;like a
+ cloud in the sky.&rdquo; *
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The name is commonly interpreted &ldquo;Great Rock,&rdquo; and divided
+ thus&mdash;Kap-rabi. It may also be considered, like Kapridargila
+ or Kapranishâ, as being formed of <i>Kapru</i> and <i>abi</i>; this
+ latter element appears to exist in the ancient name of
+ Telaba, Thallaba, now Tul-Abâ. Kapr-abi might be a fortress
+ of the province of Tul-Abâ.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0025" id="linkimage-0025">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="figleft" style="width:50%;">
+ <img width="100%" src="images/054.jpg"
+ alt="054.jpg the War-chariot of The KhÂti Op The Ninth Century " />
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Drawn by Boudier, from a bas-relief.
+</pre>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ The king, however, soon demolished its walls by sapping and by the use of
+ the ram, killed 800 of its garrison, burned its houses, and carried off
+ 2400 men with their families, whom he installed in one of the suburbs of
+ Calah. Akhuni, who was then reigning in Bît-Adini, had not anticipated
+ that the invasion would reach his neighbourhood: he at once sent hostages
+ and purchased peace by a tribute; the Lord of Tul-Abnî followed his
+ example, and the dominion of Assyria was carried at a blow to the very
+ frontier of the Khâti. It was about two centuries before this that
+ Assurirba had crossed these frontiers with his vanquished army, but the
+ remembrance of his defeat had still remained fresh in the memory of the
+ people, as a warning to the sovereign who should attempt the old hazardous
+ enterprise, and repeat the exploits of Sargon of Agadê or of
+ Tiglath-pileser I. Assur-nazir-pal made careful preparations for this
+ campaign, so decisive a one for his own prestige and for the future of the
+ empire. He took with him not only all the Assyrian troops at his disposal,
+ but requisitioned by the way the armies of his most recently acquired
+ vassals, incorporating them with his own, not so much for the purpose of
+ augmenting his power of action, as to leave no force in his rear when once
+ he was engaged hand to hand with the Syrian legions. He left Calah in the
+ latter days of April, 876 B.C.,* receiving the customary taxes from
+ Bît-Bakhiâni, Izalla, and Bît-Adini, which comprised horses, silver, gold,
+ copper, lead, precious stuffs, vessels of copper and furniture of ivory;
+ having reached Tul-Barsip, he accepted the gifts offered by Tul-Abni, and
+ crossing the Euphrates upon rafts of inflated skins, he marched his
+ columns against Oarchemish.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * On the 8th Iyyâr, but without any indication of limmu, or
+ any number of the year or of the campaign; the date 876 B.C.
+ is admitted by the majority of historians.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The political organisation of Northern Syria had remained entirely
+ unaltered since the days when Tiglath-pileser made his first victorious
+ inroad into the country. The Cilician empire which succeeded to the
+ Assyrian&mdash;if indeed it ever extended as far as some suppose&mdash;did
+ not last long enough to disturb the balance of power among the various
+ races occupying Syria: it had subjugated them for a time, but had not been
+ able to break them up and reconstitute them. At the downfall of the
+ Cilician Empire the small states were still intact, and occupied, as of
+ old, the territory comprising the ancient Naharaim of the Egyptians, the
+ plateau between the Orontes and the Euphrates, the forests and marshy
+ lowlands of the Amanos, the southern slopes of Taurus, and the plains of
+ Cilicia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0022" id="linkimage-0022">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/050.jpg" width="100%"
+ alt="050.jpg Campaigns of Assur-nazir-pal in Syria " />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Of these states, the most famous, though not then the most redoubtable,
+ was that with which the name of the Khâti is indissolubly connected, and
+ which had Carchemish as its capital. This ancient city, seated on the
+ banks of the Euphrates, still maintained its supremacy there, but though
+ its wealth and religious ascendency were undiminished, its territory had
+ been curtailed. The people of Bît-Adini had intruded themselves between
+ this state and Kummukh, Arazik hemmed it in on the south, Khazazu and
+ Khalmân confined it on the west, so that its sway was only freely
+ exercised in the basin of the Sajur. On the north-west frontier of the
+ Khâti lay Gurgum, whose princes resided at Marqasi and ruled over the
+ central valley of the Pyramos together with the entire basin of the Ak-su.
+ Mikhri,* Iaudi, and Samalla lay on the banks of the Saluara, and in the
+ forests of the Amanos to the south of Gurgum. Kuî maintained its
+ uneventful existence amid the pastures of Cilicia, near the marshes at the
+ mouth of the Pyramos. To the south of the Sajur, Bît-Agusi** barred the
+ way to the Orontes; and from their lofty fastness of Arpad, its chiefs
+ kept watch over the caravan road, and closed or opened it at their will.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Mikhri or Ismikhri, i.e. &ldquo;the country of larches,&rdquo; was the
+ name of a part of the Amanos, possibly near the Pyramos.
+
+ ** The real name of the country was Iakhânu, but it was
+ called Bît-Gusi or Bît-Agusi, like Bît-Adini, Bît-Bakhiâni,
+ Bît-Omri, after the founder of the reigning dynasty. We must
+ place Iakhânu to the south of Azaz, in the neighbourhood of
+ Arpad, with this town as its capital.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ They held the key of Syria, and though their territory was small in
+ extent, their position was so strong that for more than a century and a
+ half the majority of the Assyrian generals preferred to avoid this
+ stronghold by making a detour to the west, rather than pass beneath its
+ walls. Scattered over the plateau on the borders of Agusi, or hidden in
+ the valleys of Amanos, were several less important principalities, most of
+ them owing allegiance to Lubarna, at that time king of the Patina and the
+ most powerful sovereign of the district. The Patina had apparently
+ replaced the Alasia of Egyptian times, as Bît-Adini had superseded Mitâni;
+ the fertile meadow-lands to the south of Samalla on the Afrîn and the
+ Lower Orontes, together with the mountainous district between the Orontes
+ and the sea as far as the neighbourhood of Eleutheros, also belonged to
+ the Patina.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0023" id="linkimage-0023">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/052.jpg" width="100%"
+ alt="052.jpg Bas-relief from a Building at Sinjirli " />
+ </div>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a sketch by Perrot and Chipiez.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ On the southern frontier of the Patina lay the important Phoenician
+ cities, Arvad, Arka, and Sina; and on the south-east, the fortresses
+ belonging to Hamath and Damascus. The characteristics of the country
+ remained unchanged. Fortified towns abounded on all sides, as well as
+ large walled villages of conical huts, like those whose strange outlines
+ on the horizon are familiar to the traveller at the present-day. The
+ manners and civilisation of Chaldæa pervaded even more than formerly the
+ petty courts, but the artists clung persistently to Asianic tradition, and
+ the bas-reliefs which adorned the palaces and temples were similar in
+ character to those we find scattered throughout Asia Minor; there is the
+ same inaccurate drawing, the same rough execution, the same tentative and
+ awkward composition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0024" id="linkimage-0024">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/053.jpg" width="100%"
+ alt="053.jpg JibrÎn, a Village of Conical Huts, on the Plateau Of Aleppo " />
+ </div>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Drawn by Boudier, from a photograph reproduced in Peters.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The scribes from force of custom still employed the cuneiform syllabary in
+ certain official religious or royal inscriptions, but, as it was difficult
+ to manipulate and limited in application, the speech of the Aramæan
+ immigrants and the Phoenician alphabet gradually superseded the ancient
+ language and mode of writing.*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * There is no monument bearing an inscription in this
+ alphabet which can be referred with any certainty to the
+ time of Assur-nazir-pal, but the inscriptions of the kings
+ of Samalla date back to a period not more than a century and
+ a half later than his reign; we may therefore consider the
+ Aramæan alphabet as being in current use in Northern Syria
+ at the beginning of the ninth century, some forty years
+ before the date of Mesha&rsquo;s inscription (i.e. the Moabite
+ stone).
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Thus these Northern Syrians became by degrees assimilated to the people of
+ Babylon and Nineveh, much as the inhabitants of a remote province nowadays
+ adapt their dress, their architecture, their implements of husbandry and
+ handicraft, their military equipment and organisation, to the fashions of
+ the capital.*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * One can judge of their social condition from the
+ enumeration of the objects which formed their tribute, or
+ the spoil which the Assyrian kings carried off from their
+ country.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Their armies were modelled on similar lines, and consisted of archers,
+ plkemen, slingers, and those troops of horsemen which accompanied the
+ chariotry on flying raids; the chariots, moreover, closely followed the
+ Assyrian type, even down to the padded bar with embroidered hangings which
+ connected the body of the chariot with the end of the pole.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0026" id="linkimage-0026">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/055.jpg" width="100%"
+ alt="055.jpg the Assyrian War-chariot of The Ninth Century B.c. " />
+ </div>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a bronze bas-relief on the
+ gates of Balawât.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The Syrian princes did not adopt the tiara, but they wore the long fringed
+ robe, confined by a girdle at the waist, and their mode of life, with its
+ ceremonies, duties, and recreations, differed little from that prevailing
+ in the palaces of Calah or Babylon. They hunted big game, including the
+ lion, according to the laws of the chase recognised at Nineveh, priding
+ themselves as much on their exploits in hunting, as on their triumphs in
+ war.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0027" id="linkimage-0027">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/056.jpg" width="100%"
+ alt="056.jpg a King of the KhÂti Hunting A Lion in His Chariot " />
+ </div>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Drawn by Boudier, from a photograph by Hogarth, published in
+ the <i>Recueil de Travaux</i>.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Their religion was derived from the common source which underlay all
+ Semitic religions, but a considerable number of Babylonian deities were
+ also worshipped; these had been introduced in some cases without any
+ modification, whilst in others they had been assimilated to more ancient
+ gods bearing similar characteristics: at Nerab, among the Patina, Nusku
+ and his female companion Nikal, both of Chaldæan origin, claimed the
+ homage of the faithful, to the disparagement of Shahr the moon and Shamash
+ the sun. Local cults often centred round obscure deities held in little
+ account by the dominant races; thus Samalla reverenced Uru the light,
+ Bekubêl the wind, the chariot of El, not to mention El himself, Besheph,
+ Hadad, and the Cabin, the servants of Besheph.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0028" id="linkimage-0028">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="figleft" style="width:21%;">
+ <img width="100%" src="images/057.jpg" alt="057.jpg the God Hadad " />
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Drawn by Faucher-
+Gudin, from the
+photograph in
+Luschan.
+</pre>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ These deities were mostly of the Assyrian type, and if one may draw any
+ conclusion from the few representations of them already discovered, their
+ rites must have been celebrated in a manner similar to that followed in
+ the cities on the Lower Euphrates. Scarcely any signs of Egyptian
+ influence survived, though here and there a trace of it might be seen in
+ the figures of calf or bull, the vulture of Mut or the sparrow-hawk of
+ Horus. Assur-nazir-pal, marching from the banks of the Khabur to
+ Bît-Adini, and from Bît-Adini passing on to Northern Syria, might almost
+ have imagined himself still in his own dominions, so gradual and
+ imperceptible were the changes in language and civilisation in the country
+ traversed between Nineveh and Assur, Tul-Barsip and Samalla.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His expedition was unattended by danger or bloodshed. Lubarna, the
+ reigning prince of the Patina, was possibly at that juncture meditating
+ the formation of a Syrian empire under his rule. Unki, in which lay his
+ capital of Kunulua, was one of the richest countries of Asia,* being well
+ watered by the Afrin, Orontes, and Saluara;** no fields produced such rich
+ harvests as his, no meadows pastured such cattle or were better suited to
+ the breeding of war-horses.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The Unki of the Assyrians, the Uniuqa of the Egyptians, is
+ the valley of Antioch, the Amk of the present day. Kunulua
+ or Kinalia, the capital of the Patina, has been identified
+ with the Gindaros of Greek times; I prefer to identify it
+ with the existing Tell-Kunâna, written for Tell-Kunâla by
+ the common substitution of <i>n</i> for <i>l</i> at the end of proper
+ names.
+
+ ** The Saluara of the Assyrian texts is the present Kara-su,
+ which flows into the Ak-Denîz, the lake of Antioch.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0029" id="linkimage-0029">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/058.jpg" width="100%"
+ alt="058.jpg Religious Scene Displaying Egyptian Features " />
+ </div>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from the impression taken from a
+ Hittite cylinder.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ His mountain provinces yielded him wood and minerals, and provided a
+ reserve of semi-savage woodcutters and herdsmen from which to recruit his
+ numerous battalions. The neighbouring princes, filled with uneasiness or
+ jealousy by his good fortune, saw in the Assyrian monarch a friend and a
+ liberator rather than an enemy. Carchemish opened its gates and laid at
+ his feet the best of its treasures&mdash;twenty talents of silver, ingots,
+ rings, and daggers of gold, a hundred talents of copper, two hundred
+ talents of iron, bronze bulls, cups decorated with scenes in relief or
+ outline, ivory in the tusk or curiously wrought, purple and embroidered
+ stuffs, and the state carriage of its King Shangara. The Hittite troops,
+ assembled in haste, joined forces with the Aramæan auxiliaries, and the
+ united host advanced on Coele-Syria. The scribe commissioned to record the
+ history of this expedition has taken a delight in inserting the most
+ minute details. Leaving Carchemish, the army followed the great caravan
+ route, and winding its way between the hills of Munzigâni and Khamurga,
+ skirting Bît-Agusi, at length arrived under the walls of Khazazu among the
+ Patina.*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Khazazu being the present Azaz, the Assyrian army must
+ have followed the route which still leads from Jerabis to
+ this town. Mount Munzigâni and Khamurga, mentioned between
+ Carchemish and Akhânu or Iakhânu, must lie between the Sajur
+ and the Koweik, near Shehab, at the only point on the route
+ where the road passes between two ranges of lofty hills.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The town having purchased immunity by a present of gold and of finely
+ woven stuffs, the army proceeded to cross the Apriê, on the bank of which
+ an entrenched camp was formed for the storage of the spoil. Lubarna
+ offered no resistance, but nevertheless refused to acknowledge his
+ inferiority; after some delay, ifc was decided to make a direct attack on
+ his capital, Kunulua, whither he had retired. The appearance of the
+ Assyrian vanguard put a speedy end to his ideas of resistance: prostrating
+ himself before his powerful adversary, he offered hostages, and emptied
+ his palaces and stables to provide a ransom. This comprised twenty talents
+ of silver, one talent of gold, a hundred talents of lead, a hundred
+ talents of iron, a thousand bulls, ten thousand sheep, daughters of his
+ nobles with befitting changes of garments, and all the paraphernalia of
+ vessels, jewels, and costly stuffs which formed the necessary furniture of
+ a princely household. The effect of his submission on his own vassals and
+ the neighbouring tribes was shown in different ways. Bît-Agusi at once
+ sent messengers to congratulate the conqueror, but the mountain provinces
+ awaited the invader&rsquo;s nearer approach before following its example.
+ Assur-nazir-pal, seeing that they did not take the initiative, crossed the
+ Orontes, probably at the spot where the iron bridge now stands, and making
+ his way through the country between laraku and Iaturi,* reached the banks
+ of the Sangura* without encountering any difficulty.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The spot where Assur-nazir-pal must have crossed the
+ Orontes is determined by the respective positions of Kunulua
+ and Tell-Kunâna. At the iron bridge, the modern traveller
+ has the choice of two roads: one, passing Antioch and Beît-
+ el-Mâ, leads to Urdeh on the Nahr-el-Kebîr; the other
+ reaches the same point by a direct route over the Gebel
+ Kosseir. If, as I believe, Assur-nazir-pal took the latter
+ route, the country and Mount laraku must be the northern
+ part of Gebel Kosseir in the neighbourhood of Antioch, and
+ Iaturi, the southern part of the same mountain near Derkush.
+ laraku is mentioned in the same position by Shalmaneser
+ III., who reached it after crossing the Orontes, on
+ descending from the Amanos <i>en route</i> for the country of
+ Hamath.
+
+ ** The Sangura or Sagura has been identified by Delattre
+ with the Nahr-el-Kebîr, not that river which the Greeks
+ called the Eleutheros, but that which flows into the sea
+ near Latakia. Before naming the Sangura, the <i>Annals</i>
+ mention a country, whose name, half effaced, ended in <i>-ku</i>:
+ I think we may safely restore this name as [Ashtama]kou,
+ mentioned by Shalmaneser III. in this region, after the name
+ of laraku. The country of Ashtamaku would thus be the
+ present canton of Urdeh, which is traversed before reaching
+ the banks of the Nahr-el-Kebîr.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ After a brief halt there in camp, he turned his back on the sea, and
+ passing between Saratini and Duppâni,* took by assault the fortress of
+ Aribua.** This stronghold commanded all the surrounding country, and was
+ the seat of a palace which Lubarna at times used as a similar residence.
+ Here Assur-nazir-pal took up his quarters, and deposited within its walls
+ the corn and spoils of Lukhuti;*** he established here an Assyrian colony,
+ and, besides being the scene of royal festivities, it became henceforth
+ the centre of operations against the mountain tribes.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The mountain cantons of Saratini and Duppâni (Kalpâni
+ l&rsquo;Adpâni?), situated immediately to the south of the Nahr-el-
+ Kebîr, correspond to the southern part of Gebel-el-Akrad,
+ but I cannot discover any names on the modern map at all
+ resembling them.
+
+ ** Beyond Duppâni, Assur-nazir-pal encamped on the banks of
+ a river whose name is unfortunately effaced, and then
+ reached Aribua; this itinerary leads us to the eastern slope
+ of the Gebel Ansarieh in the latitude of Hamath. The only
+ site I can find in this direction fulfilling the
+ requirements of the text is that of Masiad, where there
+ still exists a fort of the Assassins. The name Aribua is
+ perhaps preserved in that of Rabaô, er-Rabahu, which is
+ applied to a wady and village in the neighbourhood of
+ Masiad.
+
+ *** Lukhuti must not be sought in the plains of the Orontes,
+ where Assur-nazir-pal would have run the risk of an
+ encounter with the King of Hamath or his vassals; it must
+ represent the part of the mountain of Ansarieh lying between
+ Kadmus, Masiad, and Tortosa.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The forts of the latter were destroyed, their houses burned, and prisoners
+ were impaled outside the gates of their cities. Having achieved this noble
+ exploit, the king crossed the intervening spurs of Lebanon and marched
+ down to the shores of the Mediterranean. Here he bathed his weapons in the
+ waters, and offered the customary sacrifices to the gods of the sea, while
+ the Phoenicians, with their wonted prudence, hastened to anticipate his
+ demands&mdash;Tyre, Sidon, Byblos, Mahallat, Maîza, Kaîza, the Amorites
+ and Arvad,* all sending tribute.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The point where Assur-nazir-pal touched the sea-coast
+ cannot be exactly determined: admitting that he set out from
+ Masiad or its neighbourhood, he must have crossed the
+ Lebanon by the gorge of the Eleutheros, and reached the sea-
+ board somewhere near the mouth of this river.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ One point strikes us forcibly as we trace on the map the march of this
+ victorious hero, namely, the care with which he confined himself to the
+ left bank of the Orontes, and the restraint he exercised in leaving
+ untouched the fertile fields of its valley, whose wealth was so calculated
+ to excite his cupidity. This discretion would be inexplicable, did we not
+ know that there existed in that region a formidable power which he may
+ have thought it imprudent to provoke. It was Damascus which held sway over
+ those territories whose frontiers he respected, and its kings, also
+ suzerains of Hamath and masters of half Israel, were powerful enough to
+ resist, if not conquer, any enemy who might present himself. The fear
+ inspired by Damascus naturally explains the attitude adopted by the
+ Hittite states towards the invader, and the precautions taken by the
+ latter to restrict his operations within somewhat narrow limits. Having
+ accepted the complimentary presents of the Phoenicians, the king again
+ took his way northwards&mdash;making a slight detour in order to ascend
+ the Amanos for the purpose of erecting there a stele commemorating his
+ exploits, and of cutting pines, cedars, and larches for his buildings&mdash;and
+ then returned to Nineveh amid the acclamations of his people.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In reading the history of this campaign, its plan and the principal events
+ which took place in it appear at times to be the echo of what had happened
+ some centuries before. The recapitulation of the halting-places near the
+ sources of the Tigris and on the banks of the Upper Euphrates, the marches
+ through the valleys of the Zagros or on the slopes of Kashiari, the
+ crushing one by one of the Mesopotamian races, ending in a triumphal
+ progress through Northern Syria, is almost a repetition, both as to the
+ names and order of the places mentioned, of the expedition made by
+ Tiglath-pileser in the first five years of his reign. The question may
+ well arise in passing whether Assur-nazir-pal consciously modelled his
+ campaign on that of his ancestor, as, in Egypt, Ramses III. imitated
+ Ramses II., or whether, in similar circumstances, he instinctively and
+ naturally followed the same line of march. In either case, he certainly
+ showed on all sides greater wisdom than his predecessor, and having
+ attained the object of his ambition, avoided compromising his success by
+ injudiciously attacking Damascus or Babylon, the two powers who alone
+ could have offered effective resistance. The victory he had gained, in
+ 879, over the brother of Nabu-baliddin had immensely flattered his vanity.
+ His panegyrists vied with each other in depicting Karduniash bewildered by
+ the terror of his majesty, and the Chaldæans overwhelmed by the fear of
+ his arms; but he did not allow himself to be carried away by their
+ extravagant flatteries, and continued to the end of his reign to observe
+ the treaties concluded between the two courts in the time of his
+ grandfather Rammân-nirâri.*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * His frontier on the Chaldæan side, between the Tigris and
+ the mountains, was the boundary fixed by Rammân-nirâri.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ He had, however, sufficiently enlarged his dominions, in less than ten
+ years, to justify some display of pride. He himself described his empire
+ as extending, on the west of Assyria proper, from the banks of the Tigris
+ near Nineveh to Lebanon and the Mediterranean;* besides which, Sukhi was
+ subject to him, and this included the province of Rapiku on the frontiers
+ of Babylonia.**
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The expression employed in this description and in similar
+ passages, <i>ishtu ibirtan nâru</i>, translated <i>from the ford
+ over the river</i>, or better, <i>from the other side of the
+ river</i>, must be understood as referring to Assyria proper:
+ the territory subject to the king is measured in the
+ direction indicated, starting from the rivers which formed
+ the boundaries of his hereditary dominions. <i>From the other
+ bank of the Tigris</i> means from the bank of the Tigris
+ opposite Nineveh or Oalah, whence the king and his army set
+ out on their campaigns.
+
+ ** Rapiku is mentioned in several texts as marking the
+ frontier between the Sukhi and Chaldæa.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ He had added to his older provinces of Amidi, Masios and Singar, the whole
+ strip of Armenian territory at the foot of the Taurus range, from the
+ sources of the Supnat to those of the Bitlis-tchaî, and he held the passes
+ leading to the banks of the Arzania, in Kirruri and Gilzân, while the
+ extensive country of Naîri had sworn him allegiance. Towards the
+ south-east the wavering tribes, which alternately gave their adherence to
+ Assur or Babylon according to circumstances, had ranged themselves on his
+ side, and formed a large frontier province beyond the borders of his
+ hereditary kingdom, between the Lesser Zab and the Turnat. But, despite
+ repeated blows inflicted on them, he had not succeeded in welding these
+ various factors into a compact and homogeneous whole; some small
+ proportion of them were assimilated to Assyria, and were governed directly
+ by royal officials,* but the greater number were merely dependencies, more
+ or less insecurely held by the obligations of vassalage or servitude. In
+ some provinces the native chiefs were under the surveillance of Assyrian
+ residents;** these districts paid an annual tribute proportionate to the
+ resources and products of their country: thus Kirruri and the neighbouring
+ states contributed horses, mules, bulls, sheep, wine, and copper vessels;
+ the Aramaeans gold, silver, lead, copper, both wrought and in the ore,
+ purple, and coloured or embroidered stuffs; while Izalla, Nirbu, Nirdun,
+ and Bît-Zamâni had to furnish horses, chariots, metals, and cattle.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * There were royal governors in Suru in Bit-Khalupi, in
+ Matiâte, in Madara, and in Naîri.
+
+ ** There were &ldquo;Assyrian&rdquo; residents in Kirruri and the
+ neighbouring countries, in Kirkhi, and in Naîri.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The less civilised and more distant tribes were not, like these, subject
+ to regular tribute, but each time the sovereign traversed their territory
+ or approached within reasonable distance, their chiefs sent or brought to
+ him valuable presents as fresh pledges of their loyalty. Royal outposts,
+ built at regular intervals and carefully fortified, secured the fulfilment
+ of these obligations, and served as depots for storing the commodities
+ collected by the royal officials; such outposts were, Damdamusa on the
+ north-west of the Kashiari range, Tushkhân on the Tigris, Tilluli between
+ the Supnat and the Euphrates, Aribua among the Patina, and others
+ scattered irregularly between the Greater and Lesser Zab, on the Khabur,
+ and also in Naîri. These strongholds served as places of refuge for the
+ residents and their guards in case of a revolt, and as food-depots for the
+ armies in the event of war bringing them into their neighbourhood. In
+ addition to these, Assur-nazir-pal also strengthened the defences of
+ Assyria proper by building fortresses at the points most open to attack;
+ he repaired or completed the defences of Kaksi, to command the plain
+ between the Greater and Lesser Zab and the Tigris; he rebuilt the castles
+ or towers which guarded the river-fords and the entrances to the valleys
+ of the Gebel Makhlub, and erected at Calah the fortified palace which his
+ successors continued to inhabit for the ensuing five hundred years.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Assur-nazir-pal had resided at Nineveh from the time of his accession to
+ the throne; from thence he had set out on four successive campaigns, and
+ thither he had returned at the head of his triumphant troops, there he had
+ received the kings who came to pay him homage, and the governors who
+ implored his help against foreign attacks; thither he had sent rebel
+ chiefs, and there, after they had marched in ignominy through the streets,
+ he had put them to torture and to death before the eyes of the crowd, and
+ their skins were perchance still hanging nailed to the battlements when he
+ decided to change the seat of his capital. The ancient capital no longer
+ suited his present state as a conqueror; the accommodation was too
+ restricted, the decoration too poor, and probably the number of apartments
+ was insufficient to house the troops of women and slaves brought back from
+ his wars by its royal master. Built on the very bank of the Tebilti, one
+ of the tributaries of the Khusur, and hemmed in by three temples, there
+ was no possibility of its enlargement&mdash;a difficulty which often
+ occurs in ancient cities. The necessary space for new buildings could only
+ have been obtained by altering the course of the stream, and sacrificing a
+ large part of the adjoining quarters of the city: Assur-nazir-pal
+ therefore preferred to abandon the place and to select a new site where he
+ would have ample space at his disposal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0030" id="linkimage-0030">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/067.jpg" width="100%" alt="067.jpg the Mounds of Calah " />
+ </div>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Drawn by Boudier, from Layard. The pointed mound on the left
+ near the centre of the picture represents the ziggurât of
+ the great temple.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ He found what he required close at hand in the half-ruined city of Calah,
+ where many of his most illustrious predecessors had in times past sought
+ refuge from the heat of Assur. It was now merely an obscure and sleepy
+ town about twelve miles south of Nineveh, on the right bank of the Tigris,
+ and almost at the angle made by the junction of this river with the
+ Greater Zab. The place contained a palace built by Shalmaneser I., which,
+ owing to many years&rsquo; neglect, had become uninhabitable. Assur-nazir-pal
+ not only razed to the ground the palaces and temples, but also levelled
+ the mound on which they had been built; he then cleared away the soil down
+ to the water level, and threw up an immense and almost rectangular terrace
+ on which to lay out his new buildings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0031" id="linkimage-0031">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="figright" style="width:38%;">
+ <img width="100%" src="images/068.jpg"
+ alt="068.jpg Stele of Assur-nazir-pal at Calah " />
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Drawn by Faucher-Gudin,
+from a photograph by Mansell.
+</pre>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ The king chose Ninip, the god of war, as the patron of the city, and
+ dedicated to him, at the north-west corner of the terrace, a ziggurât with
+ its usual temple precincts. Here the god was represented as a bull with a
+ man&rsquo;s head and bust in gilded alabaster, and two yearly feasts were
+ instituted in his honour, one in the month Sebat, the other in the month
+ Ulul. The ziggurât was a little over two hundred feet high, and was
+ probably built in seven stages, of which only one now remains intact:
+ around it are found several independent series of chambers and passages,
+ which may have been parts of other temples, but it is now impossible to
+ say which belonged to the local Belît, which to Sin, to Gula, to Rammân,
+ or to the ancient deity Râ. At the entrance to the largest chamber, on a
+ rectangular pedestal, stood a stele with rounded top, after the Egyptian
+ fashion. On it is depicted a figure of the king, standing erect and facing
+ to the left of the spectator; he holds his mace at his side, his right
+ hand is raised in the attitude of adoration, and above him, on the left
+ upper edge of the stele, are grouped the five signs of the planets; at the
+ base of the stele stands an altar with a triangular pedestal and circular
+ slab ready for the offerings to be presented to the royal founder by
+ priests or people. The palace extended along the south side of the terrace
+ facing the town, and with the river in its rear; it covered a space one
+ hundred and thirty-one yards in length and a hundred and nine in breadth.
+ In the centre was a large court, surrounded by seven or eight spacious
+ halls, appropriated to state functions; between these and the court were
+ many rooms of different sizes, forming the offices and private apartments
+ of the royal house. The whole palace was built of brick faced with stone.
+ Three gateways, flanked by winged, human-headed bulls, afforded access to
+ the largest apartment, the hall of audience, where the king received his
+ subjects or the envoys of foreign powers.* The doorways and walls of some
+ of the rooms were decorated with glazed tiles, but the majority of them
+ were covered with bands of coloured** bas-reliefs which portrayed various
+ episodes in the life of the king&mdash;his state-councils, his lion hunts,
+ the reception of tribute, marches over mountains and rivers,
+ chariot-skirmishes, sieges, and the torture and carrying away of captives.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * At the east end of the hall Layard found a block of
+ alabaster covered with inscriptions, forming a sort of
+ platform on which the king&rsquo;s throne may have stood.
+
+ ** Layard points out the traces of colouring still visible
+ when the excavations were made.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Incised in bands across these pictures are inscriptions extolling the
+ omnipotence of Assur, while at intervals genii with eagles&rsquo; beaks, or
+ deities in human form, imperious and fierce, appear with hands full of
+ offerings, or in the act of brandishing thunderbolts against evil spirits.
+ The architect who designed this imposing decoration, and the sculptors who
+ executed it, closely followed the traditions of ancient Chaldæa in the
+ drawing and composition of their designs, and in the use of colour or
+ chisel; but the qualities and defects peculiar to their own race give a
+ certain character of originality to this borrowed art. They exaggerated
+ the stern and athletic aspect of their models, making the figure
+ thick-set, the muscles extraordinarily enlarged, and the features
+ ludicrously accentuated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0033" id="linkimage-0033">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/071.jpg" width="100%"
+ alt="071.jpg Glazed Tile from Palace of Calah " />
+ </div>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Drawn by Boudier, after Layard.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Their pictures produce an impression of awkwardness, confusion and
+ heaviness, but the detail is so minute and the animation so great that the
+ attention of the spectator is forcibly arrested; these uncouth beings
+ impress us with the sense of their self-reliance and their confidence in
+ their master, as we watch them brandishing their weapons or hurrying to
+ the attack, and see the shock of battle and the death-blows given and
+ received. The human-headed bulls, standing on guard at the gates, exhibit
+ the calm and pensive dignity befitting creatures conscious of their
+ strength, while the lions passant who sometimes replace them, snarl and
+ show their teeth with an almost alarming ferocity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0034" id="linkimage-0034">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/072.jpg" width="100%"
+ alt="072.jpg Lion from Assur-nazir-pal&rsquo;s Palace " />
+ </div>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Drawn by Boudier, from a photograph of the sculpture in the
+ British Museum.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0032" id="linkimage-0032">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="figleft" style="width:50%;">
+ <img width="100%" src="images/070.jpg"
+ alt="070.jpg the Winged Bulls Op Assur-nazir-pal " />
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Drawn by Faucher-Gudin,
+from a sketch by Layard.
+</pre>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ The statues of men and gods, as a rule, are lacking in originality. The
+ heavy robes which drape them from head to foot give them the appearance of
+ cylinders tied in at the centre and slightly flattened towards the top.
+ The head surmounting this shapeless bundle is the only life-like part, and
+ even the lower half of this is rendered heavy by the hair and beard, whose
+ tightly curled tresses lie in stiff rows one above the other. The upper
+ part of the face which alone is visible is correctly drawn; the expression
+ is of rather a commonplace type of nobility&mdash;respectable but
+ self-sufficient. The features&mdash;eyes, forehead, nose, mouth&mdash;are
+ all those of Assur-nazir-pal; the hair is arranged in the fashion he
+ affected, and the robe is embroidered with his jewels; but amid all this
+ we miss the keen intelligence always present in Egyptian sculpture,
+ whether under the royal head-dress of Cheops or in the expectant eyes of
+ the sitting scribe: the Assyrian sculptor could copy the general outline
+ of his model fairly well, but could not infuse soul into the face of the
+ conqueror, whose &ldquo;countenance beamed above the destruction around him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The water of the Tigris being muddy, and unpleasant to the taste, and the
+ wells at Calah so charged with lime and bitumen as to render them
+ unwholesome, Assur-nazir-pal supplied the city with water from the
+ neighbouring Zab.* An abundant stream was diverted from this river at the
+ spot now called Negub, and conveyed at first by a tunnel excavated in the
+ rock, and thence by an open canal to the foot of the great terrace: at
+ this point the flow of the water was regulated by dams, and the surplus
+ was utilised for irrigation** purposes by means of openings cut in the
+ banks.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The presence of bitumen in the waters of Calah is due to
+ the hot springs which rise in the bed of the brook Shor-
+ derreh.
+
+ ** The canal of Negub&mdash;<i>Negub</i> signifies <i>hole</i> in Arabic&mdash;
+ was discovered by Layard. The Zab having changed its course
+ to the south, and scooped out a deeper bed for itself, the
+ double arch, which serves as an entrance to the canal, is
+ actually above the ordinary level of the river, and the
+ water flows through it only in flood-time.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The aqueduct was named Bâbilat-khigal&mdash;the bringer of plenty&mdash;and,
+ to justify the epithet, date-palms, vines, and many kinds of fruit trees
+ were planted along its course, so that both banks soon assumed the
+ appearance of a shady orchard interspersed with small towns and villas.
+ The population rapidly increased, partly through the spontaneous influx of
+ Assyrians themselves, but still more through the repeated introduction of
+ bands of foreign prisoners: forts, established at the fords of the Zab, or
+ commanding the roads which cross the Gebel Makhlub, kept the country in
+ subjection and formed an inner line of defence at a short distance from
+ the capital.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0035" id="linkimage-0035">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/074.jpg" width="100%"
+ alt="074.jpg a Corner of the Ruined Palace Of Assur-nazir-pal " />
+ </div>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Drawn by Boudier, from a photograph by Rassam.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Assur-nazir-pal kept up a palace, garden, and small temple, near the fort
+ of Imgur-Bel, the modern Balawât: thither he repaired for intervals of
+ repose from state affairs, to enjoy the pleasures of the chase and cool
+ air in the hot season. He did not entirely abandon his other capitals,
+ Nineveh and Assur, visiting them occasionally, but Calah was his favourite
+ seat, and on its adornment he spent the greater part of his wealth and
+ most of his leisure hours. Only once again did he abandon his peaceful
+ pursuits and take the field, about the year 897 B.C., during the eponymy
+ of Shamashnurî. The tribes on the northern boundary of the empire had
+ apparently forgotten the lessons they had learnt at the cost of so much
+ bloodshed at the beginning of his reign: many had omitted to pay the
+ tribute due, one chief had seized the royal cities of Amidi and Damdamusa,
+ and the rebellion threatened to spread to Assyria itself. Assur-nazir-pal
+ girded on his armour and led his troops to battle as vigorously as in the
+ days of his youth. He hastily collected, as he passed through their lands,
+ the tribute due from Kipâni, Izalla, and Kummukh, gained the banks of the
+ Euphrates, traversed Grubbu burning everything on his way, made a detour
+ through Dirria and Kirkhi, and finally halted before the walls of
+ Damdamusa. Six hundred soldiers of the garrison perished in the assault
+ and four hundred were taken prisoners: these he carried to Amidi and
+ impaled as an object-lesson round its walls; but, the defenders of the
+ town remaining undaunted, he raised the siege and plunged into the gorges
+ of the Kashiari. Having there reduced to submission Udâ, the capital of
+ Lapturi, son of Tubisi, he returned to Calah, taking with him six thousand
+ prisoners whom he settled as colonists around his favourite residence.
+ This was his last exploit: he never subsequently quitted his hereditary
+ domain, but there passed the remaining seven years of his life in peace,
+ if not in idleness. He died in 860 B.C., after a reign of twenty-five
+ years. His portraits represent him as a vigorous man, with a brawny neck
+ and broad shoulders, capable of bearing the weight of his armour for many
+ hours at a time. He is short in the head, with a somewhat flattened skull
+ and low forehead; his eyes are large and deep-set beneath bushy eyebrows,
+ his cheek-bones high, and his nose aquiline, with a fleshy tip and wide
+ nostrils, while his mouth and chin are hidden by moustache and beard. The
+ whole figure is instinct with real dignity, yet such dignity as is due
+ rather to rank and the habitual exercise of power, than to the innate
+ qualities of the man.*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Perrot and Chipiez do not admit that the Assyrian
+ sculptors intended to represent the features of their kings;
+ for this they rely chiefly on the remarkable likeness
+ between all the figures in the same series of bas-reliefs.
+ My own belief is that in Assyria, as in Egypt, the sculptors
+ took the portrait of the reigning sovereign as the model for
+ all their figures.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0036" id="linkimage-0036">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="figright" style="width:28%;">
+ <img width="100%" src="images/077.jpg" alt="077.jpg Shalmaneser III. " />
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Drawn by Boudier,
+from a photograph
+by Mansell, taken
+from the original
+stele in the British
+Museum.
+</pre>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ The character of Assur-nazir-pal, as gathered from the dry details of his
+ Annals, seems to have been very complex. He was as ambitious, resolute,
+ and active as any prince in the world; yet he refrained from offensive
+ warfare as soon as his victories had brought under his rule the majority
+ of the countries formerly subject to Tiglath-pileser I. He knew the
+ crucial moment for ending a campaign, arresting his progress where one
+ more success might have brought him into collision with some formidable
+ neighbour; and this wise prudence in his undertakings enabled him to
+ retain the principal acquisitions won by his arms. As a worshipper of the
+ gods he showed devotion and gratitude; he was just to his subjects, but
+ his conduct towards his enemies was so savage as to appear to us cruel
+ even for that terribly pitiless age: no king ever employed such horrible
+ punishments, or at least none has described with such satisfaction the
+ tortures inflicted on his vanquished foes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Perhaps such measures were necessary, and the harshness with which he
+ repressed insurrection prevented more frequent outbreaks and so averted
+ greater sacrifice of life. But the horror of these scenes so appals the
+ modern reader, that at first he can only regard Assur-nazir-pal as a royal
+ butcher of the worst type.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Assur-nazir-pal left to his successor an overflowing treasury, a valiant
+ army, a people proud of their progress and fully confident in their own
+ resources, and a kingdom which had recovered, during several years of
+ peace, from the strain of its previous conquests. Shalmaneser III.* drew
+ largely on the reserves of men and money which his father&rsquo;s foresight had
+ prepared, and his busy reign of thirty-five years saw thirty-two
+ campaigns, conducted almost without a break, on every side of the empire
+ in succession. A double task awaited him, which he conscientiously and
+ successfully fulfilled.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * [The Shalmaneser III. of the text
+ is the Shalmaneser II.
+ of the notes.&mdash;TR.]
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Assur-nazir-pal had thoroughly reorganised the empire and raised it to the
+ rank of a great power: he had confirmed his provinces and vassal states in
+ their allegiance, and had subsequently reduced to subjection, or, at any
+ rate, penetrated at various points, the little buffer principalities
+ between Assyria and the powerful kingdoms of Babylon, Damascus, and
+ Urartu; but he had avoided engaging any one of these three great states in
+ a struggle of which the issue seemed doubtful. Shalmaneser could not
+ maintain this policy of forbearance without loss of prestige in the eyes
+ of the world: conduct which might seem prudent and cautious in a
+ victorious monarch like Assur-nazir-pal would in him have argued timidity
+ or weakness, and his rivals would soon have provoked a quarrel if they
+ thought him lacking in the courage or the means to attack them.
+ Immediately after his accession, therefore, he assumed the offensive, and
+ decided to measure his strength first against Urartu, which for some years
+ past had been showing signs of restlessness. Few countries are more rugged
+ or better adapted for defence than that in which his armies were about to
+ take the field. The volcanoes to which it owed its configuration in
+ geological times, had become extinct long before the appearance of man,
+ but the surface of the ground still bears evidence of their former
+ activity; layers of basaltic rock, beds of scorias and cinders, streams of
+ half-disintegrated mud and lava, and more or less perfect cones, meet the
+ eye at every turn. Subterranean disturbances have not entirely ceased even
+ now, for certain craters&mdash;that of Tandurek, for example&mdash;sometimes
+ exhale acid fumes; while hot springs exist in the neighbourhood, from
+ which steaming waters escape in cascades to the valley, and earthquakes
+ and strange subterranean noises are not unknown. The backbone of these
+ Armenian mountains joins towards the south the line of the Grordyasan
+ range; it runs in a succession of zigzags from south-east to northwest,
+ meeting at length the mountains of Pontus and the last spurs of the
+ Caucasus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0037" id="linkimage-0037">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/079.jpg" width="100%"
+ alt="079.jpg the Two Peaks of Mount Ararat " />
+ </div>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Drawn by Boudier, from a photograph by A. Tissandier.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Lofty snow-clad peaks, chiefly of volcanic origin, rise here and there
+ among them, the most important being Akhta-dagh, Tandurek, Ararat,
+ Bingoel, and Palandoeken. The two unequal pyramids which form the summit
+ of Ararat are covered with perpetual snow, the higher of them being 16,916
+ feet above the sea-level. The spurs which issue from the principal chain
+ cross each other in all directions, and make a network of rocky basins
+ where in former times water collected and formed lakes, nearly all of
+ which are now dry in consequence of the breaking down of one or other of
+ their enclosing sides. Two only of these mountain lakes still remain,
+ entirely devoid of outlet, Lake Van in the south, and Lake Urumiah further
+ to the south-east. The Assyrians called the former the Upper Sea of Naîri,
+ and the latter the Lower Sea, and both constituted a defence for Urartu
+ against their attacks. To reach the centre of the kingdom of Urartu, the
+ Assyrians had either to cross the mountainous strip of land between the
+ two lakes, or by making a detour to the north-west, and descending the
+ difficult slopes of the valley of the Arzania, to approach the mountains
+ of Armenia lying to the north of Lake Van. The march was necessarily a
+ slow and painful one for both horses and men, along narrow winding valleys
+ down which rushed rapid streams, over raging torrents, through tangled
+ forests where the path had to be cut as they advanced, and over barren
+ wind-swept plateaux where rain and mist chilled and demoralized soldiers
+ accustomed to the warm and sunny plains of the Euphrates. The majority of
+ the armies which invaded this region never reached the goal of the
+ expedition: they retired after a few engagements, and withdrew as quickly
+ as possible to more genial climes. The main part of the Urartu remained
+ almost always unsubdued behind its barrier of woods, rocks, and lakes,
+ which protected it from the attacks levelled against it, and no one can
+ say how far the kingdom extended in the direction of the Caucasus. It
+ certainly included the valley of the Araxes and possibly part of the
+ valley of the Kur, and the steppes sloping towards the Caspian Sea. It was
+ a region full of contrasts, at once favoured and ill-treated by nature in
+ its elevation and aspect: rugged peaks, deep gorges, dense thickets,
+ districts sterile from the heat of subterranean fires, and sandy wastes
+ barren for lack of moisture, were interspersed with shady valleys, sunny
+ vine-clad slopes, and wide stretches of fertile land covered with rich
+ layers of deep alluvial soil, where thick-standing corn and meadow-lands,
+ alternating with orchards, repaid the cultivator for the slightest attempt
+ at irrigation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0038" id="linkimage-0038">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/080.jpg" width="100%"
+ alt="080.jpg End of the Harvest--cutting Straw " />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img alt="" src="images/080-text.jpg" width="100%" />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ History does not record who were the former possessors of this land; but
+ towards the middle of the ninth century it was divided into several
+ principalities, whose position and boundaries cannot be precisely
+ determined. It is thought that Urartu lay on either side of Mount Ararat
+ and on both banks of the Araxes, that Biainas lay around Lake Van,* and
+ that the Mannai occupied the country to the north and east of Lake
+ Urumiah;** the positions of the other tribes on the different tributaries
+ of the Euphrates or the slopes of the Armenian mountains are as yet
+ uncertain.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Urartu is the only name by which the Assyrians knew the
+ kingdom of Van; it has been recognised from the very
+ beginning of Assyriological studies, as well as its identity
+ with the Ararat of the Bible and the Alarodians of
+ Herodotus. It was also generally recognised that the name
+ Biainas in the Vannic inscriptions, which Hincks read Bieda,
+ corresponded to the Urartu of the Assyrians, but in
+ consequence of this mistaken reading, efforts have been made
+ to connect it with Adiabene. Sayce was the first to show
+ that Biainas was the name of the country of Van, and of the
+ kingdom of which Van was the capital; the word Bitâni which
+ Sayce connects with it is not a secondary form of the name
+ of Van, but a present day term, and should be erased from
+ the list of geographical names.
+
+ ** The Mannai are the Minni of Jeremiah (li. 27), and it is
+ in their country of Minyas that one tradition made the ark
+ rest after the Deluge.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The country was probably peopled by a very mixed race, for its mountains
+ have always afforded a safe asylum for refugees, and at each migration,
+ which altered the face of Western Asia, some fugitives from neighbouring
+ nations drifted to the shelter of its fastnesses.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0039" id="linkimage-0039"></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/082.jpg" width="100%" alt="082.jpg the Kingdom of Uratu " />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ The principal element, the Khaldi, were akin to that great family of
+ tribes which extended across the range of the Taurus, from the shores of
+ the Mediterranean to the Euxine, and included the Khalybes, the Mushku,
+ the Tabal, and the Khâti. The little preserved of their language resembles
+ what we know of the idioms in use among the people of Arzapi and Mitânni,
+ and their religion seems to have been somewhat analogous to the ancient
+ worship of the Hittites. The character of the ancient Armenians, as
+ revealed to us by the monuments, resembles in its main features that of
+ the Armenians of the present time. They appear as tall, strong, muscular,
+ and determined, full of zest for work and fighting, and proud of their
+ independence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0040" id="linkimage-0040">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/083.jpg" width="100%"
+ alt="083.jpg Fragment of a Votive Shield Of Urartian Work " />
+ </div>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a photograph by Hormuzd Rassam.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Some of them led a pastoral life, wandering about with their flocks during
+ the greater part of the year, obliged to seek pasturage in valley, forest,
+ or mountain height according to the season, while in winter they remained
+ frost-bound in semi-subterranean dwellings similar to those in which
+ descendants immure themselves at the present day. Where the soil lent
+ itself to agriculture, they proved excellent husbandmen, and obtained
+ abundant crops. Their ingenuity in irrigation was remarkable, and enabled
+ them to bring water by a system of trenches from distant springs to supply
+ their fields and gardens; besides which, they knew how to terrace the
+ steep hillsides so as to prevent the rapid draining away of moisture.
+ Industries were but little developed among them, except perhaps the
+ working of metals; for were they not akin to those Chalybes of the Pontus,
+ whose mines and forges already furnished iron to the Grecian world?
+ Fragments have been discovered in the ruined cities of Urartu of
+ statuettes, cups, and votive shields, either embossed or engraved, and
+ decorated with concentric bands of animals or men, treated in the Assyrian
+ manner, but displaying great beauty of style and remarkable finish of
+ execution.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0041" id="linkimage-0041">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/084.jpg" width="100%"
+ alt="084.jpg Site of an Urartian Town at Toprah-kaleh " />
+ </div>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Drawn by Boudier, from a photograph by M. Binder.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Their towns were generally fortified or perched on heights, rendering them
+ easy of defence, as, for example, Van and Toprah-Kaleh. Even such towns as
+ were royal residences were small, and not to be compared with the cities
+ of Assyria or Aram; their ground-plan generally assumed the form of a
+ rectangular oblong, not always traced with equal exactitude.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0042" id="linkimage-0042">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/085.jpg" width="100%"
+ alt="085.jpg the Ruins of a Palace Of Urartu at Toprah-kaleh " />
+ </div>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Drawn by Boudier, from a photograph by Hormuzd Rassam.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The walls were built of blocks of roughly hewn stone, laid in regular
+ courses, but without any kind of mortar or cement; they were surmounted by
+ battlements, and flanked at intervals by square towers, at the foot of
+ which were outworks to protect the points most open to attack. The
+ entrance was approached by narrow and dangerous pathways, which sometimes
+ ran on ledges across the precipitous face of the rock. The dwelling-houses
+ were of very simple construction, being merely square cabins of stone or
+ brick, devoid of any external ornament, and pierced by one low doorway,
+ but sometimes surmounted by an open colonnade supported by a row of small
+ pillars; a flat roof with a parapet crowned the whole, though this was
+ often replaced by a gabled top, which was better adapted to withstand the
+ rains and snows of winter. The palaces of the chiefs differed from the
+ private houses in the size of their apartments and the greater care
+ bestowed upon their decoration. Their façades were sometimes adorned with
+ columns, and ornamented with bucklers or carved discs of metal; slabs of
+ stone covered with inscriptions lined the inner halls, but we do not know
+ whether the kings added to their dedications to the gods and the recital
+ of their victories, pictures of the battles they had fought and of the
+ fortresses they had destroyed. The furniture resembled that in the houses
+ of Nineveh, but was of simpler workmanship, and perhaps the most valuable
+ articles were imported from Assyria or were of Aramaean manufacture. The
+ temples seemed to have differed little from the palaces, at least in
+ external appearance. The masonry was more regular and more skilfully laid;
+ the outer court was filled with brazen lavers and statues; the interior
+ was furnished with altars, sacrificial stones, idols in human or animal
+ shape, and bowls identical with those in the sanctuaries on the Euphrates,
+ but the nature and details of the rites in which they were employed are
+ unknown. One supreme deity, Khaldis, god of the sky, was, as far as we can
+ conjecture, the protector of the whole nation, and their name was derived
+ from his, as that of the Assyrians was from Assur, the Cossæans from
+ Kashshu, and the Khati from Khâtu.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0043" id="linkimage-0043">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/086.jpg" width="100%"
+ alt="086.jpg Temple of Khaldis at Muzazir " />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ This deity was assisted in the government of the universe by Teisbas, god
+ of the air, and Ardinîs the sun-god. Groups of secondary deities were
+ ranged around this sovereign triad&mdash;Auis, the water; Ayas, the earth;
+ Selardis, the moon; Kharubainis, Irmusinis, Adarutas, and Arzi-melas: one
+ single inscription enumerates forty-six, but some of these were worshipped
+ in special localities only.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0044" id="linkimage-0044">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/087.jpg" width="100%"
+ alt="089.jpg Assyrian Soldiers Carrying off Or Destroying The Furniture of an Urartian Temple " />
+ </div>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from Botta. Scribes are weighing
+ gold, and soldiers destroying the statue of a god with their
+ axes.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ It would appear as if no goddesses were included in the native Pantheon.
+ Saris, the only goddess known to us at present, is probably merely a
+ variant of the Ishtar of Nineveh or Arbela, borrowed from the Assyrians at
+ a later date.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first Assyrian conquerors looked upon these northern regions as an
+ integral part of Naîri, and included them under that name. They knew of no
+ single state in the district whose power might successfully withstand
+ their own, but were merely acquainted with a group of hostile provinces
+ whose internecine conflicts left them ever at the mercy of a foreign foe.*
+ Two kingdoms had, however, risen to some importance about the beginning of
+ the ninth century&mdash;that of the Mannai in the east, and that of Urartu
+ in the centre of the country. Urartu comprised the district of Ararat
+ proper, the province of Biaina, and the entire basin of the Arzania.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The single inscription of Tiglath-pileser I. contains a
+ list of twenty-three kings of Nairi, and mentions sixty
+ chiefs of the same country.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0045" id="linkimage-0045">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/090.jpg" width="100%"
+ alt="090.jpg Shalmanesee Iii. Crossing the Mountains " />
+ </div>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from one of the bas-reliefs on the
+ bronze gates of Balawât.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Arzashkun, one of its capitals, situated probably near the sources of this
+ river, was hidden, and protected against attack, by an extent of dense
+ forest almost impassable to a regular army. The power of this kingdom,
+ though as yet unorganised, had already begun to inspire the neighbouring
+ states with uneasiness. Assur-nazir-pal speaks of it incidentally as lying
+ on the northern frontier of his empire,* but the care he took to avoid
+ arousing its hostility shows the respect in which he held it.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Arzashku, Arzashkun, seems to be the Assyrian form of an
+ Urartian name ending in <i>-ka</i>, formed from a proper name
+ Arzash, which recalls the name Arsène, Arsissa, applied by
+ the ancients to part of Lake Van. Arzashkun might represent
+ the Ardzik of the Armenian historians, west of Malasgert.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0046" id="linkimage-0046">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="figright" style="width:51%;">
+ <img width="100%" src="images/093.jpg"
+ alt="093.jpg the People of Shugunia Fighting Against The Assyrians " />
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from
+one of the bas-reliefs on the
+bronze gates of Balawât.
+</pre>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ He was, indeed, as much afraid of Urartu as of Damascus, and though he
+ approached quite close to its boundary in his second campaign, he
+ preferred to check his triumphant advance rather than risk attacking it.
+ It appears to have been at that time under the undisputed rule of a
+ certain Sharduris, son of Lutipri, and subsequently, about the middle of
+ Assur-nazir-pal&rsquo;s reign, to have passed into the hands of Aramê, who
+ styled himself King of Naîri, and whose ambition may have caused those
+ revolts which forced Assur-nazir-pal to take up arms in the eighteenth
+ year of his reign. On this occasion the Assyrians again confined
+ themselves to the chastisement of their own vassals, and checked their
+ advance as soon as they approached Urartu. Their success was but
+ temporary; hardly had they withdrawn from the neighbourhood, when the
+ disturbances were renewed with even greater violence, very probably at the
+ instigation of Aramê. Shalmaneser III. found matters in a very
+ unsatisfactory state both on the west and south of Lake Van: some of the
+ peoples who had been subject to his father&mdash;the Khubushkia, the
+ pastoral tribes of the Gordæan mountains, and the Aramæans of the
+ Euphrates&mdash;had transferred their allegiance elsewhere. He immediately
+ took measures to recall them to a sense of their duty, and set out from
+ Calah only a few days after succeeding to the crown. He marched at first
+ in an easterly direction, and, crossing the pass of Simisi, burnt the city
+ of Aridi, thus proving that he was fully prepared to treat rebels after
+ the same fashion as his father. The lesson had immediate effect. All the
+ neighbouring tribes, Khargæans, Simisæans, the people of Simira, Sirisha,
+ and Ulmania, hastened to pay him homage even before he had struck his camp
+ near Aridi. Hurrying across country by the shortest route, which entailed
+ the making of roads to enable his chariots and cavalry to follow him, he
+ fell upon Khubushkia, and reduced a hundred towns to ashes, pursuing the
+ king Kakia into the depths of the forest, and forcing him to an
+ unconditional surrender. Ascending thence to Shugunia, a dependency of
+ Aramê&rsquo;s, he laid the principality waste, in spite of the desperate
+ resistance made on their mountain slopes by the inhabitants; then
+ proceeding to Lake Van, he performed the ceremonial rites incumbent on an
+ Assyrian king whenever he stood for the first time on the shores of a new
+ sea. He washed his weapons in the waters, offered a sacrifice to the gods,
+ casting some portions of the victim into the lake, and before leaving
+ carved his own image on the surface of a commanding rock. On his homeward
+ march he received tribute from Gilzân. This expedition was but the prelude
+ of further successes. After a few weeks&rsquo; repose at Nineveh, he again set
+ out to make his authority felt in the western portions of his dominions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Akhuni, chief of Bît-Adini, whose position was the first to be menaced,
+ had formed a league with the chiefs of all the cities which had formerly
+ bowed before Assur-nazir-pal&rsquo;s victorious arms, Gurgum, Samalla, Kuî, the
+ Patina, Car-chemish, and the Khâti. Shalmaneser seized Lalati* and
+ Burmarana, two of Akhuni&rsquo;s towns, drove him across the Euphrates, and
+ following close on his heels, collected as he passed the tribute of
+ Gurgum, and fell upon Samalla.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Lalati is probably the Lulati of the Egyptians. The modern
+ site is not known, nor is that of Burmarana.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Under the walls of Lutibu he overthrew the combined forces of Adini,
+ Samalla, and the Patina, and raised a trophy to commemorate his victory at
+ the sources of the Saluara; then turning sharply to the south, he crossed
+ the Orontes in pursuit of Shapalulme, King of the Patina.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0047" id="linkimage-0047">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/094.jpg" width="100%"
+ alt="094.jpg Prisoners from Shugunia, With Their Arms Tied And Yokes on Their Necks " />
+ </div>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from one of the bas-reliefs on the
+ bronze gates of Balawât.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Not far from Alizir he encountered a fresh army raised by Akhuni and the
+ King of Samalla, with contingents from Carchemish, Kuî, Cilicia, and
+ Iasbuki:* having routed it, he burnt the fortresses of Shapalulme, and
+ after occupying himself by cutting down cedars and cypress trees on the
+ Amanos in the province of Atalur, he left a triumphal stele engraved on
+ the mountain-side.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The country of Iasbuki is represented by Ishbak, a son of
+ Abraham and Keturah, mentioned in Genesis (xxv. 2) in
+ connection with Shuah.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0048" id="linkimage-0048">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/094b.jpg" width="100%"
+ alt="094b.jpg Sacrifice Offered by Shalmaneser Iii. " />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0049" id="linkimage-0049">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/095.jpg" width="100%"
+ alt="095.jpg Costumes Found in the Fifth Tomb " />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Next turning eastwards, he received the homage offered with alacrity by
+ the towns of Taia, Khazazu, Nulia, and Butamu, and, with a final tribute
+ from Agusi, he returned in triumph to Nineveh. The motley train which
+ accompanied, him showed by its variety the immense extent of country he
+ had traversed during this first campaign. Among the prisoners were
+ representatives of widely different races;&mdash;Khâti with long robes and
+ cumbrous head-dresses, following naked mountaineers from Shugunia, who
+ marched with yokes on their necks, and wore those close-fitting helmets
+ with short crests which have such a strangely modern look on the Assyrian
+ bas-reliefs. The actual results of the campaign were, perhaps, hardly
+ commensurate with the energy expended. This expedition from east to west
+ had certainly inflicted considerable losses on the rebels against whom it
+ had been directed; it had cost them dearly in men and cattle, and booty of
+ all kinds, and had extorted from them a considerable amount of tribute,
+ but they remained, notwithstanding, still unsubdued. As soon as the
+ Assyrian troops had quitted their neighbourhood, they flattered themselves
+ they were safe from further attack. No doubt they thought that a show of
+ submission would satisfy the new invader, as it had satisfied his father;
+ but Shalmaneser was not disposed to rest content with this nominal
+ dependence. He intended to exercise effective control over all the states
+ won by his sword, and the proof of their subjection was to be the regular
+ payment of tribute and fulfilment of other obligations to their suzerain.
+ Year by year he unfailingly enforced his rights, till the subject states
+ were obliged to acknowledge their master and resign themselves to
+ servitude.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The narrative of his reiterated efforts is a monotonous one. The king
+ advanced against Adini in the spring of 859 B.C., defeated Akhuni near
+ Tul-barsip, transported his victorious regiments across the Euphrates on
+ rafts of skins, seized Surunu, Paripa, and Dabigu* besides six fortresses
+ and two hundred villages, and then advanced into the territory of
+ Carchemish, which he proceeded to treat with such severity that the other
+ Hittite chiefs hastened to avert a similar fate by tendering their
+ submission.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Shalmaneser crossed the Euphrates near Tul-barsip, which
+ would lead him into the country between Birejîk, Rum-kaleh,
+ and Aintab, and it is in that district that we must look for
+ the towns subject to Akhuni. Dabigu, I consider, corresponds
+ to Dehbek on Rey&rsquo;s map, a little to the north-east of
+ Aintab; the sites of Paripa and Surunu are unknown.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The very enumeration of their offerings proves not only their wealth, but
+ the terror inspired by the advancing Assyrian host: Shapalulmê of the
+ Patina, for instance, yielded up three talents of gold, a hundred talents
+ of silver, three hundred talents of copper, and three hundred of iron, and
+ paid in addition to this an annual tribute of one talent of silver, two
+ talents of purple, and two hundred great beams of cedar-wood. Samalla,
+ Agusi, and Kummukh were each laid under tribute in proportion to their
+ resources, but their surrender did not necessarily lead to that of Adini.
+ Akhuni realised that, situated as he was on the very borders of Assyrian
+ territory, there was no longer a chance of his preserving his
+ semi-independence, as was the case with his kinsfolk beyond the Euphrates;
+ proximity to the capital would involve a stricter servitude, which would
+ soon reduce him from the condition of a vassal to that of a subject, and
+ make him merely a governor where he had hitherto reigned as king.
+ Abandoned by the Khâti, he sought allies further north, and entered into a
+ league with the tribes of Naîri and Urartu. When, in 858 B.C., Shalmaneser
+ III. forced an entrance into Tul-barsip, and drove back what was left of
+ the garrison on the right bank of the Euphrates, a sudden movement of
+ Aramê obliged him to let the prey escape from his grasp. Rapidly
+ fortifying Tul-barsip, Nappigi, Aligu, Pitru, and Mutkînu, and garrisoning
+ them with loyal troops to command the fords of the river, as his ancestor
+ Shalmaneser I. had done six centuries before,* he then re-entered Naîri by
+ way of Bît-Zamani, devastated Inziti with fire and sword, forced a road
+ through to the banks of the Arzania, pillaged Sukhmi and Dayaîni, and
+ appeared under the walls of Arzashkun.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Pitru, the Pethor of the Bible (Numb. xxii. 5), is
+ situated near the confluence of the Sajur and the Euphrates,
+ somewhere near the encampment called Oshériyéh by Sachau.
+ Mutkînu was on the other bank, perhaps at Kharbet-Beddaî,
+ nearly opposite Pitru. Nappigi was on the left bank of the
+ Euphrates, which excludes its identification with Mabog-
+ Hierapolis, as proposed by Hommel; Nabigath, mentioned by
+ Tomkins, is too far east. Nappigi and Aligu must both be
+ sought in the district between the Euphrates and the town of
+ Saruj.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Aramê withdrew to Mount Adduri and awaited his attack in an almost
+ impregnable position; he was nevertheless defeated: 3400 of his soldiers
+ fell on the field of battle; his camp, his treasures, his chariots, and
+ all his baggage passed into the hands of the conqueror, and he himself
+ barely escaped with his life. Shalmaneser ravaged the country &ldquo;as a savage
+ bull ravages and tramples under his feet the fertile fields;&rdquo; he burnt the
+ villages and the crops, destroyed Arzashkun, and raised before its gates a
+ pyramid of human heads, surrounded by a circle of prisoners impaled on
+ stakes. He climbed the mountain chain of Iritia, and laid waste Aramali
+ and Zanziuna at his leisure, and descending for the second time to the
+ shores of Lake Van, renewed the rites he had performed there in the first
+ year of his reign, and engraved on a neighbouring rock an inscription
+ recording his deeds of prowess.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0050" id="linkimage-0050">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/100.jpg" width="100%"
+ alt="100.jpg Shua, King of Gilzan, Bringing a War-horse Fully Caparisoned to Shalmaneser " />
+ </div>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from one of the bas-reliefs on the
+ Black Obelisk.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ He made his way back to Gilzân, where its king, Shua, brought him a
+ war-horse fully caparisoned, as a token of homage. Shalmaneser graciously
+ deigned to receive it, and further exacted from the king the accustomed
+ contributions of chariot-horses, sheep, and wine, together with seven
+ dromedaries, whose strange forms amused the gaping crowds of Nineveh.
+ After quitting Gilzân, Shalmaneser encountered the people of Khubushkia,
+ who ventured to bar his way; but its king, Kakia, lost his city of
+ Shilaia, and three thousand soldiers, besides bulls, horses, and sheep
+ innumerable. Having enforced submission in Khubushkia, Shalmaneser at
+ length returned to Assur through the defiles of Kirruri, and came to Calah
+ to enjoy a well-earned rest after the fatigues of his campaign.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0051" id="linkimage-0051">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/101.jpg" width="100%"
+ alt="101.jpg Dromedaries from Gilzan " />
+ </div>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from one of the bas-reliefs on the
+ bronze gates of Balawât.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ But Akhuni had not yet lost heart. Though driven back to the right bank of
+ the Euphrates, he had taken advantage of the diversion created by Aramê in
+ his favour, to assume a strong position among the hills of Shitamrat with
+ the river in his rear.*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The position of Shitamrat may answer to the ruins of the
+ fortress of Rum-kaleh, which protected a ford of the
+ Euphrates in Byzantine times.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Shalmaneser attacked his lines in front, and broke through them after
+ three days&rsquo; preliminary skirmishing; then finding the enemy drawn up in
+ battle array before their last stronghold, the king charged without a
+ moment&rsquo;s hesitation, drove them back and forced them to surrender.
+ Akhuni&rsquo;s life was spared, but he was sent with the remainder of his army
+ to colonise a village in the neighbourhood of Assur, and Adini became
+ henceforth an integral part of Assyria.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0052" id="linkimage-0052">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/102.jpg" width="100%" alt="102.jpg Tribute from Gilzan " />
+ </div>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from one of the bas-reliefs on the
+ Black Obelisk.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The war on the western frontier was hardly brought to a close when another
+ broke out in the opposite direction. The king rapidly crossed the pass of
+ Bunagishlu and fell upon Mazamua: the natives, disconcerted by his
+ impetuous onslaught, nevertheless hoped to escape by putting out in their
+ boats on the broad expanse of Lake Urumiah. Shalmaneser, however,
+ constructed rafts of inflated skins, on which his men ventured in pursuit
+ right out into the open. The natives were overpowered; the king &ldquo;dyed the
+ sea with their blood as if it had been wool,&rdquo; and did not withdraw until
+ he had forced them to appeal for mercy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In five years Shalmaneser had destroyed Adini, laid low Urartu, and
+ confirmed the tributary states of Syria in their allegiance; but Damascus
+ and Babylon were as yet untouched, and the moment was at hand when he
+ would have to choose between an arduous conflict with them, or such a
+ repression of the warlike zeal of his opening years, that, like his father
+ Assur-nazir-pal, he would have to repose on his laurels. Shalmaneser was
+ too deeply imbued with the desire for conquest to choose a peaceful
+ policy: he decided at once to assume the offensive against Damascus, being
+ probably influenced by the news of Ahab&rsquo;s successes, and deeming that if
+ the King of Israel had gained the ascendency unaided, Assur, fully
+ confident of its own superiority, need have no fear as to the result of a
+ conflict. The forces, however, at the disposal of Benhadad II. (Adadidri)
+ were sufficient to cause the Assyrians some uneasiness. The King of
+ Damascus was not only lord of Coele-Syria and the Haurân, but he exercised
+ a suzerainty more or less defined over Hamath, Israel, Ammon, the Arabian
+ and Idumean tribes, Arvad and the principalities of Northern Phoenicia,
+ Usanata, Shianu, and Irkanata;* in all, twelve peoples or twelve kings
+ owned his sway, and their forces, if united to his, would provide at need
+ an army of nearly 100,000 men: a few years might see these various
+ elements merged in a united empire, capable of withstanding the onset of
+ any foreign foe.**
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Irkanata, the Egyptian Arqanatu, perhaps the Irqata of the
+ Tel-el-A marna tablets, is the Arka of Phoenicia. The other
+ countries enumerated are likewise situated in the same
+ locality. Shianu (for a long time read as Shizanu), the Sin
+ of the Bible (Gen. x. 17), is mentioned by Tiglath-pileser
+ III. under the name Sianu. Ushanat is called Uznu by
+ Tiglath-pileser, and Delitzsch thought it represented the
+ modern Kalaat-el-Hosu. With Arvad it forms the ancient Zahi
+ of the Egyptians, which was then subject to Damascus.
+
+ ** The suzerainty of Ben-hadad over these twelve peoples is
+ proved by the way in which they are enumerated in the
+ Assyrian documents: his name always stands at the head of
+ the list. The manner in which the Assyrian scribes introduce
+ the names of these kings, mentioning sometimes one,
+ sometimes two among them, without subtracting them from the
+ total number 12, has been severely criticised, and Schrader
+ excused it by saying that 12 is here used as a round number
+ somewhat vaguely.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Shalmaneser set out from Nineveh on the 14th day of the month Iyyâr, 854
+ B.C., and chastised on his way the Aramaeans of the Balikh, whose sheikh
+ Giammu had shown some inclination to assert his independence. He crossed
+ the Euphrates at Tul-harsip, and held a species of durbar at Pitru for his
+ Syrian subjects: Sangar of Carchemish, Kundashpi of Kummukh, Aramê of
+ Agusi, Lalli of Melitene, Khaiani of Samalla, Garparuda who had succeeded
+ Shapalulmê among the Patina, and a second Garparuda of Gurgum, rallied
+ around him with their presents of welcome, and probably also with their
+ troops. This ceremony concluded, he hastened to Khalmaa and reduced it to
+ submission, then plunged into the hill-country between Khalmân and the
+ Orontes, and swept over the whole territory of Hamath. A few easy
+ victories at the outset enabled him to exact ransom from, or burn to the
+ ground, the cities of Adinnu, Mashgâ, Arganâ, and Qarqar, but just beyond
+ Qarqar he encountered the advance-guard of the Syrian army.*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The position of these towns is uncertain: the general plan
+ of the campaign only proves that they must lie on the main
+ route from Aleppo to Kalaat-Sejar, by Barâ or by Maarêt-en-
+ Nômân and Kalaat-el-Mudiq. It is agreed that Qarqar must be
+ sought not far from Hamath, whatever the exact site may be.
+ An examination of the map shows us that Qarqar corresponds
+ to the present Kalaat-el-Mudiq, the ancient Apamasa of
+ Lebanon; the confederate army would command the ford which
+ led to the plain of Hamath by Kalaat-Sejar.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0053" id="linkimage-0053">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/105.jpg" width="100%"
+ alt="105.jpg Tribute from Garparuda, King of the Patina " />
+ </div>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from one of the bas-reliefs on the
+ Black Obelisk.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Ben-hadad had called together, to give him a fitting reception, the whole
+ of the forces at his disposal: 1200 chariots, 1200 horse, 20,000
+ foot-soldiers from Damascus alone; 700 chariots, 700 horse and 10,000 foot
+ from Hamath; 2000 chariots and 10,000 foot belonging to Ahab, 500 soldiers
+ from Kuî, 1000 mountaineers from the Taurus,* 10 chariots and 10,000 foot
+ from Irk and 200 from Arvad, 200 from Usanata, 30 chariots and 10,000 foot
+ from Shianu, 1000 camels from Gindibu the Arab, and 1000 Ammonites.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The people of the Muzri next enumerated have long been
+ considered as Egyptians; the juxtaposition of their name
+ with that of Kuî shows that it refers here to the Muzri of
+ the Taurus.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The battle was long and bloody, and the issue uncertain; Shalmaneser drove
+ back one wing of the confederate army to the Orontes, and forcing the
+ other wing and the centre to retire from Qarqar to Kirzau, claimed the
+ victory, though the losses on both sides were equally great. It would seem
+ as if the battle were indecisive&mdash;the Assyrians, at any rate, gained
+ nothing by it; they beat a retreat immediately after their pretended
+ victory, and returned to their own land without prisoners and almost
+ without booty. On the whole, this first conflict had not been unfavourable
+ to Damascus: it had demonstrated the power of that state in the eyes of
+ the most incredulous, and proved how easy resistance would be, if only the
+ various princes of Syria would lay aside their differences and all unite
+ under the command of a single chief. The effect of the battle in Northern
+ Syria and among the recently annexed Aïamoan tribes was very great; they
+ began to doubt the omnipotence of Assyria, and their loyalty was shaken.
+ Sangar of Carchemish and the Khâti refused to pay their tribute, and the
+ Emirs of Tul-Abnî and Mount Kashiari broke out into open revolt.
+ Shalmaneser spent a whole year in suppressing the insurrection;
+ complications, moreover, arose at Babylon which obliged him to concentrate
+ his attention and energy on Chaldæan affairs. Nabu-baliddin had always
+ maintained peaceful and friendly relations with Assyria, but he had been
+ overthrown, or perhaps assassinated, and his son Marduk-nadin-shumu had
+ succeeded him on the throne, to the dissatisfaction of a section of his
+ subjects. Another son of Nabu-baliddin, Marduk-belusâtê, claimed the
+ sovereign power, and soon won over so much of the country that
+ Marduk-nâdin-shumu had fears for the safety of Babylon itself. He then
+ probably remembered the pretensions to Kharduniash, which his Assyrian
+ neighbours had for a long time maintained, and applied to Shalmaneser to
+ support his tottering fortunes. The Assyrian monarch must have been
+ disposed to lend a favourable ear to a request which allowed him to
+ intervene as suzerain in the quarrels of the rival kingdom: he mobilised
+ his forces, offered sacrifices in honour of Bammân at Zabân, and crossed
+ the frontier in 853 B.C.*
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The war dragged on during the next two years. The scene of hostilities was
+ at the outset on the left bank of the Tigris, which for ten centuries had
+ served as the battle-field for the warriors of both countries.
+ Shalmaneser, who had invested Me-Turnat at the fords of the Lower Dîyalah,
+ at length captured that fortress, and after having thus isolated the
+ rebels of Babylonia proper, turned his steps towards G-ananatê.**
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The town of Zabân is situated on the Lesser Zab, but it is
+ impossible to fix the exact site.
+
+ ** Mè-Turnat, Mê-Turni, &ldquo;the water of the Turnat,&rdquo; stood
+ upon the Dîyalah, probably near the site of Bakuba, where
+ the most frequented route crosses the river; perhaps we may
+ identify it with the Artemita of classical authors. Gananatê
+ must be sought higher up near the mountains, as the context
+ points out; I am inclined to place it near the site of
+ Khanekin, whose gardens are still celebrated, and the
+ strategic importance of which is considerable.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Marduk-belusâtê, &ldquo;a vacillating king, incapable of directing his own
+ affairs,&rdquo; came out to meet him, but although repulsed and driven within
+ the town, he defended his position with such spirit that Shalmaneser was
+ at length obliged to draw off his troops after having cut down all the
+ young compelled the fruit trees, disorganised the whole system of
+ irrigation,&mdash;in short, after having effected all the damage he could.
+ He returned in the following spring by the most direct route; Lakhiru fell
+ into his hands,* but Marduk-belusâtê, having no heart to contend with him
+ for the possession of a district ravaged by the struggle of the preceding
+ summer, fell back on the mountains of Yasubi and concentrated his forces
+ round Armân.**
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Lakhiru comes before Gananate on the direct road from
+ Assyria, to the south of the Lower Zab, as we learn from the
+ account of the campaign itself: wo shall not do wrong in
+ placing this town either at Kifri, or in its neighbourhood
+ on the present caravan route.
+
+ ** Mount Yasubi is the mountainous district which separates
+ Khanekin from Holwân.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Shalmaneser, having first wreaked his vengeance upon Gananatê, attacked
+ his adversary in his self-chosen position; Annan fell after a desperate
+ defence, and Marduk-belusâtê either perished or disappeared in a last
+ attempt at retaliation. Marduk-nadîn-shumu, although rid of his rival, was
+ not yet master of the entire kingdom. The Aramæans of the Marshes, or, as
+ they called themselves, the Kaldâ, had refused him their allegiance, and
+ were ravaging the regions of the Lower Euphrates by their repeated
+ incursions. They constituted not so much a compact state, as a
+ confederation of little states, alternately involved in petty internecine
+ quarrels, or temporarily reconciled under the precarious authority of a
+ sole monarch. Each separate state bore the name of the head of the family&mdash;real
+ or mythical&mdash;from whom all its members prided themselves on being
+ descended,&mdash;Bît-Dakkuri, Bît-Adini, Bît-Amukkâni, Bît-Shalani,
+ Bît-Shalli, and finally Bît-Yakîn, which in the end asserted its
+ predominance over all the rest.*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * As far as we can judge, Bît-Dakkuri and Bît-Adini were the
+ most northerly, the latter lying on both sides of the
+ Euphrates, the former on the west of the Euphrates, to the
+ south of the Bahr-i-Nejîf; Bît-Yakîn was at the southern
+ extremity near the mouths of the Euphrates, and on the
+ western shore of the Persian Gulf.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ In demanding Shalmaneser&rsquo;s help, Marduk-nadîn-shumu had virtually thrown
+ on him the responsibility of bringing these turbulent subjects to order,
+ and the Assyrian monarch accepted the duties of his new position without
+ demur. He marched to Babylon, entered the city and went direct to the
+ temple of E-shaggîl: the people beheld him approach with reverence their
+ deities Bel and Belît, and visit all the sanctuaries of the local gods, to
+ whom he made endless propitiatory libations and pure offerings. He had
+ worshipped Ninip in Kuta; he was careful not to forget Nabo of Borsippa,
+ while on the other hand he officiated in the temple of Ezida, and
+ consulted its ancient oracle, offering upon its altars the flesh of
+ splendid oxen and fat lambs. The inhabitants had their part in the
+ festival as well as the gods; Shalmaneser summoned them to a public
+ banquet, at which he distributed to them embroidered garments, and plied
+ them with meats and wine; then, after renewing his homage to the gods of
+ Babylon, he recommenced his campaign, and set out in the direction of the
+ sea. Baqâni, the first of the Chaldæan cities which lay on his route,
+ belonged to Bît-Adini,* one of the tribes of Bît-Dakkuri; it appeared
+ disposed to resist him, and was therefore promptly dismantled and burnt&mdash;an
+ example which did not fail to cool the warlike inclinations which had
+ begun to manifest themselves in other parts of Bît-Dakkuri.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The site of Baqâni is unknown; it should be sought for
+ between Lamlum and Warka, and Bît-Adini in Bît-Dakkuri
+ should be placed between the Shatt-et-Kaher and the Arabian
+ desert, if the name of Enzudî, the other royal town,
+ situated to the west of the Euphrates, is found, as is
+ possible, under a popular etymology, in that of Kalaat ain-
+ Saîd or Kalaat ain-es-Saîd in the modern maps.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ He next crossed the Euphrates, and pillaged Enzudî, the fate of which
+ caused the remainder of Bît-Adini to lay down arms, and the submission of
+ the latter brought about that of Bît-Yakîn and Bît-Amukkani. These were
+ all rich provinces, and they bought off the conqueror liberally: gold,
+ silver, tin, copper, iron, acacia-wood, ivory, elephants&rsquo; skins, were all
+ showered upon the invader to secure his mercy. It must have been an
+ intense satisfaction to the pride of the Assyrians to be able to boast
+ that their king had deigned to offer sacrifices in the sacred cities of
+ Accad, and that he had been borne by his war-horses to the shores of the
+ Salt Sea; these facts, of little moment to us now, appeared to the people
+ of those days of decisive importance. No king who was not actually master
+ of the country would have been tolerated within the temple of the
+ eponymous god, for the purpose of celebrating the rites which the
+ sovereign alone was empowered to perform. Marduk-nadîn-shumu, in
+ recognising Shalmaneser&rsquo;s right to act thus, thereby acknowledged that he
+ himself was not only the king&rsquo;s ally, but his liegeman. This bond of
+ supremacy doubtless did not weigh heavily upon him; as soon as his
+ suzerain had evacuated the country, the two kingdoms remained much on the
+ same footing as had been established by the treaties of the three previous
+ generations. Alliances were made between private families belonging to
+ both, peace existed between the two sovereigns, interchange of commerce
+ and amenities took place between the two peoples, but with one point of
+ difference which had not existed formerly: Assur protected Babel, and, by
+ taking precedence of Marduk, he became the real head of the peoples of the
+ Euphrates valley. Assured of the subordination, or at least of the
+ friendly neutrality of Babylon, Shalma-neser had now a free hand to
+ undertake a campaign in the remoter regions of Syria, without being
+ constantly haunted by the fear that his rival might suddenly swoop down
+ upon him in the rear by the valleys of the Badanu or the Zabs. He now ran
+ no risks in withdrawing his troops from the south-eastern frontier, and in
+ marshalling his forces on the slopes of the Armenian Alps or on the banks
+ of the Orontes, leaving merely a slender contingent in the heart of
+ Assyria proper to act as the necessary guardians of order in the capital.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Since the indecisive battle of Qarqar, the western frontier of the empire
+ had receded as far as the Euphrates, and Shalmaneser had been obliged to
+ forego the collection of the annual Syrian tribute. It would have been an
+ excellent opportunity for the Khâti, while they enjoyed this accidental
+ respite, to come to an understanding with Damascus, for the purpose of
+ acting conjointly against a common enemy; but they let the right moment
+ slip, and their isolation made submission inevitable. The effort to subdue
+ them cost Shalmaneser dear, both in time and men; in the spring of each
+ year he appeared at the fords of Tul-barsip and ravaged the environs of
+ Carchemish, then marched upon the Orontes to accomplish the systematic
+ devastation of some fresh district, or to inflict a defeat on such of his
+ adversaries as dared to encounter him in the open field. In 850 B.C. the
+ first blow was struck at the Khâti; Agusi* was the next to suffer, and its
+ king, Aramê, lost Arniê, his royal city, with some hundred more townships
+ and strongholds.**
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Historians have up to the present admitted that this
+ campaign of the year 850 took place in Armenia. The context
+ of the account itself shows us that, in his tenth year,
+ Shalmaneser advanced against the towns of Aramê, immediately
+ after having pillaged the country of the Khâti, which
+ inclines me to think that these towns were situated in
+ Northern Syria. I have no doubt that the Aramê in question
+ is not the Armenian king of that name, but Aramê the
+ sovereign of Bit-Agusi, who is named several times in the
+ Annals of Shalmaneser.
+
+ ** The text of Bull No. 1 adds to the account of the war
+ against Aramê, that of a war against the Damascene league,
+ which merely repeats the account of Shalmaneser&rsquo;s eleventh
+ year. It is generally admitted that the war against Aramê
+ falls under his tenth year, and the war against Ben-hadad
+ during his eleventh year. The scribes must have had at their
+ disposal two different versions of one document, in which
+ these two wars were described without distinction of year.
+ The compiler of the inscription of the Bulls would have
+ considered them as forming two distinct accounts, which he
+ has placed one after the other.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ In 849 B.C. it was the turn of Damascus. The league of which Ben-hadad had
+ proclaimed himself the suzerain was still in existence, but it had
+ recently narrowly escaped dissolution, and a revolt had almost deprived it
+ of the adherence of Israel and the house of Omri&mdash;after Hamath, the
+ most active of all its members. The losses suffered at Qarqar had
+ doubtless been severe enough to shake Ahab&rsquo;s faith in the strength of his
+ master and ally. Besides this, it would appear that the latter had not
+ honourably fulfilled all the conditions of the treaty of peace he had
+ signed three years previously; he still held the important fortress of
+ Bamoth-gilead, and he delayed handing it over to Ahab in spite of his oath
+ to restore it. Finding that he could not regain possession of it by fair
+ means, Ahab resolved to take it by force. A great change in feeling and
+ politics had taken place at Jerusalem. Jehoshaphat, who occupied the
+ throne, was, like his father Asa, a devout worshipper of Jahveh, but his
+ piety did not blind him to the secular needs of the moment. The experience
+ of his predecessors had shown that the union of the twelve tribes under
+ the rule of a scion of Judah was a thing of the past for ever; all
+ attempts to restore it had ended in failure and bloodshed, and the house
+ of David had again only lately been saved from ruin by the dearly bought
+ intervention of Ben-hadad I. and his Syrians. Jehoshaphat from the outset
+ clearly saw the necessity of avoiding these errors of the past; he
+ accepted the situation and sought the friendship of Israel. An alliance
+ between two princes so unequal in power could only result in a disguised
+ suzerainty for one of them and a state of vassalage for the other; what
+ Ben-hadad&rsquo;s alliance was to Ahab, that of Ahab was to Jehoshaphat, and it
+ served his purpose in spite of the opposition of the prophets.1 The
+ strained relations between the two countries were relaxed, and the severed
+ tribes on both sides of the frontier set about repairing their losses;
+ while Hiel the Bethelite at length set about rebuilding Jericho on behalf
+ of Samaria,* Jehoshaphat was collecting around him a large army, and
+ strengthening himself on the west against the Philistines and on the south
+ against the Bedawîn of the desert.** The marriage of his eldest son
+ Jehoram*** with Athaliah subsequently bound the two courts together by
+ still closer ties;**** mutual-visits were exchanged, and it was on the
+ occasion of a stay made by Jehoshaphat at Jezreel that the expedition
+ against Eamoth was finally resolved on.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The subordinate position of Jehoshaphat is clearly
+ indicated by the reply which he makes to Ahab when the
+ latter asks him to accompany him on this expedition: &ldquo;I am
+ as thou art, my people as thy people, my horses as thy
+ horses&rdquo; (1 Kings xxii. 4).
+
+ ** 1 Kings xvi. 34, where the writer has preserved the
+ remembrance of a double human sacrifice, destined, according
+ to the common custom in the whole of the East, to create
+ guardian spirits for the new building: &ldquo;he laid the
+ foundation thereof with the loss of Abiram his firstborn,
+ and set up the gates thereof with the loss of his youngest
+ son Segub; according to the word of the Lord.&rdquo; [For the
+ curse pronounced on whoever should rebuild Jericho, see
+ Josh. vi. 26.&mdash;Tr.]
+
+ *** [Following the distinction in spelling given in 2 Kings
+ viii. 25, I have everywhere written Joram (of Israel) and
+ Jehoram (of Judah), to avoid confusion.&mdash;Tr.]
+
+ **** Athaliah is sometimes called the daughter of Ahab (2
+ Kings viii. 18), and sometimes the daughter of Omri (2 Kings
+ viii. 26; cf. 2 Ohron. xxii. 2), and several authors prefer
+ the latter filiation, while the majority see in it a mistake
+ of the Hebrew scribe. It is possible that both attributions
+ may be correct, for we see by the Assyrian inscriptions that
+ a sovereign is called the son of the founder of his line
+ even when he was several generations removed from him: thus,
+ Merodach-baladan, the adversary of Sargon of Assyria, calls
+ himself son of Iakin, although the founder of the Bît-Iakîn
+ had been dead many centuries before his accession. The
+ document used in 2 Kings viii. 26 may have employed the term
+ daughter of Omri in the same manner merely to indicate that
+ the Queen of Jerusalem belonged to the house of Omri.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ It might well have appeared a more than foolhardy enterprise, and it was
+ told in Israel that Micaiah, a prophet, the son of Imlah, had predicted
+ its disastrous ending. &ldquo;I saw,&rdquo; exclaimed the prophet, &ldquo;the Lord sitting
+ on His throne, and all the host of heaven standing on His right hand and
+ on His left. And the Lord said, Who shall entice Ahab that he may go up
+ and fall at Ramoth-gilead? And one said on this manner, and another said
+ on that manner. And there came forth a spirit, and stood before the Lord,
+ and said, I will entice him. And the Lord said unto him, Wherewith? And he
+ said, I will go forth, and will be a lying spirit in the mouth of all his
+ prophets. And He said, Thou shalt entice him, and shalt prevail also: go
+ forth, and do so. Now therefore, behold, the Lord hafch put a lying spirit
+ in the mouth of all these thy prophets; and the Lord hath spoken evil
+ concerning thee.&rdquo; *
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * 1 Kings xxii. 5-23, reproduced in 2 Chron. xviii. 4-22.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The two kings thereupon invested Ramoth, and Ben-hadad hastened to the
+ defence of his fortress. Selecting thirty-two of his bravest charioteers,
+ he commanded them to single out Ahab only for attack, and not fight with
+ others until they had slain him. This injunction happened in some way to
+ come to the king&rsquo;s ears, and he therefore disguised himself as a common
+ soldier, while Jehoshaphat retained his ordinary dress. Attracted by the
+ richness of the latter&rsquo;s armour, the Syrians fell upon him, but on his
+ raising his war-cry they perceived their mistake, and turning from the
+ King of Judah they renewed their quest of the Israelitish leader. While
+ they were vainly seeking him, an archer drew a bow &ldquo;at a venture,&rdquo; and
+ pierced him in the joints of his cuirass. &ldquo;Wherefore he said to his
+ charioteer, Turn thine hand, and carry me out of the host; for I am sore
+ wounded.&rdquo; Perceiving, however, that the battle was going against him, he
+ revoked the order, and remained on the field the whole day, supported by
+ his armour-bearers. He expired at sunset, and the news of his death having
+ spread panic through the ranks, a cry arose, &ldquo;Every man to his city, and
+ every man to his country!&rdquo; The king&rsquo;s followers bore his body to Samaria,*
+ and Israel again relapsed into the position of a vassal, probably under
+ the same conditions as before the revolt.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * 1 Kings xxii. 28-38 (cf. 2 Ohron. xviii. 28-34), with
+ interpolations in verses 35 and 38. It is impossible to
+ establish the chronology of this period with any certainty,
+ so entirely do the Hebrew accounts of it differ from the
+ Assyrian. The latter mention Ahab as alive at the time of
+ the battle of Qarqar in 854 B.C. and Jehu on the throne in
+ 842 B.C. We must, therefore, place in the intervening twelve
+ years, first, the end of Ahab&rsquo;s reign; secondly, the two
+ years of Ahaziah; thirdly, the twelve years of Joram;
+ fourthly, the beginning of the reign of Jehu&mdash;in all,
+ possibly fourteen years. The reign of Joram has been
+ prolonged beyond reason by the Hebrew annalists, and it
+ alone lends itself to be curtailed. Admitting that the siege
+ of Samaria preceded the battle of Qarqar, we may surmise
+ that the three years which elapsed, according to the
+ tradition (1 Kings xxii. 1), between the triumph of Ahab and
+ his death, fall into two unequal periods, two previous to
+ Qarqar, and one after it, in such a manner that the revolt
+ of Israel would have been the result of the defeat of the
+ Damascenes; Ahab must have died in 835 B.C., as most modern
+ historians agree. On the other hand, it is scarcely probable
+ that Jehu ascended the throne at the very moment that
+ Shalmaneser was defeating Hazael in 842 B.C.; we can only
+ carry back his accession to the preceding year, possibly
+ 843. The duration of two years for the reign of Ahaziah can
+ only be reduced by a few months, if indeed as much as that,
+ as it allows of a full year, and part of a second year (cf.
+ 1 Kings xxii. 51, where it is said that Ahaziah ascended the
+ throne in the 17th year of Jehoshaphat, and 2 Kings iii. 1,
+ where it states that Joram of Israel succeeded Ahaziah in
+ the 18th year of the same Jehoshaphat).; in placing these
+ two years between 853 and 851, there will remain for the
+ reign of Joram the period comprised between 851 and 843,
+ namely, eight years, instead of the twelve attributed to him
+ by biblical tradition.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Ahaziah survived his father two years, and was succeeded by his brother
+ Joram.* When Shalmaneser, in 849 B.C., reappeared in the valley of the
+ Orontes, Joram sent out against him his prescribed contingent, and the
+ conquered Israelites once more fought for their conqueror.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The Hebrew documents merely make mention of Ahaziah&rsquo;s
+ accession, length of reign, and death (1 Kings xxii. 40, 51-
+ 53, and 2 Kings i. 2-17). The Assyrian texts do not mention
+ his name, but they state that in 849 &ldquo;the twelve kings&rdquo;
+ fought against Shalmaneser, and, as we have already seen,
+ one of the twelve was King of Israel, here, therefore
+ necessarily Ahaziah, whose successor was Joram.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The Assyrians had, as usual, maltreated the Khâti. After having pillaged
+ the towns of Carchemish and Agusi, they advanced on the Amanos, held to
+ ransom the territory of the Patina enclosed within the bend of the
+ Orontes, and descending upon Hamath by way of the districts of Iaraku and
+ Ashta-maku, they came into conflict with the army of the twelve kings,
+ though on this occasion the contest was so bloody that they were forced to
+ withdraw immediately after their success. They had to content themselves
+ with sacking Apparazu, one of the citadels of Aramê, and with collecting
+ the tribute of Garparuda of the Patina; which done, they skirted the
+ Amanos and provided themselves with beams from its cedars. The two
+ following years were spent in harrying the people of Paqarakhbuni, on the
+ right bank of the Euphrates, in the dependencies of the ancient kingdom of
+ Adini (848 B.C.), and in plundering the inhabitants of Ishtaratê in the
+ country of Iaîti, near the sources of the Tigris (847 B.C.), till in 846
+ they returned to try their fortune again in Syria. They transported
+ 120,000 men across the Euphrates, hoping perhaps, by the mere mass of such
+ a force, to crush their enemy in a single battle; but Ben-hadad was
+ supported by his vassals, and their combined army must have been as
+ formidable numerically as that of the Assyrians. As usual, after the
+ engagement, Shalmaneser claimed the victory, but he did not succeed in
+ intimidating the allies or in wresting from them a single rood of
+ territory.*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The care which the king takes to specify that &ldquo;with
+ 120,000 men he crossed the Euphrates in flood-time&rdquo; very
+ probably shows that this number was for him in some respects
+ an unusual one.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0054" id="linkimage-0054">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="figleft" style="width:43%;">
+ <img width="100%" src="images/123.jpg"
+ alt="123.jpg the Moabite Stone of Stele Of Mesha " />
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+From a photograph by Faucher-Gudin,
+retouched by Massias from the original
+in the Louvre. The fainter parts of the
+stele are the portions restored in the
+original.
+</pre>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Discouraged, doubtless, by so many fruitless attempts, he decided to
+ suspend hostilities, at all events for the present. In 845 B.C. he visited
+ Naîri, and caused an &ldquo;image of his royal Majesty&rdquo; to be carved at the
+ source of the Tigris close to the very spot where the stream first rises.
+ Pushing forward through the defiles of Tunibuni, he next invaded Urartu,
+ and devastated it as far as the sources of the Euphrates; on reaching
+ these he purified his arms in the virgin spring, and offered a sacrifice
+ to the gods. On his return to the frontier, the chief of Dayaini &ldquo;embraced
+ his feet,&rdquo; and presented him with some thoroughbred horses. In 844 B.C. he
+ crossed the Lower Zab and plunged into the heart of Namri; this country
+ had long been under Babylonian influence, and its princes bore Semitic
+ names. Mardukmudammiq, who was then its ruler, betook himself to the
+ mountains to preserve his life; but his treasures, idols, and troops were
+ carried off to Assyria, and he was superseded on the throne by Ianzu, the
+ son of Khambân, a noble of Cossæan origin. As might be expected after such
+ severe exertions, Shalmaneser apparently felt that he deserved a time of
+ repose, for his chroniclers merely note the date of 843 B.C. as that of an
+ inspection, terminating in a felling of cedars in the Amanos. As a fact,
+ there was nothing stirring on the frontier. Chaldæa itself looked upon him
+ as a benefactor, almost as a suzerain, and by its position between Elam
+ and Assyria, protected the latter from any quarrel with Susa. The nations
+ on the east continued to pay their tribute without coercion, and Namri,
+ which alone entertained pretensions to independence, had just received a
+ severe lesson. Urartu had not acknowledged the supremacy of Assur, but it
+ had suffered in the last invasion, and Aramê had shown no further sign of
+ hostility. The tribes of the Upper Tigris&mdash;Kummukh and Adini&mdash;accepted
+ their position as subjects, and any trouble arising in that quarter was
+ treated as merely an ebullition of local dissatisfaction, and was promptly
+ crushed. The Khâti were exhausted by the systematic destruction of their
+ towns and their harvests. Lastly, of the principalities of the Amanos,
+ Gurgum, Samalla, and the Patina, if some had occasionally taken part in
+ the struggles for independence, the others had always remained faithful in
+ the performance of their duties as vassals. Damascus alone held out, and
+ the valour with which she had endured all the attacks made on her showed
+ no signs of abatement; unless any internal disturbance arose to diminish
+ her strength, she was likely to be able to resist the growing power of
+ Assyria for a long time to come. It was at the very time when her
+ supremacy appeared to be thus firmly established that a revolution broke
+ out, the effects of which soon undid the work of the preceding two or
+ three generations. Ben-hadad, disembarrassed of Shalmaneser, desired to
+ profit by the respite thus gained to make a final reckoning with the
+ Israelites. It would appear that their fortune had been on the wane ever
+ since the heroic death of Ahab. Immediately after the disaster at Eamoth,
+ the Moabites had risen against Ahaziah,* and their king, Mesha, son of
+ Kamoshgad, had seized the territory north of the Arnon which belonged to
+ the tribe of Gad; he had either killed or carried away the Jewish
+ population in order to colonise the district with Moabites, and he had
+ then fortified most of the towns, beginning with Dhibon, his capital.
+ Owing to the shortness of his reign, Ahaziah had been unable to take
+ measures to hinder him; but Joram, as soon as he was firmly seated on the
+ throne, made every effort to regain possession of his province, and
+ claimed the help of his ally or vassal Jehoshaphat.**
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * 2 Kings iii. 5. The text does not name Ahaziah, and it
+ might be concluded that the revolt took place under Joram;
+ the expression employed by the Hebrew writer, however,
+ &ldquo;when Ahab was dead... the King of Moab rebelled against the
+ King of Israel,&rdquo; does not permit of it being placed
+ otherwise than at the opening of Ahaziah&rsquo;s reign.
+
+ ** 2 Kings iii. 6, 7, where Jehoshaphat replies to Joram in
+ the same terms which he had used to Ahab. The chronological
+ difficulties induced Ed. Meyer to replace the name of
+ Jehoshaphat in this passage by that of his son Jehoram. As
+ Stade has remarked, the presence of two kings both bearing
+ the name of Jehoram in the same campaign against Moab would
+ have been one of those facts which strike the popular
+ imagination, and would not have been forgotten; if the
+ Hebrew author has connected the Moabite war with the name of
+ Jehoshaphat, it is because his sources of information
+ furnished him with that king&rsquo;s name.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The latter had done his best to repair the losses caused by the war with
+ Syria. Being Lord of Edom, he had been tempted to follow the example of
+ Solomon, and the deputy who commanded in his name had constructed a vessel
+ * at Ezion-geber &ldquo;to go to Ophir for gold;&rdquo; but the vessel was wrecked
+ before quitting the port, and the disaster was regarded by the king as a
+ punishment from Jahveh, for when Ahaziah suggested that the enterprise
+ should be renewed at their joint expense, he refused the offer.** But the
+ sudden insurrection of Moab threatened him as much as it did Joram, and he
+ gladly acceded to the latter&rsquo;s appeal for help.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * [Both in the Hebrew and the Septuagint the ships are in
+ the plural number in 1 Kings xxii. 48, 49.&mdash;Tr.]
+
+ ** 1 Kings xxii. 48, 49, where the Hebrew writer calls the
+ vessel constructed by Jehoshaphat a &ldquo;ship of Tarshish;&rdquo;
+ that is, a vessel built to make long voyages. The author of
+ the Chronicles thought that the Jewish expedition to Ezion-
+ geber on the Red Sea was destined to go to Tarshish in
+ Spain. He has, moreover, transformed the vessel into a
+ fleet, and has associated Ahaziah in the enterprise,
+ contrary to the testimony of the Book of Kings; finally, he
+ has introduced into the account a prophet named Eliezer, who
+ represents the disaster as a chastisement for the alliance
+ with Ahaziah (2 Ghron. xx. 35-37).
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Apparently the simplest way of approaching the enemy would have been from
+ the north, choosing Gilead as a base of operations; but the line of
+ fortresses constructed by Mesha at this vulnerable point of his frontier
+ was so formidable, that the allies resolved to attack from the south after
+ passing the lower extremity of the Dead Sea. They marched for seven days
+ in an arid desert, digging wells as they proceeded for the necessary
+ supply of water. Mesha awaited them with his hastily assembled troops on
+ the confines of the cultivated land; the allies routed him and blockaded
+ him within his city of Kir-hareseth.* Closely beset, and despairing of any
+ help from man, he had recourse to the last resource which religion
+ provided for his salvation; taking his firstborn son, he offered him to
+ Chemosh, and burnt him on the city wall in sight of the besiegers. The
+ Israelites knew what obligations this sacrifice entailed upon the Moabite
+ god, and the succour which he would be constrained to give to his devotees
+ in consequence. They therefore raised the siege and disbanded in all
+ directions.** Mesha, delivered at the very moment that his cause seemed
+ hopeless, dedicated a stele in the temple of Dhibôn, on which he recorded
+ his victories and related what measures he had taken to protect his
+ people.***
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Kir-Hareseth or Kir-Moab is the present Kcrak, the Krak of
+ mediaeval times.
+
+ ** The account of the campaign (2 Kings iii. 8-27) belongs
+ to the prophetic cycle of Elisha, and seems to give merely a
+ popular version of the event. A king of Edom is mentioned
+ (9-10, 12-13), while elsewhere, under Jehoshaphat, it is
+ stated &ldquo;there was no king in Edom&rdquo; (1 Kings xxii. 47); the
+ geography also of the route taken by the expedition is
+ somewhat confused. Finally, the account of the siege of Kir-
+ hareseth is mutilated, and the compiler has abridged the
+ episode of the human sacrifice, as being too conducive to
+ the honour of Chemosh and to the dishonour of Jahveh. The
+ main facts of the account are correct, but the details are
+ not clear, and do not all bear the stamp of veracity.
+
+ *** This is the famous Moabite Stone or stele of Dhibôn,
+ discovered by Clermont-Ganneau in 1868, and now preserved in
+ the Louvre.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ He still feared a repetition of the invasion, but this misfortune was
+ spared him; Jehoshaphat was gathered to his fathers,* and his Edomite
+ subjects revolted on receiving the news of his death. Jeho&mdash;his son
+ and successor, at once took up arms to bring them to a sense of their
+ duty; but they surrounded his camp, and it was with difficulty that he cut
+ his way through their ranks and escaped during the night.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The date of the death of Jehoshaphat may be fixed as 849
+ or 848 B.C. The biblical documents give us for the period of
+ the history of Judah following on the death of Ahab: First,
+ eight years of Jehoshaphat, from the 17th year of his reign
+ (1 Kings xxii. 51) to his 25th (and last) year (1 Kings
+ xxii. 42); secondly, eight years of Jehoram, son of
+ Jehoshaphat (2 Kings viii. 17); thirdly, one year of
+ Ahaziah, son of Jehoram (2 Kings viii. 26)&mdash;in all 17 years,
+ which must be reduced and condensed into the period between
+ 853 B.C., the probable date of the battle of Ramoth, and
+ 843, the equally probable date of the accession of Jehu. The
+ reigns of the two Ahaziahs are too short to be further
+ abridged; we must therefore place the campaign against Moab
+ at the earliest in 850, during the months which followed the
+ accession of Joram of Israel, and lengthen Johoshaphat&rsquo;s
+ reign from 850 to 849. There will then be room between 849
+ and 844 for five years (instead of eight) for the reign of
+ Jehoram of Judah.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The defection of the old Canaanite city of Libnah followed quickly on this
+ reverse,* and Jehoram was powerless to avenge himself on it, the
+ Philistines and the Bedâwin having threatened the western part of his
+ territory and raided the country.** In the midst of these calamities Judah
+ had no leisure to take further measures against Mesha, and Israel itself
+ had suffered too severe a blow to attempt retaliation. The advanced age of
+ Ben-hadad, and the unsatisfactory result of the campaigns against
+ Shalmaneser, had furnished Joram with an occasion for a rupture with
+ Damascus. War dragged on for some time apparently, till the tide of
+ fortune turned against Joram, and, like his father Ahab in similar
+ circumstances, he shut himself within Samaria, where the false alarm of an
+ Egyptian or Hittite invasion produced a panic in the Syrian camp, and
+ restored the fortunes of the Israelitish king.***
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * 2 Kings viii. 20-22; cf. 2 Ghron. xxi. 8-10.
+
+ ** This war is mentioned only in 2 Ghron. xxi. 16, 17, where
+ it is represented as a chastisement from Jahveh; the
+ Philistines and &ldquo;the Arabs which are beside the Ethiopians&rdquo;
+ (Kush) seem to have taken Jerusalem, pillaged the palace,
+ and carried away the wives and children of the king into
+ captivity, &ldquo;so that there was never a son left him, save
+ Jehoahaz (Ahaziah), the youngest of his sons.&rdquo;
+
+ *** Kuenen has proposed to take the whole account of the
+ reign of Joram, son of Ahab, and transfer it to that of
+ Jehoahaz, son of Jehu, and this theory has been approved by
+ several recent critics and historians. On the other hand,
+ some have desired to connect it with the account of the
+ siege of Samaria in Ahab&rsquo;s reign. I fail to see any
+ reasonable argument which can be brought against the
+ authenticity of the main fact, whatever opinion may be held
+ with regard to the details of the biblical narrative.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Ben-hadad did not long survive the reverse he had experienced; he returned
+ sick and at the point of death to Damascus, where he was assassinated by
+ Hazael, one of his captains. Hebrew tradition points to the influence of
+ the prophets in all these events. The aged Elijah had disappeared, so ran
+ the story, caught up to heaven in a chariot of fire, but his mantle had
+ fallen on Elisha, and his power still survived in his disciple. From far
+ and near Elisha&rsquo;s counsel was sought, alike by Gentiles as by the
+ followers of the true God; whether the suppliant was the weeping Shunamite
+ mourning for the loss of her only son, or Naaman the captain of the
+ Damascene chariotry, he granted their petitions, and raised the child from
+ its bed, and healed the soldier of his leprosy. During the siege of
+ Samaria, he had several times frustrated the enemy&rsquo;s designs, and had
+ predicted to Joram not only the fact but the hour of deliverance, and the
+ circumstances which would accompany it. Ben-hadad had sent Hazael to the
+ prophet to ask him if he should recover, and Elisha had wept on seeing the
+ envoy&mdash;&ldquo;Because I know the evil that thou wilt do unto the children
+ of Israel; their strongholds wilt thou set on fire, and their young men
+ wilt thou slay with the sword, and wilt dash in pieces their little ones,
+ and rip up their women with child. And Hazael said, But what is thy
+ servant which is but a dog, that he should do this great thing? And Elisha
+ answered, The Lord hath showed me that thou shalt be king over Syria.&rdquo; On
+ returning to Damascus Hazael gave the results of his mission in a
+ reassuring manner to Ben-hadad, but &ldquo;on the morrow... he took the coverlet
+ and dipped it in water, and spread it on his face, so that he died.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The deed which deprived it of its king^ seriously affected Damascus
+ itself. It was to Ben-hadad that it owed most of its prosperity; he it was
+ who had humiliated Hamath and the princes of the coast of Arvad, and the
+ nomads of the Arabian desert. He had witnessed the rise of the most
+ energetic of all the Israelite dynasties, and he had curbed its ambition;
+ Omri had been forced to pay him tribute; Ahab, Ahaziah, and Joram had
+ continued it; and Ben-hadad&rsquo;s suzerainty, recognised more or less by their
+ vassals, had extended through Moab and Judah as far as the Bed Sea. Not
+ only had he skilfully built up this fabric of vassal states which made him
+ lord of two-thirds of Syria, but he had been able to preserve it unshaken
+ for a quarter of a century, in spite of rebellions in several of his fiefs
+ and reiterated attacks from Assyria; Shalmaneser, indeed, had made an
+ attack on his line, but without breaking through it, and had at length
+ left him master of the field. This superiority, however, which no reverse
+ could shake, lay in himself and in himself alone; no sooner had he passed
+ away than it suddenly ceased, and Hazael found himself restricted from the
+ very outset to the territory of Damascus proper.* Hamath, Arvad, and the
+ northern peoples deserted the league, to return to it no more; Joram of
+ Israel called on his nephew Ahaziah, who had just succeeded to Jehoram of
+ Judah, and both together marched to besiege Bamoth.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * From this point onward, the Assyrian texts which mentioned
+ <i>the twelve kings of the Khati</i>, Irkhulini of Hamath and
+ Adadidri (Ben-hadad) of Damascus, now only name <i>Khazailu of
+ the country of Damascus</i>.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The Israelites were not successful in their methods of carrying on sieges;
+ Joram, wounded in a skirmish, retired to his palace at Jezreel, where
+ Ahaziah joined him a few days later, on the pretext of inquiring after his
+ welfare. The prophets of both kingdoms and their followers had never
+ forgiven the family of Ahab their half-foreign extraction, nor their
+ eclecticism in the matter of religion. They had numerous partisans in both
+ armies, and a conspiracy was set on foot against the absent sovereigns;
+ Elisha, judging the occasion to be a propitious one, despatched one of his
+ disciples to the camp with secret instructions. The generals were all
+ present at a banquet, when the messenger arrived; he took one of them,
+ Jehu, the son of Nimshi, on one side, anointed him, and then escaped. Jehu
+ returned, and seated himself amongst his fellow-officers, who,
+ unsuspicious of what had happened, questioned him as to the errand. &ldquo;Is
+ all well? Wherefore came this mad fellow to thee? And he said unto them,
+ Ye know the man and what his talk was. And they said, It is false; tell us
+ now. And he said, Thus and thus spake he to me, saying, Thus saith the
+ Lord, I have anointed thee king over Israel. Then they hasted, and took
+ every man his garment and put it under him on the top of the stairs, and
+ blew the trumpet, saying, Jehu is king.&rdquo; He at once marched on Jezreel,
+ and the two kings, surprised at this movement, went out to meet him with
+ scarcely any escort. The two parties had hardly met when Joram asked, &ldquo;Is
+ it peace, Jehu?&rdquo; to which Jehu replied, &ldquo;What peace, so long as the
+ whoredoms of thy mother Jezebel and her witchcrafts are so many?&rdquo;
+ Whereupon Joram turned rein, crying to his nephew, &ldquo;There is treachery, O
+ Ahaziah.&rdquo; But an arrow pierced him through the heart, and he fell forward
+ in his chariot. Ahaziah, wounded near Ibleam, managed, however, to take
+ refuge in Megiddo, where he died, his servants bringing the body back to
+ Jerusalem.*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * According to the very curtailed account in 2 Chron. xxii.
+ 9, Ahaziah appears to have hidden himself in Samaria, where
+ he was discovered and taken to Jehu, who had him killed.
+ This account may perhaps have belonged to the different
+ version of which a fragment has been preserved in 2 Kings x.
+ 12-17.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ When Jezebel heard the news, she guessed the fate which awaited her. She
+ painted her eyes and tired her head, and posted herself in one of the
+ upper windows of the palace. As Jehu entered the gates she reproached him
+ with the words, &ldquo;Is it peace, thou Zimri&mdash;thy master&rsquo;s murderer? And
+ he lifted up his face to the window and said, Who is on my side&mdash;who?
+ Two or three eunuchs rose up behind the queen, and he called to them,
+ Throw her down. So they threw her down, and some of her blood was
+ sprinkled on the wall and on the horses; and he trode her under foot. And
+ when he was come in he did eat and drink; and he said, See now to this
+ cursed woman and bury her; for she is a king&rsquo;s daughter.&rdquo; But nothing was
+ found of her except her skull, hands, and feet, which they buried as best
+ they could. Seventy princes, the entire family of Ahab, were slain, and
+ their heads piled up on either side of the gate. The priests and
+ worshippers of Baal remained to be dealt with. Jehu summoned them to
+ Samaria on the pretext of a sacrifice, and massacred them before the
+ altars of their god. According to a doubtful tradition, the brothers and
+ relatives of Ahaziah, ignorant of what had happened, came to salute Joram,
+ and perished in the confusion of the slaughter, and the line of David
+ narrowly escaped extinction with the house of Omri.*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * 2 Kings x. 12-14. Stade has shown that this account is in
+ direct contradiction with its immediate context, and that it
+ belonged to a version of the events differing in detail from
+ the one which has come down to us. According to the latter,
+ Jehu must at once have met Jehonadab the son of Rechab, and
+ have entered Samaria in his company (vers. 15-17); this
+ would have been a poor way of inspiring the priests of Baal
+ with the confidence necessary for drawing them into the
+ trap. According to 2 Chron. xxii. 8, the massacre of the
+ princes of Judah preceded the murder of Ahaziah.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Athaliah assumed the regency, broke the tie of vassalage which bound Judah
+ to Israel, and by a singular irony of fate, Jerusalem offered an asylum to
+ the last of the children of Ahab. The treachery of Jehu, in addition to
+ his inexpiable cruelty, terrified the faithful, even while it served their
+ ends. Dynastic crimes were common in those days, but the tragedy of
+ Jezreel eclipsed in horror all others that had preceded it; it was at
+ length felt that such avenging of Jahveh was in His eyes too ruthless, and
+ a century later the Prophet Hosea saw in the misery of his people the
+ divine chastisement of the house of Jehu for the blood shed at his
+ accession.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The report of these events, reaching Calah, awoke the ambition of
+ Shalmaneser. Would Damascus, mistrusting its usurper, deprived of its
+ northern allies, and ill-treated by the Hebrews, prove itself as
+ invulnerable as in the past? At all events, in 842 B.C., Shalmaneser once
+ more crossed the Euphrates, marched along the Orontes, probably receiving
+ the homage of Hamath and Arvad by the way. Restricted solely to the
+ resources of Damascus, Hazael did not venture to advance into Coele-Syria
+ as Ben-hadad had always done; he barricaded the defiles of Anti-Lebanon,
+ and, entrenched on Mount Shenir with the flower of his troops, prepared to
+ await the attack. It proved the most bloody battle that the Assyrians had
+ up to that period ever fought. Hazael lost 16,000 foot-soldiers, 470
+ horsemen, 1121 chariots, and yet succeeded in falling back on Damascus in
+ good order. Shalmaneser, finding it impossible to force the city,
+ devastated the surrounding country, burnt numberless villages and farms,
+ and felled all the fruit trees in the Haurân up to the margin of the
+ desert. This district had never, since the foundation of the kingdom by
+ Bezon a century before, suffered at the hands of an enemy&rsquo;s army, and its
+ population, enriched as much by peaceful labour as by the spoil of its
+ successful wars, offered a prize of incalculable value. On his return
+ march Shalmaneser raided the Bekaa, entered Phoenicia, and carved a
+ triumphal stele on one of the rocks of Baalirasi.*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The site of Baalirasi is left undecided by Assyriologists.
+ The events which follow enable us to affirm with tolerable
+ certainty that the point on the coast where Shalmaneser
+ received the tributes of Tyre and Sidon is none other than
+ the mouth of the Nahr-el-Kelb: the name Baalirasi, &ldquo;the
+ master of the head,&rdquo; would then be applicable to the rocky
+ point which rises to the south of the river, and on which
+ Egyptian kings had already sculptured their stelæ.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The Kings of Tyre and Sidon hastened to offer him numerous gifts, and
+ Jehu, who owed to his presence temporary immunity from a Syrian invasion,
+ sent his envoys to greet him, accompanied by offerings of gold and silver
+ in bars, vessels of gold of various forms, situlæ, salvers, cups,
+ drinking-vessels, tin, sceptres, and wands of precious woods.
+ Shalmaneser&rsquo;s pride was flattered by this homage, and he carved on one of
+ his monuments the representation of this first official connection of
+ Assyria with Israel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0055" id="linkimage-0055">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/131.jpg" width="100%"
+ alt="131.jpg Jehu, King of Israel, Sends Presents To Shalmaneser " />
+ </div>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from one of the scenes represented
+ on the Black Obelisk.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The chief of the embassage is shown prostrating himself and kissing the
+ dust before the king, while the rest advance in single file, some with
+ vessels in their hands, some carrying sceptres, or with metal bowls
+ supported on their heads. The prestige of the house of Omri was still a
+ living influence, or else the Ninevite scribes were imperfectly informed
+ of the internal changes which had taken place in Israel, for the
+ inscription accompanying this bas-relief calls Jehu the son of Omri, and
+ grafts the regicide upon the genealogical tree of his victims.
+ Shalmaneser&rsquo;s victory had been so dearly bought, that the following year
+ the Assyrians merely attempted an expedition for tree-felling in the
+ Amanos (841 B.C.). Their next move was to push forward into Kuî, in the
+ direction of the Pyramos and Saros (840 B.C.). In the summer of 839 they
+ once more ventured southwards, but this time Hazael changed his tactics:
+ pitched battles and massed movements, in which the fate of a campaign was
+ decided by one cast of the dice, were now avoided, and ambuscades,
+ guerilla warfare, and long and tedious sieges became the order of the day.
+ By the time that four towns had been taken, Shalmaneser&rsquo;s patience was
+ worn out: he drew off his troops and fell back on Phoenicia, laying Tyre,
+ Sidon, and Byblos under tribute before returning into Mesopotamia. Hazael
+ had shown himself possessed of no less energy than Ben-hadad; and
+ Damascus, isolated, had proved as formidable a foe as Damascus surrounded
+ by its vassals; Shalmaneser therefore preferred to leave matters as they
+ were, and accept the situation. Indeed the results obtained were of
+ sufficient importance to warrant his feeling some satisfaction. He had
+ ruthlessly dispelled the dream of Syrian hegemony which had buoyed up
+ Ben-hadad, he had forced Damascus to withdraw the suzerainty it had
+ exercised in the south, and he had conquered Northern Syria and the lower
+ basin of the Orontes. Before running any further risks, he judged it
+ prudent to strengthen his recently acquired authority over these latter
+ countries, and to accustom the inhabitants to their new position as
+ subjects of Nineveh.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He showed considerable wisdom by choosing the tribes of the Taurus and of
+ the Oappadocian marches as the first objects of attack. In regions so
+ difficult of access, war could only be carried on with considerable
+ hardship and severe loss. The country was seamed by torrents and densely
+ covered with undergrowth, while the towns and villages, which clung to the
+ steep sides of the valleys, had no need of walls to become effective
+ fortresses, for the houses rose abruptly one above another, and formed so
+ many redoubts which the enemy would be forced to attack and take one by
+ one. Few pitched battles could be fought in a district of this
+ description; the Assyrians wore themselves out in incessant skirmishes and
+ endless petty sieges, and were barely compensated by the meagre spoil
+ which such warfare yielded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0056" id="linkimage-0056">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/134.jpg" width="100%" alt="134.jpg a Mountain Village " />
+ </div>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Drawn by Boudier, from a photograph by Alfred Boissier.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ In 838 B.C. Shalmaneser swept over the country of Tabal and reduced
+ twenty-four of its princes to a state of subjection; proceeding thence, he
+ visited the mountains of Turat,* celebrated from this period downwards for
+ their silver mines and quarries of valuable marbles.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The position of the mountains of Turat is indicated by the
+ nature of their products: &ldquo;We know of <i>a silver mine</i> at
+ Marash and an iron mine not worked, and <i>two fine quarries</i>,
+ one of pink and the other of black marble.&rdquo; Turat,
+ therefore, must be the Marash mountain, the Aghir-Uagh and
+ its spurs; hence the two sorts of stone mentioned in the
+ Assyrian text would be, the one the pink, the other the
+ black marble.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ In 837 he seized the stronghold of Uêtash in Melitene, and laid Tabal
+ under a fresh contribution; this constituted a sort of advance post
+ for-Assyria in the sight of those warlike and continually fluctuating
+ races situated between the sources of the Halys and the desert border of
+ Asia Minor.* Secure on this side, he was about to bring matters to a close
+ in Cilicia, when the defection of Ianzu recalled him to the opposite
+ extremity of the empire. He penetrated into Namri by the defiles of
+ Khashmur,** made a hasty march through Sik-hisatakh, Bît-Tamul,
+ Bît-Shakki, and Bît-Shedi, surprised the rebels and drove them into the
+ forests; he then bore down on Parsua*** and plundered twenty-seven petty
+ kings consecutively.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * A fragment of an anonymous list, discovered by Delitzsch,
+ puts the expedition against the Tabal in 837 B.C. instead of
+ in 838, and consequently makes the entire series of ensuing
+ expeditions one year later, up to the revolt of Assur-dain-
+ pal. This is evidently a mistake of the scribe who compiled
+ this edition of the Canon, and the chronology of a
+ contemporary monument, such as the Black Obelisk, ought to
+ obtain until further light can be thrown on the subject.
+
+ ** For the site of Khashmur or Khashmar, cf. <i>supra</i>, p. 35,
+ note 3. The other localities cannot as yet be identified
+ with any modern site; we may conjecture that they were
+ scattered about the basin of the upper Dîyalah.
+
+ *** Parsua, or with the native termination Parsuash, has
+ been identified first with Persia and then with Parthia, and
+ Rost still persists in its identification, if not with the
+ Parthia of classical geographers, at least with the Parthian
+ people. Schrader has shown that it ought to be sought
+ between Namri on the south and the Mannai on the north; in
+ one of the valleys of the Gordysean mountains, and his
+ demonstration has been accepted with a few modifications of
+ detail by most scholars. I believe it to be possible to
+ determine its position with still further precision. Parsua
+ on one side lay on the border of Namri, which comprises the
+ districts to the east of the Dîyalah in the direction of
+ Zohab, and was contiguous to the Medes on the other side,
+ and also to the Mannai, who occupied the southern regions of
+ Lake Urumiah; it also lies close to Bît-Khamban, the
+ principal of the Cossæan tribes, as it would appear. I can
+ find only one position on the map which would answer to all
+ these requirements: this is in the main the basin of the
+ Gavê-rud and its small affluents, the Ardelân and the
+ sources of the Kizil-Uzên, and I shall there place Parsua
+ until further information is forthcoming on the subject.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Skirting Misi, Amadai, Araziash,* and Kharkhar, and most of the districts
+ lying on the middle heights of the table-land of Iran, he at length came
+ up with Ianzu, whom he seized and brought back prisoner to Assyria,
+ together with his family and his idols.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Amadai is a form of Madai, with a prothetical <i>a</i>, like
+ Agusi or Azala, by the side of Guzi and Zala. The
+ inscription of Shalmaneser III. thus gives us the first
+ mention of the classical Medes. Araziash, placed too far to
+ the east in Sagartenê by Fr. Lenormant, has been located
+ further westwards by Schrader, near the upper course of the
+ Kerkhâ; but the documents of all periods show us that on one
+ side it adjoined Kharkhar, that is the basin of the Gamas-
+ âb, on the other side Media, that is the country of Hamadan.
+ It must, therefore, be placed between the two, in the
+ northern part of the ancient Cambadenê in the present
+ Tchamabadân. Kharkhar in this case would be in the southern
+ part of Cambadene, on the main road which leads from the
+ gates of the Zagros to Hamadan; an examination of the
+ general features of the country leads me to believe that the
+ town of Kharkhar should occupy the site of Kirmânshahân, or
+ rather of the ancient city which preceded that town.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ It was at this juncture, perhaps, that he received from the people of
+ Muzri the gift of an elephant and some large monkeys, representations of
+ which he has left us on one of his bas-reliefs. Elephants were becoming
+ rare, and it was not now possible to kill them by the hundred, as
+ formerly, in Syria: this particular animal, therefore, excited the wonder
+ of the Ninevites, and the possession of it flattered the vanity of the
+ conqueror. This was, however, an interlude of short duration, and the
+ turbulent tribes of the Taurus recalled him to the west as soon as spring
+ set in.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He laid waste Kuî in 836 B.C., destroyed Timur, its capital, and on his
+ return march revenged himself on Aramê of Agusi, whose spirit was still
+ unbroken by his former misfortunes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0057" id="linkimage-0057">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/137.jpg" width="100%"
+ alt="137.jpg Elephant and Monkeys Brought As a Tribute To Nineveh by the People of Muzbi " />
+ </div>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from one of the bas-reliefs of the
+ Black Obelisk.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Tanakun and Tarsus fell into his hands 835 B.C.; Shalmaneser replaced
+ Kati, the King of Kuî, by his brother Kirri, and made of his dominions a
+ kind of buffer state between his own territory and that of Pamphylia and
+ Lycaonia. He had now occupied the throne for a quarter of a century, not a
+ year of which had elapsed without seeing the monarch gird on his armour
+ and lead his soldiers in person towards one or other points of the
+ horizon. He was at length weary of such perpetual warfare, and advancing
+ age perchance prevented him from leading his troops with that dash and
+ vigour which are necessary to success; however this might be, on his
+ return from Cilicia he laid aside his armour once for all, and devoted
+ himself to peaceful occupations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But he did not on that account renounce all attempts at conquest.
+ Conducting his campaigns by proxy delegated the command of his army to his
+ Tartan Dayân-assur, and the northern tribes were the first on whom this
+ general gave proof of his prowess. Urartu had passed into the hands of
+ another sovereign since its defeat in 845 B.C., and a second Sharduris*
+ had taken the place of the Aramê who had ruled at the beginning of
+ Shalma-neser&rsquo;s reign.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The name is written Siduri or Seduri in the text of the
+ Obelisk, probably in accordance with some popular
+ pronunciation, in which the r was but slightly rolled and
+ finally disappeared. The identity of Seduri and Sharduris,
+ has been adopted by recent historians. Belck and Lehmann
+ have shown that this Seduri was not Sharduris, son of
+ Lutipris, but a Sharduris II., probably the son of Aramê.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ It would appear that the accession of this prince, who was probably young
+ and active, was the signal for a disturbance among the people of the Upper
+ Tigris and the Masios&mdash;a race always impatient of the yoke, and ready
+ to make common cause with any fresh enemy of Assyria. An insurrection
+ broke out in Bît-Zamani and the neighbouring districts. Dayân-assur
+ quelled it offhand; then, quitting the basin of the Tigris by the défiles
+ of Armash, he crossed the Arzania, and entered Urartu. Sharduris came out
+ to meet him, and was defeated, if we may give credence to the official
+ record of the campaign. Even if the account be an authentic one, the
+ victory was of no advantage to the Assyrians, for they were obliged to
+ retreat before they had subjugated the enemy, and an insurrection among
+ the Patina prevented them from returning to the attack in the following
+ year. With obligations to their foreign master on one hand and to their
+ own subjects on the other, the princes of the Syrian states had no easy
+ life. If they failed to fulfil their duties as vassals, then an Assyrian
+ invasion would pour in to their country, and sooner or later their ruin
+ would be assured; they would have before them the prospect of death by
+ impaling or under the knife of the flayer, or, if they escaped this,
+ captivity and exile in a far-off land. Prudence therefore dictated a
+ scrupulous fidelity to their suzerain. On the other hand, if they resigned
+ themselves to their dependent condition, the people of their towns would
+ chafe at the payment of tribute, or some ambitious relative would take
+ advantage of the popular discontent to hatch a plot and foment a
+ revolution, and the prince thus threatened would escape from an Assyrian
+ reprisal only to lose his throne or fall by the blow of an assassin. In
+ circumstances such as these the people of the Patina murdered their king,
+ Lubarna II., and proclaimed in his room a certain Sum, who had no right to
+ the crown, but who doubtless undertook to liberate them from the
+ foreigner. Dayân-assur defeated the rebels and blockaded the remains of
+ their army in Kinalua. They defended themselves at first energetically,
+ but on the death of Surri from some illness, their courage failed them and
+ they offered to deliver over the sons of their chief if their own lives
+ might be spared. Dayân-assur had the poor wretches impaled, laid the
+ inhabitants under a heavy contribution, and appointed a certain Sâsi, son
+ of Uzza, to be their king. The remainder of Syria gave no further trouble&mdash;a
+ fortunate circumstance, for the countries on the Armenian border revolted
+ in 832 B.C., and the whole year was occupied in establishing order among
+ the herdsmen of Kirkhi. In 831 B.C., Dayân-assiir pushed forward into
+ Khubushkia, and traversed it from end to end without encountering any
+ resistance. He next attacked the Mannai. Their prince, Ualki, quailed
+ before his onslaught; he deserted his royal city Zirtu,* and took refuge
+ in the mountains. Dayân-assur pursued him thither in vain, but he was able
+ to collect considerable booty, and turning in a south-easterly direction,
+ he fought his way along the base of the Gordysean mountains till he
+ reached Parsua, which he laid under tribute. In 830 B.C. it was the turn
+ of Muzazir, which hitherto had escaped invasion, to receive a visit from
+ the Tartan. Zapparia, the capital, and fifty-six other towns were given
+ over to the flames. From thence, Dayân-assur passed into Urartu proper;
+ after having plundered it, he fell back on the southern provinces,
+ collecting by the way the tribute of Guzân, of the Mannai, of Andiu,** and
+ Parsua; he then pushed on into the heart of Namri, and having razed to the
+ ground two hundred and fifty of its towns, returned with his troops to
+ Assyria by the defiles of Shimishi and through Khalman.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The town is elsewhere called Izirtu, and appears to have
+ been designated in the inscriptions of Van by the name of
+ Sisiri-Khadiris.
+
+ ** Andia or Andiu is contiguous to Naîri, to Zikirtu and to
+ Karalla, which latter borders on Manna; it bordered on the
+ country of Misa or Misi, into which it is merged under the
+ name of Misianda in the time of Sargon. Delattre places
+ Andiu in the country of the classical Matiense, between the
+ Mationian mountains and Lake Urumiah. The position of Misu
+ on the confines of Araziash and Media, somewhere in the
+ neighbourhood of Talvantu-Dagh, obliges us to place Andiu
+ lower down to the south-east, near the district of Kurdasir.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ This was perhaps the last foreign campaign of Shalmaneser III.&lsquo;s reign; it
+ is at all events the last of which we possess any history. The record of
+ his exploits ends, as it had begun more than thirty years previously, with
+ a victory in Namri.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The aged king had, indeed, well earned the right to end his allotted days
+ in peace. Devoted to Calah, like his predecessor, he had there accumulated
+ the spoils of his campaigns, and had made it the wealthiest city of his
+ empire. He continued to occupy the palace of Assur-nazir-pal, which he had
+ enlarged. Wherever he turned within its walls, his eyes fell upon some
+ trophy of his wars or panegyric of his virtues, whether recorded on mural
+ tiles covered with inscriptions and bas-reliefs, or celebrated by statues,
+ altars, and triumphal stelæ. The most curious among all these is a
+ square-based block terminating in three receding stages, one above the
+ other, like the stump of an Egyptian obelisk surmounted by a stepped
+ pyramid. Five rows of bas-reliefs on it represent scenes most flattering
+ to Assyrian pride;&mdash;the reception of tribute from Gilzân, Muzri, the
+ Patina, the Israelitish Jehu, and Marduk-abal-uzur, King of the land of
+ Sukhi. The latter knew his suzerain&rsquo;s love of the chase, and he provided
+ him with animals for his preserves, including lions, and rare species of
+ deer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <a name="linkimage-0059" id="linkimage-0059">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/142.jpg" width="100%"
+ alt="142.jpg Stag and Lions of the Country Of Sukhi " />
+ </div>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from one of the bas-reliefs of the
+ Black Obelisk.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The inscription on the monument briefly relates the events which had
+ occurred between the first and the thirty-first years of Shalmaneser&rsquo;s
+ reign;&mdash;the defeat of Damascus, of Babylon and Urartu, the conquest
+ of Northern Syria, of Cilicia, and of the countries bordering on the
+ Zagros. When the king left Calah for some country residence in
+ its-neighbourhood, similar records and carvings would meet his eye. At
+ Imgur-Bel, one of the gates of the palace was covered with plates of
+ bronze, on which the skilful artist had embossed and engraved with the
+ chisel episodes from the campaigns on the Euphrates and the Tigris, the
+ crossing of mountains and rivers, the assault and burning of cities, the
+ long lines of captives, the <i>mêlée</i> with the enemy and the pursuit of
+ the chariots. All the cities of Assyria, Nineveh,* Arbela, Assur, even to
+ the more distant towns of Harrân** and Tushkhân,***&mdash;vied with each
+ other in exhibiting proofs of his zeal for their gods and his affection
+ for their inhabitants; but his predilection for Calah filled them with
+ jealousy, and Assur particularly could ill brook the growing aversion with
+ which the Assyrian kings regarded her. It was of no avail that she
+ continued to be the administrative and religious capital of the empire,
+ the storehouse of the spoil and annual tribute of other nations, and was
+ continually embellishing herself with fresh monuments: a spirit of
+ discontent was daily increasing, and merely awaited some favourable
+ occasion to break out into open revolt. Shalmaneser enjoyed the dignity of
+ <i>limmu</i> for the second time after thirty years, and had celebrated
+ this jubilee of his inauguration by a solemn festival in honour of Assur
+ and Eammân.****
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Nineveh is mentioned as the starting-place of nearly all
+ the first campaigns in the inscription on the <i>Monolith</i>;
+ also in the Balawât inscription, on the other hand, towards
+ the end of the reign, Calah is given as the residence of the
+ king on the <i>Black Obelisk</i>
+
+ ** Mention of the buildings of Shalmaneser III. at Harrân
+ occurs in an inscription of Nabonidus.
+
+ *** The Monolith discovered at Kurkh is in itself a proof
+ that Shalmaneser executed works in this town, the Tushkhân
+ of the inscriptions.
+
+ **** Any connection established between this thirty-year
+ jubilee and the thirty years&rsquo; festival of Egypt rests on
+ facts which can be so little relied on, that it must be
+ accepted with considerable reserve.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ It is possible that he may have thought this a favourable moment for
+ presenting to the people the son whom he had chosen from among his
+ children to succeed him. At any rate, Assur-dain-pal, fearing that one of
+ his brothers might be preferred before him, &ldquo;proclaimed himself king,&rdquo; and
+ nearly the whole of Assyria gathered around his standard. Assur and
+ twenty-six more of the most important cities revolted in his favour&mdash;Nineveh,
+ Imgur-bel, Sibaniba, Dur-balat, Arbela, Zabân in the Chaldæan marches,
+ Arrapkha in the valley of the Upper Zab, and most of the colonies, both of
+ ancient and recent foundation&mdash;Amidi on the Tigris, Khindanu near the
+ mouths of the Kha-bur and Tul-Abni on the southern slopes of the Masios.
+ The aged king remained in possession only of Calah and its immediate
+ environs&mdash;Nisibis, Harrân, Tushkhân, and the most recently subdued
+ provinces on the banks of the Euphrates and the Orontes. It is probable,
+ however, that the army remained faithful to him, and the support which
+ these well-tried troops afforded him enabled the king to act with
+ promptitude. The weight of years did not permit him to command in person;
+ he therefore entrusted the conduct of operations to his son Samsi-rammân,
+ but he did not live to see the end of the struggle. It embittered his last
+ days, and was not terminated till 822 B.C., at which date Shalmaneser had
+ been dead two years. This prolonged crisis had shaken the kingdom to its
+ foundations; the Syrians, the Medes, the Babylonians, and the peoples of
+ the Armenian and Aramæan marches were rent from it, and though
+ Samsi-rammân IV. waged continuous warfare during the twelve years that he
+ governed, he could only partially succeed in regaining the territory which
+ had been thus lost.*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * All that we know of the reign of Samsi-rammân IV. comes
+ from an inscription in archaic characters containing the
+ account of four campaigns, without giving the years of each
+ reign or the <i>limmu</i>, and historians have classified them in
+ different ways.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ His first three campaigns were-directed against the north-eastern and
+ eastern provinces. He began by attempting to collect the tribute from
+ Naîri, the payment of which had been suspended since the outbreak of the
+ revolution, and he re-established the dominion of Assyria from the
+ district of Paddir to the township of Kar-Shulmânasharid, which his father
+ had founded at the fords of the Euphrates opposite to Carchemish (821
+ B.C.). In the following campaign he did not personally take part, but the
+ Rabshakeh Mutarriz-assur pillaged the shores of Lake Urumiah, and then
+ made his way towards Urartu, where he destroyed three hundred towns (820).
+ The third expedition was directed against Misi and Gizilbunda beyond the
+ Upper Zab and Mount Zilar.* The inhabitants of Misi entrenched themselves
+ on a wooded ridge commanded by three peaks, but were defeated in spite of
+ the advantages which their position secured for them;** the people of
+ Gizilbunda were not more fortunate than their neighbours, and six thousand
+ of them perished at the assault of Urash, their capital.***
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Mount Zilar is beyond the Upper Zab, on one of the roads
+ which lead to the basin of Lake Urumiah, probably in
+ Khubushkia. There are two of these roads&mdash;that which passes
+ over the neck of Kelishin, and the other which runs through
+ the gorges of Alan; &ldquo;with the exception of these two points,
+ the mountain chain is absolutely impassable.&rdquo; According to
+ the general direction of the campaign, it appears to me
+ probable that the king crossed by the passes of Alan; Mount
+ Zilâr would therefore be the group of chains which cover the
+ district of Pîshder, and across which the Lesser Zab passes
+ before descending to the plain.
+
+ ** The country of Misi adjoined Gizilbunda, Media, Araziâsh,
+ and Andiu. All these circumstances incline us to place it in
+ the south-eastern part of Kurdistan of Sihmeh, in the upper
+ valley of Kisil-Uzên. The ridge, overlooked by three peaks,
+ on which the inhabitants took refuge, cannot be looked for
+ on the west, whore there are few important heights: I should
+ rather identify it with the part of the Gordysean mountains
+ which bounds the basin of the Kisil-Uzên on the west, and
+ which contains three peaks of 12,000 feet&mdash;the Tchehel-
+ tchechma, the Derbend, and the Nau-Kân.
+
+ *** The name of the country has been read Giratbunda,
+ Ginunbunda, Girubbunda; a variant, to which no objections
+ can be made, has furnished Gizilbunda. It was contiguous on
+ one side to the Medes, and on the other to the Mannai, which
+ obliges us to place it in Kurdistan of Gerrus, on the Kizil-
+ Uzôn. It may be asked if the word Kizil which occurs several
+ times in the topographical nomenclature of these regions is
+ not a relic of the name in question, and if Gizil-bunda is
+ not a compound of the same class as Kizil-uzên, Kizil-
+ gatchi, Kizihalân, Kizil-lôk, whether it be that part of the
+ population spoke a language analogous to the dialects now in
+ use in these districts, or that the ancient word has been
+ preserved by later conquerors and assimilated to some well-
+ known word in their own language.
+</pre>
+ <div class="figleft" style="width:25%;">
+ <img alt="Obelisk" width="100%" src="images/141.jpg" />
+ </div>
+ <div class="figright" style="width:29%;">
+ <img alt="Monolith" width="100%" src="images/148.jpg" />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Mutarriz-assur at once turned upon the Medes, vanquished them, and drove
+ them at the point of the sword into their remote valleys, returning to the
+ district of Araziash, which he laid waste. A score of chiefs with
+ barbarous names, alarmed by this example, hastened to prostrate themselves
+ at his feet, and submitted to the tribute which he imposed on them.
+ Assyria thus regained in these regions the ascendency which the victories
+ of Shalmaneser III. in their time had won for her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Babylon, which had endured the suzerainty of its rival for a quarter of a
+ century, seems to have taken advantage of the events occurring in Assyria
+ to throw off the yoke, by espousing the cause of Assur-dain-pal.
+ Samsi-rammân, therefore, as soon as he was free to turn his attention from
+ Media (818), directed his forces against Babylonia. Metur-nât, as usual,
+ was the first city attacked; it capitulated at once, and its inhabitants
+ were exiled to Assyria. Kami to the south of the Turnat, and Dibina on
+ Mount Yalrnan, suffered the same fate, but Gananâtê held out for a time;
+ its garrison, however, although reinforced by troops from the surrounding
+ country, was utterly routed before its walls, and the survivors, who fled
+ for refuge to the citadel in the centre of the town, were soon dislodged.
+ The Babylonians, who had apparently been taken by surprise at the first
+ attack, at length made preparations to resist the invaders. The Prince of
+ Dur-papsukal, who owned allegiance to Marduk-balatsu-ikbi, King of
+ Babylon, had disposed his troops so as to guard the fords of the Tigris,
+ in order to prevent the enemy from reaching his capital. But Samsi-rammân
+ dispersed this advanced force, killing thirteen thousand, besides taking
+ three thousand prisoners, and finally reduced Dur-papsukal to ashes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0060" id="linkimage-0060">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="figright" style="width:43%;">
+ <img width="100%" src="images/144.jpg"
+ alt="144.jpg the Bronze-covered Gates of BalawÀt " />
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Drawn by Faucher-Gudin,
+from the sketch by Pinches.
+</pre>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ The respite thus obtained gave Marduk-balatsu-ikbi sufficient time to
+ collect the main body of his troops: the army was recruited from Kaldâ and
+ Ela-mites, soldiers from Namri, and Aramaean contingents, and the united
+ force awaited the enemy behind the ruins of Dur-papsukal, along the banks
+ of the Dabân canal. Five thousand footmen, two hundred horsemen, one
+ hundred chariots, besides the king&rsquo;s tent and all his stores, fell into
+ the hands of the Assyrians. The victory was complete; Babylon, Kuta, and
+ Borsippa capitulated one after the other, and the invaders penetrated as
+ far as the land of the Kaldâ, and actually reached the Persian Gulf.
+ Samsi-rammân offered sacrifices to the gods, as his father had done before
+ him, and concluded a treaty with Marduk-balatsu-ikbi, the terms of which
+ included rectification of boundaries, payment of a subsidy, and the other
+ clauses usual in such circumstances; the peace was probably ratified by a
+ matrimonial alliance, concluded between the Babylonian princess Sammuramat
+ and Bammân-nirâri, son of the conqueror. In this manner the hegemony of
+ Assyria over Karduniash was established even more firmly than before the
+ insurrection; but all available resources had been utilised in the effort
+ necessary to secure it. Samsi-rammân had no leisure to reconquer Syria or
+ Asia Minor, and the Euphrates remained the western frontier of his
+ kingdom, as it had been in the early days of Shalmaneser III. The peace
+ with Babylon, moreover, did not last long; Bau-akhiddîn, who had succeeded
+ Marduk-balatsu-ikbi, refused to observe the terms of the treaty, and
+ hostilities again broke out on the Turnat and the Tigris, as they had done
+ six years previously. This war was prolonged from 813 to 812 B.C., and was
+ still proceeding when Samsi-rammân died. His son Bammân-nirâri III.
+ quickly brought it to a successful issue. He carried Bau-akhiddîn captive
+ to Assyria, with his family and the nobles of his court, and placed on the
+ vacant throne one of his own partisans, while he celebrated festivals in
+ honour of his own supremacy at Babylon, Kuta, and Borsippa. Karduniash
+ made no attempt to rebel against Assyria during the next half-century.
+ Bammân-nirâri proved himself an energetic and capable sovereign, and the
+ thirty years of his reign were by no means inglorious. We learn from the
+ eponym lists what he accomplished during that time, and against which
+ countries he waged war; but we have not yet recovered any inscription to
+ enable us to fill in this outline, and put together a detailed account of
+ his reign. His first expeditions were directed against Media (810), Gozân
+ (809), and the Mannai (808-807); he then crossed the Euphrates, and in
+ four successive years conducted as many vigorous campaigns against Arpad
+ (806), Kkazaiu (808), the town of Baali (804), and the cities of the
+ Phoenician sea-board (803). The plague interfering with his advance in the
+ latter direction, he again turned his attention eastward and attacked
+ Khubushkia in 802, 792, and 784; Media in 801-800, 794-793, and 790-787;
+ Lushia in 799; Namri in 798; Diri in 796-795 and 785; Itua in 791,
+ 783-782; Kishki in 785. This bare enumeration conjures up a vision of an
+ enterprising and victorious monarch of the type of Assur-nazir-pal or
+ Shalmaneser III., one who perhaps succeeded even where his redoubtable
+ ancestors had failed. The panoramic survey of his empire, as unfolded to
+ us in one of his inscriptions, includes the mountain ranges of Illipi as
+ far as Mount Sihina, Kharkhar, Araziash, Misu, Media, the whole of
+ Gizilbunda, Man, Parsua, Allabria, Abdadana, the extensive territory of
+ Istaîri, far-off Andiu, and, westwards beyond the Euphrates, the Khâti,
+ the entire country of the Amorites, Tyre, Sidon, Israel, Edom, and the
+ Philistines. Never before had the Assyrian empire extended so far east in
+ the direction of the centre of the Iranian tableland, nor so far to the
+ south-west towards the frontiers of Egypt.*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Allabria or Allabur is on the borders of Parsua and of
+ Karalla, which allows us to locate it in the basins of the
+ Kerkhorâh and the Saruk, tributaries of the Jagatu, which
+ flow into Lake Urumiah. Abdadana, which borders on
+ Allabria, and was, according to Rammân-nirâri, at the
+ extreme end of Naîri, was a little further to the east or
+ north-east; if I am not mistaken, it corresponds pretty
+ nearly to Uriâd, on the banks of the Kizil-Uzên.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ In two only of these regions, namely, Syria and Armenia, do native
+ documents add any information to the meagre summary contained in the
+ Annals, and give us glimpses of contemporary rulers. The retreat of
+ Shalmaneser, after his partial success in 839, had practically left the
+ ancient allies of Ben-hadad II. at the mercy of Hazael, the new King of
+ Damascus, but he did not apparently attempt to assert his supremacy over
+ the whole of Coele-Syria, and before long several of its cities acquired
+ considerable importance, first Mansuate, and then Hadrach,* both of which,
+ casting Hamath into the shade, succeeded in holding their own against
+ Hazael and his successors. He renewed hostilities, however, against the
+ Hebrews, and did not relax his efforts till he had thoroughly brought them
+ into subjection. Jehu suffered loss on all his frontiers, &ldquo;from Jordan
+ eastward, all the land of Gilead, the Gadites, the Keubenites, and the
+ Manassites, from Aroer, which is by the valley of Arnon, even Gilead and
+ Bashan,&rdquo; ** Israel became thus once more entirely dependent on Damascus,
+ but the sister kingdom of Judah still escaped its yoke through the energy
+ of her rulers.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Mansuati successfully resisted Rammân-nirâri in 797 B.C.,
+ but he probably caused its ruin, for after this only
+ expeditions against Hadrach are mentioned. Mansuati was in
+ the basin of the Orontes, and the manner in which the
+ Assyrian texts mention it in connection with Zimyra seems to
+ show that it commanded the opening in the Lebanon range
+ between Cole-Syria and Phoenicia. The site of Khatarika, the
+ Hadrach of Zech. ix. 1, is not yet precisely determined; but
+ it must, as well as Mansuati, have been in the neighbourhood
+ of Hamath, perhaps between Hamath and Damascus. It appears
+ for the first time in 772.
+
+ ** 2 Kings x. 32, 33. Even if verse 33 is a later addition,
+ it gives a correct idea of the situation, except as regards
+ Bashan, which had been lost to Israel for some time already.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Athaliah reigned seven years, not ingloriously; but she belonged to the
+ house of Ahab, and the adherents of the prophets, whose party had planned
+ Jehu&rsquo;s revolution, could no longer witness with equanimity one of the
+ accursed race thus prospering and ostentatiously practising the rites of
+ Baal-worship within sight of the great temple of Jahveh. On seizing the
+ throne, Athaliah had sought out and put to death all the members of the
+ house of David who had any claim to the succession; but Jeho-sheba,
+ half-sister of Ahaziah, had with difficulty succeeded in rescuing Joash,
+ one of the king&rsquo;s sons. Her husband was the high priest Jehoiada, and he
+ secreted his nephew for six years in the precincts of the temple; at the
+ end of that time, he won over the captains of the royal guard, bribed a
+ section of the troops, and caused them to swear fealty to the child as
+ their legitimate sovereign. Athaliah, hastening to discover the cause of
+ the uproar, was assassinated. Mattan, chief priest of Baal, shared her
+ fate; and Jehoiada at once restored to Jahveh the preeminence which the
+ gods of the alien had for a time usurped (837). At first his influence
+ over his pupil was supreme, but before long the memory of his services
+ faded away, and the king sought only how to rid himself of a tutelage
+ which had grown irksome. The temple had suffered during the late wars, and
+ repairs were much needed. Joash ordained that for the future all moneys
+ put into the sacred treasury&mdash;which of right belonged to the king&mdash;should
+ be placed unreservedly at the disposal of the priests on condition that
+ they should apply them to the maintenance of the services and fabric of
+ the temple: the priests accepted the gift, but failed in the faithful
+ observance of the conditions, so that in 814 B.C. the king was obliged to
+ take stringent measures to compel them to repair the breaches in the
+ sanctuary walls:* he therefore withdrew the privilege which they had
+ abused, and henceforth undertook the administration of the Temple Fund in
+ person. The beginning of the new order of things was not very successful.
+ Jehu had died in 815, after a disastrous reign, and both he and his son
+ Jehoahaz had been obliged to acknowledge the supremacy of Hazael: not only
+ was he in the position of an inferior vassal, but, in order to preclude
+ any idea of a revolt, he was forbidden to maintain a greater army than the
+ small force necessary for purposes of defence, namely, ten thousand
+ foot-soldiers, fifty horsemen, and ten chariots.**
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * 2 Kings xii. 4-16; cf. 2 Chron. xxiv. 1-14. The beginning
+ of the narrative is lost, and the whole has probably been
+ modified to make it agree with 2 Kings xxii. 3-7.
+
+ ** 2 Kings xiii. 1-7. It may be noticed that the number of
+ foot-soldiers given in the Bible is identical with that
+ which the Assyrian texts mention as Ahab&rsquo;s contingent at the
+ battle of Qarqar, viz. 10,000; the number of the chariots is
+ very different in the two cases. Kuenen and other critics
+ would like to assign to the reign of Jehoahaz the siege of
+ Samaria by the Syrians, which the actual text of the Book of
+ the Kings attributes to the reign of Joram.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The power of Israel had so declined that Hazael was allowed to march
+ through its territory unhindered on his way to wage war in the country of
+ the Philistines; which he did, doubtless, in order to get possession of
+ the main route of Egyptian commerce. The Syrians destroyed Gath,* reduced
+ Pentapolis to subjection, enforced tribute from Edom, and then marched
+ against Jerusalem. Joash took from the treasury of Jahveh the reserve
+ funds which his ancestors, Jehoshaphat, Joram, and Ahaziah, had
+ accumulated, and sent them to the invader,** together with all the gold
+ which was found in the king&rsquo;s house.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The text of 2 Kings xii. 17 merely says that Hazael took
+ Gath. Gath is not named by Amos among the cities of the
+ Philistines (Amos. i. 6-8), but it is one of the towns cited
+ by that prophet as examples to Israel of the wrath of Jahveh
+ (vi. 2). It is probable, therefore, that it was already
+ destroyed in his time.
+
+ ** 2 Kings xii. 17, 18; cf. 2 Chron. xxiv. 22-24, where the
+ expedition of Hazael is represented as a punishment for the
+ murder of Mechariah, son of Jehoiada.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0061" id="linkimage-0061">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="figleft" style="width:37%;">
+ <img width="100%" src="images/156.jpg"
+ alt="156.jpg Triumphal Stele of Menuas at Kelishin " />
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Drawn by Faucher-Gudin,
+from a photograph by
+J. de Morgan.
+</pre>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ From this time forward Judah became, like Israel, Edom, the Philistines
+ and Ammonites, a mere vassal of Hazael; with the possible exception of
+ Moab, all the peoples of Southern Syria were now subject to Damascus, and
+ formed a league as strong as that which had successfully resisted the
+ power of Shalmaneser. Rammân-nirâri, therefore, did not venture to attack
+ Syria during the lifetime of Hazael; but a change of sovereign is always a
+ critical moment in the history of an Eastern empire, and he took advantage
+ of the confusion caused by the death of the aged king to attack his
+ successor Mari (803 B.C.). Mari essayed the tactics which his father had
+ found so successful; he avoided a pitched battle, and shut himself up in
+ Damascus. But he was soon closely blockaded, and forced to submit to
+ terms; Rammân-nirâri demanded as the price of withdrawal, 23,000 talents
+ of silver, 20 talents of gold, 3000 of copper, 5000 of iron, besides
+ embroidered and dyed stuffs, an ivory couch, and a litter inlaid with
+ ivory,&mdash;in all a considerable part of the treasures amassed at the
+ expense of the Hebrews and their neighbours. It is doubtful whether
+ Rammân-nirâri pushed further south, and penetrated in person as far as the
+ deserts of Arabia Petrsæ&mdash;a suggestion which the mention of the
+ Philistines and Edomites among the list of his tributary states might
+ induce us to accept. Probably it was not the case, and he really went no
+ further than Damascus. But the submission of that city included, in theory
+ at least, the submission of all states subject to her sway, and these
+ dependencies may have sent some presents to testify their desire to
+ conciliate his favour; their names appear in the inscriptions in order to
+ swell the number of direct or indirect vassals of the empire, since they
+ were subject to a state which had been effectually conquered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Rammân-nirâri did not meet with such good fortune in the North; not only
+ did he fail to obtain the brilliant successes which elsewhere attended his
+ arms, but he ended by sustaining considerable reverses. The Ninevite
+ historians reckoned the two expeditions of 808 and 807 B.C. against the
+ Mannai as victories, doubtless because the king returned with a train of
+ prisoners and loaded with spoil; but the Vannic inscriptions reveal that
+ Urartu, which had been rising into prominence during the reign of
+ Shalmaneser, had now grown still more powerful, and had begun to reconquer
+ those provinces on the Tigris and Euphrates of which the Assyrians thought
+ themselves the undoubted lords. Sharduris II. had been succeeded, about
+ 828, by his son Ishpuinis, who had perhaps measured his strength against
+ Samsi-ranimân IV. Ishpuinis appears to have conquered and reduced to the
+ condition of a province the neighbouring principality of Biainas, which up
+ to that time had been governed by a semi-independent dynasty; at all
+ events, he transferred thence his seat of govern-and made Dhuspas his
+ favourite residence. Towards the end of his reign he associated with him
+ on the throne his son Menuas, and made him commander-in-chief of the army.
+ Menuas proved a bold and successful general, and in a few years had
+ doubled the extent of his dominions. He first delivered from the Assyrian
+ yoke, and plundered on his father&rsquo;s account, the tribes on the borders of
+ Lake Urumiah, Muzazir, Gilzân, and Kirruri; then, crossing the Gordygean
+ mountains, he burnt the towns in the valley of the Upper Zab, which bore
+ the uncouth names of Teraîs, Ardis, Khanalis, Bikuras, Khatqanas, Inuas,
+ and Nibur, laid waste the more fertile part of Khubushkia, and carved
+ triumphal stelas in the Assyrian and Vannic scripts upon the rocks in the
+ pass of Rowandiz.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was probably to recover this territory that Rammân-nirâri waged war
+ three times in Khubushkia, in 802, 792, and 785, in a district which had
+ formerly been ruled by a prefect from Nineveh, but had now fallen into the
+ hands of the enemy.*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * It is probable that the stele of Kelishin, belonging to
+ the joint reign of Ishpuinis and Menuas, was intended to
+ commemorate the events which led Rammân-nirâri to undertake
+ his first expedition; the conquest by Menuas will fall then
+ in 804 or 803 B.C. The inscription of Meher-Kapussi contains
+ the names of the divinities belonging to several conquered
+ towns, and may have been engraved on the return from this
+ war.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Everywhere along the frontier, from the Lower Zab to the Euphrates, Menuas
+ overpowered and drove back the Assyrian outposts. He took from them Aldus
+ and Erinuis on the southern shores of Lake Van, compelled Dayaîni to
+ abandon its allegiance, and forced its king, Udhupursis, to surrender his
+ treasure and his chariots; then gradually descending the valley of the
+ Arzania, he crushed Seseti, Kulmê, and Ekarzu. In one year he pillaged the
+ Mannai in the east, and attacked the Khâti in the west, seizing their
+ fortresses of Surisilis, Tarkhigamas, and Sarduras; in the province of
+ Alzu he left 2113 soldiers dead on the field after one engagement; Gupas
+ yielded to his sway, followed by the towns of Khuzanas and Puteria,
+ whereupon he even crossed the Euphrates and levied tribute from Melitene.
+ But the struggle against Assyria absorbed only a portion of his energy; we
+ do not know what he accomplished in the east, in the plains sloping
+ towards the Caspian Sea, but several monuments, discovered near Armavir
+ and Erzerum, testify that he pushed his arms a considerable distance
+ towards the north and north-west.* He obliged Etius to acknowledge his
+ supremacy, sending a colony to its capital, Lununis, whose name he changed
+ to Menua-lietzilinis.**
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The inscription of Erzerum, discovered by F. de Saulcy and
+ published by him, shows that Menuas was in possession of the
+ district in which this town is situated, and that he rebuilt
+ a palace there.
+
+ ** Inscriptions of Yazli-tash and Zolakert. It follows from
+ these texts that the country of Etius is the district of
+ Armavir, and Lununis is the ancient name of this city. The
+ now name by which Menuas replaced the name Lununis signifies
+ <i>the abode of the people of Menuas</i>; like many names arising
+ from special circumstances, it naturally passed away with
+ the rule of the people who had imposed it.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Towards the end of his reign he partly subjugated the Mannai, planting
+ colonies throughout their territory to strengthen his hold on the country.
+ By these campaigns he had formed a kingdom, which, stretching from the
+ south side of the Araxes to the upper reaches of the Zab and the Tigris,
+ was quite equal to Assyria in size, and probably surpassed it in density
+ of population, for it contained no barren steppes such as stretched across
+ Mesopotamia, affording support merely to a few wretched Bedâwin. As their
+ dominions increased, the sovereigns of Biainas began to consider
+ themselves on an equality with the kings of Nineveh, and endeavoured still
+ more to imitate them in the luxury and display of their domestic life, as
+ well as in the energy of their actions and the continuity of their
+ victories. They engraved everywhere on the rocks triumphal inscriptions,
+ destined to show to posterity their own exploits and the splendour of
+ their gods. Having made this concession to their vanity, they took
+ effective measures to assure possession of their conquests. They selected
+ in the various provinces sites difficult of access, commanding some defile
+ in the&rsquo; mountains, or ford over a river, or at the junction of two roads,
+ or the approach to a plain; on such spots they would build a fortress or a
+ town, or, finding a citadel already existing, they would repair it and
+ remodel its fortifications so as to render it impregnable. At Kalajik,
+ Ashrut-Darga, and the older Mukhrapert may still be seen the ruins of
+ ramparts built by Ishpuims. Menuas finished the buildings his father had
+ begun, erected others in all the districts where he sojourned, in time of
+ peace or war, at Shushanz, Sirka,* Anzaff, Arzwapert, Geuzak, Zolakert,
+ Tashtepê, and in the country of the Mannai, and it is possible that the
+ fortified village of Melasgerd still bears his name.**
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The name of the ancient place corresponding to the modern
+ village of Sirka was probably Artsunis or Artsuyunis,
+ according to the Vannic inscriptions.
+
+ ** A more correct form than Melas-gerd is Manas-gert, <i>the
+ city of Manas</i>, where Manas would represent Menuas: one of
+ the inscriptions of Aghtamar speaks of a certain
+ Menuakhinas, <i>city of Menuas</i>, which may be a primitive
+ version of the same name.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ His wars furnished him with the men and materials necessary for the rapid
+ completion of these works, while the statues, valuable articles of
+ furniture, and costly fabrics, vessels of silver, gold, and copper carried
+ off from Assyrian or Asiatic cities, provided him with surroundings as
+ luxurious as those enjoyed by the kings of Nineveh. His favourite
+ residence was amid the valleys and hills of the south-western shore of
+ Lake Van, the sea of the rising sun. His father, Ishpuinis, had already
+ done much to embellish the site of Dhuspas, or Khaldinas as it was called,
+ from the god Khaldis; he had surrounded it with strong walls, and within
+ them had laid the foundations of a magnificent palace. Menuas carried on
+ the work, brought water to the cisterns by subterranean aqueducts, planted
+ gardens, and turned the whole place into an impregnable fortress, where a
+ small but faithful garrison could defy a large army for several years.
+ Dhuspas, thus completed, formed the capital and defence of the kingdom
+ during the succeeding century.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Menuas was gathered to his fathers shortly before the death of
+ Eammân-nirâri, perhaps in 784 B.C.*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * This date seems to agree with the text of the <i>Annals of
+ Argistis</i>, as far as we are at present acquainted with them;
+ Müller has shown, in fact, that they contain the account of
+ fourteen campaigns, probably the first fourteen of the reign
+ of Argistis, and he has recognised, in accordance with the
+ observations of Stanislas Guyard, the formula which
+ separates the campaigns one from another. There are two
+ campaigns against the peoples of the Upper Euphrates
+ mentioned before the campaigns against Assyria, and as these
+ latter follow continuously after 781, it is probable that
+ the former must be placed in 783-782, which would give 783
+ or 784 for the year of his accession.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ He was engaged up to the last in a quarrel with the princes who occupied
+ the mountainous country to the north of the Araxes, and his son Argistis
+ spent the first few years of his reign in completing his conquests in this
+ region.* He crushed with ease an attempted revolt in Dayaîni, and then
+ invaded Etius, systematically devastating it, its king, Uduris, being
+ powerless to prevent his ravages. All the principal towns succumbed one
+ after another before the vigour of his assault, and, from the numbers
+ killed and taken prisoners, we may surmise the importance of his victories
+ in these barbarous districts, to which belonged the names of Seriazis,
+ Silius, Zabakhas, Zirimutaras, Babanis, and Urmias,** though we cannot
+ definitely locate the places indicated.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The <i>Annals of Argistis</i> are inscribed on the face of the
+ rock which crowns the citadel of Van. The inscription
+ contains (as stated in note above) the history of the first
+ fourteen yearly campaigns of Argistis.
+
+ ** The site of these places is still undetermined. Seriazis
+ and Silius (or Tarius) lay to the north-east of Dayaîni, and
+ Urmias, Urmê, recalls the modern name of Lake Urumiah, but
+ was probably situated on the left bank of the Araxes.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img alt="160 (81K)" src="images/160.jpg" width="100%" />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On a single occasion, the assault on Ureyus, for instance, Argistis took
+ prisoners 19,255 children, 10,140 men fit to bear arms, 23,280 women, and
+ the survivors of a garrison which numbered 12,675 soldiers at the opening
+ of the siege, besides 1104 horses, 35,016 cattle, and more than 10,000
+ sheep. Two expeditions into the heart of the country, conducted between
+ 784 and 782 B.C., had greatly advanced the work of conquest, when the
+ accession of a new sovereign in Assyria made Argistis decide to risk a
+ change of front and to concentrate the main part of his forces on the
+ southern boundary of his empire. Rammân-nirâri, after his last contest in
+ Khubushkia in 784, had fought two consecutive campaigns against the
+ Aramæan tribes of Itua, near the frontiers of Babylon, and he was still in
+ conflict with them when he died in 782 B.C. His son, Shalmaneser IV., may
+ have wished to signalise the commencement of his reign by delivering from
+ the power of Urartu the provinces which the kings of that country had
+ wrested from his ancestors; or, perhaps, Argistis thought that a change of
+ ruler offered him an excellent opportunity for renewing the struggle at
+ the point where Menuas had left it, and for conquering yet more of the
+ territory which still remained to his rival. Whatever the cause, the
+ Assyrian annals show us the two adversaries ranged against each other, in
+ a struggle which lasted from 781 to 778 B.C. Argistis had certainly the
+ upper hand, and though his advance was not rapid, it was never completely
+ checked. The first engagement took place at Nirbu, near the sources of the
+ Supnat and the Tigris: Nirbu capitulated, and the enemy pitilessly ravaged
+ the Hittite states, which were subject to Assyria, penetrating as far as
+ the heart of Melitene (781). The next year the armies encountered each
+ other nearer to Nineveh, in the basin of the Bitlis-tchaî, at Khakhias;
+ and, in 779, Argistis expressly thanks his gods, the Khaldises, for having
+ graciously bestowed upon him as a gift the armies and cities of Assur. The
+ scene of the war had shifted, and the contest was now carried on in the
+ countries bordering on Lake Urumiah, Bustus and Parsua. The natives gained
+ nothing by the change of invader, and were as hardly used by the King of
+ Urartu as they had been by Shalmaneser III. or by Samsirammân: as was
+ invariably the case, their towns were given over to the flames, their
+ fields ravaged, their cattle and their families carried into captivity.
+ Their resistance, however, was so determined that a second campaign was
+ required to complete the conquest: and this time the Assyrians suffered a
+ serious defeat at Surisidas (778), and a year at least was needed for
+ their recovery from the disaster. During this respite, Argistis hastened
+ to complete the pacification of Bustus, Parsua, and the small portion of
+ Man which had not been reduced to subjection by Menuas. When the Assyrians
+ returned to the conflict, he defeated them again (776), and while they
+ withdrew to the Amanus, where a rebellion had broken out (775), he reduced
+ one by one the small states which clustered round the eastern and southern
+ shores of Lake Urumiah. He was conducting a campaign in Namri, when
+ Shalmaneser IV. made a last effort to check his advance; but he was again
+ victorious (774), and from henceforth these troubled regions, in which
+ Nineveh had so persistently endeavoured for more than a century to
+ establish her own supremacy, became part of the empire of Urartu.
+ Argistis&rsquo;s hold of them proved, however, to be a precarious and uncertain
+ one, and before long the same difficulties assailed him which had
+ restricted the power of his rivals.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0062" id="linkimage-0062">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/164.jpg" width="100%"
+ alt="164.jpg Urartian Stele on the Rocks of Ak-keupbu " />
+ </div>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Drawn by Boudier, from a photograph by M. Ximones.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ He was forced to return again and again to these districts, destroying
+ fortresses and pursuing the inhabitants over plain and mountain: in 773 we
+ find him in Urmes, the territory of Bikhuras, and Bam, in the very heart
+ of Namri; in 772, in Dhuaras, and Gurqus, among the Mannai, and at the
+ city of Uikhis, in Bustus. Meanwhile, to the north of the Araxes, several
+ chiefs had taken advantage of his being thus engaged in warfare in distant
+ regions, to break the very feeble bond which held them vassals to Urartu.
+ Btius was the fountain-head and main support of the rebellion; the rugged
+ mountain range in its rear provided its chiefs with secure retreats among
+ its woods and lakes and valleys, through which flowed rapid torrents.
+ Argistis inflicted a final defeat on the Mannai in 771, and then turned
+ his forces against Etius. He took by storm the citadel of Ardinis which
+ defended the entrance to the country, ravaged Ishqigulus,* and seized
+ Amegu, the capital of Uidharus: our knowledge of his wars comes to an end
+ in the following year with an expedition into the land of Tarius.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Sayce shows that Ishqigulus was the district of
+ Alexandropolis, to the east of Kars; its capital, Irdanius,
+ is very probably either the existing walled village of
+ Kalinsha or the neighbouring ruin of Ajuk-kaleh, on the
+ Arpa-tohâî.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The monuments do not tell us what he accomplished on the borders of Asia
+ Minor; he certainly won some considerable advantages there, and the
+ influence which Assyria had exercised over states scattered to the north
+ of the Taurus, such as Melitene, and possibly Tabal and Kummukh, which had
+ formed the original nucleus of the Hittite empire, must have now passed
+ into his hands. The form of Argistis looms before us as that of a great
+ conqueror, worthy to bear comparison with the most indefatigable and
+ triumphant of the Pharaohs of Egypt or the lords of Chaldæa. The
+ inscriptions which are constantly being discovered within the limits of
+ his kingdom prove that, following the example of all Oriental sovereigns,
+ he delighted as much in building as in battle: perhaps we shall some day
+ recover a sufficient number of records to enable us to restore to their
+ rightful place in history this great king, and the people whose power he
+ developed more than any other sovereign.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Assyria had thus lost all her possessions in the northern and eastern
+ parts of her empire; turning to the west, how much still remained faithful
+ to her? After the expedition of 775 B.C. to the land of Cedars, two
+ consecutive campaigns are mentioned against Damascus (773) and Hadrach
+ (772); it was during this latter expedition, or immediately after it, that
+ Shalmaneser IV. died. Northern Syria seems to have been disturbed by
+ revolutions which seriously altered the balance of power within her
+ borders. The ancient states, whose growth had been arrested by the deadly
+ blows inflicted on them in the ninth century by Assur-nazir-pal and
+ Shalmaneser III., had become reduced to the condition of second-rate
+ powers, and their dominions had been split up. The Patina was divided into
+ four small states&mdash;the Patina proper, Unki, Iaudi, and Samalla, the
+ latter falling under the rule of an Aramaean family;* perhaps the
+ accession of Qaral, the founder of this dynasty, had been accompanied by
+ convulsions, which might explain the presence of Shalmaneser IV. in the
+ Amanos in 775.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The inscriptions of Tiglath-Pileser III. mention Unku,
+ Iaudi, Samalla, and the Patin, in the districts where the
+ texts of Assur-nazir-pal and Shalmaneser III., only know of
+ the Patina.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ All these principalities, whether of ancient or recent standing, ranged
+ themselves under one of two kingdoms&mdash;either Hadrach or Arpad, whose
+ names henceforth during the following half-century appear in the front
+ rank whenever a coalition is formed against Assyria. Carchemish, whose
+ independence was still respected by the fortresses erected in its
+ neighbourhood, could make no move without exposing itself to an immediate
+ catastrophe: Arpad, occupying a prominent position a little in front of
+ the Afrîn, on the main route leading to the Orontes, had assumed the <i>rôle</i>
+ which Carchemish was no longer in a position to fill. Agusi became the
+ principal centre of resistance; all battles were fought under the walls of
+ its fortresses, and its fall involved the submission of all the country
+ between the Euphrates and the sea, as in former times had been the case
+ with Kinalua and Khazazu.*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * That Arpad was in Agusi is proved, among other places, by
+ the inscriptions of Tiglath-pileser III., which show us from
+ 743 to 741 the king at war with Matîlu of Agusi and his
+ suzerain Sharduris III. of Urartu.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Similar to the ascendency of Arpad over the plateau of Aleppo was that of
+ Hadrach in the valley of the Orontes. This city had taken the position
+ formerly occupied by Hamath, which was now possibly one of its
+ dependencies; it owed no allegiance to Damascus, and rallied around it all
+ the tribes of Coele-Syria, whose assistance Hadadezer, but a short while
+ before, had claimed in his war with the foreigner. Neither Arpad, Hadrach,
+ nor Damascus ever neglected to send the customary presents to any
+ sovereign who had the temerity to cross the Euphrates and advance into
+ their neighbourhood, but the necessity for this act of homage became more
+ and more infrequent. During his reign of eighteen years Assurdân III., son
+ and successor of Shalmaneser IV., appeared only three times beneath their
+ walls&mdash;at Hadrach in 766 and 755, at Arpad in 750, a few months only
+ before his death. Assyria was gradually becoming involved in difficulties,
+ and the means necessary to the preservation of its empire were less
+ available than formerly. Assurdân had frankly renounced all idea of
+ attacking Urartu, but he had at least endeavoured to defend himself
+ against his enemies on the southern and eastern frontiers; he had led his
+ armies against Gananâtê (771,767), against Itua (769), and against the
+ Medes (766), before risking an attack on Hadrach (765), but more than this
+ he had not attempted. On two occasions in eight years (768, 764) he had
+ preferred to abstain from offensive action, and had remained inactive in
+ his own country. Assyria found herself in one of those crises of
+ exhaustion which periodically laid her low after each outbreak of
+ ambitious enterprise; she might well be compared to a man worn out by
+ fatigue and loss of blood, who becomes breathless and needs repose as soon
+ as he attempts the least exertion. Before long, too, the scourges of
+ disease and civil strife combined with exhaustion in hastening her ruin.
+ The plague had broken out in the very year of the last expedition against
+ Hadrach (765), perhaps under the walls of that city. An eclipse of the sun
+ occurred in 763, in the month of Sivân, and this harbinger of woe was the
+ signal for an outbreak of revolt in the city of Assur.*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The ideas which Orientals held on the subject of comets
+ renders the connection between the two events very likely,
+ if not certain.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ From Assur the movement spread to Arrapkha, and wrought havoc there from
+ 761 to 760; it then passed on to Gozân, where it was not finally
+ extinguished till 758. The last remains of Assyrian authority in Syria
+ vanished during this period: Assurdân, after two years&rsquo; respite,
+ endeavoured to re-establish it, and attacked successively Hadrach (755)
+ and Arpad (754). This was his last exploit. His son Assur-nirâri III.
+ spent his short reign of eight years in helpless inaction; he lost Syria,
+ he carried on hostilities in Namri from 749 to 748&mdash;whether against
+ the Aramaeans or Urartians is uncertain&mdash;then relapsed into
+ inactivity, and a popular sedition drove him finally from Calah in 746. He
+ died some months later, without having repressed the revolt; none of his
+ sons succeeded him, and the dynasty, having fallen into disrepute through
+ the misfortunes of its last kings, thus came to an end; for, on the 12th
+ of Iyyâr, 742 B.C., a usurper, perhaps, the leader of the revolt at Calah,
+ proclaimed himself king under the name of Tiglath-pileser.* The second
+ Assyrian empire had lasted rather less than a century and a half, from
+ Tukulti-ninip II. to Assur-nirâri III.**
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Many historians have thought that Tiglath-pileser III. was
+ of Babylonian origin; most of them, however, rightly
+ considers that he was an Assyrian. The identity of Tiglath-
+ pileser III. with Pulu, the Biblical Pul (2 Kings xv. 19)
+ has been conclusively proved by the discovery of the
+ <i>Babylonian Chronicle</i>, where the Babylonian reigns of
+ Tiglath-pileser III. and his son Shalmaneser V. are inserted
+ where the dynastic lists give Pulu and Ululai, the Poros and
+ Eluloos of Ptolemy.
+
+ ** Here is the concluding portion of the dynasty of the
+ kings of Assyria, from Irba-rammân to Assur-nirâri III.:&mdash;
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkimage-0063" id="linkimage-0063">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/169.jpg" width="100%"
+ alt="169.jpg Table of the Dynasty Of The Kings Of Assyria " />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ In the manner in which it had accomplished its work, it resembled the
+ Egyptian empire of eight hundred years before. The Egyptians, setting
+ forth from the Nile valley, had overrun Syria and had at first brought it
+ under their suzerainty, though without actually subduing it. They had
+ invaded Amurru and Zahi, Naharaim and Mitanni, where they had pillaged,
+ burnt, and massacred at will for years, without obtaining from these
+ countries, which were too remote to fall naturally within their sphere of
+ influence, more than a temporary and apparent submission; the regions in
+ the neighbourhood of the isthmus alone had been regularly administered by
+ the officers of Pharaoh, and when the country between Mount Seir and
+ Lebanon seemed on the point of being organised into a real empire the
+ invasion of the Peoples of the Sea had overthrown and brought to nought
+ the work of three centuries. The Assyrians, under the leadership of
+ ambitious kings, had in their turn carried their arms over the countries
+ of the Euphrates and the Mediterranean, but, like those of the Egyptians
+ before them, their expeditions resembled rather the destructive raids of a
+ horde in search of booty than the gradual and orderly advance of a
+ civilised people aiming at establishing a permanent empire. Their
+ campaigns in Cole-Syria and Palestine had enriched their own cities and
+ spread the terror of their name throughout the Eastern world, but their
+ supremacy had only taken firm root in the plains bordering on Mesopotamia,
+ and just when they were preparing to extend their rule, a power had sprung
+ up beside them, over which they had been unable to triumph: they had been
+ obliged to withdraw behind the Euphrates, and they might reasonably have
+ asked themselves whether, by weakening the peoples of Syria at the price
+ of the best blood of their own nation, they had not merely laboured for
+ the benefit of a rival power, and facilitated the rise of Urartu. Egypt,
+ after her victory over the Peoples of the Sea, had seemed likely, for the
+ moment, to make a fresh start on a career of conquest under the energetic
+ influence of Ramses III., but her forces proved unequal to the task, and
+ as soon as the master&rsquo;s hand ceased to urge her on, she shrank back,
+ without a struggle, within her ancient limits, and ere long nothing
+ remained to her of the Asiatic empire carved out by the warlike Pharaohs
+ of the Theban dynasties. If Tiglath-pileser could show the same courage
+ and capacity as Ramses III., he might well be equally successful, and
+ raise his nation again to power; but time alone could prove whether
+ Nineveh, on his death, would be able to maintain a continuous effort, or
+ whether her new display of energy would prove merely ephemeral, and her
+ empire be doomed to sink into irremediable weakness under the successors
+ of her deliverer, as Egypt had done under the later Ramessides.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img alt="171 (26K)" src="images/171.jpg" width="100%" />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br /> <br /> <a name="linkBimage-0005" id="linkBimage-0005">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/173.jpg" width="100%" alt="173.jpg Page Image " />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkBimage-0006" id="linkBimage-0006">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/174.jpg" width="100%" alt="174.jpg Page Image " />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ <i>TIGLATH-PILESER III. <br /> AND THE ORGANISATION OF THE ASSYRIAN EMPIRE
+ FROM 745 to 722 B.C.</i>
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <i>FAILURE OF URARTU AND RE-CONQUEST Of SYRIA&mdash;EGYPT AGAIN UNITED
+ UNDER ETHIOPIAN AUSPICES&mdash;PIÔNKHI&mdash;THE DOWNFALL OF DAMASCUS, OF
+ BABYLON, AND OF ISRAEL.</i>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Assyria and its neighbours at the accession of Tiglath-pileser III.:
+ progress of the Aramæans in the basin of the Middle Tigris&mdash;Urartu
+ and its expansion into the north of Syria&mdash;Damascus and Israel&mdash;Vengeance
+ of Israel on Damascus&mdash;Jeroboam II.&mdash;Civilisation of the Hebrew
+ kingdoms, their commerce, industries, private life, and political
+ organisation&mdash;Dawn of Hebrew literature: the two historians of Israel&mdash;The
+ priesthood and the prophets&mdash;The prophecy of Amos at Bethel;
+ denunciation of Israel by Hosea.</i>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Early campaigns of Tiglath-pileser III. in Karduniash and in Media&mdash;He
+ determines to attach Urartu in Syria: defeat of Sharduris, campaign around
+ Arpad, and capture of that city&mdash;Homage paid by the Syrian princes,
+ by Menahem and Rezin II&mdash;Second campaign against the Medes&mdash;Invasion
+ of Urartu and end of its supremacy&mdash;Alliance of Pekah and Rezin
+ against Ahaz: the war in Judæa and siege of Jerusalem.</i>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Egypt under the kings of the XXIIth dynasty&mdash;The Theban
+ principality, its priests, pallacides, and revolts; the XXIIIrd Tanite
+ dynasty&mdash;Tafnakhti and the rise of the Saite family&mdash;The
+ Egyptian kingdom, of Ethiopia: theocratic nature of its dynasty,
+ annexation of the Thebaid by the kingdom of Napata&mdash;Piônkhi-Mîamun;
+ his generals in Middle Egypt; submission of Khmunu, of Memphis, and of
+ Tafnalchti&mdash;Effect produced in Asia by the Ethiopian conquest.</i>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>The prophet Isaiah, his rise under Aliaz&mdash;Intervention of
+ Tiglath-pileser III. in Hebrew affairs; the campaign of 733 B.C. against
+ Israel&mdash;Capture of Rezin, and the downfall of Damascus&mdash;Nabunazîr;
+ the Kaldd and the close of the Babylonian dynasty; usurpation of Ukînzîr&mdash;Campaign
+ against Ukînzîr; capture of Shapîa and of Babylon&mdash;Tiglath-pileser
+ ascends the throne in the last-named city under the name of Fulu (729
+ B.C.)&mdash;Death of Tiglath-pileser III. (727 B.C.)</i>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Reorganisation of the Assyrian empire; provinces and feudatory states&mdash;Karduniash,
+ Syria&mdash;Wholesale deportation of conquered races&mdash;Provincial
+ administrators, their military and financial arrangements&mdash;Buildings
+ erected by Tiglath-pileser at Calah&mdash;The Bit-Khilâni&mdash;Foundation
+ of feudal lordships&mdash;Belharrdn-beluzur&mdash;Shalmaneser V. and
+ Egypt: rebellion of Hoshea, the siege of Samaria, and the prophecies of
+ Isaiah&mdash;Sargon&mdash;Destruction of the kingdom of Israel.</i>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br /> <a name="linkB2HCH0001" id="linkB2HCH0001">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a> <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER II&mdash;TIGLATH-PILESER III. <br /><br /> AND THE ORGANISATION OF
+ THE ASSYRIAN EMPIRE <br /> FROM 745 TO 722 B.C.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <i>Failure of Urartu and re-conquest of Syria&mdash;Egypt again united
+ under Ethiopian auspices&mdash;Piônkhi&mdash;The downfall of Damascus, of
+ Babylon, and of Israel.</i>
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Drawn by Boudier, from Layard. The vignette, also by
+ Boudier, represents a bronze statuette of Queen Karomama,
+ now in the Louvre.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Events proved that, in this period, at any rate, the decadence of Assyria
+ was not due to any exhaustion of the race or impoverishment of the
+ country, but was mainly owing to the incapacity of its kings and the lack
+ of energy displayed by their generals. If Menuas and Argistis had again
+ and again triumphed over the Assyrians during half a century, it was not
+ because their bands of raw recruits were superior to the tried veterans of
+ Rammân-nirâri in either discipline or courage. The Assyrian troops had
+ lost none of their former valour, and their muster-roll showed no trace of
+ diminution, but their leaders had lost the power of handling their men
+ after the vigorous fashion of their predecessors, and showed less
+ foresight and tenacity in conducting their campaigns. Although decimated
+ and driven from fortress to fortress, and from province to province,
+ hampered by the rebellions it was called upon to suppress, and distracted
+ by civil discord, the Assyrian army still remained a strong and efficient
+ force, ever ready to make its full power felt the moment it realised that
+ it was being led by a sovereign capable of employing its good qualities to
+ advantage. Tiglath-pileser had, doubtless, held a military command before
+ ascending the throne, and had succeeded in winning the confidence of his
+ men: as soon as he had assumed the leadership they regained their former
+ prestige, and restored to their country that supremacy which its last
+ three rulers had failed to maintain.*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The official documents dealing with the history of
+ Tiglath-pileser III. have been seriously mutilated, and
+ there is on several points some difference of opinion among
+ historians as to the proper order in which the fragments
+ ought to be placed, and, consequently, as to the true
+ sequence of the various campaigns. The principal documents
+ are as follows: (1) The <i>Annals</i> in the Central Hall of the
+ palace of Shalmaneser III. at Nimroud, partly defaced by
+ Esarhaddon, and carried off to serve as materials for the
+ south-western palace, whence they were rescued by Layard,
+ and brought in fragments to the British Museum. (2) The
+ <i>Tablets</i>, K. 3571 and D. T. 3, in the British Museum. (3)
+ The <i>Slabs of Nimrud</i>, discovered by Layard and G. Smith.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The empire still included the original patrimony of Assur and its ancient
+ colonies on the Upper Tigris, the districts of Mesopotamia won from the
+ Aramæans at various epochs, the cities of Khabur, Khindanu, Laqî, and
+ Tebabnî, and that portion of Bît-Adini which lay to the left of the
+ Euphrates. It thus formed a compact mass capable of successfully resisting
+ the fiercest attacks; but the buffer provinces which Assur-nazir-pal and
+ Shalmaneser III. had grouped round their own immediate domains on the
+ borders of Namri, of Naîri, of Melitene, and of Syria had either resumed
+ their independence, or else had thrown in their lot with the states
+ against which they had been intended to watch. The Aramaean tribes never
+ let slip an opportunity of encroaching on the southern frontier. So far,
+ the migratory instinct which had brought them from the Arabian desert to
+ the swamps of the Persian Gulf had met with no check. Those who first
+ reached its shores became the founders of that nation of the Kaldâ which
+ had, perhaps, already furnished Babylon with one of its dynasties; others
+ had soon after followed in their footsteps, and passing beyond the Kaldâ
+ settlement, had gradually made their way along the canals which connect
+ the Euphrates with the Tigris till they had penetrated to the lowlands of
+ the Uknu. Towards the middle of the eighth century B.C. they wedged
+ themselves in between Elam and Karduniash, forming so many buffer states
+ of varying size and influence. They extended from north to south along
+ both banks of the Tigris, their different tribes being known as the
+ Gambulu, the Puqudu, the Litau, the Damunu, the Ruuâ, the Khindaru, the
+ Labdudu, the Harîlu, and the Rubuu;* the Itua, who formed the vanguard,
+ reached the valleys of the Turnat during the reign of Kammân-nirâri III.
+ They were defeated in 791 B.C., but obstinately renewed hostilities in
+ 783, 782, 777, and 769; favoured by circumstances, they ended by forcing
+ the cordon of Assyrian outposts, and by the time of Assur-nirâri had
+ secured a footing on the Lower Zab. Close by, to the east of them, lay
+ Namri and Media, both at that time in a state of absolute anarchy. The
+ invasions of Menuas and of Argistis had entirely laid waste the country,
+ and Sharduris III., the king who succeeded Argistis, had done nothing
+ towards permanently incorporating them with Urartu.** Sharduris, while
+ still heir-apparent to the throne, had been appointed by his father
+ governor of the recently annexed territory belonging to Etius and the
+ Mannai:*** he made Lununis his headquarters, and set himself to subdue the
+ barbarians who had settled between the Kur and the Araxes. When he
+ succeeded to the throne, about 760 B.C., the enjoyment of supreme power in
+ no way lessened his activity. On the contrary, he at once fixed upon the
+ sort of wide isthmus which separates the Araxes from Lake Urumiah, as the
+ goal of his incursions, and overran the territory of the Babilu; there he
+ carried by storm three royal castles, twenty-three cities, and sixty
+ villages; he then fell back upon Etius, passing through Dakis, Edias, and
+ Urmes on his way, and brought back with him 12,735 children, 46,600 women,
+ 12,000 men capable of bearing arms, 23,335 oxen, 58,100 sheep, and 2,500
+ horses; these figures give some idea of the importance of his victories
+ and the wealth of the conquered territory.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The list of Aramæan tribes, and the positions occupied by
+ them towards the middle of the eighth century, have been
+ given us by Tiglath-pileser III. himself.
+
+ ** Tiglath-pileser did not encounter any Urartian forces in
+ these regions, as would almost certainly have been the case
+ had these countries remained subject to Urartu from the
+ invasions of Menuas and Argistis onwards.
+
+ *** Argistis tells us in the <i>Annals</i> that he had made his
+ son satrap over the provinces won from the Mannai and Etius:
+ though his name is not mentioned, Sayce believes this son
+ must have been Sharduris.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ So far as we can learn, he does not seem to have attacked Khubushkia,* nor
+ to have entered into open rivalry with Assyria; even under the rule of
+ Assur-nirâri III. Assyria showed a bold enough front to deter any enemy
+ from disturbing her except when forced to do so. Sharduris merely strove
+ to recover those portions of his inheritance to which Assyria attached but
+ little value, and his inscriptions tell us of more than one campaign waged
+ by him with this object against the mountaineers of Melitene, about the
+ year 758. He captured most of their citadels, one after another:
+ Dhumeskis, Zapsas, fourteen royal castles, and a hundred towns, including
+ Milid itself, where King Khitaruadas held his court.**
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * It is evident from the account of the campaigns that
+ Tiglath-pileser occupied Khubushkia from the very
+ commencement of his reign; we must therefore assume that the
+ invasions of Argistis had produced only transient effects.
+
+ ** These campaigns must have preceded the descent into
+ Syria, and I believe this latter to have been anterior to
+ the expedition of Assur-nirâri against Arpad in 754 B.C.
+ Assur-nirâri probably tried to reconquer the tribes who had
+ just become subject to Sharduris. The descent of this latter
+ into Syria probably took place about 756 or 755 B.C., and
+ his wars against Melitene about 758 to 757 B.C.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ At this point two courses lay open before him. He could either continue
+ his march westwards, and, penetrating into Asia Minor, fall upon the
+ wealthy and industrious races who led a prosperous existence between the
+ Halys and the Sangarios, such as the Tabal, the Chalybes, and the
+ Phrygians, or he could turn southwards.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkBimage-0007" id="linkBimage-0007">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/180.jpg" width="100%"
+ alt="180.jpg a Vista of the Asianic Steppe " />
+ </div>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Drawn by Boudier, from a photograph by Alfred Boissier.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Deterred, apparently, by the dreary and monotonous aspect of the Asianic
+ steppes, he chose the latter course; he crossed Mount Taurus, descended
+ into Northern Syria about 756, and forced the Khâti to swear allegiance to
+ him. Their inveterate hatred of the Assyrians led the Bît-Agusi to accept
+ without much reluctance the supremacy of the only power which had shown
+ itself capable of withstanding their triumphant progress. Arpad became for
+ several years an unfailing support to Urartu and the basis on which its
+ rule in Syria rested. Assur-nirâri had, as we know, at first sought to
+ recover it, but his attempt to do so in 754 B.C. was unsuccessful, and
+ merely served to demonstrate his own weakness: ten years later,
+ Carchemish, Grurgum, Kummukh, Samalla, Unki, Kuî&mdash;in a word, all the
+ Aramæans and the Khâti between the Euphrates and the sea had followed in
+ the steps of the Agusi, and had acknowledged the supremacy of Sharduris.*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The <i>minimum</i> extent of the dominions of Sharduris in
+ Syria may be deduced from the list of the allies assigned to
+ him by Tiglath-pileser in 743 in the Annals.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ This prince must now haye been sorely tempted to adopt, on his own
+ account, the policy of the Ninevite monarchs, and push on in the direction
+ of Hamath, Damascus, and the Phoenician seaboard, towards those countries
+ of Israel and Judah which were nearly coterminous with far-off Egypt. The
+ rapidity of the victories which he had just succeeded in winning at the
+ foot of Mount Taurus and Mount Amanus must have seemed a happy omen of
+ what awaited his enterprise in the valleys of the Orontes and the Jordan.
+ Although the races of southern and central Syria had suffered less than
+ those of the north from the ambition of the Ninevite kings, they had, none
+ the less, been sorely tried during the previous century; and it might be
+ questioned whether they had derived courage from the humiliation of
+ Assyria, or still remained in so feeble a state as to present an easy prey
+ to the first invader.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The defeat inflicted on Mari by Rammân-nirâri in 803 had done but little
+ harm to the prestige of Damascus. The influence exercised by this state
+ from the sources of the Litany to the brook of Egypt * was based on so
+ solid a foundation that no temporary reverse had power to weaken it.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * [Not the Nile, but the Wady el Arish, the frontier between
+ Southern Syria and Egypt. Cf. Josh. xv. 47; 2 Kings xxiv. 7,
+ called &ldquo;river&rdquo; of Egypt in the A.V.&mdash;Tr.]
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Had the Assyrian monarch thrown himself more seriously into the
+ enterprise, and reappeared before the ramparts of the capital in the
+ following year, refusing to leave it till he had annihilated its armies
+ and rased its walls to the ground, then, no doubt, Israel, Judah, the
+ Philistines, Edom, and Ammon, seeing it fully occupied in its own defence,
+ might have forgotten the ruthless severity of Hazael, and have plucked up
+ sufficient courage to struggle against the Damascene yoke; as it was,
+ Bammân-nirâri did not return, and the princes who had, perhaps, for the
+ moment, regarded him as a possible deliverer, did not venture on any
+ concerted action. Joash, King of Judah, and Jehoahaz, King of Israel,
+ continued to pay tribute till both their deaths, within a year of each
+ other, Jehoahaz in 797 B.C., and Joash in 796, the first in his bed, the
+ second by the hand of an assassin.*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Kings xii. 20, 21, xiii. 9; cf. 2 Citron, xxiv. 22-26,
+ where the death of Joash is mentioned as one of the
+ consequences of the Syrian invasion, and as a punishment for
+ his crime in killing the sons of Jehoiada.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Their children, Jehoash in Israel, Amaziah in Judah, were, at first, like
+ their parents, merely the instruments of Damascus; but before long, the
+ conditions being favourable, they shook off their apathy and initiated a
+ more vigorous policy, each in his own kingdom. Mari had been succeeded by
+ a certain Ben-hadad, also a son of Hazael,* and possibly this change of
+ kings was accompanied by one of those revolutions which had done so much
+ to weaken Damascus: Jehoash rebelled and defeated Ben-hadad near Aphek and
+ in three subsequent engagements, but he failed to make his nation
+ completely independent, and the territory beyond Jordan still remained in
+ the hands of the Syrians.** We are told that before embarking on this
+ venture he went to consult the aged Elisha, then on his deathbed. He wept
+ to see him in this extremity, and bending over him, cried out, &ldquo;My father,
+ my father, the chariots of Israel and the horsemen thereof!&rdquo; The prophet
+ bade him take bow and arrows and shoot from the window toward the East.
+ The king did so, and Elisha said, &ldquo;The Lord&rsquo;s arrow of victory *** over
+ Syria; for thou shalt smite the Syrians in Aphek till thou have consumed
+ them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * 2 Kings xiii. 24, 25. Winckler is of opinion that Mari and
+ Ben-hadad, son of Hazael, were one and the same person.
+
+ ** 2 Kings xiii. 25, The term &ldquo;saviour&rdquo; in 2 Kings xiii. 5
+ is generally taken as referring to Joash: Winckler, however,
+ prefers to apply it to the King of Assyria. The biblical
+ text does not expressly state that Joash failed to win back
+ the districts of Gilead from the Syrians, but affirms that
+ he took from them the cities which Hazael &ldquo;had taken out of
+ the hand of Jehoahaz, his father.&rdquo; Ramah of Gilead and the
+ cities previously annexed by Jehoahaz must, therefore, have
+ remained in the hands of Ben-hadad.
+
+ *** [Heb. &ldquo;salvation;&rdquo; A.V. &ldquo;deliverance.&rdquo;&mdash;Tr.]
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Then he went on: &ldquo;Take the arrows,&rdquo; and the king took them; then he said,
+ &ldquo;Smite upon the ground,&rdquo; and the king smote thrice and stayed. And the man
+ of God was wroth with him, and said, &ldquo;Thou shouldest have smitten five or
+ six times; then hadst thou smitten Syria till thou hadst consumed it,
+ whereas now thou shalt smite Syria but thrice.&rdquo; * Amaziah, on his side, had
+ routed the Edomites in the Valley of Salt, one of David&rsquo;s former
+ battle-fields, and had captured their capital, Sela.** Elated by his
+ success, he believed himself strong enough to break the tie of vassalage
+ which bound him to Israel, and sent a challenge to Jehoash in Samaria. The
+ latter, surprised at his audacity, replied in a parable, &ldquo;The thistle that
+ was in Lebanon sent to the cedar that was in Lebanon, saying, Give thy
+ daughter to my son to wife.&rdquo; But &ldquo;there passed by a wild beast that was in
+ Lebanon and trode down the thistle. Thou hast indeed smitten Edom, and
+ thine heart hath lifted thee up: glory thereof and abide at home; for why
+ shouldest thou meddle to thy hurt that thou shouldest fall, even thou, and
+ Judah with thee?&rdquo; They met near Beth-shemesh, on the border of the
+ Philistine lowlands. Amaziah was worsted in the engagement, and fell into
+ the power of his rival. Jehoash entered Jerusalem and dismantled its walls
+ for a space of four hundred cubits, &ldquo;from the gate of Ephraim unto the
+ corner gate;&rdquo; he pillaged the Temple, as though it had been the abode, not
+ of Jahveh, but of some pagan deity, insisted on receiving hostages before
+ he would release his prisoner, and returned to Samaria, where he soon
+ after died (781 B.C.).***
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * 2 Kings xiii. 14-19.
+
+ ** 2 Kings xiv. 7; cf. 2 Gliron. xxv. 11, 12. Sela was
+ rebuilt, and received the name of Joktheel from its Hebrew
+ masters. The subjection of the country was complete, for,
+ later on, the Hebrew chronicler tells of the conquest of
+ Elath by King Azariah, son of Amaziah (2 Kings xiv. 22).
+
+ *** 2 Kings xiv. 8-16. cf. 2 Ghron. xxv. 17-24.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Jeroboam II. completed that rehabilitation of Israel, of which his father
+ had but sketched the outline; he maintained his suzerainty, first over
+ Amaziah, and when the latter was assassinated at Lachish (764),* over his
+ son, the young Azariah.** After the defeat of Ben-hadad near Aphek,
+ Damascus declined still further in power, and Hadrach, suddenly emerging
+ from obscurity, completely barred the valley of the Orontes against it. An
+ expedition under Shalmaneser IV. in 773 seems to have precipitated it to a
+ lower depth than it had ever reached before: Jeroboam was able to wrest
+ from it, almost without a struggle, the cities which it had usurped in the
+ days of Jehu, and Gilead was at last set free from a yoke which had
+ oppressed it for more than a century. Tradition goes so far as to affirm
+ that Israel reconquered the Bekaa, Hamath, and Damascus, those northern
+ territories once possessed by David, and it is quite possible that its
+ rivals, menaced from afar by Assyria and hard pressed at their own doors
+ by Hadrach, may have resorted to one of those propitiatory overtures which
+ eastern monarchs are only too ready to recognise as acts of submission.
+ The lesser southern states, such as Ammon, the Bedâwin tribes of Hauran,
+ and, at the opposite extremity of the kingdom, the Philistines,*** who had
+ bowed themselves before Hazael in the days of his prosperity, now
+ transferred their homage to Israel.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * 2 Kings xiv. 19, 20; cf. 2 Ghron. xxv. 27, 28.
+
+ ** The Hebrew texts make no mention of this subjection of
+ Judah to Jeroboam II.; that it actually took place must,
+ however, be admitted, at any rate in so far as the first
+ half of the reign of Azariah is concerned, as a necessary
+ outcome of the events of the preceding reigns.
+
+ *** The conquests of Jeroboam II. are indicated very briefly
+ in 2 Kings xiv. 25-28: cf. Amos vi. 14, where the
+ expressions employed by the prophet imply that at the time
+ at which he wrote the whole of the ancient kingdom of David,
+ Judah included, was in the possession of Israel.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkBimage-0008" id="linkBimage-0008">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="figleft" style="width:45%;">
+ <img width="100%" src="images/188.jpg"
+ alt="188.jpg Specimens of Hebrew Pottery " />
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Drawn by Faucher-Gudin,
+from sketches by Warren.
+</pre>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Moab alone offered any serious resistance. It had preserved its
+ independence ever since the reign of Mesha, having escaped from being
+ drawn into the wars which had laid waste the rest of Syria. It was now
+ suddenly forced to pay the penalty of its long prosperity. Jeroboam made a
+ furious onslaught upon its cities&mdash;Ar of Moab, Kir of Moab, Dibon,
+ Medeba, Heshbon, Elealeh&mdash;and destroyed them all in succession. The
+ Moabite forces carried a part of the population with them in their flight,
+ and all escaped together across the deserts which enclose the southern
+ basin of the Dead Sea. On the frontier of Edom they begged for sanctuary,
+ but the King of Judah, to whom the Edomite valleys belonged, did not dare
+ to shelter the vanquished enemies of his suzerain, and one of his
+ prophets, forgetting his hatred of Israel in delight at being able to
+ gratify his grudge against Moab, greeted them in their distress with a
+ hymn of joy&mdash;&ldquo;I will water thee with my tears, O Heshbon Elealeh: for
+ upon thy summer fruits and upon thy harvest the battle shout is fallen.
+ And gladness is taken away and joy out of the fruitful fields; and in the
+ vineyards there shall be no singing, neither joyful noise; no treader
+ shall tread out wine in the presses; I have made the vintage shout to
+ cease. Wherefore my bowels sound like an harp for Moab, and my inward
+ parts for Kir-Heres. And it shall come to pass, when Moab presenteth
+ himself, when he wearieth himself upon the high place, and shall come to
+ his sanctuary to pray, he shall not prevail!&rdquo;*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Isa. xv. 1-9; xvi. 1-12. This prophecy, which had been
+ pronounced against Moab &ldquo;in the old days,&rdquo; and which is
+ appropriated by Isaiah (xvi. 13, 14), has been attributed to
+ Jonah, son of Amittaî, of Gath-Hepher, who actually lived in
+ the time of Jeroboam II. (2 Kings xiv. 25). It is now
+ generally recognised as the production of an anonymous
+ Judsean prophet, and the earliest authentic fragment of
+ prophetic literature which has come down to us.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ This revival, like the former greatness of David and Solomon, was due not
+ so much to any inherent energy on the part of Israel, as to the weakness
+ of the nations on its frontiers. Egypt was not in the habit of intervening
+ in the quarrels of Asia, and Assyria was suffering from a temporary
+ eclipse. Damascus had suddenly collapsed, and Hadrach or Mansuati, the
+ cities which sought to take its place, found themselves fully employed in
+ repelling the intermittent attacks of the Assyrian; the Hebrews, for a
+ quarter of a century, therefore, had the stage to themselves, there being
+ no other actors to dispute their possession of it. During the three
+ hundred years of their existence as a monarchy they had adopted nearly all
+ the laws and customs of the races over whom they held sway, and by whom
+ they were completely surrounded. The bulk of the people devoted themselves
+ to the pasturing and rearing of cattle, and, during the better part of the
+ year, preferred to live in tents, unless war rendered such a practice
+ impossible.* They had few industries save those of the potter** and the
+ smith,*** and their trade was almost entirely in the hands of foreigners.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Cf. the passage in 2 Kings xiii. 5, &ldquo;And the children of
+ Israel dwelt in their tents as beforetime.&rdquo; Although the
+ word <i>ôhel</i> had by that time acquired the more general
+ meaning of <i>habitation</i>, the context here seems to require
+ us to translate it by its original meaning tent.
+
+ ** Pottery is mentioned in 2 Sam. xvii. 28; numerous
+ fragments dating from the monarchical period have been found
+ at Jerusalem and Lachish.
+
+ *** The story of Tubal-Cain (Gen. iv. 22) shows the
+ antiquity of the ironworker&rsquo;s art among the Israelites; the
+ smith is practically the only artisan to be found amongst
+ nomadic tribes.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ We find, however, Hebrew merchants in Egypt,* at Tyre, and in Coele-Syria,
+ and they were so numerous at Damascus that they requested that a special
+ bazaar might be allotted to them, similar to that occupied by the
+ merchants of Damascus in Samaria from time immemorial.**
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The accurate ideas on the subject of Egypt possessed by
+ the earliest compilers of the traditions contained in
+ Genesis and Exodus, prove that Hebrew merchants must have
+ been in constant communication with that country about the
+ time with which we are now concerned.
+
+ ** 1 Kings xx. 34; cf. what has been said on this point in
+ vol. vi. pp. 432, 441.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The Hebrew monarchs had done their best to encourage this growing desire
+ for trade. It was only the complicated state of Syrian politics that
+ prevented them from following the example of Solomon, and opening
+ communications by sea with the far-famed countries of Ophir, either in
+ competition with the Phoenicians or under their guidance. Indeed, as we
+ have seen, Jehoshaphat, encouraged by his alliance with the house of Omri,
+ tried to establish a seagoing fleet, but found that peasants could not be
+ turned into sailors at a day&rsquo;s notice, and the vessel built by him at
+ Eziongeber was wrecked before it left the harbour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkBimage-0009" id="linkBimage-0009">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/189.jpg" width="100%"
+ alt="189.jpg Israelites of the Higher Class in The Time Of Shalmaneser III. " />
+ </div>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from one of the bas-reliefs of the
+ Black Obelisk.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ In appearance, the Hebrew towns closely resembled the ancient Canaanite
+ cities. Egyptian influences still predominated in their architecture, as
+ may be seen from what is still left of the walls of Lachish, and they were
+ fortified in such a way as to be able to defy the military engines of
+ besiegers. This applies not only to capitals, like Jerusalem, Tirzah, and
+ Samaria, but even to those towns which commanded a road or mountain pass,
+ the ford of a river, or the entrance to some fertile plain; there were
+ scores of these on the frontiers of the two kingdoms, and in those
+ portions of their territory which lay exposed to the attacks of Damascus,
+ Moab, Edom, or the Philistines.* The daily life of the inhabitants was; to
+ all intents, the same as at Arpad, Sidon, or Gaza; and the dress,
+ dwellings, and customs of the upper and middle classes cannot have
+ differed in any marked degree from those of the corresponding grades of
+ society in Syria.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * 2 Chron. xi. 6-10, where we find a list of the towns
+ fortified by Rehoboam: Bethlehem, Etam, Beth-zur, Soco,
+ Adullam, Gath, Mareshah, Ziph, Adoraim, Lachish, Azekah,
+ Zorah, Ajalon, Hebron.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkBimage-0010" id="linkBimage-0010">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/190.jpg" width="100%" alt="190.jpg JudÆan Peasants " />
+ </div>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Drawn by Boudier, from Layard. These figures are taken from
+ a bas-relief which represents Sennacherib receiving the
+ submission of Judah before Lachish.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The men wore over their tunic a fringed kaftan, with short sleeves, open
+ in front, a low-crowned hat, and sandals or shoes of pliant leather; *
+ they curled their beards and hair, painted their eyes and cheeks, and wore
+ many jewels; while their wives adopted all the latest refinements in vogue
+ in the harems of Damascus, Tyre, or Nineveh.** Descendants of ancient
+ families paid for all this luxury out of the revenues of the wide domains
+ they had inherited; others kept it up by less honourable means, by usury,
+ corruption, and by the exercise of a ruthless violence towards neighbours
+ who were unable to defend themselves.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The kaftan met with in these parts seems to correspond to
+ the <i>meîl</i> (R.V. &ldquo;ephod &ldquo;) of the biblical texts (1 Sam. ii.
+ 19; xviii. 4, etc.).
+
+ ** Isa. iii. 16-24 describes in detail the whole equipment
+ of jewels, paint, and garments required by the fashionable
+ women of Jerusalem during the last thirty years of the
+ eighth century B.C.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Illustration: 191.jpg WOMEN AND CHILDREN OF JUDÆA
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Drawn by Boudier, from Layard.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The king himself set them an evil example, and did not hesitate to
+ assassinate one of his subjects in order that he might seize a vineyard
+ which he coveted;* it was not to be wondered at, therefore, that the
+ nobles of Ephraim &ldquo;sold the righteous for silver, and the needy for a pair
+ of shoes;&rdquo; ** that they demanded gifts of wheat, and &ldquo;turned the needy from
+ their right&rdquo; when they sat as a jury &ldquo;at the gate.&rdquo; *** From top to bottom
+ of the social ladder the stronger and wealthier oppressed those who were
+ weaker or poorer than themselves, leaving them with no hope of redress
+ except at the hands of the king.****
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Cf. the well-known episode of Naboth and Ahab in 1 Kings
+ xxi.
+
+ ** Amos ii. 6.
+
+ *** Amos v. 11, 12.
+
+ **** 2 Kings vi. 26-30; viii. 3-8, where, in both instances,
+ it is a woman who appeals to the king. Cf. for the period of
+ David and Solomon, 2 Sam. xiv. 1-20, and 1 Kings iii. 16-27.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Unfortunately, the king, when he did not himself set the example of
+ oppression, seldom possessed the resources necessary to make his decisions
+ effective. True, he was chief of the most influential family in either
+ Judah or Israel, a chief by divine appointment, consecrated by the priests
+ and prophets of Jahveh, a priest of the Lord,* and he was master in his
+ own city of Jerusalem or Samaria, but his authority did not extend far
+ beyond the walls.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Cf. the anointing of Saul (1 Sam. ix. 16; x. 1; and xiv.
+ 1), of David (1 Sam. xvi. 1-3, 12, 13), of Solomon (1 Kings
+ i. 34, 39, 45), of Jehu (2 Kings ix. 1-10), and compare it
+ with the unction received by the priests on their admission
+ to the priesthood (Exod. xxix. 7; xxx. 22, 23; cf. Lev.
+ viii. 12, 30; x. 7).
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ It was not the old tribal organisation that embarrassed him, for the
+ secondary tribes had almost entirely given up their claims to political
+ independence. The division of the country into provinces, a consequence of
+ the establishment of financial districts by Solomon, had broken them up,
+ and they gradually gave way before the two houses of Ephraim and Judah;
+ but the great landed proprietors, especially those who held royal fiefs,
+ enjoyed almost unlimited power within their own domains. They were,
+ indeed, called on to render military service, to furnish forced labour,
+ and to pay certain trifling dues into the royal treasury;* but, otherwise,
+ they were absolute masters in their own domains, and the sovereign was
+ obliged to employ force if he wished to extort any tax or act of homage
+ which they were unwilling to render. For this purpose he had a standing
+ army distributed in strong detachments along the frontier, but the flower
+ of his forces was concentrated round the royal residence to serve as a
+ body-guard. It included whole companies of foreign mercenaries, like those
+ Cretan and Carian warriors who, since the time of David, had kept guard
+ round the Kings of Judah;** these, in time of war,*** were reinforced by
+ militia, drawn entirely from among the landed proprietors, and the whole
+ force, when commanded by an energetic leader, formed a host capable of
+ meeting on equal terms the armies of Damascus, Edom, or Moab, or even the
+ veterans of Egypt and Assyria.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * 1 Kings xv. 22 (cf. 2 Ohron. xvi. 6), where &ldquo;King Asa made
+ a proclamation unto all Judah; none was exempted,&rdquo; the
+ object in this case being the destruction of Ramah, the
+ building of which had been begun by Baasha.
+
+ ** The Carians or Cretans are again referred to in the
+ history of Athaliah (2 Kings xi. 4).
+
+ *** Taking the tribute paid by Menahem to Pul (2 Kings xv.
+ 19, 20) as a basis, it has been estimated that the owners of
+ landed estate in Israel, who were in that capacity liable to
+ render military service, numbered 60,000 in the time of that
+ king; all others were exempt from military service.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The reigning prince was hereditary commander-in-chief, but the <i>sharzaba</i>,
+ or captain of the troops, often took his place, as in the time of David,
+ and thereby became the most important person in the kingdom. More than one
+ of these officers had already turned against their sovereign the forces
+ which he had entrusted, to them, and these revolts, when crowned with
+ success, had, on various occasions, in Israel at any rate, led to a change
+ of dynasty: Omri had been shar zaba when he mutinied against Zimri, the
+ assassin of Elah, and Jehu occupied the same position when Elisha deputed
+ him to destroy the house of Omri.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The political constitutions of Judah and Israel were, on the whole, very
+ similar to those of the numerous states which shared the territory of
+ Syria between them, and their domestic history gives us a fairly exact
+ idea of the revolutions which agitated Damascus, Hamath, Carchemish,
+ Arpad, and the principalities of Amanos and Lebanon about the same period.
+ It would seem, however, that none of these other nations possessed a
+ literary or religious life of any great intensity. They had their
+ archives, it is true, in which were accumulated documents relating to
+ their past history, their rituals of theology and religious worship, their
+ collections of hymns and national songs; but none of these have survived,
+ and the very few inscriptions that have come down to us merely show that
+ they had nearly all of them adopted the alphabet invented by the
+ Phoenicians. The Israelites, initiated by them into the art of writing,
+ lost no time in setting down, in their turn, all they could recall of the
+ destinies of their race from the creation of the world down to the time in
+ which they lived. From the beginning of the monarchical epoch onwards,
+ their scribes collected together in the <i>Book of the Wars of the Lord</i>,
+ the <i>Book of Jashar</i>, and in other works the titles of which have not
+ survived, lyrics of different dates, in which nameless poets had sung the
+ victories and glorious deeds of their national heroes, such as the Song of
+ the Well, the Hymn of Moses, the triumphal Ode of Deborah, and the
+ blessing of Jacob.* They were able to draw upon traditions which preserved
+ the memory of what had taken place in the time of the Judges;** and when
+ that patriarchal form of government was succeeded by a monarchy, they had
+ narratives of the ark of the Lord and its wanderings, of Samuel, Saul,
+ David, and Solomon,*** not to mention the official records which, since
+ then, had been continuously produced and accumulated by the court
+ historians.****
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The books of <i>Jashar</i> and of the <i>Wars of the Lord</i> appear
+ to date from the IXth century B.C.; as the latter is quoted
+ in the Elohist narrative, it cannot have been compiled later
+ than the beginning of the VIIIth century B.C. The passage in
+ Numb. xxi. lib, 15, is the only one expressly attributed by
+ the testimony of the ancients to the <i>Book of the Wars of
+ the Lord,</i> but modern writers add to this the <i>Song of the
+ Well </i>(Numb. xxi. 17b, 18), and the Song of Victory over
+ Moab (Numb. xxi. 27&amp;-30). The <i>Song of the Bow</i> (2 Sam. i.
+ 19-27) admittedly formed part of the <i>Book of Jashar</i>.
+ Joshua&rsquo;s Song of Victory over the Amorites (Josh. x. 13),
+ and very probably the couplet recited by Solomon at the
+ dedication of the Temple (1 Kings viii, 12, 13, placed by
+ the LXX. after verse 53), also formed part of it, as also
+ the <i>Song of Deborah</i> and the Blessing of Jacob (Gen. xlix.
+ 1-27).
+
+ ** Wellhausen was the first to admit the existence of a Book
+ of Judges prior to the epoch of Deuteronomy, and his opinion
+ has been adopted by Kuenen and Driver. This book was
+ probably drawn upon by the two historians of the IXth and
+ VIIIth centuries B.C. of whom we are about to speak; some of
+ the narratives, such as the story of Abimelech, and possibly
+ that of Ehud, may have been taken from a document written at
+ the end of the Xth or the beginning of the IXth centuries
+ B.C.
+
+ *** The revolutions which occurred in the family of David (2
+ Sam. ix.-xx.) bear so evident a stamp of authenticity that
+ they have been attributed to a contemporary writer, perhaps
+ Ahimaaz, son of Zadok (2 Sam. xv. 27), who took part in the
+ events in question. But apart from this, the existence is
+ generally admitted of two or three books which were drawn up
+ shortly after the separation of the tribes, containing a
+ kind of epic of the history of the first two kings; the one
+ dealing with Saul, for instance, was probably written in the
+ time of Jeroboam.
+
+ **** The two lists in which the names of the principal
+ personages at the court of David are handed down to us,
+ mention a certain Jehoshaphat, son of Ahilud, who was
+ <i>mazhir</i>, or recorder; he retained his post under Solomon (1
+ Kings iv. 3).
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ It may be that more than one writer had already endeavoured to evolve from
+ these materials an Epie of Jahveh and His faithful people, but in the
+ second half of the IXth century B.C., perhaps in the time of Jehoshaphat,
+ a member of the tribe of Judah undertook to put forth a fresh edition.*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The approximate date of the composition and source of this
+ first <i>Jehovist</i> is still an open question., Reuss and
+ Kuenen, not to mention others, believe the Jehovist writer
+ to have been a native of the northern kingdom; I have
+ adopted the opposite view, which is supported by most modern
+ critics.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ He related how God, after creating the universe out of chaos, had chosen
+ His own people, and had led them, after trials innumerable, to the
+ conquest of the Promised Land. He showed, as he went on, the origin of the
+ tribes identified with the children of Israel, and the covenants made by
+ Jahveh with Moses in the Arabian desert; while accepting the stories
+ connected with the ancient sanctuaries of the north and east at Shechem,
+ Bethel, Peniel, Mahanaim, and Succoth, it was at Hebron in Judah that he
+ placed the principal residence of Abraham and his descendants. His style,
+ while simple and direct, is at the same time singularly graceful and
+ vivacious; the incidents he gives are carefully selected, apt and
+ characteristic, while his narrative passes from scene to scene without
+ trace of flagging, unburdened by useless details, and his dialogue, always
+ natural and easy, rises without effort from the level of familiar
+ conversation to heights of impassioned eloquence. His aim was not merely
+ to compile the history of his people: he desired at the same time to edify
+ them, by showing how sin first came into the world through disobedience to
+ the commandments of the Most High, and how man, prosperous so long as he
+ kept to the laws of the covenant, fell into difficulties as soon as he
+ transgressed or failed to respect them. His concept of Jahveh is in the
+ highest degree a concrete one: he regards Him as a Being superior to other
+ beings, but made like unto them and moved by the same passions. He shows
+ anger and is appeased, displays sorrow and repents Him of the evil.* When
+ the descendants of Noah build a tower and a city, He draws nigh to examine
+ what they have done, and having taken account of their work, confounds
+ their language and thus prevents them from proceeding farther.** He
+ desires, later on, to confer a favour on His servant Abraham: He appears
+ to him in human form, and eats and drinks with him.*** Sodom and Gomorrah
+ had committed abominable iniquities, the cry against them was great and
+ their sin very grievous: but before punishing them, He tells Abraham that
+ He will &ldquo;go down and see whether they have done according to the cry of it
+ which is come unto Me; and if not, I will know.&rdquo; ****
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Exod. iv. 14 and xxxii. 10, anger of Jahveh against Moses
+ and against Israel; Gen. vi. 6, 7, where He repents and is
+ sorry for having created man; and Exod. xxxii. 14, where He
+ repents Him of the evil He had intended to do unto Israel.
+
+ ** Gen. xi. 5-8.
+
+ *** Gen. xviii.
+
+ **** Gen. xviii. and xix.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Elsewhere He wrestles a whole night long with Jacob;* or falls upon Moses,
+ seeking to kill him, until appeased by Zipporah, who casts the
+ blood-stained foreskin of her child at her husband&rsquo;s feet.** This book,
+ though it breathes the spirit of the prophets and was perhaps written in
+ one of their schools, did not, however, include all the current
+ narratives, and omitted many traditions that were passing from lip to lip;
+ moreover, the excessive materialism of its treatment no longer harmonised
+ with that more idealised concept of the Deity which had already begun to
+ prevail. Consequently, within less than a century of its appearance, more
+ than one version containing changes and interpolations in the narrative
+ came to be circulated,*** till a scribe of Ephraim, who flourished in the
+ time of Jeroboam II., took up the subject and dealt with it in a different
+ fashion.****
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Gen. xxxii. 24, 25.
+
+ ** Exod. iv. 24-26.
+
+ *** Schrader and Wellhausen have drawn attention to
+ contradictions in the primitive history of humanity as
+ presented by the Jehovist which forbid us to accept it as
+ the work of a single writer. Nor can these inconsistencies
+ be due to the influence of the Elohist, since the latter did
+ not deal with this period in his book. Budde has maintained
+ that the primitive work contained no account of the Deluge,
+ and traced the descent of all the nations, Israel included,
+ back to Cain, and he declares he can detect in the earlier
+ chapters of Genesis traces of a first Jehovist, whom he
+ calls J1. A second Jehovist, J2, who flourished between 800
+ and 700 B.C., is supposed to have added to the contribution
+ of the first, certain details borrowed from the Babylonian
+ tradition, such as the Deluge, the story of Noah, of Nimrod,
+ etc. Finally, a third Jehovist is said to have thrown the
+ versions of his two predecessors into one, taking J2 as the
+ basis of his work.
+
+ **** The date and origin of the Elohist have given rise to
+ no less controversy than those of the Jehovist: the view
+ most generally adopted is that he was a native of the
+ northern kingdom, and flourished about 750 B.C.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Putting on one side the primitive accounts of the origin of the human race
+ which his predecessors had taken pleasure in elaborating, he confined his
+ attention solely to events since the birth of Abraham;* his origin is
+ betrayed by the preference he displays for details calculated to flatter
+ the self-esteem of the northern tribes. To his eyes, Joseph is the noblest
+ of all the sons of Jacob, before whom all the rest must bow their heads,
+ as to a king; next to Joseph comes Reuben, to whom&mdash;rather than to
+ Judah**&mdash;he gives the place as firstborn. He groups his characters
+ round Bethel and Shechem, the sanctuaries of Israel; even Abraham is
+ represented as residing, not at Hebron in Judea, but at Beersheba, a spot
+ held in deep veneration by pilgrims belonging to the ten tribes.*** It is
+ in his concept of the Supreme Being, however, that he differs most widely
+ from his predecessors. God is, according to him, widely removed from
+ ordinary humanity. He no longer reveals Himself at all times and in all
+ places, but works rather by night, and appears to men in their dreams, or,
+ when circumstances require His active interference, is content to send His
+ angels rather than come in His own person.****
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ * Budde seems to have proved conclusively that the Elohist did not write
+ any part of the primitive history of mankind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ** Gen. xxxvii. 21, 22, 29, 30; xlii. 22, 27; whereas in Gen. xliii. 3,
+ 8-10, where the narrative is from the pen of the Jehovist, it is Judah
+ that plays the principal part: it is possible that, in Gen. xxxvii. 21,
+ Reuben has been substituted in the existing text for Judah.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ *** Gen. xxi. 31, 33; xxii. 19; the importance of Beersheba as a holy
+ place resorted to by pilgrims from the northern kingdom is shown in 1
+ Kings xix. 3, and Amos v. 5; viii. 14.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ **** Gen. xx. 3-8; xxviii. 11-15; xxxi 24; Numb. xxii. 8-12, 20.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Indeed, such cases of active interference are of rare occurrence, and He
+ prefers to accomplish His purpose through human agents, who act
+ unconsciously, or even in direct contravention of their own clearly,
+ expressed intentions.* Moreover it was only by degrees that He revealed
+ His true nature and title; the patriarchs, Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, and
+ Joseph, had called Him Elohim, or &ldquo;the gods,&rdquo; and it was not until the
+ coming of Moses that He disclosed His real name of Jahveh to His
+ worshippers.**
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Gen. 1. 20, end of the story of Joseph: &ldquo;And as for you,
+ ye meant evil against me; but God meant it for good, to
+ bring it to pass as it is this day, to save much people
+ alive.&rdquo;
+
+ ** Exod. iii. 13, 14; verse 15 is an interpolation of much
+ later date.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkBimage-0011" id="linkBimage-0011">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/200.jpg" width="100%" alt="200.jpg Prayer at Sunset " />
+ </div>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ After Painting by Gerome
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkBimage-0012" id="linkBimage-0012">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/200-text.jpg" width="100%" alt="200-text.jpg " />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ In a word, this new historian shows us in every line that the theological
+ instinct has superseded popular enthusiasm, and his work loses
+ unmistakably in literary interest by the change. We feel that he is
+ wanting in feeling and inspiration; his characters no longer palpitate
+ with life; his narrative drags, its interest decreases, and his language
+ is often deficient in force and colour. But while writers, trained in the
+ schools of the prophets, thus sought to bring home to the people the
+ benefits which their God had showered on them, the people themselves
+ showed signs of disaffection towards Him, or were, at any rate, inclined
+ to associate with Him other gods borrowed from neighbouring states, and to
+ overlay the worship they rendered Him with ceremonies and ideas
+ inconsistent with its original purity. The permanent division of the
+ nation into two independent kingdoms had had its effect on their religion
+ as well as on their political life, and had separated the worshippers into
+ two hostile camps. The inhabitants of Judah still continued to build
+ altars on their high places, as they had done in the time before David;
+ there, the devout prostrated themselves before the sacred stones and
+ before the Asherah, or went in unto the <i>kedeshôth</i> in honour of
+ Astarte, and in Jahveh&rsquo;s own temple at Jerusalem they had set up the image
+ of a brazen serpent to which they paid homage.* The feeling, however, that
+ the patron deity of the chosen people could have but one recognised
+ habitation&mdash;the temple built for Him by Solomon&mdash;and that the
+ priests of this temple were alone qualified to officiate there in an
+ effective manner, came to prevail more and more strongly in Judaea. The
+ king, indeed, continued to offer sacrifices and prayer there,** but the
+ common people could no longer intercede with their God except through the
+ agency of the priests.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Cf. what we are told of idolatrous practices in Judah
+ under Rehoboam and Abraham (1 Kings xiv. 22-24; xv. 3), and
+ of the tolerance of high places by Asa and Jehoshaphat (1
+ Kings xv. 14; xxii. 44); even at the period now under
+ consideration neither Amaziah (2 Kings xiv. 4) nor Azariah
+ (2 Kings xv. 4) showed any disposition to prohibit them. The
+ brazen serpent was still in existence in the time of
+ Hezekiah, at the close of the VIIIth century B.C. (2 Kings
+ xviii. 4).
+
+ ** 2 Kings xvi. 10-16, where Ahaz is described as offering
+ sacrifice and giving instructions to the high priest Urijah
+ as to the reconstruction and service of the altar; cf. 2
+ Chron. xxvi. 16-21, where similar conduct on the part of
+ Uzziah is recorded, and where the leprosy by which he was
+ attacked is, in accordance with the belief of later times,
+ represented as a punishment of the sacrilege committed by
+ him in attempting to perform the sacrifice in person.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The latter, in their turn, tended to develop into a close corporation of
+ families consecrated for generations past to the priestly office; they
+ came in time to form a tribe by themselves, which took rank among the
+ other tribes of Israel, and claimed Levi, one of the twelve sons of Jacob,
+ as its ancestor. Their head, chosen from among the descendants of Zadok,
+ who had been the first high priest in the reign of Solomon, was by virtue
+ of his office one of the chief ministers of the crown, and we know what an
+ important part was played by Jehoiadah in the revolution which led to the
+ deposition of Athaliah; the high priest was, however, no less subordinate
+ to the supreme power than his fellow-ministers, and the sanctity of his
+ office did not avail to protect him from ill-treatment or death if he
+ incurred the displeasure of his sovereign.* He had control over a treasury
+ continually enriched by the offerings of the faithful, and did not always
+ turn his trust to the best uses; in times of extreme distress the king
+ used to borrow from him as a last resource, in order to bring about the
+ withdrawal of an invader, or purchase the help of a powerful ally.** The
+ capital of Israel was of too recent foundation to allow of its chapel
+ royal becoming the official centre of national worship; the temple and
+ priesthood of Samaria never succeeded in effacing the prestige enjoyed by
+ the ancient oracles, though in the reign of both the first and second
+ Jeroboam, Dan, Bethel, Gilgal, and Mizpah had each its band of chosen
+ worshippers.***
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * In order to form an idea of the relative positions
+ occupied by the king and the high priest, we must read what
+ is told of Jehoiadah and Joash (2 Kings xii. 6-16), or
+ Urijah and Ahaz (2 Kings xvi. 10-16); the story runs that
+ Zechariah was put to death by Joash (2 Chron. xxiv. 22).
+
+ ** Asa did so in order to secure Ben-hadad&rsquo;s help against
+ Baasha (1 Kings xv. 18, 19; cf. 2 Chron. xvi. 2, 3): as to
+ the revenues by which the treasury of the temple was
+ supported and the special dues appropriated to it, cf. 2
+ Kings xii. 4, 5, 7-16, and xxii. 4-7, 9.
+
+ *** In the time of Jeroboam II., Bethel, Gilgal, and Dan are
+ mentioned by Amos (iv. 4; v. 5, 6; viii. 14), by Hosea (iv.
+ 15; ix. 15; xii. 12). Mizpah is mentioned by Hosea (v. 1),
+ and so is Tabor. The altar of Jahveh on Mount Carmel was
+ restored by Elijah (1 Kings xviii. 30).
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ At these centres adoration was rendered to the animal presentment of
+ Jahveh,* and even prophets like Elijah and Elisha did not condemn this as
+ heretical; they had enough to do in hunting down the followers of Baal
+ without entering into open conflict with the worshippers of the golden
+ calf. The priesthood of the northern kingdom was not confined to members
+ of the family of Levi, but was recruited from all the tribes; it levied a
+ tithe on the harvest, reserved to itself the pick of the offerings and
+ victims, and jealously forbade a plurality of sanctuaries,** The <i>Book
+ of the Covenant</i>*** has handed down to us the regulations in force at
+ one of these temples, perhaps that of Bethel, one of the wealthiest of
+ them all.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The golden calves at Dan and Bethel are referred to by
+ Amos (viii. 14) and Hosea (x. 5), where Bethel is called
+ Beth-aven; as to the golden calf at Samaria, cf. Amos viii.
+ 14 and Hos. viii. 5, 6.
+
+ ** Amos iv. 4, 5; v. 21-23.
+
+ *** This is the title given in Exod. xxiv. 7 to a writing
+ in which Moses is said to have entered the covenant made
+ between Jahveh and Israel; it is preserved, with certain
+ interpolations and alterations, in Exod. xx. 23?&mdash;xxiii. 33.
+ It was inserted in its entirety in the Elohist narrative,
+ there taking the place at present occupied by Deuteronomy in
+ the Pentateuch, viz. that of the covenant made between
+ Jahveh and Israel prior to the crossing of the Jordan
+ (Kuenen, <i>H. C. Onderzoek</i>, i. § 13, No. 32). Reuss tries to
+ make out that it was the code promulgated on the occasion of
+ Jehoshaphat&rsquo;s legal reforms, which is only referred to in 2
+ Chron. xvii. 7-9; cf. xix. 5. A more probable theory is that
+ it was the &ldquo;custom&rdquo; of one of the great sanctuaries of the
+ northern kingdom reduced to writing at the end of the Xth or
+ during the IXth century B.C.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkBimage-0013" id="linkBimage-0013">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/203.jpg" width="100%"
+ alt="203.jpg Egyptian Altar at Deik-el-bahari " />
+ </div>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a restoration by Naville.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The directions in regard to ritual are extremely simple, and the moral
+ code is based throughout on the inexorable <i>lex talionis</i>, &ldquo;Life for
+ life, eye for eye, tooth for tooth, hand for hand, foot for foot, burning
+ for burning, wound for wound, stripe for stripe.&rdquo; * This brief code must
+ have been almost universally applicable to every conjuncture of civil and
+ religious life in Judah no less than in Israel. On one point only do we
+ find a disagreement, and that is in connection with the one and only Holy
+ of Holies to the possession of which the southern kingdom had begun to lay
+ claim: in a passage full of significance Jahveh declares, &ldquo;An altar of
+ earth thou shalt make unto Me, and shalt sacrifice thereon thy burnt
+ offerings and thy peace offerings, thy sheep and thine oxen: in every
+ place where I record My name I will come unto thee and I will bless thee.
+ And if thou make Me an altar of stone, thou shalt not build it of hewn
+ stones: for if thou lift up thy tool upon it, thou hast polluted it.
+ Neither shalt thou go up by steps unto Mine altar, that thy nakedness be
+ not discovered thereon.&rdquo; **
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Exod. xxi. 23-25.
+
+ ** Exod. xx. 24-26.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The patriarchs and early ancestors of the race had performed their
+ sacrifices in the open air, on rude and low altars, differing widely from
+ lofty and elaborately ornamented erections like those at Jerusalem, which
+ seem to have borne a resemblance to the altars of the Egyptians: the
+ author of the <i>Book of the Covenant</i> advises the faithful to follow
+ the example of those great men rather than that of the Lévites of Judah.
+ Nevertheless this multiplicity of high places was not without its dangers;
+ it led the common people to confuse Jahveh with the idols of Canaan, and
+ encouraged the spread of foreign superstitions. The misfortunes which had
+ come thick and fast upon the Israelites ever since the division of the
+ kingdom had made them only too ready to seek elsewhere that support and
+ consolation which they could no longer find at home. The gods of Damascus
+ and Assur who had caused the downfall of Gath, of Calneh, and of Hamath,*
+ those of Tyre and Sidon who lavished upon the Phoenicians the wealth of
+ the seas, or even the deities of Ammon, Moab, or Edom, might well appear
+ more desirable than a Being Who, in spite of His former promises, seemed
+ powerless to protect His own people. A number of the Israelites
+ transferred their allegiance to these powerful deities, prostrated
+ themselves before the celestial host, flocked round the resting-places of
+ Kevan, the star of El, and carried the tabernacles of the King of
+ heaven;** nor was Judah slow to follow their example. The prophets,
+ however, did not view their persistent ill-fortune in the same light as
+ the common people; far from accepting it as a proof of the power of other
+ divinities, they recognised in it a mark of Jahveh&rsquo;s superiority.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Amos vi. 2; with regard to the destruction of Gath by
+ Hazael.
+
+ ** Amos v. 26, 27
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ In their eyes Jahveh was the one God, compared with Whom the pagan deities
+ were no gods at all, and could not even be said to exist. He might, had He
+ so willed it, have bestowed His protection on any one of the numerous
+ races whom He had planted on the earth: but as a special favour, which He
+ was under no obligation to confer, He had chosen Israel to be His own
+ people, and had promised them that they should occupy Canaan so long as
+ they kept free from sin. But Israel had sinned, Israel had followed after
+ idols; its misfortunes were, therefore, but the just penalty of its
+ unfaithfulness. Thus conceived, Jahveh ceased to be merely the god of a
+ nation&mdash;He became the God of the whole world; and it is in the guise
+ of a universal Deity that some, at any rate, of the prophets begin to
+ represent Him from the time of Jeroboam II. onwards.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This change of view in regard to the Being of Jahveh coincided with a no
+ less marked alteration in the character of His prophets. At first they had
+ taken an active part in public affairs; they had thrown themselves into
+ the political movements of the time, and had often directed their course,*
+ by persuasion when persuasion sufficed, by violence when violence was the
+ only means that was left to them of enforcing the decrees of the Most
+ High. Not long before this, we find Elisha secretly conspiring against the
+ successors of Ahab, and taking a decisive part in the revolution which set
+ the house of Jehu on the throne in place of that of Omri; but during the
+ half-century which had elapsed since his death, the revival in the
+ fortunes of Israel and its growing prosperity under the rule of an
+ energetic king had furnished the prophets with but few pretexts for
+ interfering in the conduct of state affairs.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Cf. the part taken by Nathan in the conspiracy which
+ raised Solomon to the throne (1 Kings i. 8, et seq.), and
+ previous to this in the story of David&rsquo;s amour with
+ Bathsheba (2 Sam. xii. 1-25). Similarly, we find prophets
+ such as Ahijah in the reign of Jeroboam I. (1 Kings xi. 29-
+ 39; cf. xiv. 1-18; xv. 29, 30), and Shemaîah in the reign of
+ Rehoboam (1 Kings xii. 22-24), Jehu son of Hananiah under
+ Baasha (1 Kings xvi. 1-4, 7, 12, 13), Micaiah son of Imla,
+ and Zedekiah under Ahab (1 Kings xxii. 5-28), not to speak
+ of those mentioned in the Chronicles, e.g. Azariah son of
+ Oded (2 Ghron. xv. 1-8), and Hanani under Asa (2 Ghron. xvi.
+ 7-10), Jahaziel (2 Ghron. xx. 14-19), and Eliezer, son of
+ Dodavahu (2 Ghron. xx. 37), in the time of Johoshaphat. No
+ trace of any writings composed by these prophets is found
+ until a very late date; but in Chronicles, in addition to a
+ letter from Elijah to Jehoram of Juda (2 Ghron. xxi. 12-15),
+ we find a reference to the commentary of the prophet Iddo in
+ the time of Abijah (2 Ghron. xiii. 22), and to the &ldquo;History
+ of Jehu the son of Hanani, which is inserted in the book of
+ the kings of Israel&rdquo; (2 Chron. xx. 34), in the time of
+ Jehoshaphat.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ They no longer occupied themselves in resisting the king, but addressed
+ themselves to the people, pointed out the heinousness of their sins, and
+ threatened them with the wrath of Jahveh if they persisted in their
+ unfaithfulness: they came to be spiritual advisers rather than political
+ partisans, and orators rather than men of action like their predecessors.
+ Their discourses were carefully prepared beforehand, and were written down
+ either by themselves or by some of their disciples for the benefit of
+ posterity, in the hope that future generations would understand the
+ dangers or witness the catastrophes which their contemporaries might not
+ live to see. About 760 B.C., Amos of Tekôa,* a native of Judaea, suddenly
+ made his appearance at Bethel, in the midst of the festivals which
+ pilgrims had flocked to celebrate in the ancient temple erected to Jahveh
+ in one of His animal forms.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The title of the Book of Amos fixes the date as being &ldquo;in
+ the days of Uzziah king of Judah, and in the days of
+ Jeroboam the son of Joash king of Israel&rdquo; (i. 1), and the
+ state of affairs described by him corresponds pretty closely
+ with what we know of this period. Most critics fix the date
+ somewhere between 760 and 750 B.C., but nearer 760 than 750.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ His opening words filled the listening crowd with wonder: &ldquo;The high places
+ of Isaac shall be desolate,&rdquo; he proclaimed, &ldquo;and the sanctuaries of Israel
+ shall be laid waste; and I will rise against the house of Jeroboam with
+ the sword.&rdquo; *
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Amos vii. 9.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Yet Jeroboam had by this time gained all his victories, and never before
+ had the King of Samaria appeared to be more firmly seated on the throne:
+ what, then, did this intruder mean by introducing himself as a messenger
+ of wrath in the name of Jahveh, at the very moment when Jahveh was
+ furnishing His worshippers with abundant signs of His favour? Amaziah, the
+ priest of Bethel, interrupted him as he went on to declare that &ldquo;Jeroboam
+ should die by the sword, and Israel should surely be led away captive out
+ of his land.&rdquo; The king, informed of what was going on, ordered Amos into
+ exile, and Amaziah undertook to communicate this sentence to him: &ldquo;O thou
+ seer, go, flee thee away into the land of Judah, and there eat bread, and
+ prophesy there: but prophesy not again any more at Bethel: for it is the
+ king&rsquo;s sanctuary, and it is a royal house.&rdquo; And Amos replied, &ldquo;I was no
+ prophet, neither was I a prophet&rsquo;s son; but I was a herdman, and a dresser
+ of sycomore trees: and the Lord took me from following the flock, and the
+ Lord said unto me, Go, prophesy unto My people Israel. Now therefore hear
+ thou the word of the Lord: Thou sayest, Prophesy not against Israel, and
+ drop not thy word against the house of Isaac: therefore thus saith the
+ Lord: Thy wife shall be an harlot in the city, and thy sons and thy
+ daughters shall fall by the sword, and thy land shall be divided by line;
+ and thou thyself shalt die in a land that is unclean, and Israel shall
+ surely be led away captive out of his land.&rdquo; *
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Amos vii. 9-17.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ This prophecy, first expanded, and then written down with a purity of
+ diction and loftiness of thought which prove Amos to have been a master of
+ literary art,* was widely circulated, and gradually gained authority as
+ portents indicative of the divine wrath began to accumulate, such as an
+ earthquake which occurred two years after the incident at Bethel,* an
+ eclipse of the sun, drought, famine, and pestilence.*** It foretold, in
+ the first place, the downfall of all the surrounding countries&mdash;Damascus,
+ Gaza, Tyre, Edom, Ammon, Moab, and Judah; then, denouncing Israel itself,
+ condemned it to the same penalties for the same iniquities. In vain did
+ the latter plead its privileges as the chosen people of Jahveh, and seek
+ to atone for its guilt by endless sacrifices. &ldquo;I hate, I despise your
+ feasts,&rdquo; declared Jahveh, &ldquo;and I will take no delight in your solemn
+ assemblies. Yea, though ye offer Me your burnt offerings and meat
+ offerings, I will not accept them: neither will I regard the peace
+ offerings of your fat beasts. Take thou away from Me the noise of thy
+ songs; for I will not hear the melody of thy viols. But let judgment roll
+ down as waters, and righteousness as a mighty stream.&rdquo; ****
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * S. Jerome describes Amos as &ldquo;rusticus&rdquo; and &ldquo;imperitus
+ sermone,&rdquo; but modern writers are generally agreed that in
+ putting forward this view he was influenced by the statement
+ as to the peasant origin of the prophet.
+
+ ** Amos i. 1; reference is made to it by the unknown prophet
+ whose words are preserved in Zech. xiv. 5.
+
+ *** The famine is mentioned in Amos iv. 6, the drought in
+ Amos iv. 7, 8, the pestilence in Amos iv. 10.
+
+ **** Amos v. 21-24.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The unfaithfulness of Israel, the corruption of its cities, the pride of
+ its nobles, had sealed its doom; even at that moment the avenger was at
+ hand on its north-eastern border, the Assyrian appointed to carry out
+ sentence upon it.* Then follow visions, each one of which tends to deepen
+ the effect of the seer&rsquo;s words&mdash;a cloud of locusts,** a devouring
+ fire,*** a plumb-line in the hands of the Lord,**** a basket laden with
+ summer fruits&mdash;till at last the whole people of Israel take refuge in
+ their temple, vainly hoping that there they may escape from the vengeance
+ of the Eternal. &ldquo;There shall not one of them flee away, and there shall
+ not one of them escape. Though they dig into hell, thence shall Mine hand
+ take them; and though they climb up to heaven, thence will I bring them
+ down. And though they hide themselves in the top of Oarmel, I will search
+ and take them out thence; and though they be hid from My sight in the
+ bottom of the sea, thence will I command the serpent, and he shall bite
+ them. And though they go into captivity before their enemies, thence will
+ I command the sword, and it shall slay them; and I will set Mine eyes upon
+ them for evil and not for good.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Most commentators admit that the nation raised up by
+ Jahveh to oppress Israel &ldquo;from the entering in of Hamath
+ unto the brook of the Arabah&rdquo; (Amos vi. 14) was no other
+ than Assyria. At the very period in which Amos flourished,
+ Assurdân made two campaigns against Hadrach, in 765 and 755,
+ which brought his armies right up to the Israelite frontier
+ (Schrader, Keilinschrift. Bibliothec, vol. i. pp. 210-
+ 213).
+
+ ** Amos vii. 1-3.
+
+ *** Amos vii. 4-6.
+
+ **** Amos vii. 7-9. It is here that the speech delivered by
+ the prophet at Bethel is supposed to occur (vii. 9); the
+ narrative of what afterwards happened follows immediately
+ (Amos vii. 10-17).
+
+ ^ Amos viii. 1-3.; Amos ix. 1-4.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ For the first time in history a prophet foretold disaster and banishment
+ for a whole people: love of country was already giving place in the heart
+ of Amos to his conviction of the universal jurisdiction of God, and this
+ conviction led him to regard as possible and probable a state of things in
+ which Israel should have no part. Nevertheless, its decadence was to be
+ merely temporary; Jahveh, though prepared to chastise the posterity of
+ Jacob severely, could not bring Himself to destroy it utterly. The kingdom
+ of David was soon to flourish anew: &ldquo;Behold, the days come, saith the
+ Lord, that the plowman shall overtake the reaper, and the treader of
+ grapes him that soweth seed; and the mountains shall drop sweet wine, and
+ all the hills shall melt. And I will bring again the captivity of My
+ people Israel, and they shall build the waste cities, and inhabit them;
+ and they shall plant vineyards, and drink the wine thereof; they shall
+ also make gardens, and eat the fruit of them. And I will plant them upon
+ their land, and they shall no more be plucked up out of their land which I
+ have given them, saith the Lord thy God.&rdquo; *
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The voice of Amos was not the only one raised in warning. From the midst
+ of Ephraim, another seer, this time a priest, Hosea, son of Beeri,** was
+ never weary of reproaching the tribes with their ingratitude, and
+ persisted in his foretelling of the desolation to come.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Amos ix. 13-15.
+
+ ** Hoshea (or Hosea) was regarded by the rabbis as the
+ oldest of the lesser prophets, and his writings were placed
+ at the head of their collected works. The title of his book
+ (Hos. i. 1), where he begins by stating that he preached
+ &ldquo;in the days of Jeroboam, the son of Joash (Jehoash), King of
+ Israel,&rdquo; is a later interpolation; the additional mention of
+ Uzziah, Jotham, Ahaz, and Hezekiah, kings of Judah, is due
+ to an attempted analogy with the title of Isaiah. Hosea was
+ familiar with the prophecies of Amos, and his own
+ predictions show that the events merely foreseen by his
+ predecessor were now in course of fulfilment in his day. The
+ first three chapters probably date from the end of the reign
+ of Jeroboam, about 750 B.C.; the others were compiled under
+ his successors, and before 734-733 B.C., since Gilead is
+ there mentioned as still forming part of Israel (Hos. vi. 8;
+ xii. 12), though it was in that year laid waste and
+ conquered by Tiglath-pileser III. Duhm has suggested that
+ Hosea must have been a priest from the tone of his writings,
+ and this hypothesis is generally accepted by theologians.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The halo of grandeur and renown with which Jeroboam had surrounded the
+ kingdom could not hide its wretched and paltry character from the
+ prophet&rsquo;s eyes; &ldquo;for yet a little while, and I will avenge the blood of
+ Jezreel upon the house of Jehu, and will cause the kingdom of the house of
+ Israel to cease. And it shall come to pass at that day that I will break
+ the bow of Israel in the valley of Jezreel.&rdquo; * Like his predecessor, he,
+ too, inveighed against the perversity and unfaithfulness of his people.
+ The abandoned wickedness of Gomer, his wife, had brought him to despair.
+ In the bitterness of his heart, he demands of Jahveh why He should have
+ seen fit to visit such humiliation on His servant, and persuades himself
+ that the faithlessness of which he is a victim is but a feeble type of
+ that which Jahveh had suffered at the hands of His people. Israel had gone
+ a-whoring after strange gods, and the day of retribution for its crimes
+ was not far distant: &ldquo;The children of Israel shall abide many days without
+ king and without prince, and without sacrifice and without pillar, and
+ without ephod or teraphim; afterward shall the children of Israel return,
+ and seek the Lord their God, and David their king; and shall come with
+ fear unto the Lord and to His goodness in the latter days.&rdquo; **
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Hos. i. 4, 5.
+
+ **Hos. i.-iii. Is the story of Hosea and his wife an
+ allegory, or does it rest on a basis of actual fact? Most
+ critics now seem to incline to the view that the prophet has
+ here set down an authentic episode from his own career, and
+ uses it to point the moral of his work.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Whether the decadence of the Hebrews was or was not due to the purely
+ moral and religious causes indicated by the prophets, it was only too
+ real, and even the least observant among their contemporaries must have
+ suspected that the two kingdoms were quite unfitted, as to their numbers,
+ their military organisation, and monetary reserves, to resist successfully
+ any determined attack that might be made upon them by surrounding nations.
+ An armed force entering Syria by way of the Euphrates could hardly fail to
+ overcome any opposition that might be offered to it, if not at the first
+ onset, at any rate after a very brief struggle; none of the minor states
+ to be met upon its way, such as Damascus or Israel, much less those of
+ Hamath or Hadrach, were any longer capable of barring its progress, as
+ Ben-hadad and Hazael had arrested that of the Assyrians in the time of
+ Shalmaneser III. The efforts then made by the Syrian kings to secure their
+ independence had exhausted their resources and worn out the spirit of
+ their peoples; civil war had prevented them from making good their losses
+ during the breathing-space afforded by the decadence of Assyria, and now
+ that Nature herself had afflicted them with the crowning misfortunes of
+ famine and pestilence, they were reduced to a mere shadow of what they had
+ been during the previous century. If, therefore, Sharduris, after making
+ himself master of the countries of the Taurus and Amanos, had turned his
+ steps towards the valley of the Orontes, he might have secured possession
+ of it without much difficulty, and after that there would have been
+ nothing to prevent his soldiers from pressing on, if need be, to the walls
+ of Samaria or even of Jerusalem itself. Indeed, he seems to have at last
+ made up his mind to embark on this venture, when the revival of Assyrian
+ power put a stop to his ambitious schemes. Tiglath-pileser, hard pressed
+ on every side by daring and restless foes, began by attacking those who
+ were at once the most troublesome and most vulnerable&mdash;the Aramæan
+ tribes on the banks of the Tigris. To give these incorrigible banditti,
+ who boldly planted their outposts not a score of leagues from his capital,
+ a free hand on his rear, and brave the fortune of war in Armenia or Syria,
+ without first teaching them a lesson in respect, would have been simply to
+ court serious disaster; an Aramæan raid occurring at a time when he was
+ engaged elsewhere with the bulk of his army, might have made it necessary
+ to break off a successful campaign and fall back in haste to the relief of
+ Nineveh or Calah (Kalakh), just as he was on the eve of gaining some
+ decisive advantage. Moreover, the suzerainty of Assyria over Karduniash
+ entailed on him the duty of safeguarding Babylon from that other horde of
+ Aramæans which harassed it on the east, while the Kaldâ were already
+ threatening its southern frontier. It is not quite clear whether Nabunazîr
+ who then occupied the throne implored his help:* at any rate, he took the
+ field as soon as he felt that his own crown was secure, overthrew the
+ Aramæans at the first encounter, and drove them back from the banks of the
+ Lower Zab to those of the Uknu: all the countries which they had seized to
+ the east of the Tigris at once fell again into the hands of the Assyrians.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Nabunazîr is the Nabonassar who afterwards gave his name
+ to the era employed by Ptolemy.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ This first point gained, Tiglath-pileser crossed the river, and made a
+ demonstration in force before the Babylonian fortresses. He visited, one
+ after another, Sippar, Nipur, Babylon, Borsippa, Kuta, Kîshu, Dilbat, and
+ Uruk, &ldquo;cities without peer,&rdquo; and offered in all of them sacrifices to the
+ gods,&mdash;to Bel, to Zirbanît, to Nebo, to Tashmît, and to Nirgal.
+ Karduniash bowed down before him, but he abstained from giving any
+ provocation to the Kaldâ, and satisfied with having convinced Nabunazîr
+ that Assyria had lost none of her former vigour, he made his way back to
+ his hereditary kingdom.*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Most historians believe that Tiglath-pileser entered
+ Karduniash as an enemy: that he captured several towns, and
+ allowed the others to ransom themselves on payment of
+ tribute. The way in which the texts known to us refer to
+ this expedition seems to me, however, to prove that he set
+ out as an ally and protector of Nabonazir, and that his
+ visit to the Babylonian sanctuaries was of a purely pacific
+ nature.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The lightly-won success of this expedition produced the looked-for result.
+ Tiglath-pileser had set out a king <i>de facto</i>; but now that the gods
+ of the ancient sanctuaries had declared themselves satisfied with his
+ homage, and had granted him that religious consecration which had before
+ been lacking, he returned a king de jure as well (745 B.C.). His next
+ campaign completed what the first had begun. The subjugation of the plain
+ would have been of little advantage if the highlands had been left in the
+ power of tribes as yet unconquered, and allowed to pour down with impunity
+ bands of rapacious freebooters on the newly liberated provinces: security
+ between the Zab and the Uknu could only be attained by the pacification of
+ Namri, and it was, therefore, to Namri that the sea of war was transferred
+ in 744 B.C. All the Cossæan and Babylonian races intermingled in the
+ valleys on the frontier were put to ransom one after another.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkBimage-0014" id="linkBimage-0014">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/216.jpg" width="100%"
+ alt="216.jpg Map of Campaigns Of Tiglath-pileser Iii. In Media " />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ These included the Bît-Sangibuti, the Bît-Khambân, the Barrua, the
+ Bit-Zualzash, the Bît-Matti, the Umliash, the Parsua, the Bît-Zatti, the
+ Bît-Zabdâdani, the Bît-Ishtar, the city of Zakruti, the Nina, the Bustus,
+ the Arakuttu, by which the conqueror gradually made his way into the heart
+ of Media, reaching districts into which none of his predecessors had ever
+ penetrated. Those least remote he annexed to his own empire, converting
+ them into a province under the rule of an Assyrian governor; he then
+ returned to Calah with a convoy of 60,500 prisoners, and countless herds
+ of oxen, sheep, mules, and dromedaries. Whilst he was thus employed,
+ Assur-dainâni, one of his generals to whom he had entrusted the pick of
+ his army, pressed on still further to the north-east, across the almost
+ waterless deserts of Media. The mountainous district on the shores of the
+ Caspian had for centuries enjoyed a reputation for wealth and fertility
+ among the races settled on the banks of the Euphrates and Tigris. It was
+ from thence that they obtained their lapis-lazuli, and the hills from
+ which it was extracted were popularly supposed to consist almost entirely
+ of one compact mass of this precious mineral. Their highest peak, now
+ known as the Demavend, was then called Bikni,* a name which had come to be
+ applied to the whole district.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The country of Bikni is probably Rhagian Media and Mount
+ Bikni, the modern Demavend.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ To the Assyrians it stood as the utmost boundary mark of the known world,
+ beyond which their imagination pictured little more than a confused mist
+ of almost fabulous regions and peoples. Assur-dainâni caught a distant
+ glimpse of the snow-capped pyramid of Demavend, but approached no nearer
+ than its lower slopes, whence he retraced his steps after having levied
+ tribute from their inhabitants. The fame of this exploit spread far and
+ wide in a marvellously short space of time, and chiefs who till then had
+ vacillated in their decision now crowded the path of the victor, eager to
+ pay him homage on his return: even the King of Illipi thought it wise to
+ avoid the risk of invasion, and hastened of his own accord to meet the
+ conqueror. Here, again, Tiglath-pileser had merely to show himself in
+ order to re-establish the supremacy of Assyria: the races of the plain,
+ for many years familiar with defeat, made no pretence of serious
+ resistance, but bowed their necks beneath a fresh yoke almost without
+ protest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkBimage-0015" id="linkBimage-0015">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/218.jpg" width="100%"
+ alt="218.jpg Principal Pak of Mount Bikni (demavend) " />
+ </div>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Drawn by Boudier, from a photograph by M. de Morgan.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Having thus secured his rear from attack for some years at any rate,
+ Tiglath-pileser no longer hesitated to try conclusions with Urartu. The
+ struggle in which he now deliberately engaged could not fail to be a
+ decisive one; for Urartu, buoyed up and borne on the wave of some fifty
+ years of prosperity, had almost succeeded in reaching first rank among the
+ Asiatic powers: one more victory over Nineveh, and it would become&mdash;for
+ how long none might say&mdash;undisputed mistress of the whole of Asia.
+ Assyria, on the other hand, had reached a. point where its whole future
+ hung upon a single issue of defeat or victory. The prestige with which the
+ brilliant campaigns of Assur-nazir-pal and Shalmaneser III. had invested
+ its name, if somewhat diminished, had still survived its recent reverses,
+ and the terror inspired by its arms was so great even among races who had
+ witnessed them from a distance, that the image of Assyria rose
+ involuntarily before the eyes of the Hebrew prophets as that of the
+ avenger destined to punish Israel for its excesses.*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Cf. Amos vi. 4.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ No doubt, during the last few reigns its prosperity had waned and its
+ authority over distant provinces had gradually become relaxed; but now the
+ old dynasty, worn out by its own activity, had given place to a new one,
+ and with this change of rulers the tide of ill-fortune was, perhaps, at
+ last about to turn. At such a juncture, a successful campaign meant full
+ compensation for all past disasters and the attainment of a firmer
+ position than had ever yet been held; whereas another reverse, following
+ on those from which the empire had already suffered, would render their
+ effect tenfold more deadly, and, by letting loose the hatred of those whom
+ fear alone still held in check, complete its overthrow. It was essential,
+ therefore, before entering on the struggle, to weigh well every chance of
+ victory, and to take every precaution by which adverse contingencies might
+ be, as far as possible, eliminated. The army, encouraged by its success in
+ the two preceding campaigns, was in excellent fighting order, and ready to
+ march in any direction without a moment&rsquo;s hesitation, confident in its
+ ability to defeat the forces of Urartu as it had defeated those of the
+ Medes and Aramæans; but the precise point of attack needed careful
+ consideration. Tiglath-pileser must have been sorely tempted to take the
+ shortest route, challenge the enemy at his most vulnerable point on the
+ shores of Lake Van, and by a well-aimed thrust deal him a blow from which
+ he would never, or only by slow degrees, recover. But this vital region of
+ Urartu, as we have already pointed out, presented the greatest
+ difficulties of access. The rampart of mountain and forest by which it was
+ protected on the Assyrian side could only be traversed by means of a few
+ byways, along which bands of guerrillas could slip down easily enough to
+ the banks of the Tigris, but which were quite impassable to any army in
+ full marching order, hampered by its horses, chariots, and baggage-train:
+ compelled to thread its way, with columns unduly extended, through the
+ woods and passes of an unknown country, which daily use had long made
+ familiar to its adversaries, it would have run the risk of being cut to
+ pieces man by man a dozen times before it could hope to range its
+ disciplined masses on the field of battle. Former Assyrian invasions had,
+ as a general rule, taken an oblique course towards some of the spurs of
+ this formidable chain, and had endeavoured to neutralise its defences by
+ outflanking them, either by proceeding westwards along the basins of the
+ Supnat and the Arzania, or eastwards through the countries bordering on
+ Lake Urumiah; but even this method presented too many difficulties and too
+ little certainty of success to warrant Tiglath-pileser in staking the
+ reviving fortunes of his empire on its adoption. He rightly argued that
+ Sharduris would be most easily vulnerable in those provinces whose
+ allegiance to him was of recent date, and he resolved to seek out his foe
+ in the heart of Northern Syria.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkBimage-0016" id="linkBimage-0016">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/221.jpg" width="100%"
+ alt="221.jpg View of the Mountains Which Guard The Southern Border of Uartu " />
+ </div>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Drawn by Boudier, from a photograph by M. Binder. Taken at
+ Julamerk, near the junction of the mountain tracks leading
+ from the Zab valley to the south-eastern corner of the basin
+ of Lake Van.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ There, if anywhere, every chance was in his favour and against the
+ Armenian. The scene of operations, while it had long been familiar to his
+ own generals and soldiers, was, on the other hand, entirely new ground to
+ those of the enemy; the latter, though unsurpassed in mountain warfare,
+ lost much of their superiority on the plains, and could not, with all
+ their courage, make up for their lack of experience. Moreover, it must not
+ be forgotten that a victory on the banks of the Afrîn or the Orontes would
+ have more important results than a success gained in the neighbourhood of
+ the lakes or of Urartu. Not only would it free the Assyrians from the only
+ one of their enemies whom they had any cause to fear, but it would also
+ bring back the Hittite kings to their allegiance, and restore the Assyrian
+ supremacy over the wealthiest regions of Western Asia: they would thus
+ disable Urartu and reconquer Syria at one and the same time.
+ Tiglath-pileser, therefore, crossed the Euphrates in the spring of 743
+ B.C., neither Matîlu of Agusi, Kushtashpi of Kummukh, nor their allies
+ daring to interfere with his progress. He thus advanced as far as Arpad,
+ and, in the first moment of surprise, the town threw open its gates before
+ him.*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Different writers have given different versions of this
+ campaign. Some think that Arpad resisted, and that Tiglath-
+ pileser was laying siege to it, when the arrival of
+ Sharduris compelled him to retire; others prefer to believe
+ that Arpad was still in the hands of the Assyrians, and that
+ Tiglath-pileser used it as his base of operations. The
+ formula ina Arpadda in the Eponym Canon proves that Tiglath-
+ pileser was certainly in Arpad: since Arpad belonged to the
+ Bit-Agusi, and they were the allies or vassals of Sharduris,
+ we must assume, as I have done here, that in the absence of
+ the Urartians they did not dare to resist the Assyrians, and
+ opened their gates to them.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ There, while he was making ready to claim the homage of the surrounding
+ countries, he learnt that Sharduris was hastening up to the rescue. He at
+ once struck his camp and marched out to meet his rival, coming up with him
+ in the centre of Kummukh, not far from the Euphrates, between Kishtân and
+ Khalpi. Sharduris was at the head of his Syrian contingents, including the
+ forces of Agusi, Melitene, Kummukh, and Gurgum&mdash;a formidable army,
+ probably superior in point of numbers to that of the Assyrians. The
+ struggle lasted a whole day, and in the course of it the two kings,
+ catching sight of one another on the field of battle, engaged in personal
+ combat: at last, towards evening, the chariots and cavalry of Urartu gave
+ way and the rout began. The victors made their way into the camp at the
+ heels of their flying enemies. Sharduris abandoned his chariot, and could
+ find nothing but a mare to aid him in his flight; he threw himself upon
+ her back, careless of the ridicule at that time attached to the use of
+ such a mount in Eastern countries,* fled at a gallop all through the
+ night, hard pressed by a large body of cavalry, crossed the hills of
+ Sibak, and with much difficulty reached the bridge over the Euphrates.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * So, too, later on, in the time of Sargon, Rusas, when
+ defeated, gets on the back of a mare and rides off.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ His pursuers drew rein on the river-bank, and Sharduris re-entered his
+ kingdom in safety. He had lost nearly 73,000 men, killed or taken
+ prisoners, in addition to his chariots, and nearly the whole train of
+ horses, asses, servants, and artisans attached to his army; he left his
+ tent still standing, and those who were first to enter it laid hands on
+ his furniture and effects, his royal ornaments, his bed and portable
+ throne, with its cushions and bearing-poles, none of which had he found
+ time to take with him. Tiglath-pileser burnt them all on the spot as a
+ thank-offering, to the gods who had so signally favoured him; the bed
+ alone he retained, in order that he might dedicate it as a trophy to the
+ goddess Ishtar of Nineveh.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had covered himself with glory, and might well be proud of his
+ achievement, yet the victory was in no way a decisive one. The damage
+ inflicted on the allies, considerable though it was, had cost him dear:
+ the forces left to him were not sufficient to enable him to finish the
+ campaign, and extort oaths of allegiance from the Syrian princes before
+ they had recovered from the first shock of defeat. He returned to Nineveh,
+ and spent the whole winter in reorganising his troops; while his enemies,
+ on the other hand, made preparations to repel the attack energetically.
+ Sharduris could not yet venture outside his mountain strongholds, but the
+ hope of being reinforced by him, as soon as he had got together another
+ army, encouraged the Syrian kings to remain faithful to him in spite of
+ his reverses.*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The part played by Sharduris in the events of the years
+ which followed, passing mention of which was made by
+ Winckler (<i>Gesch. Bab. und Ass</i>,, pp. 224, 225), have been
+ fully dealt with by Belck and Lehmann (Chaldische
+ <i>Forschungen, in Veriiand. der Berliner anthropol.
+ Gesellschaft</i>, 1895, pp. 325-336).
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkBimage-0017" id="linkBimage-0017">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="figleft" style="width:47%;">
+ <img width="100%" src="images/226.jpg"
+ alt="226a.jpg Plan of the Ancient City Of Zinjirli. " />
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+A reproduction by Faucher-Gudin
+of the first plan published
+by Luschan.
+</pre>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Matîlu of Agusi, unable to carry the day against the Assyrians in the open
+ field, distributed his men among his towns, and resisted all attacks with
+ extraordinary persistence, confident that Sharduris would at length come
+ to help him, and with this hope he held out for three years in his town of
+ Arpad. This protracted resistance need no longer astonish us, now that we
+ know, from observations made on the spot, the marvellous skill displayed
+ in the fortification of these Asiatic towns. The ruins of Arpad have yet
+ to be explored, but those of Samalla have been excavated, and show us the
+ methods adopted for the defence of a royal residence about the middle of
+ the century with which we are now concerned. The practice of building
+ citadels on a square or rectangular plan, which prevailed so largely under
+ the Egyptian rule, had gradually gone out of fashion as the knowledge of
+ engineering advanced, and the use of mines and military engines had been
+ more fully developed among the nations of Western Asia. It was found that
+ the heavily fortified angles of the enclosing wall merely presented so
+ many weak points, easy to attack but difficult to defend, no matter how
+ carefully they might be protected by an accumulation of obstacles. In the
+ case of fortresses built on a plain, where the plan was not modified by
+ the nature of the site, the enclosing wall was generally round or oval in
+ shape, and free from useless angles which might detract from its strength.
+ The walls were surmounted by battlements, and flanked at short intervals
+ by round or square towers, the tops of which rose but little, if indeed at
+ all, above the level of the curtain. In front of this main wall was a
+ second lower one, also furnished with towers and battlements, which
+ followed the outline of the first all the way round at an interval of some
+ yards, thus acting as a sort of continuous screen to it. The gates were
+ little less than miniature citadels built into each line of ramparts; the
+ gate of the outer wall was often surrounded by lower outworks, two square
+ bastions and walls enclosing an outer quadrangle which had to be crossed
+ before the real gate was reached.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When a breach had been made in this double enclosure, though the town
+ itself might be taken, the labours of the attacking force were not yet
+ over. In the very centre of the place, on a sort of artificial mound or
+ knoll, stood the royal castle, and resistance on the part of its garrison
+ would make it necessary for the enemy to undertake a second siege no less
+ deadly and protracted than the first. The keep of Zinjirli had only a
+ single gate approached by a narrow causeway.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkBimage-0018" id="linkBimage-0018">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/226b.jpg" width="100%"
+ alt="226b.jpg One of the Gates Of Zinjirli Restored " />
+ </div>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Reproduction by Faucher-Gudin of the sketch published by
+ Luschan.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Within, it was divided by walls into five compartments, each of which was
+ independent of the rest, and had to be attacked separately. Ma-tîlu knew
+ he could hope for no mercy at the hands of the Assyrians; he therefore
+ struggled on to the last, and when at length obliged to surrender, in the
+ year 740 B.C., he paid for his obstinacy by the loss of his throne, and
+ perhaps also of his life.*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Our knowledge of these events is imperfect, our only
+ information being derived from the very scanty details given
+ in the <i>Eponym Canon</i>; up to the present we can do no more
+ than trace the general course of events.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkBimage-0019" id="linkBimage-0019">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/227.jpg" width="100%"
+ alt="227.jpg Bird&rsquo;s-eye View of the Royal Castle Of Zinjirli As Restored " />
+ </div>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from the plan published in Luschan.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The inaction of Sharduris clearly showed that he was no longer in a
+ position to protect his allies, and that the backbone of his kingdom was
+ broken; the kings who had put faith in his help now gave him up, and
+ ambassadors flocked in from all parts, even from those which were not as
+ yet directly threatened. Kushtashpi of Kummukh, Tark-hulara of Gturgum,
+ Pisiris of Carchemish, Uriaîk of Kuî, came to Arpad in person to throw
+ themselves at the conqueror&rsquo;s feet, bringing with them offerings of gold
+ and silver, of lead and iron, of ivory, carved and in the tusk, of purple,
+ and of dyed or embroidered stuffs, and were confirmed in the possession of
+ their respective territories; Hiram II. of Tyre, moreover, and Eezin of
+ Damascus sent their greetings to him.*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * <i>Annals of Tiglath-pileser III</i>., where the statement at
+ the close indicates that Tiglath-pileser received the
+ tributary kings of Syria &ldquo;in Arpad,&rdquo; after he had captured
+ that city.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The Patina, who in days gone by had threatened the fortunes of
+ Assur-nazir-pal, once again endeavoured to pose as the rivals of Assyria,
+ and Tutammû, sovereign of Unki, the most daring of the minor states into
+ which the Patina had been split up, declined to take part in the
+ demonstrations made by his neighbours. Tiglath-pileser marched on Kinalua,
+ sacked it, built a fortress there, and left a governor and garrison behind
+ him: Agusi and Unki henceforth sank down to the level of mere provinces,
+ administered by royal officers in the king&rsquo;s name, and permanently
+ occupied by Assyrian troops.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Northern Syria was thus again incorporated with the empire, but Urartu,
+ although deprived of the resources with which Syria had supplied it,
+ continued to give cause for apprehension; in 739 B.C., however, a large
+ proportion of the districts of Naîri, to which it still clung, was wrested
+ from it, and a fortress was built at Ulluba, with a view to providing a
+ stable base of operations at this point on the northern frontier. A
+ rebellion, instigated, it may be, by his own agents, recalled
+ Tiglath-pileser to the Amanus in the year 738. The petty kings who shared
+ with Assyria the possession of the mountains and plains of the Afrîn could
+ not succeed in living at peace with one another, and every now and then
+ their disputes broke out into open warfare. Samalla was at that time
+ subject to a family of which the first members known to history, Qaral and
+ Panammu, shared Yaudi equally between them. Barzur, son of Panammu I., had
+ reigned there since about 765 B.C., and there can be little doubt that he
+ must have passed through the same vicissitudes as his neighbours; faithful
+ to Urartu as long as Sharduris kept the upper hand, and to Assyria as soon
+ as Tiglath-pileser had humiliated Urartu, he had been killed in a skirmish
+ by some rival. His son, Panammu IL, came to the throne merely as a nominee
+ of his suzerain, and seems to have always rendered him faithful service;
+ unfortunately, Yaudi was no longer subject to the house of Panammu, but
+ obeyed the rule of a certain Azriyahu, who chafed at the presence of an
+ alien power.*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Azriyahu of Yaudi was identified with Azariah of Judah by
+ G. Smith, and this identification was for a long time
+ accepted without question by most Assyriologists. After a
+ violent controversy it has finally been shown that the
+ <i>Yaudi</i> of Tiglath-pileser III.&lsquo;a inscriptions ought to be
+ identified with the <i>Yadi</i> or <i>Yaudi</i> of the Zinjirli
+ inscriptions, and consequently that Azriyahu was not king of
+ Judah, but a king of Northern Syria. This view appears to me
+ to harmonise so well with what remains of the texts, and
+ with our knowledge of the events, that I have had no
+ hesitation in adopting it.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Azriyahu took advantage of the events which kept Tiglath-pileser fully
+ occupied in the east, to form a coalition in favour of himself among the
+ states on the banks of the Orontes, including some seventeen provinces,
+ dependencies of Hamath, and certain turbulent cities of Northern
+ Phoenicia, such as Byblos, Arka, Zimyra, Usnû, Siannu, Coele-Syria, and
+ even Hadrach itself. It is not quite clear whether Damascus and the
+ Hebrews took part in this movement. Jeroboam had died in 740, after a
+ prosperous reign of forty-one years, and on his death Israel seems to have
+ fallen under a cloud; six months later, his son Zechariah was assassinated
+ at Ibleam by Shallum, son of Jabesh, and the prophecy of Amos, in which he
+ declared that the house of Jeroboam should fall beneath the sword of
+ Jahveh,* was fulfilled. Shallum himself reigned only one month: two other
+ competitors had presented themselves immediately after his crime;** the
+ ablest of these, Menahem, son of Gadi, had come from Tirzah to Samaria,
+ and, after suppressing his rivals, laid hands on the crown.*** He must
+ have made himself master of the kingdom little by little, the success of
+ his usurpation being entirely due to the ruthless energy invariably and
+ everywhere displayed by him; as, for instance, when Tappuakh (Tiphsah)
+ refused to open its gates at his summons, he broke into the town and
+ slaughtered its inhabitants.****
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Amos vii. 9.
+
+ ** The nameless prophet, whose prediction is handed down to
+ us in Zech. ix.&mdash;xi., speaks of three shepherds cut off by
+ Javeh in one month (xi. 8); two of these were Zechariah and
+ Shallum; the third is not mentioned in the Book of Kings.
+
+ *** 2 Kings xiv. 23-29; xv. 8-15.
+
+ **** 2 Kings xv. 16. The Massoretic text gives the name of
+ the town as Tipsah, but the Septuagint has Taphôt, which led
+ Thenius to suggest Tappuakh as an emendation of Tipsah:
+ Stade prefers the emendation Tirzah.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ All the defects of organisation, all the sources of weakness, which for
+ the last half-century had been obscured by the glories of Jeroboam II.,
+ now came to the surface, and defied all human efforts to avert their
+ consequences. &ldquo;Then,&rdquo; as Hosea complains, &ldquo;is the iniquity of Ephraim
+ discovered, and the wickedness of Samaria; for they commit falsehood: and
+ the thief entereth in, and the troop of robbers spoileth without. And they
+ consider not in their hearts that I (Jahveh) remember all their
+ wickedness: now have their own doings beset them about; they are before My
+ face. They make the king glad with their wickedness and the princes with
+ their lies. They are all adulterers; they are as an oven heated by the
+ baker.... They... devour their judges; all their kings are fallen; there
+ is none among them that calleth unto Me.&rdquo; * In Judah, Azariah (Uzziah) had
+ at first shown some signs of ability; he had completed the conquest of
+ Idumsea, Edom, and had fortified Elath,** but he suddenly found himself
+ stricken with leprosy, and was obliged to hand over the reins of
+ government of Jotham.***
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Sos. vii. 1-4, 7.
+
+ ** 2 Kings xiv. 22; in 2 Ghron. xxvi. 6-15 he is credited
+ with the reorganisation of the army and of the Judsean
+ fortress, in addition to campaigns against the Philistines
+ and Arabs.
+
+ *** 2 Kings xv. 5; cf. 2 Ghron. xxvi. 19-21. Azariah is also
+ abbreviated into Uzziah. Tappuakh was a town situated on the
+ borders of Ephraim and Manasseh (Josh. xvi. 8; xvii. 7, 8).
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ His long life had been passed uneventfully, and without any disturbance,
+ under the protection of Jeroboam; but the very same defects which had led
+ to the ruin of Israel were at work also in Judah, and Menahem, in spite of
+ his enfeebled condition, had nothing to fear in this direction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkBimage-0020" id="linkBimage-0020">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/232.jpg" width="100%"
+ alt="232.jpg Tiglath-pileser Iii. In his State Chariot " />
+ </div>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a sketch published by Layard.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The danger which menaced him came rather from the east and the north,
+ where Damascus, aroused from its state of lethargy by Rezôn [Rezin] II.,
+ had again begun to strive after the hegemony of Syria.*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The name of this king, written Rezin in the Bible (2 Kings
+ xv. 37; xvi. 5, 6, 9), is given as <i>Razunu</i> in the Assyrian
+ texts; he was therefore Ilezôn II. A passage in the <i>Annals</i>
+ seems to indicate that Rezin&rsquo;s father was prince of a city
+ dependent on Damascus, not king of Damascus itself;
+ unfortunately the text is too much mutilated to warrant us
+ in forming any definite conclusion on this point.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ All these princes, when they found that the ambition of Tiglath-pileser
+ threatened to interfere with their own intrigues, were naturally tempted
+ to combine against him, and were willing to postpone to a more convenient
+ season the settlement of their own domestic quarrrels. But Tiglath-pileser
+ did not give them time for this; he routed Azriyahu, and laid waste
+ Kullani,* the chief centre of revolt, ravaged the valley of the Orontes,
+ and carried off the inhabitants of several towns, replacing them with
+ prisoners taken the year before during his campaign in Naîri.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Kullani is the Calno or Calneh mentioned by Isaiah (x. 9)
+ and Amos (vi. 2), which lay somewhere between Arpad and
+ Hamath; the precise spot is not yet known.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ After this feat the whole of Syria surrendered. Rezin and Menahem were
+ among the first to tender their homage, and the latter paid a thousand
+ talents of silver for the <i>firman</i> which definitely confirmed his
+ tenure of the throne; the princes of Tyre, Byblos, Hamath, Carchemish,
+ Milid, Tabal, and several others followed their example&mdash;even a
+ certain Zabibi, queen of an Arab tribe, feeling compelled to send her
+ gifts to the conqueror.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A sudden rising among the Aramæan tribes on the borders of Elam obliged
+ Tiglath-pileser to depart before he had time to take full advantage of his
+ opportunity. The governors of Lullumi and Naîri promptly suppressed the
+ outbreak, and, collecting the most prominent of the rebels together, sent
+ them to the king in order that he might distribute them throughout the
+ cities of Syria: a colony of 600 prisoners from the town of Amlati was
+ established in the territory of Damaunu, 5400 from Dur were sent to the
+ fortresses of Unki, Kunalia, Khuzarra, Taî, Tarmanazi, Kulmadara,
+ Khatatirra, and Sagillu, while another 10,000 or so were scattered along
+ the Phoenician seaboard and among the adjacent mountains. The revolt had
+ meanwhile spread to the nations of Media, where it was, perhaps, fomented
+ by the agents of Urartu; and for the second time within seven years (737
+ B.C.) Tiglath-pileser trampled underfoot the countries over which he had
+ ridden in triumph at the beginning of his career&mdash;the Bît-Kapsi, the
+ Bît-Sangibuti, the Bît-Tazzakki, the Bît-Zulazash, the Bît-Matti, and
+ Umliash. The people of Upash, among the Bît-Kapsi, entrenched themselves
+ on the slopes of Mount Abirus; but he carried their entrenchments by
+ storm. Ushuru of Taddiruta and Burdadda of Nirutakta were seized with
+ alarm, and hid themselves in their mountain gorges; but he climbed up in
+ pursuit of them, drove them out of their hiding-places, seized their
+ possessions, and made them prisoners. Similar treatment was meted out to
+ all those who proved refractory; some he despoiled, others he led captive,
+ and &ldquo;bursting upon the remainder like the downpour of Bammân,&rdquo; permitted
+ none of them to escape. He raised trophies all along his line of march: in
+ Bau, a dependency of Bît-Ishtar, he set up a pointed javelin dedicated to
+ Ninip, on which he had engraved a panegyric of the virtues of his master
+ Assur; near Shilkhazi, a town founded, in bygone days, by the Babylonians,
+ he erected a statue of himself, and a pillar consecrated to Marduk in
+ Til-ashshur. In the following year he again attacked Urartu and occupied
+ the mountain province of Nâl, which formed one of its outlying defences
+ (736). The year after he entered on the final struggle with Sharduris, and
+ led the flower of his forces right under the walls of Dhuspas,* the
+ enemy&rsquo;s capital.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The name is written Turuspas in the inscriptions of
+ Tiglath-pileser III.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Dhuspas really consisted of two towns joined together. One of these,
+ extending over the plain by the banks of the Alaîs and in the direction of
+ the lake, was surrounded by fertile gardens and villas, in which the
+ inhabitants spent the summer at their ease. It was protected by an
+ isolated mass of white and red nummulitic chalk, the steep sides of which
+ are seamed with fissures and tunnelled with holes and caverns from top to
+ bottom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkBimage-0021" id="linkBimage-0021">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/235.jpg" width="100%"
+ alt="235.jpg the Rock and Citadel of Van at The Present Day " />
+ </div>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Drawn by Boudier, from a photograph by M. Binder.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The plateau in which it terminates, and which rises to a height of 300
+ feet at its loftiest point, is divided into three main terraces, each
+ completely isolated from the other two, and forming, should occasion
+ arise, an independent fortress, Ishpuinis, Menuas, Argistis, and Sharduris
+ II. had laboured from generation to generation to make this stronghold
+ impregnable, and they had succeeded in the attempt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkBimage-0022" id="linkBimage-0022">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/236.jpg" width="100%"
+ alt="236.jpg Entrance to the Modern Citadel of Van from The Westward " />
+ </div>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Drawn by Boudier, from a photograph by M. Binder.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ There can be little or no doubt, however, that this is merely a variant of
+ the name usually written as Tuspas, Tuspana, Dhuspana, the Thospia of
+ classical times; properly speaking, it was the capital of Biainas. The
+ only access to it was from the western side, by a narrow bridle-path,
+ which almost overhung the precipice as it gradually mounted to the summit.
+ This path had been partially levelled, and flanked with walls and towers
+ which commanded the approach throughout its whole length; on the platforms
+ at the summit a citadel had been constructed, together with a palace,
+ temples, and storehouses, in which was accumulated a sufficient supply of
+ arms and provisions to enable the garrison to tire out the patience of any
+ ordinary foe; treason or an unusually prolonged siege could only get the
+ better of such a position. Tiglath-pileser invested the citadel and
+ ravaged its outskirts without pity, hoping, no doubt, that he would thus
+ provoke the enemy into capitulating. Day after day, Sharduris, perched in
+ his lofty eyrie, saw his leafy gardens laid bare under the hatchet, and
+ his villages and the palaces of his nobles light up the country round as
+ far as the eye could reach: he did not flinch, however, and when all had
+ been laid waste, the Assyrians set up a statue of their king before the
+ principal gate of the fortress, broke up their camp, and leisurely
+ retired. They put the country to fire and sword, destroyed its cities, led
+ away every man and beast they could find into captivity, and then returned
+ to Nineveh laden with plunder. Urartu was still undaunted, and Sharduris
+ remained king as before; but he was utterly spent, and his power had
+ sustained a blow from which it never recovered. He had played against
+ Assur with the empire of the whole Asiatic world as the stake, and the
+ dice had gone against him: compelled to renounce his great ambitions from
+ henceforth, he sought merely to preserve his independence. Since then,
+ Armenia has more than once challenged fortune, but always with the same
+ result; it fared no better under Tigranes in the Roman epoch, than under
+ Sharduris in the time of the Assyrians; it has been within an ace of
+ attaining the goal of its ambitions, then at the last moment its strength
+ has failed, and it has been forced to retire worsted from the struggle.
+ Its position prevented it from exercising very wide influence; hidden away
+ in a corner of Asia at the meeting-point of three or four great mountain
+ ranges, near the source of four rivers, all flowing in different
+ directions, it has lacked that physical homogeneity without which no
+ people, however gifted, can hope to attain supremacy; nature has doomed it
+ to remain, like Syria, split up into compartments of unequal size and
+ strength, which give shelter to half a score of independent
+ principalities, each one of them perpetually jealous of the rest. From
+ time to time it is invested with a semblance of unity, but for the most
+ part it drags on an uneventful existence, dismembered into as many
+ fragments as there happen to be powerful states around it, its only chance
+ of complete reunion lying in the possibility of one or other of these
+ attaining sufficient predominance to seize the share of the others and
+ absorb it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The subjection of Urartu freed Assyria from the only rival which could at
+ this moment have disputed its supremacy on the banks of the Euphrates and
+ the Tigris. The other nations on its northern and eastern frontiers as yet
+ possessed no stability; they might, in the course of a passing outburst,
+ cut an army to pieces or annex part of a province, but they lacked
+ strength to follow up their advantage, and even their most successful
+ raids were sure, in the long run, to lead to terrible reprisals, in which
+ their gains were two or three times outweighed by their losses in men and
+ treasure. For nearly a hundred years Nineveh found its hands free, and its
+ rulers were able to concentrate all their energy on two main points of the
+ frontier&mdash;to the south-west on Syria and Egypt, to the south-east on
+ Chaldæa and Elam. Chaldæa gave little trouble, but the condition of Syria
+ presented elements of danger. The loyalty of its princes was more apparent
+ than real; they had bowed their necks after the fall of Unki, but
+ afterwards, as the years rolled on without any seeming increase in the
+ power of Assyria, they again took courage and began once more to quarrel
+ among themselves. Menahem had died, soon after he had paid his tribute
+ (737 B.c.); his son Pekahiah had been assassinated less than two years
+ later (736)* and his murderer, Pekah, son of Remaliah, was none too firmly
+ seated on the throne. Anarchy was triumphant throughout Israel; so much so
+ that Judah seized the opportunity for throwing off the yoke it had borne
+ for well-nigh a hundred years. Pekah, conscious of his inability to
+ suppress the rebellion, called in Rezin to help him. The latter was
+ already on the way when Jotham was laid with his fathers (736 B.C.), and
+ it was Ahaz, the son of Jotham, who had to bear the brant of the assault.
+ He was barely twenty years old, a volatile, presumptuous, and daring
+ youth, who was not much dismayed by his position.** Jotham had repaired
+ the fortifications of Jerusalem, which had been left in a lamentable state
+ ever since the damage done to them in the reign of Amaziah;*** his
+ successor now set to work to provide the city with the supply of water
+ indispensable for its defence,**** and, after repairing the ancient
+ aqueducts, conceived the idea of constructing a fresh one in the spur of
+ Mount Sion, which extends southwards.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * 2 Kings xv. 22-26. The chronology of the events which took
+ place between the death of Menahem and the fall of Samaria,
+ as presented by the biblical documents in the state in which
+ they have been transmitted to us, is radically inaccurate:
+ following the example of most recent historians, I have
+ adhered exclusively to the data furnished by the Assyrian
+ texts, merely indicating in the notes the reasons which have
+ led me to adopt certain dates in preference to others.
+
+ ** 2 Kings xv. 38, xvi. 1, 2. Ahaz is called Iaukhazi, i.e.
+ Jehoahaz, in the Assyrian texts, and this would seem to have
+ been the original form of the name.
+
+ *** The restoration of the walls of Jerusalem by Jotham is
+ only mentioned in 2 Chron. xxvii. 3.
+
+ **** We may deduce this from the words of Isaiah (vii. 3),
+ where he represents Ahaz &ldquo;at the end of the conduit of the
+ upper pool, in the highway of the fuller&rsquo;s field.&rdquo; Ahaz had
+ gone there to inspect the works intended for the defence of
+ the aqueduct.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ As time pressed, the work was begun simultaneously at each end; the
+ workmen had made a wide detour underground, probably in order to avoid the
+ caves in which the kings of Judah had been laid to rest ever since the
+ time of David,* and they were beginning to despair of ever uniting the two
+ sections of the tunnel, when they suddenly heard one another through the
+ wall of rock which divided them. A few blows with the pick-axe opened a
+ passage between them, and an inscription on the wall adjoining the
+ entrance on the east side, the earliest Hebrew inscription we possess, set
+ forth the vicissitudes of the work for the benefit of future generations.
+ It was scarcely completed when Kezin, who had joined forces with Pekah at
+ Samaria, came up and laid regular siege to Jerusalem.**
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * This is the highly ingenious hypothesis put forward and
+ defended with much learning by Clermont-Ganneau, in order to
+ account for the large curve described by the tunnel.
+
+ ** 2 Kings xvi. 5; cf. 2 Chron. xxviii. 5-8. It was on this
+ occasion that Isaiah delivered the prophecies which, after
+ subsequent revision, furnished the bulk of chaps, vi. 1&mdash;x. 4.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The allies did not propose to content themselves with exacting tribute
+ from the young king; they meant to dethrone him, and to set up in his room
+ a son of Tabeel, whom they had brought with them; they were nevertheless
+ obliged to retire without effecting a breach in his defences and leave the
+ final assault till the following campaign. Rezin, however, had done as
+ much injury as he could to Judah; he had laid waste both mountain and
+ plain, had taken Elath by storm and restored it to the Edomites,* and had
+ given a free hand to the Philistines (735).**
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * 2 Kings xvi. 6, where the Massoretic text states that the
+ Syrians retained the town, while the Septuagint maintain
+ that he restored it to the Edomites.
+
+ ** Chron. xxviii. 18, where a list is given of the towns
+ wrested from Judah by the Philistines. The delight felt by
+ the Philistines at the sight of Judah&rsquo;s abasement seems to
+ be referred to in the short prophecy of Isaiah (xiv. 29-32),
+ wrongly ascribed to the year of Ahaz&rsquo;s death.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkBimage-0023" id="linkBimage-0023">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/241.jpg" width="100%"
+ alt="241.jpg Hebrew Inscription on the Siloam Aqueduct " />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkBimage-0024" id="linkBimage-0024">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="figleft" style="width:22%;">
+ <img width="100%" src="images/242.jpg" alt="242.jpg Bronze " />
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Drawn by Faucher-
+Gudin, from
+Lanzone&rsquo;s statuette.
+</pre>
+ </div>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ A direct reproduction from a plaster cast now in Paris. The
+ inscription discovered by Schick, in 1880, has since been
+ mutilated, and only the fragments are preserved in the
+ museum at Constantinople. Some writers think it was composed
+ in the time of Hezekiah; for my own part, I agree with Stade
+ in assigning it to the period of Ahaz.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The whole position seemed so hopeless, that a section of the people began
+ to propose surrendering to the mercy of the Syrians.*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * This seems to be an obvious inference from the words of
+ Isaiah (viii. 6): &ldquo;Forasmuch as this people hath refused the
+ waters of Shiloah that go softly, <i>and lose courage because
+ of Rezin and Bemaliali&rsquo;s son</i>.&rdquo; [The R.V. reads &ldquo;<i>rejoice
+ in</i>&rdquo; Rezin, etc.&mdash;Tr.]
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Ahaz looked around him in search of some one on whom he might call for
+ help. All his immediate neighbours were hostile; but behind them, in the
+ background, were two great powers who might be inclined to listen to his
+ appeal&mdash;Egypt and Assyria. Ever since the expedition of Sheshonq into
+ Asia, Egypt seemed to have lost all interest in foreign politics. Osorkon
+ had not inherited the warlike propensities of his father, and his son,
+ Takelôti I., and his grandson, Osorkon II., followed his example.*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The chronology of this period is still very uncertain, and
+ the stelae of the Serapseum, which enable us to fix the
+ order of the various reigns, yield no information as to
+ their length. Sheshonq I. did not reign much longer than
+ twenty-one years, which is his latest known date, and we may
+ take the reign of twenty-one years attributed to him by
+ Manetho as being substantially correct. The latest dates we
+ possess are as follows: Osorkon I., twelfth year, and
+ Takelôti I., sixth year or seventh year. Lastly, we have a
+ twenty-ninth year in the case of Osorkon II., with a
+ reference in the case of the twenty-eighth year to the fifth
+ year of a Takelôti whose first cartouche is missing, and who
+ perhaps died before his father and co-regent. In Manetho,
+ Osorkon I. is credited with a reign of fifteen years, and
+ his three next successors with a total of twenty-five years
+ between them, which is manifestly incorrect, since the
+ monuments give twenty-nine years, or twenty-three at the
+ very least, if we take into account the double date in the
+ case of the first two of these kings. The wisest course
+ seems to be to allow forty-five years to Osorkon and his two
+ successors: if Sheshonq, as I believe, died in 924, the
+ fifty years allotted to the next three Pharaohs would bring
+ us down to 880, and it is in this year that I am, for the
+ present, inclined to place the death of Osorkon II.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ These monarchs regarded themselves as traditionary suzerains of the
+ country of Kharu, i.e. of Israel, Judah, Ammon, and Moab, and their
+ authority may perhaps have been recognised by the Philistines in the main,
+ but they seldom stirred from their own territory, and contented themselves
+ with protecting their frontiers against the customary depredations of the
+ Libyan and Asiatic nomads.*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Repressive measures of this kind are evidently referred to
+ in passages similar to those in which Osorkon II. boasts of
+ having &ldquo;overthrown beneath his feet the Upper and Lower
+ Lotanu,&rdquo; and speaks of the exploits of the sons of Queen
+ Kalamâît against certain tribes whose name, though
+ mutilated, seems to have been Libyan in character.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkBimage-0025" id="linkBimage-0025">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/243.jpg" width="100%"
+ alt="243.jpg the Great Temple of Bubastis Duringnaville&rsquo;s Excavations " />
+ </div>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Drawn by Boudier, from a photograph by Naville.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Under their rule, Egypt enjoyed fifty years of profound peace, which was
+ spent in works of public utility, especially in the Delta, where, thanks
+ to their efforts, Bubastis came to be one of the most splendid among the
+ cities of secondary importance.*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * All our knowledge of the history of the temple of Bubastis
+ dates from Naville&rsquo;s excavations.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Its temple, which had been rebuilt by Ramses II. and decorated by the
+ Rames-sides, was in a sorry plight when the XXIInd dynasty came into
+ power. Sheshonq I. did little or nothing to it, but Osorkon I. entirely
+ remodelled it, and Osorkon II. added several new halls, including, amongst
+ others, one in which he celebrated, in the twenty-second year of his
+ reign, the festival of his deification. A record of some of the ceremonies
+ observed has come down to us in the mural paintings. There we see the
+ king, in a chapel, consecrating a statue of himself in accordance with the
+ ritual in use since the time of Amenôthes III., and offering the figure
+ devout and earnest worship; all the divinities of Egypt have assembled to
+ witness the enthronement of this new member of their confraternity, and
+ take part in the sacrifices accompanying his consecration. This gathering
+ of the gods is balanced by a human festival, attended by Nubians and
+ Kushites, as well as by the courtiers and populace. The proceedings
+ terminated, apparently, with certain funeral rites, the object being to
+ make the identification of Osorkon with Osiris complete.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkBimage-0026" id="linkBimage-0026">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/244.jpg" width="100%"
+ alt="244.jpg Picture in the Hall of The Harps In The Fifth Tomb " />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ The Egyptian deities served in a double capacity, as gods of the dead as
+ well as of the living, and no exception could be made in favour of the
+ deified Osorkon; while yet living he became an Osiris, and his double was
+ supposed to animate those prophetic statues in which he appeared as a
+ mummy no less than those which represented him as still alive.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkBimage-0027" id="linkBimage-0027">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/245.jpg" width="100%"
+ alt="245.jpg Gate of the Festival Hall at Bubastis " />
+ </div>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a restoration by Naville.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Another temple of small size, also dedicated to Bastîfc or Pasht, which
+ had been built in the time of Ramses II., was enlarged by Osorkon I., and
+ richly endowed with workshops, lands, cattle, slaves, and precious metals:
+ Tumu-Khopri of Heliopolis, to mention but one of the deities worshipped
+ there, received offerings of gold in value by weight.£120,000, and silver
+ ingots worth £12,000.*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * This is the small temple afterwards described by Herodotus
+ as being dedicated to Hermes.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ A country which could afford to indulge in extravagances of this nature
+ must have been in a flourishing condition, and everything goes to prove
+ that Egypt prospered under the rule of the early Bubastite kings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The very same causes, however, which had ruined the Ramessides and the
+ Tanites were now openly compassing the downfall of the Bubastite dynasty.
+ The military feudalism from which it had sprung, suppressed for a time by
+ Sheshonq I., developed almost unchecked under his successors. They had
+ thought to break it up and turn it to their own advantage, by transferring
+ the more important religious functions and the principal fiefs to their
+ own sons or nephews. They governed Memphis through the high priests of
+ Phtah; a prince of the blood represented them at Khmunu,* another at
+ Khninsu** (Heracleopolis), and others in various cities of the Delta, each
+ of them being at the head of several thousand Mashauasha, or Libyan
+ soldiers on whose fidelity they could entirely rely.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * E.g. Namrôti, under Piônkhi-Mîamun, whose rights were such
+ that he adopted the protocol of the Pharaohs.
+
+ ** Stole 1959 of the Serapæum contains the names of five
+ successive princes of this city, the first of whom was
+ Namrôti, son of Osorkon II., and high priest of Thebes; a
+ member of the same family, named Pefzââbastît, had taken
+ cartouches under Osorkon III. of the XXIIIrd dynasty.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Thebes alone had managed to exclude these representatives of the ruling
+ dynasty, and its princes, guided in this particular by the popular
+ prejudice, persistently refused to admit into their bodyguard any but the
+ long-tried Mâzaîu. Moreover, Thebes lost no opportunity of proving itself
+ to be still the most turbulent of the baronies. Its territory had suffered
+ no diminution since the time of Hrihor, and half of Upper Egypt, from
+ Elephantine to Siut, acknowledged its sway.1
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * It is evident that this was so from the first steps taken
+ by Piônkhi-Miamun&rsquo;s generals: they meet the army and fleet
+ of Tafnakhti and the princes of the north right under the
+ walls of Hormopolis, but say nothing of any feudal princes
+ of the south. Their silence is explained if we assume that
+ Thebes, being a dependency of Ethiopia, retained at that
+ date, i.e. in the time of the XXIInd dynasty, the same or
+ nearly the same boundaries which it had won for itself under
+ the XXIst.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkBimage-0028" id="linkBimage-0028">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="figright" style="width:49%;">
+ <img width="100%" src="images/248.jpg"
+ alt="248.jpg Small Bronze Sphinx of Siamun " />
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Drawn by Faucher-Gudin,
+from the original now i
+n the Louvre.
+</pre>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Through all the changes of dynasty its political constitution had remained
+ unaltered; Amon still ruled there supreme as ever, and nothing was done
+ until he had been formally consulted in accordance with ancient usage.
+ Anputi, in spite of his being a son of Sheshonq, was compelled to adopt
+ the title of high priest in order to rule in peace, and had married some
+ daughter or niece of the last of the Painotmu. After his death, good care
+ was taken to prevent the pontificate from passing to one of his children,
+ as this would have re-established a Theban dynasty which might have soon
+ proved hostile to that of Bubastis. To avoid this, Osorkon I. made over
+ the office and fief to his own son Sheshonq. The latter, after a time,
+ thought he was sufficiently powerful to follow the example of Paînotmu and
+ adopt the royal cartouches; but, with all his ambition, he too failed to
+ secure the succession to the male line of his descendants, for Osorkon II.
+ appointed his own son Namrôti, already prince of Khninsu, to succeed him.
+ The amalgamation of these two posts invested the person on whom they were
+ conferred with almost regal power; Khninsu was, indeed, as we know, the
+ natural rampart of Memphis and Lower Egypt against invasion from the
+ south, and its possessor was in a position to control the fate of the
+ empire almost as he pleased. Osorkon must have had weighty reasons for
+ taking a step which placed him practically at the mercy of his son, and,
+ indeed, events proved that but little reliance could be placed on the
+ loyalty of the Thebans, and that energetic measures were imperative to
+ keep them in the path of duty or lead them back to it. The decadence of
+ the ancient capital had sadly increased since the downfall of the
+ descendants of Hrihor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The few public works which they had undertaken, and which Sheshonq I.
+ encouraged to the best of his ability, had been suspended owing to want of
+ money, and the craftsmen who had depended on them for support were
+ suffering from poverty: the makers of small articles of a religious or
+ funerary character, carvers of wood or stone, joiners, painters of
+ mummy-cases, and workers in bronze, alone managed to eke out a bare
+ livelihood, thanks to commissions still given to them by officials
+ attached to the temples. Theban art, which in its best period had excelled
+ in planning its works on a gigantic scale, now gladly devoted itself to
+ the production of mere knick-knacks, in place of the colossal figures of
+ earlier days.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkBimage-0029" id="linkBimage-0029">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/249.jpg" width="100%"
+ alt="249.jpg Ruins of the Temple at Khninsu After Naville&rsquo;s Excavations " />
+ </div>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Drawn by Boudier, from a photograph in Naville. The
+ illustration shows what now remains of the portions of the
+ temple rebuilt in the time of Ramses II.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ We have statuettes some twelve or fifteen inches high, crudely coloured,
+ wooden stelæ, shapeless <i>ushâbti</i> redeemed from ugliness by a coating
+ of superb blue enamel, and, above all, those miniature sphinxes
+ representing queens or kings, which present with two human arms either a
+ table of offerings or a salver decorated with cartouches. The starving
+ populace, its interests and vanity alike mortified by the accession of a
+ northern dynasty, refused to accept the decay of its fortunes with
+ resignation, and this spirit of discontent was secretly fomented by the
+ priests or by members of the numerous families which boasted of their
+ descent from the Eamessides. Although hereditary claims to the throne and
+ the pontificate had died out or lost their force in the male line, they
+ were still persistently urged by the women: consecrated from their birth
+ to the service of Amon, and originally reserved to sing his praises or
+ share his nuptial couch, those of them who married transmitted to their
+ children, and more especially to their daughters, the divine germ which
+ qualified them for the throne. They and their followers never ceased to
+ look for the day when the national deity should shake off his apathy, and,
+ becoming the champion of their cause against the Bubastite or Tanite
+ usurpers, restore their city to the rank and splendour from which it had
+ fallen. Namrôti married one of these Theban princesses, and thus contrived
+ to ward off the danger of revolt during his lifetime; but on his death or
+ disappearance an insurrection broke out. Sheshonq II. had succeeded
+ Osorkon II., and he, in his turn, was followed by Takelôti II. Takelôti
+ chose Kala-mâit, daughter of Namrôti, as his lawful wife, formally
+ recognised her as queen, and set up numerous statues and votive monuments
+ in her honour. But all in vain: this concession failed to conciliate the
+ rebellious, and the whole Thebaid rose against him to a man. In the
+ twelfth year of his reign he entrusted the task of putting down the revolt
+ to his son Osorkon, at the same time conferring upon him the office of
+ high priest. It took several years to repress the rising; defeated in the
+ eleventh year, the rebels still held the field in the fifteenth year of
+ the king, and it was not till some time after, between the fifteenth and
+ twenty-second year of Takelôti II., that they finally laid down their
+ arms.* At the end of this struggle the king&rsquo;s power was quite exhausted,
+ while that of the feudal magnates had proportionately increased. Before
+ long, Egypt was split up into a number of petty states, some of them
+ containing but a few towns, while others, following the example of Thebes,
+ boldly annexed several adjacent nomes. A last remnant of respect for the
+ traditional monarchy kept them from entirely repudiating the authority of
+ Pharaoh. They still kept up an outward show of submission to his rule;
+ they paid him military service when called upon, and appealed to him as
+ umpire in their disputes, without, however, always accepting his rulings,
+ and when they actually came to blows among themselves, were content to
+ exercise their right of private warfare under his direction.** The royal
+ domain gradually became narrowed down to the Memphite nome and the private
+ appanages of the reigning house, and soon it no longer yielded the sums
+ necessary for the due performance of costly religious ceremonies, such as
+ the enthronement or burial of an Apis. The pomp and luxury usually
+ displayed on such occasions grew less and less under the successors of
+ Takelôti II., Sheshonq III., Pimi, and Sheshonq IV.***
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The story of these events is told in several greatly
+ mutilated inscriptions to be found at Karnak on the outer
+ surface of the south wall of the Hall of Columns.
+
+ ** It is evident that this was so, from a romance discovered
+ by Krall.
+
+ *** One need only go to the Louvre and compare the Apis
+ stelae erected during this period with those engraved in the
+ time of the XXVIth dynasty, in order to realise the low ebb
+ to which the later kings of the XXIInd dynasty had fallen:
+ the fact that the chapel and monuments were built under
+ their direction shows that they were still masters of
+ Memphis. We have no authentic date for Sheshonq II., and the
+ twenty-ninth year is the latest known in the case of
+ Takelôti II., but we know that Sheshonq III. reigned fifty-
+ two years, and, after two years of Pimi, we find a reference
+ to the thirty-seventh year of Sheshonq IV. If we allow a
+ round century for these last kings we are not likely to be
+ far out: this would place the close of the Bubastite dynasty
+ somewhere about 780 B.C.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ When the last of these passed away after an inglorious reign of at least
+ thirty-seven years, the prestige of his race had so completely declined
+ that the country would have no more of it; the sceptre passed into the
+ hands of another dynasty, this time of Tanite origin.* It was probably a
+ younger branch of the Bubastite family allied to the Ramessides and Theban
+ Pallacides. Petu-bastis, the first of the line, secured recognition in
+ Thebes,** and throughout the rest of Egypt as well, but his influence was
+ little greater than that of his predecessors; as in the past, the real
+ power was in the hands of the high priests.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The following list gives the names of the Pharaohs of the
+ XXIIth dynasty in so far as they have been ascertained up
+ to the present:&mdash;
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkBimage-0030" id="linkBimage-0030">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/252.jpg" width="100%"
+ alt="252.jpg Table of Pharaohs Of the Xxiith Dynasty " />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkBimage-0031" id="linkBimage-0031">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="figleft" style="width:28%;">
+ <img width="100%" src="images/253.jpg"
+ alt="253.jpg King Petubastis at Prayer " />
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Drawn by Faucher-Gudin,
+from a small door now
+in the Louvre.
+</pre>
+ </div>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ ** This fact has recently been placed beyond doubt by
+ inscriptions found on the quay at Karnak near the water-
+ marks of the Nile.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ One of them, Auîti by name, even went so far, in the fourteenth or
+ fifteenth year, as to declare himself king, and had his cartouches
+ inscribed on official documents side by side with those of the Tanite
+ monarch.* His kingship died with him, just as that of Patnotmu had done in
+ similar circumstances, and two years later we find his successor,
+ Harsiisît, a mere high priest without pretensions to royalty.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * No. 26 of Legrain&rsquo;s inscriptions tells us the height of
+ the Nile in the sixteenth year of Petubastît, which was also
+ the second year of King Auîti. Seeing that Auîti&rsquo;s name
+ occurs in the place occupied by that of the high priest of
+ Thebes in other inscriptions of the same king, I consider it
+ probable that he was reigning in Thebes itself, and that he
+ was a high priest who had become king in the same way as
+ Paînotmu under the XXIst dynasty.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Doubtless his was not an isolated case; all the grandees who happened to
+ be nearly related either to the dethroned or to the reigning houses acted
+ in like manner, and for the first time for many years Egypt acknowledged
+ the simultaneous sway of more than one legitimate Pharaoh. Matters became
+ still worse under Osorkon III.; although he, too, introduced a daughter of
+ Anion into his harem, this alliance failed to give him any hold over
+ Thebes, and even the Seven Nomes and the Delta were split up to such an
+ extent that at one time they included something like a score of
+ independent principalities, three of which, Hermopolis, Heracleopolis, and
+ Tentramu, were administered by kings who boasted cartouches similar to
+ those of Tanis and Bubastis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ About 740 B.C. there appeared in the midst of these turbulent and
+ extortionate nobles a man who, by sheer force of energy and talent, easily
+ outstripped all competitors. Tafnakhti was a chief of obscure origin,
+ whose hereditary rights extended merely over the village of Nutirît and
+ the outskirts of Sebennytos. One or two victories gained over his nearest
+ neighbours encouraged him to widen the sphere of his operations. He first
+ of all laid hands on those nomes of the Delta which extended to the west
+ of the principal arm of the Nile, the Saite, Athribite, Libyan, and
+ Memphite nomes; these he administered through officers under his own
+ immediate control; then, leaving untouched the eastern provinces, over
+ which Osorkon III. exercised a make-shift, easygoing rule, he made his way
+ up the river. Maitumu and the Fayum accepted him as their suzerain, but
+ Khninsu and its king, Pefzââbastît, faithful to their allegiance,* offered
+ strenuous resistance.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Pefzââbastît, King of Heracleopolis, seems to be identical
+ with the Pharaoh Pefzâbastît of the Berlin sarcophagus.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ He then crossed over to the right bank, and received the homage of
+ Heliopolis and Phebtepahê; he put the inhabitants of Uabu to ransom,
+ established a close blockade of Khninsu, and persuaded Namrôti, King of
+ Khmunu, to take an oath of allegiance. At length, those petty kings and
+ princes of the Said and the Delta who still remained unconquered called
+ upon Ethiopia, the only power capable of holding its ground against him,
+ for help. The &ldquo;vile Kaushu&rdquo; (Cush) probably rose to be an independent
+ state about the time when Sheshonq and the Bubastite kings came into
+ power.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkBimage-0032" id="linkBimage-0032">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/255.jpg" width="100%"
+ alt="255.jpg View of a Part Of the Ruins Of Napata " />
+ </div>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Reproduced by Faucher-Gudin, from a lithograph published in
+ Cailliaud.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Peopled by Theban settlers, and governed by the civil and religious code
+ of Thebes, the provinces which lay between the cataract of Hannek and the
+ confluence of the two Mies soon became a second Thebaid, more barren and
+ less wealthy than the first, but no less tied to the traditions of the
+ past. Napata, its capital, lay in the plain at the foot of a sandstone
+ cliff, which rose perpendicularly to a height of nearly two hundred feet,
+ its summit, when viewed from the southwest, presenting an accidental
+ resemblance to a human profile.* This was the <i>Du-uabu</i>, or Sacred
+ Mount, in the heart of which the god was supposed to have his dwelling;
+ the ruins of several temples can still be seen near the western extremity
+ of the hill, the finest of them being dedicated to a local Amon-Râ.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The natives believe this profile to have been cut by human
+ hands&mdash;an error which has been shared by more than one
+ modern traveller.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkBimage-0033" id="linkBimage-0033">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/256.jpg" width="100%"
+ alt="256.jpg Gebel-barkal, the Sacred Mountain of Napata " />
+ </div>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Reproduced by Faucher-Gudin, from a lithograph in Cailliaud.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ This Amon was a replica of the Theban Amon on a smaller scale, and was
+ associated with the same companions as his prototype, Maut, his consort,
+ and Khonsu, his son. He owed his origin to the same religious concepts,
+ and was the central figure of a similar myth, the only difference being
+ that he was represented in composite shape, with a ram&rsquo;s head; perhaps a
+ survival from some earlier indigenous deity, such as Didun, for instance,
+ who had been previously worshipped in those parts; his priests lived in
+ accordance with the rules of the Theban hierarchy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We can readily believe that when Hrihor extorted the title of &ldquo;Royal Son
+ of Kaushu&rdquo; from the weaklings who occupied the throne at the close of the
+ Ramesside dynasty, he took care to install one of the members of his
+ family as high priest at Napata, and from henceforward had the whole
+ country at his bidding. Subsequently, when Paînotmu II. was succeeded by
+ Auputi at Thebes, it seems that the Ethiopian priests refused to ratify
+ his election. Whether they conferred the supreme power on one of their own
+ number, or whether some son of Paînotmu, flying from the Bubastite kings,
+ arrived at the right moment to provide them with a master, is not quite
+ clear.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkBimage-0035" id="linkBimage-0035">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/258.jpg" width="100%"
+ alt="258.jpg Plan of the Temple Of Amon at Napata " />
+ </div>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Reproduced by Faucher-Gudin, from the plan drawn up and
+ published by Cailliaud.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkBimage-0036" id="linkBimage-0036">
+ <!-- IMG --></a> <a name="linkBimage-0037" id="linkBimage-0037">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="figleft" style="width:33%;">
+ <img width="100%" src="images/260.jpg"
+ alt="260.jpg a Nearly Pure Ethiopian Type and a Mixed Negro and Ethiopian Type " />
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Drawn by Faucher-Gudin,
+from Lepsius.
+</pre>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ The kings of Ethiopia, priests from the first, never lost their sacerdotal
+ character. They continued to be men of God, and as such it was necessary
+ that they should be chosen by the god himself. On the death of a
+ sovereign, Amon at once became regent in the person of his prophet, and
+ continued to act until the funeral rites were celebrated. As soon as these
+ ceremonies were completed, the army and the people collected at the foot
+ of the Sacred Mount; the delegates of the various orders of the state were
+ led into the sanctuary, and then, in their presence, all the males of the
+ royal family&mdash;&ldquo;the king&rsquo;s brothers,&rdquo; as they were called&mdash;were
+ paraded before the statue of the god; he on whom the god laid his hand as
+ he passed was considered to be the chosen one of Amon, and consecrated
+ king without delay.*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * This is the ritual described in the <i>Stele of the
+ Enthronement</i>. Perhaps it was already in use at Thebes under
+ the XXIst and XXIInd dynasties, at the election of the high
+ priest, whether he happened to be a king or not; at any
+ rate, a story of the Ptolemaic period told by Synesius in
+ <i>The Egyptian</i> seems to point to this conclusion.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ As may be readily imagined, the new monarch thus appointed by divine
+ dictation was completely under the control of the priests, and before
+ long, if he failed to prove sufficiently tractable, they claimed the right
+ to dispense with him altogether; they sent him an order to commit suicide,
+ and he obeyed. The boundaries of this theocratic state varied at different
+ epochs; originally it was confined to the region between the First
+ Cataract and the mouth of the Blue Nile. The bulk of the population
+ consisted of settlers of Egyptian extraction and Egyptianised natives; but
+ isolated, as they were, from Egypt proper by the rupture of the political
+ ties which had bound them to the metropolis, they ceased to receive fresh
+ reinforcements from the northern part of the valley as they had formerly
+ done, and daily became more closely identified with the races of various
+ origin which roamed through the deserts of Libya or Arabia. This constant
+ infiltration of free or slavish Bedâwin blood and the large number of
+ black women found in the harems of the rich, and even in the huts of the
+ common people, quickly impaired the purity of the race, even among the
+ tipper classes of the nation, and the type came to resemble that of the
+ negro tribes of Equatorial Africa.*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Taharqa furnishes us with a striking example of this
+ degeneration of the Egyptian type. His face shows the
+ characteristic features of the black race, both on the
+ Egyptian statue as well as on the Assyrian stele of
+ Sinjirli.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkBimage-0034" id="linkBimage-0034">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="figleft" style="width:46%;">
+ <img width="100%" src="images/257.jpg"
+ alt="257.jpg Ruins of the Temple Of Amon at Napata " />
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Reproduced by Faucher-Gudin,
+from a lithograph published
+by Cailliaud.
+</pre>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ The language fared no better in the face of this invasion, and the written
+ character soon became as corrupt as the language; words foreign to the
+ Egyptian vocabulary, incorrect expressions, and barbarous errors in syntax
+ were multiplied without stint. The taste for art decayed, and technical
+ ability began to deteriorate, the moral and intellectual standard
+ declined, and the mass of the people showed signs of relapsing into
+ barbarism: the leaders of the aristocracy and the scribes alone preserved
+ almost intact their inheritance from an older civilisation. Egypt still
+ attracted them: they looked upon it as their rightful possession, torn
+ from them by alien usurpers in defiance of all sense of right, and they
+ never ceased to hope that some day, when the god saw fit, they would win
+ back their heritage. Were not their kings of the posterity of Sibu, the
+ true representatives of the Ramessides and the solar race, compared with
+ whom the northern Pharaohs, even those whose mothers ranked as
+ &ldquo;worshippers&rdquo; of Amon, were but mere mushroom kings? Thebes admitted the
+ validity of their claims: it looked to them for help, and the revolts by
+ which it had been torn ever since the reign of Osorkon II. were, perhaps,
+ instigated by the partisans of Ethiopia. In the time of Petubastis its
+ high priests, Harsiisît and Takelôti, were still connected with the
+ Tanites; after that it placed itself under the immediate orders of
+ Ethiopia, and the pontificate disappeared. The accession of a sovereign
+ who was himself invested by hereditary right with the functions and title
+ of high priest of Amon henceforth rendered the existence of such an office
+ superfluous at Thebes: it would almost have meant an <i>imperium in
+ imperio</i>. The administration of religious, and perhaps also of
+ political, affairs was, therefore, handed over to the deputy prophet, and
+ this change still further enhanced the importance of the &ldquo;female
+ worshippers of the god.&rdquo; In the absence of the king, who had his capital
+ at Napata, they remained the sole representatives of legitimate authority
+ in the Thebaid: the chief among them soon came to be regarded as a
+ veritable <i>Lady of Thebes</i>, and, subject to the god, mistress of the
+ city and its territory.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is not quite clear whether it was Piônkhi Miamun or one of his
+ immediate predecessors who took possession of the city. The nomes
+ dependent on Amon followed the example of the capital, and the whole
+ Theban territory as far as Siut had been occupied by Ethiopian troops,
+ when in the twenty-first year of the king&rsquo;s reign the princes of the Delta
+ and Middle Egypt appealed to the court of Napata for help.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkBimage-0038" id="linkBimage-0038">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/262.jpg" width="100%"
+ alt="262.jpg Map of Middle Egypt During the Campaign Of Pionkhi " />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Even had they not begged it to do so, it would have been compelled before
+ long to intervene, for Tafnakhti was already on his way to attack it;
+ Piônkki charged Luâmarsakni and Pu-arama, the generals he had already
+ stationed in the Thebaid, to hold Tafnakhti in check, till he was able to
+ get together the remainder of his army and descend the Nile to support
+ them. Their instructions were to spare none of the rebellious towns, but
+ to &ldquo;capture their men and their beasts, and their ships on the river; to
+ allow none of the fellaheen to go out into the fields, nor any labourer to
+ his labour, but to attack Hermopolis and harass it daily.&rdquo; They followed
+ out these orders, though, it would seem, without result, until the
+ reinforcements from Nubia came up: their movements then became more
+ actively offensive, and falling on Tafnakhti&rsquo;s ships, which were making
+ for Thebes heavily laden with men and stores, they sunk several of them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkBimage-0039" id="linkBimage-0039">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/263.jpg" width="100%"
+ alt="263.jpg Ruins of Oxyrrhynchos and the Modern Town Of Bahnesa " />
+ </div>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Drawn by Boudier, from an engraving in Vivant Denon.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Anxious to profit by this first success, they made straight for
+ Heracleopolis with a view to relieving it. Tafnakhti, accompanied by the
+ two kings Namrôti and Auputi, was directing the siege in person; he had
+ under his command, in addition to contingents from Busiris, Mendès, Thoth,
+ and Pharbaîthos, all the vassals of Osorkon III., the successor of
+ Petubastis and titular Pharaoh of the whole country. The Ethiopian fleet
+ engaged the Egyptian ships at the end of the island of Heracleopolis, near
+ the mouth of the canal leading from the Nile to the Bahr-Yusuf.* Tafnakhti
+ was defeated, and the remnants of his squadron took refuge in Pipuga under
+ cover of his land forces.** At dawn, the next day, the Ethiopians
+ disembarked and gave battle. The struggle was long and fierce, but
+ indecisive. Luâmarsakni and Puarama claimed the victory, but were obliged
+ to effect a retreat on the day following their so-called success, and when
+ they dropped anchor in the harbour of Hermopolis, they found that Namrôti
+ had made his way back to the city by land and forestalled them. Powerless
+ to hold the field without support, he collected all the men and cattle he
+ could lay hands on, and awaited the progress of events behind his
+ ramparts. The Ethiopians invested the town, and wrote to inform Piônkhi of
+ what they had done&mdash;not, however, without some misgiving as to the
+ reception which awaited their despatches. And sure enough, &ldquo;His Majesty
+ became enraged thereat, even as a panther: &lsquo;If they have allowed a remnant
+ of the warriors of the north to remain, if they have let one of them
+ escape to tell of the fight, if they make him not to die in their
+ slaughter, then by my life, by the love of Râ, by the praise of Amon for
+ me, I will myself go down and overthrow that which Tafnakhti hath done,***
+ I will compel him to give up war for ever! Therefore, after celebrating
+ the festivals of the New Year, when I shall have sacrificed to Amon of
+ [Napata], my father, in his excellent festival wherein he appears in his
+ procession of the New Year, when he shall have sent me in peace to look
+ upon the [Theban] Amon in his festivals at Thebes, and when I shall have
+ carried his image in procession to Luxor, in the festival celebrated in
+ his honour among the festivals of Thebes, on the night of the feast
+ appointed in the Thebaid, established by Râ at the creation, when I have
+ led him in the procession and brought him unto his throne, on the day for
+ introducing the god, even the second of Athyr, then will I make the enemy
+ taste the savour of my claws.&rsquo;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The ancient geographers looked upon the nome of
+ Heraoleopolis as a large island, its southern boundary
+ being, probably, the canal of Harabshent: the end of the
+ island, which the Egyptians called &ldquo;the forepart of
+ Khninsu,&rdquo; was probably Harabshent and its environs.
+
+ ** Pi-puga is probably El-Fokâ, on the Nile, to the north of
+ Harabshent.
+
+ *** The king does not mention his adversary by name in the
+ text; he is content to indicate him by a pronoun in the
+ third person&mdash;&ldquo;that which he hath done... then will I make
+ him taste,&rdquo; etc.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The generals did their very utmost to appease their master&rsquo;s wrath before
+ he appeared on the scene. They told off a force to keep watch over
+ Hermopolis while they themselves marched against the nome of Uabu; they
+ took Oxyrrhynchos by storm, with &ldquo;the fury of a water-spout,&rdquo; and informed
+ the king of this achievement; but &ldquo;his heart was not softened thereby.&rdquo;
+ They crossed over to the right bank; they crushed the people of the north
+ under the walls of Tatehni,* they forced the walls of the town with the
+ battering-ram, and killed many of the inhabitants, amongst others a son of
+ Tafnakhti, whose body they sent to the king; but &ldquo;his heart was not
+ softened thereby.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They then pushed on as far as Haït Bonua** and sacked it, but still failed
+ to regain favour. On the 9th of Thoth, Piônkhi came down to Thebes, and
+ after hasty attendance at the services to Amon, went to rejoin the
+ vanguard of his army under the walls of Hermopolis.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The modern Tehneh, on the right bank of the Nile, a little
+ below Minieh.
+
+ ** Hâit-Bonu, or Hâbonu, is the Hipponon of the Greco-Roman
+ geographers.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkBimage-0040" id="linkBimage-0040">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/266.jpg" width="100%"
+ alt="266.jpg King NamrÔti Leading a Horse to PiÔnkhi " />
+ </div>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from an impression of the stele in
+ the Gizeh Museum.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No sooner had his Majesty quitted the cabin of his ship, than the horses
+ were harnessed and the charioteers in their places; the fear of his
+ Majesty spread even to the Nomads of Asia, and all hearts trembled before
+ him.&rdquo; Piônkhi drove back the enemy behind their walls, pitched his tent to
+ the south-west of the city, threw up earth-works, and built terraces so as
+ to place his bowmen and sling-ers on a level with the battlements of its
+ towers. At the end of three days, Namrôti, finding himself hard pressed on
+ every side, resolved to surrender. He sent envoys to Piônkhi laden with
+ rich presents, and despatched Queen Nsitentmahît after them, to beg for
+ mercy from the women who had accompanied the Ethiopian, his wives,
+ concubines, daughters, or royal sisters. Their entreaties were graciously
+ received, and Namrôti ventured to come in person, leading a horse with his
+ right hand and shaking in his left a sistrum of gold and lapis-lazuli; he
+ knelt down and presented with his salutations the long train of gifts
+ which had gone before him. Piônkhi visited the temple of Thoth, and there,
+ amidst the acclamations of soldiers and priests, offered up the customary
+ sacrifices.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkBimage-0041" id="linkBimage-0041">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/267.jpg" width="100%"
+ alt="267.jpg Ruins of the Temple Of Thoth, at Hermopolis The Great " />
+ </div>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Drawn by Boudier, from an engraving in Vivant Denon. The
+ portico was destroyed about 1820 by the engineers who
+ constructed the sugar refinery at Rodah, and now only a few
+ shapeless fragments of it remain.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ He then made his way to the palace and inspected its courts, chambers,
+ treasury, and storehouses, and reviewed the whole household, including
+ even Namrôti&rsquo;s own wives and daughters, though &ldquo;he turned not his face
+ towards any one of them.&rdquo; He next went on to the stud-farms, and was
+ indignant to find that the horses had suffered from hunger during the
+ siege. Thoroughbreds were probably somewhat scarce at Napata, and he had,
+ no doubt, reckoned on obtaining new blood and a complete relay of chargers
+ from the Egyptian stables; his chances of doing so seemed likely to vanish
+ if brood mares and stallions had everywhere been debilitated by the
+ hardships of war. He reserved a part of the booty for himself, handed over
+ the balance to the priests of Amon at Karnak, and also, before he left,
+ received tribute from Heracleopolis. Pefzââbastît brought him horses, the
+ pick of his stables, slaves laden with gold and silver and precious
+ stones; then burying his face in the dust, he offered worship to his
+ liberator: &ldquo;Hell had swallowed me up, I was plunged into darkness, and lo,
+ now a light has been given me. Since I have found no man to love me in the
+ day of adversity, or to stand by me in the day of battle, save only thee,
+ O victorious king, who hast torn away the night from above me, I will be
+ thy servant, I and all my house, and Khninsu shall pay tribute into thy
+ treasury. For, as to thee, thou art Harmakhis, chief of the imperishable
+ stars, thou art king, even as he is king, and even as he doth not destroy
+ himself, neither shalt thou destroy thyself!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The downfall of Khmunu led all who might still have shown resistance in
+ Middle Egypt to lay down their arms also. The fortress of Pisakhmakhpirrî*
+ dominated the gorges of Lahunît, and thus commanded the entrance to the
+ Fayum; but the son of Tafnakhti agreed to surrender it, provided he were
+ allowed to march out with the honours of war.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * This fortress, which bears a name compounded with that of
+ Osorkon I., must have been rebuilt by that monarch on the
+ site of an earlier fort; the new name remained in use under
+ the XXIInd and XXIIIth dynasties, after which the old one
+ reappears. It is Illahun, where Petrie discovered the
+ remains of a flourishing town of the Bubastite epoch.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Shortly after, Maîtumu threw open its gates, and its example was followed
+ by Titauî; at Maîtumu there was rioting among the Egyptians in the
+ streets, one party wishing to hold out, the other to surrender, but in the
+ end the latter had their way.* Piônkhi discharged his priestly duties
+ wherever he went, and received the local taxes, always being careful to
+ reserve a tenth for the treasury of Amon-Râ; the fact that his army was
+ kept under rigid control, and that he showed great clemency to the
+ vanquished, helped largely to conciliate those who were not bound by close
+ ties of interest to the cause of Tafnakhti. On reaching Memphis, Piônkhi
+ at once had recourse to the persuasive methods which had hitherto served
+ him so well, and entered into negotiations with the garrison. &ldquo;Shut not
+ yourselves up in forts, and fight not against the Upper Country,** for Shu
+ the god of creation, when I enter, he entereth, and when I go out, he
+ goeth out, and none may repel my attacks. I will present offerings to
+ Phtah and to the divinities of the White Wall, I will honour Sokari in his
+ mysterious coffer, I will contemplate Eîsânbuf,*** then I will return from
+ thence in peace. If ye will trust in me, Memphis shall be prosperous and
+ healthy, even the children shall not cry therein. Behold the nomes of the
+ South; not a soul has been massacred there, saving only the impious who
+ blasphemed God, and these rebels have been executed.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Maritumu, or Maîtumu, is the modern Meîdum, associated in
+ the inscription with the characteristic epithet, Pisokari-
+ Nibu-Suazu, or &ldquo;temple of Sokari, master of the
+ transfiguration.&rdquo; Titauî lay exactly on the frontier between
+ Upper and Lower Egypt&mdash;hence its name, which signifies
+ &ldquo;commanding the two regions;&rdquo; it was in the Memphite nome,
+ and Brugsch identifies it with the Greek city of Acanthos,
+ near Dahshur, but this position appears to me to be too
+ close to Memphis and too far from the boundary of the nome;
+ I should prefer to place Titauî at Kafr el-Ayat or
+ thereabouts.
+
+ ** I.e. against Piônkhi, who was master of the Upper
+ Country, that is, of Thebes and Ethiopia, and the forces
+ from the whole of the valley to the south of Memphis who
+ accompanied him.
+
+ *** Lit., &ldquo;He who is on the South of his Wall,&rdquo; a name given
+ to one of the quarters of Memphis, and afterwards applied to
+ the god Phtah, who was worshipped in that quarter.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ This eloquence, however, was of no avail. A detachment of archers,
+ sailors, and engineers sent to make a reconnaissance of the harbour was
+ taken by surprise and routed with loss, and on the following night
+ Tafnakhti suddenly made his appearance on the spot. He had the 8000 men
+ who were defending it paraded before him, and made them a speech, in which
+ he pointed out the great natural strength of the position, the stoutness
+ of the walls and the abundance of provisions; he then mounted his horse,
+ and making his way a second time through the enemy&rsquo;s outposts, headed
+ straight for the Delta in order to levy reinforcements there. The next
+ day, Piônkhi went in person to examine the approaches of the city in which
+ his ancestors had once been throned. There was a full Nile, and the river
+ came right up to the walls. He sailed close in along the whole of the
+ eastern front, and landed on the north, much vexed and discomfited at
+ finding it so strongly fortified. Even the common soldiers were
+ astonished, and began to discuss among themselves the difficulties of the
+ undertaking with a certain feeling of discouragement. It would be
+ necessary, they declared, to open a regular siege, &ldquo;to make an inclined
+ plane leading to the city, throw up- earthworks against its walls, bind
+ ladders, set up masts and erect spars all around it.&rdquo; Piônkhi burst into a
+ rage when these remarks were repeated to him: a siege in set form would
+ have been a most serious enterprise, and would have allowed the allied
+ princes time to get together fresh troops. He drove his ships full speed
+ against the line of boats anchored in the harbour, and broke through it at
+ the first onset; his sailors then scaled the bank and occupied the houses
+ which overlooked it. Reinforcements concentrated on this point gradually
+ penetrated into the heart of the city, and after two days&rsquo; fighting the
+ garrison threw down their arms. The victor at once occupied the temples to
+ save them from pillage: he then purified Memphis with water and natron,
+ ascended in triumph to the temple of Phtah, and celebrated there those
+ rites which the king alone was entitled to perform. The other fortresses
+ in the neighbourhood surrendered without further hesitation. King Auputi
+ of Tentramu,* prince Akaneshu,** and prince Petisis tendered the homage of
+ their subjects in person, and the other sovereigns of the Delta merely
+ waited for a demonstration in force on the part of the Ethiopians before
+ following their example.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Probably the original of the statue discovered by Naville
+ at Tel-el-Yahudîyeh. Tentramu and Taânu, the cities of
+ Auputi, are perhaps identical with the biblical Elim (Exod.
+ xvi. 1) and the Daneon Portus of Pliny on the Red Sea, but
+ Naville prefers to identify Daneon with the Tonu of the
+ <i>Berlin Papyrus No. 1</i>. I believe that we ought to look for
+ the kingdom of Auputi in the neighbourhood of Menzaleh, near
+ Tanis.
+
+ ** Akaneshu ruled over Sebennytos and in the XVIIth nome.
+ Naville discovered at Samannud the statue of one of his
+ descendants, a king of the same name, perhaps his grandson,
+ who was prince of Sebennytos in the time of Psammetichus I.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Piônkhi crossed the Nile and marched in state to Heliopolis, there to
+ receive the royal investiture.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He offered up prayers at the various holy places along the route, such as
+ the sanctuary of Tumu at Khriâhu and the temple of the Ennead who dwelt in
+ the cavern from which the Northern Nile was supposed to spring; he then
+ crossed over Mount Ahu, bathed his face in the reputed source of the
+ river, and at length penetrated into the dwelling-place of Râ. He ascended
+ the steps leading to the great chapel in order that he might there &ldquo;see Râ
+ in Hâît-Banbonu even himself. All unattended, he drew the bolt, threw open
+ the doors, contemplated his father Râ in Hâît-Banbonu, adjusted Ra&rsquo;s boat
+ Mâdît and the Saktit of Shu, then closed the doors again, affixed a seal
+ of clay, and impressed it with the royal signet.&rdquo; He had thus submitted
+ his conduct for the approval of the god in whom all attributes of royalty
+ were vested, and the god had legitimatised his claims to universal rule:
+ he was henceforth the master, not merely <i>de jure</i> but <i>de facto</i>
+ as well, and the kings who had hitherto declined to recognise him were now
+ obliged to bow reverently before his authority.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Osorkon was the first to submit, and did so before the close of Piônkhi&rsquo;s
+ stay at Heliopolis; when the latter pitched his camp near Kahani* in the
+ Athribite nome, the nobles of the Eastern Delta, both small and great,
+ came one after another with their followers; among them Patinifi of
+ Pisapti, Paimau of Busiris, Pabîsa of Khriâhu and of Pihâpi,** besides a
+ dozen others.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Kahani is, perhaps, the modern Kaha, some distance to the
+ north of Qaliub.
+
+ ** Pisapti stood on the present site of Shaft-el-ïïineh.
+ Khriâhu, as we know, formed part of the Heliopolitan nome,
+ and is, very possibly, to be identified with Babylon of
+ Egypt, the Postât of the Arabs; Pihâpi was a place not far
+ from the supposed source of the Southern Nile.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ He extended his favour to all alike, merely stipulating that they should
+ give him the best of their horses, and undertake to keep careful watch
+ over the prosperity of their stud farms. But Tafnakhti still held out, and
+ seemed determined to defy him to the end; he had set fire to his palace
+ and taken refuge in the islands on the river, and had provided a
+ hiding-place for himself at Masudît among the marshes on the coast in case
+ of final defeat. A victory gained over him by the Ethiopian generals
+ suddenly induced him to sue for peace. He offered to disband his men and
+ pay tribute, provided he was guaranteed undisturbed possession of Sais and
+ of the western districts of the Delta; he refused, however, to sue for
+ pardon in person, and asked that an envoy should be sent to receive his
+ oath of allegiance in the temple of Nit. Though deserted by his brother
+ princes and allies, he still retained sufficient power to be a thorn in
+ his conqueror&rsquo;s side; his ultimate overthrow was certain, but it would
+ have entailed many a bloody struggle, while a defeat might easily have
+ shaken the fidelity of the other feudatory kings, and endangered the
+ stability of the new dynasty. Piônkhi, therefore, accepted the terms
+ offered him without modification, and asked for no guarantee beyond the
+ oath taken in the presence of the gods. News was brought him about this
+ time that Cynopolis and Aphroditopolis had at last thrown open their
+ gates, and accordingly he summoned his vassals for the last time to his
+ camp near Athribis. With the exception of Tafnakhti, they all obeyed the
+ call, including two minor kings of Upper and two of Lower Egypt, together
+ with barons of lesser rank; but of these, Namrôti alone was admitted to
+ the royal apartments, because he alone was circumcised and ate no fish;
+ after this the camp was broken up, and the Ethiopians set out on their
+ return journey southwards. Piônkhi may well have been proud of the result
+ of this campaign, both for himself and for his country. The empire of the
+ Pharaohs, which had for the last hundred and fifty years been divided, was
+ now re-established from the confluence of the Niles to the shores of the
+ Mediterranean, but it was no longer Egypt that benefited by the change. It
+ was now, after many years of slavery, the turn of Ethiopia to rule, and
+ the seat of power was transferred from Thebes or Memphis to Napata. As a
+ matter of fact, the fundamental constitution of the kingdom underwent no
+ great modification; it had merely one king the more to rule over it&mdash;not
+ a stranger, as we are often tempted to conclude, when we come to measure
+ these old-world revolutions by our modern standards of patriotism, but a
+ native of the south, who took the place of those natives of the north who
+ had succeeded one another on the throne since the days of Smendes. In
+ fact, this newly crowned son of Râ lived a very long way off; he had no
+ troops of his own further north than Siut, and he had imposed his
+ suzerainty on the rival claimants and reigning princes without thereby
+ introducing any change in the constitution of the state. In tendering
+ their submission to him, the heads of the different nomes had not the
+ slightest intention of parting with their liberty; they still retained it,
+ even though nominally dependent, and continued, as in the past, to abuse
+ it without scruple. Namrôti was king at Khmunu, Pefzââbastît at Khninsu,
+ Auputi at Tentramu, and Osorkon III. at Bubastis; the prestige investing
+ the Tanite race persisted so effectively that the annalists give to the
+ last-named precedence over the usurpers of the Ethiopian dynasty; the
+ Tanites continued to be the incarnate representatives of legitimate power,
+ and when Osorkon III. died, in 732, it was his son Psamutis who was
+ regarded as the Lord of Egypt. Tafnakhti had, in his defeat, gained formal
+ recognition of his royalty. He was no longer a mere successful adventurer,
+ a hero of the hour, whose victories were his only title-deeds, whose
+ rights rested solely on the argument of main force. Piônkhi, in granting
+ him amnesty, had conferred official investiture on him and on his
+ descendants. Henceforth his rule at Sais was every whit as legitimate as
+ that of Osorkon at Bubastis, and he was not slow in furnishing material
+ proof of this, for he granted himself cartouches, the uraeus, and all the
+ other insignia of royalty. These changes must have been quickly noised
+ abroad throughout Asia. Commercial intercourse between Syria and Egypt was
+ maintained as actively as ever, and the merchant caravans and fleets
+ exported with regularity the news of events as well as the natural
+ products of the soil or of industry. The tidings of an Ethiopian conquest
+ and of the re-establishment of an undivided empire in the valley of the
+ Nile, coming as they did at the very moment when the first effects of the
+ Assyrian revival began to be so keenly felt, could not fail to attract the
+ attention and arouse the hopes of Syrian statesmen. The Philistines, who
+ had never entirely released themselves from the ties which bound them to
+ the Pharaohs of the Delta, felt no repugnance at asking for a renewal of
+ their former protection.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkBimage-0042" id="linkBimage-0042">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/276.jpg" width="100%"
+ alt="276.jpg King Tafnakhti Presents a Field to Tumu and To Bastit " />
+ </div>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Drawn by Boudier, from Mallet&rsquo;s photograph of the stele in
+ the Museum at Athens.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ As for the Phoenicians, the Hebrews, Edom, Moab, Ammon, and Damascus, they
+ began to consider whether they had not here, in Africa, among the members
+ of a race favourably disposed towards them by the memories of the past and
+ by its ambition, hereditary allies against Nineveh. The fact that Egypt
+ was torn by domestic dissensions and divided into a score of rival
+ principalities in no way diminished their traditional admiration for its
+ wealth or their confidence in its power; Assyria itself was merely an
+ agglomeration of turbulent provinces, vassal cities, and minor kingdoms,
+ artificially grouped round the ancient domain of Assur, and yet the
+ convulsions by which it was periodically shaken had not prevented it from
+ developing into the most formidable engine of war that had ever threatened
+ the peace of Asia. The African hosts, whether led by ordinary generals or
+ by a king of secondary rank, formed none the less a compact army well
+ fitted by numbers and organisation to hold its own against any forces
+ which Tiglath-pileser might put into the field; and even should the
+ supreme Pharaoh be unwilling to throw the full weight of his authority
+ into the balance, yet an alliance with one of the lesser kings, such as
+ the lord of Sais or of Bubastis, would be of inestimable assistance to any
+ one fortunate enough to secure it. It is true that, in so far as the
+ ultimate issue was concerned, there was little to be gained by thus
+ pitting the two great powers together and persuading one to fight against
+ the other; the victor must, in the long run, remain master alike of those
+ who had appealed for help and of those who had fought against him, and if
+ Egypt emerged triumphant, there would be nothing for it but to accept her
+ supremacy. In either event, there could be no question of independence; it
+ was a choice between the hegemony of Egypt or that of Assyria.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From the moment that Tiglath-pileser had made his appearance on the
+ northern horizon, the nations of Southern Syria had instinctively looked
+ to Pharaoh for aid. There seems to have been an Egyptian faction in
+ Samaria, even during the disorders which broke out after the death of
+ Jeroboam II., and perhaps it was a hope of overcoming it easily which led
+ Menahem of his own accord to invoke the still remote suzerainty of
+ Nineveh, after the fall of Unki in 738;* later on, when Pekah had
+ assassinated Pekahiah and entered into alliance with Eezin, he adopted the
+ view of those who saw no hope of safety save from the banks of the Nile,
+ his only reason for doing so being, apparently, because the kings of the
+ fallen dynasty had received support from the valley of the Tigris. Hosea
+ continually reproached his countrymen with this vacillating policy, and
+ pointed out the folly of it: &ldquo;Ephraim is like a silly dove without
+ understanding; they call unto Egypt, they go unto Assyria; when they shall
+ go I will spread My net upon them,&rdquo; said the Eternal.**
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The existence of an Egyptian faction at this period has
+ been admitted by Kittel. Winckler has traced to the Arabian
+ or Idumæan Muzri everything previously referred to Egypt.
+ His arguments seem to me to be, in many cases, convincing,
+ as I shall point out where necessary, but I think he carries
+ his theory too far when he systematically excludes Egypt and
+ puts Muzri in its place. Egypt, even in its decadent state,
+ was a far more important power than the Arabian Muzri, and
+ it seems unreasonable to credit it with such a limited share
+ in the politics of the time. I cannot believe that any other
+ power is intended in most of those passages in the Hebrew
+ writings and Assyrian inscriptions in which the words
+ Mizraîm and Muzri occur.
+
+ ** Hos. vii. 11, 12.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ They were to be given up to Assyria and dispersed, and while some were to
+ go into Assur and eat unclean food, Ephraim was to return into Egypt;
+ &ldquo;for, lo, they are gone away from destruction, yet Egypt shall gather them
+ up, Memphis shall bury them.&rdquo; * Nevertheless, they persisted in negotiating
+ with Egypt, and though there was as yet no formal alliance between Samaria
+ and Sais or Tanis, their relations were so close that no enemy of Israel
+ could look for protection from Psamuti or his vassals. Ahaz had,
+ therefore, nothing to hope from this quarter, and was compelled by the
+ force of circumstances to throw himself into the arms of Assyria, if he
+ decided to call in outside aid at all. His prophets, like those of Pekah,
+ strenuously forbade him to do so, and among them was one who was beginning
+ to exert a marvellous influence over all classes of society&mdash;Isaiah,
+ the son of Amoz. He had begun his career in the year that Uzziah died,**
+ and had continued to prophesy without interruption during the brief reign
+ of Jotham.***
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Hos. ix. 3-6.
+
+ ** Isa. vi. 1.
+
+ *** The fragments which can be assigned to this period now
+ occur as follows: chap. ii. 2-5 (verses 2-4 are also found
+ in <i>Micah</i> iv. 1-3, and were, perhaps, borrowed from some
+ third prophet), ii. 6-22, iii., iv., v. 1-24 (the Parable of
+ the Vineyard), and lastly, chap, vi., in so far as the
+ substance is concerned; it seems to have been put into its
+ present form long after the events.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ When Jahveh first appeared to him, in the smoke of the altar, seated on a
+ throne and surrounded by seraphim, a sense of his own unworthiness filled
+ him with fear, but an angel purified his lips with a live coal, and he
+ heard the voice of the Lord saying, &ldquo;Whom shall I send, and who will go
+ for us?&rdquo; and he replied, &ldquo;Here am I; send me,&rdquo; whereupon Jahveh gave him
+ this message: &ldquo;Hear ye indeed, but understand not; and see ye indeed, but
+ perceive not. Make the heart of this people fat, and make their ears
+ heavy, and shut their eyes; lest they see with their eyes and hear with
+ their ears, and understand with their heart, and turn again and be
+ healed.&rdquo; Then the prophet asked, &ldquo;Lord, how long?&rdquo; And Jahveh answered,
+ &ldquo;Until cities be waste without inhabitant and houses without man, and the
+ land become utterly waste, and Jahveh have removed men far away, and the
+ forsaken places be many in the midst of the land. And if there be yet a
+ tenth in it, it shall be eaten up; as a terebinth, and as an oak, whose
+ stock remaineth when they are felled, so the holy seed is the stock
+ thereof.&rdquo; *
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * An explanatory gloss, &ldquo;the fierce anger of Rezin and Syria
+ and of the son of Remaliah,&rdquo; which formed no part of the
+ original prophecy, is here inserted in the text.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Judah, though less powerful, was quite as corrupt as his brethren of
+ Israel, and the divine wrath threatened him no less than them; it rested
+ with himself, however, to appease it by repentance, and to enter again
+ into divine favour after suffering his punishment; the Eternal would then
+ gather together on Mount Sion those of His faithful people who had
+ survived the crisis, and would assure them a long period of prosperity
+ under His law. The prophet, convinced that men could in no wise alter the
+ decrees of the Highest, save by repentance alone, was astonished that the
+ heads of the state should strive to impede the progress of events that
+ were happening under their very eyes, by the elaborately useless
+ combinations of their worldly diplomacy. To his mind, the invasion of
+ Pekah and Eezin was a direct manifestation of the divine anger, and it
+ filled him with indignation that the king should hope to escape from it by
+ begging for an alliance against them with one of the great powers: when
+ Jahveh should decide that the punishment was sufficient for the crime, He
+ would know how to shatter His instruments without any earthly help.
+ Indeed, Isaiah had already told his master, some days before the allied
+ kings appeared, while the latter was busy superintending the works
+ intended to supply Jerusalem with water, to &ldquo;Take heed, and be quiet; fear
+ not, neither let thy heart be faint, because of these two tails of smoking
+ firebrands.... Because Syria hath counselled evil against thee, Ephraim
+ also, and the son of Bemaliah, saying, Let us go up against Judah, hem it
+ in, carry it by storm, and set up the son of Tabeel as king: thus saith
+ the Lord God, It shall not stand, neither shall it come to pass.&rdquo; If,
+ however, the course of the divine justice was to be disturbed by the
+ intervention of a purely human agency, the city would doubtless be thereby
+ saved, but the matter would not be allowed to rest there, and the people
+ would suffer even more at the hands of their allies than they had formerly
+ endured from their enemies. &ldquo;Behold, a virgin shall conceive and bear a
+ son, and shall call his name Immanuel&mdash;God with us.... For before the
+ child shall know to refuse the evil and choose the good, the land whose
+ two kings thou abhorrest shall be forsaken,&rdquo; and yet &ldquo;Jahveh shall bring
+ upon thee, and upon thy people, and upon thy father&rsquo;s house, days that
+ have not come, from the day that Ephraim departed from Judah.&rdquo; * And then,
+ employing one of those daring apologues, common enough in his time, the
+ prophet took a large tablet and wrote upon it in large letters two
+ symbolical names&mdash;<i>Spoil-speedeth, Prey-hasteth</i>&mdash;and set
+ it up in a prominent place, and with the knowledge of credible witnesses
+ went in unto the prophetess his wife. When the child was born in due
+ course, Jahveh bade him call it <i>Spoil-speedeth, Prey-hasteth</i>, &ldquo;for
+ before he shall have knowledge to cry, My father and, My mother, the
+ riches of Damascus and the spoil of Samaria shall be carried away before
+ the King of Assyria.&rdquo; But the Eternal added, &ldquo;Forasmuch as this people
+ hath refused the waters of Shiloah that go softly, and rejoice in Rezin
+ and Remaliah&rsquo;s son; now therefore, behold, the Lord bringeth up upon them
+ the waters of the river [the Euphrates], strong and many:* and he shall
+ come up over all his channels, and go over all his banks: and he shall
+ sweep onward into Judah; he shall overflow and pass through; he shall
+ reach even to the neck, and the stretching of his wings shall fill the
+ breadth of thy land, O Immanuel [God-with-us]!&rdquo;*** Finding that Egypt was
+ in favour of his adversaries, Ahaz, in spite of the prophet&rsquo;s warnings,
+ turned to Assyria.****
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Isa. vii. 10-17.
+
+ ** A marginal gloss has here been inserted in the text,
+ indicating that it was «the King of Assyria and all his
+ glory » that the prophet referred to
+
+ *** Isa. viii. 1-8.
+
+ **** The following portions of Isaiah are accepted as
+ belonging to the period of this Syrian war: in addition to
+ chap, vii., chaps, viii.-ix 6. xi 1-9. xxii. 1-11; i. 4-9,
+ 18-32; to these Kuenen adds chap, xxiii. 1-8
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkBimage-0043" id="linkBimage-0043">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/282.jpg" width="100%"
+ alt="282.jpg Map the Kingdom of Damascus " />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ At one time he had found himself so hard pressed that he invoked the aid
+ of the Syrian gods, and made his eldest son pass through the fire in order
+ to propitiate them:* he collected together all the silver and gold he
+ could find in his own treasury or in that of the temple and sent it to
+ Tiglath-pileser, with this message: &ldquo;I am thy servant and thy son: come up
+ and save me out of the hand of the King of Syria, and out of the hand of
+ the King of Israel, which rise up against me.&rdquo; **
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * 2 Kings xvi. 3 (cf. 2 Chron. xxviii. 3). There is nothing
+ to indicate the date, but most historians place the event at
+ the beginning of the Syrian war, a little before or during
+ the siege.
+
+ ** Kings xvi. 7, 8; cf. 2 Chron. xxviii. 16, 20, 21.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkBimage-0045" id="linkBimage-0045">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="figright" style="width:28%;">
+ <img width="100%" src="images/289.jpg" alt="289.jpg an Arab " />
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Drawn by Faucher
+-Gudin, from Layard.
+</pre>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Tiglath-pileser came in haste, and Rezin and Pekah, at the mere tidings of
+ his approach, desisted from their attack on Jerusalem, separated, and
+ retired each to his own kingdom. The Assyrian king did not immediately
+ follow them up. He took the road leading along the coast, after leaving
+ the plains of the middle Orontes, and levied tribute from the Phoenician
+ cities as he passed; he then began by attacking the western frontier of
+ Israel, and sent a body of troops against the Philistines, who were
+ ceaselessly harassing Judah. Hannon, King of Gaza, did not await the
+ attack, but fled to Egypt for safety, and Ahaz breathed freely, perhaps
+ for the first time since his accession. This, however, was only a
+ beginning; the real struggle took place in the following year, and was
+ hotly contested. In spite of the sorry pass to which its former defeats
+ and present discords had brought it, Damascus still possessed immense
+ wealth, and its army, when reinforced by the Arabian and Israelite
+ contingents, was capable of holding its own for a long time against the
+ battalions of Assyria, even if it could not hope to conquer them.
+ Unfortunately for its chances, Eezin had failed to inherit the military
+ capacity of his great predecessors, Ben-hadad and Hazael; he allowed
+ Tiglath-pileser to crush the Hebrews without rendering them any effective
+ assistance. Pekah fought his best, but he lost, one after another, the
+ strongholds which guarded his northern frontier&mdash;Ijon,
+ Abel-beth-maacah, Janoah, Kedesh, and Hazor; he saw the whole of Naphtali
+ and Gilead laid waste, and their inhabitants carried off into Assyria
+ without his being able to prevent it; he himself being obliged to evacuate
+ Samaria and take refuge in the mountains almost unattended. Judah
+ followed, with mingled exultation and disquietude, the vicissitudes of the
+ tragic drama which was thus enacted before its eyes, and Isaiah foretold
+ the speedy ruin of the two peoples who had but yesterday threatened to
+ enslave it. He could already see the following picture in his mind&rsquo;s eye:
+ &ldquo;Damascus is taken away from being a city, and it shall be a ruinous heap.
+ The cities of Aroer are forsaken: they shall be for flocks, which shall
+ lie down, and none shall make them afraid.&rdquo; *
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Both of these Aroêrs lay beyond Jordan&mdash;one in Reuben,
+ afterwards Moab (Judg. xi. 26; Jer. xlviii. 19); the other
+ in Amnion, afterwards Gad (Josh. xiii. 25; 2 Sam. xxiv. 5);
+ here they stand for the countries beyond Jordan which
+ Tiglath-pileser had just laid waste. The tradition preserved
+ in 1 Citron, v. 26 stated that these inhabitants of Gad and
+ Reuben were led into captivity by Pul, i.e. Tiglath-pileser.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The fortress also shall cease from Ephraim, and the kingdom from
+ Damascus, and the remnant of Syria: they shall be as the glory of the
+ children of Israel, saith the Lord of hosts! And it shall come to pass in
+ that day, that the glory of Jacob shall be made thin, and the fatness of
+ his flesh shall wax lean. And it shall be as when the harvestman gathereth
+ the standing corn, and his arm reapeth the ears; yea, it shall be as when
+ one gleaneth ears in the valley of Ephraim. Yet there shall be left
+ therein gleanings, as the shaking of an olive tree, two or three berries
+ in the top of the uppermost bough, four or five in the outmost branches of
+ a fruitful tree, saith Jahveh, the God of Israel!... In that day shall his
+ strong cities be as the forsaken places in the wood, and on the mountain
+ top, which were forsaken from before the children of Israel:* and it shall
+ be as a desolation. For thou hast forgotten the God of thy salvation.&rdquo; **
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * This is probably an allusion to the warlike exploits
+ performed during Rezin and Pekah&rsquo;s invasion of Judaea, a
+ year or two previously.
+
+ ** Isa. xvii. 1-6, 9, 10.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Samaria was doomed to helplessness for many a day to come, if not for
+ ever, but it had taken a whole year to lay it low (733); Tiglath-pileser
+ returned in 732, and devoted yet another year to the war against Damascus.
+ Eezin had not been dismayed by the evil fortune of his friends, and had
+ made good his losses by means of fresh alliances. He had persuaded first
+ Mutton II. of Tyre, then Mitinti of Askalon, and with the latter a section
+ of the Philistines, to throw in their lot with him; he had even won over
+ Shamshieh, queen of the Arabs, and with her a number of the most warlike
+ of the desert tribes; for himself, he had taken up a position on the
+ further side of Anti-Lebanon, and kept strict watch from Mount Hermon on
+ the roads leading from the valley of the Jordan to the plains of the
+ Abana, in order to prevent the enemy from outflanking him and taking him
+ in the rear. But all to no purpose; Tiglath-pileser bore directly down
+ upon him, overwhelmed him in a pitched battle, obliged him to take refuge
+ behind the walls of Damascus, and there besieged him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkBimage-0044" id="linkBimage-0044">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/288.jpg" width="100%" alt="288.jpg Mount Hermon " />
+ </div>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Drawn by Boudier, from a photograph brought back by Lortet.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The city was well fortified, amply supplied with provisions, and strongly
+ garrisoned; the siege was, therefore, a long one, and the Assyrians filled
+ up the time by laying waste the fertile country at the foot of
+ Anti-Lebanon. At last Rezin yielded, gave himself up unconditionally, and
+ was forthwith executed: eight thousand of his followers were carried off
+ to Kîr, on the confines of Elam,* his kingdom was abolished, and a
+ Ninevite governor was installed in his palace, by whom the former domain
+ of Damascus and the territory lately wrested from Israel were henceforth
+ to be administered.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * 2 Kings xvi. 9. Kîr is generally located in Armenia,
+ Media, or Babylonia; a passage in Isaiah (xxii. 6), however,
+ seems to point to its having been somewhere in the direction
+ of Elam, and associated with the Aramæans on the banks of
+ the Tigris. The Assyrian monuments have not, as yet, yielded
+ confirmation of the details given by the <i>Book of the Kings</i>
+ in regard to the captivity of the inhabitants of Damascus. A
+ fragmentary tablet, giving an account of the death of Rezin,
+ was discovered by H. Raw-linson, but it was left in Assyria,
+ and no one knows what has since become of it.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The coalition he had formed did not long survive its leader.* Mutton
+ hastily came to an understanding with the conqueror; Mitinti, like Hannon,
+ fled into Egypt, and his place was taken by Kukibtu, a partisan of
+ Assyria. Hoshea, son of Elah, rebelled against Pekah, assassinated him,
+ and purchased the right to reign over what was left of Israel for ten
+ talents of gold.** Shamshieh alone held out.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The following is a list of the kings of Damascus from the
+ time of David, as far as is known up to the present time:&mdash;
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkBimage-0046" id="linkBimage-0046">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/289b.jpg" width="100%"
+ alt="289b.jpg List of the Kings Of Damascus " />
+ </div>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ ** 2 Kings xv. 30. The inscription published by H.
+ Rawlinson, merely states that &ldquo;they overthrew Pekah, their
+ king, and I promoted Auzi [to the kingship] over them. I
+ received [from him] X talents of gold and... talents of
+ silver....&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ She imagined herself to be safe among the sands of the desert, and it
+ never occurred to her that the heavy masses of the Assyrian army would
+ dream of venturing into these solitudes. Detachments of light cavalry were
+ sent in pursuit of her, and at first met with some difficulties; they
+ were, however, eventually successful; the Armenian and Cappadocian steeds
+ of the Ninevite horsemen easily rode down the queen&rsquo;s meharis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Their success made a great impression on the Arab tribes, and induced the
+ Mashaî, Timaî Sabasans, Khaiapæans, Badanæans, and Khattiæans to bend the
+ knee before Assyria. They all sent envoys bearing presents of gold and
+ silver, camels, both male and female, and spices:* even the Muzri, whose
+ territory lay to the south of the Dead Sea, followed their example, and a
+ certain Idibiel was appointed as their chief.**
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Delitzsch has identified the names of several of these
+ races with names mentioned in the Bible, such as the Temah,
+ Massah, Ephah, Sheba.
+
+ ** The name Muzri, as Winckler has shown, here refers, not
+ to Egypt, but to a canton near Edom, the Nabatsea of the
+ Greco-Roman geographers.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ While his lieutenants were settling outstanding issues in this fashion,
+ Tiglath-pileser held open courts at Damascus, where he received the visits
+ and homage of the Syrians. They came to assure themselves by the evidence
+ of their own eyes of the downfall of the power which had for more than one
+ hundred years checked the progress of Assyria. Those who, like Uassarmi of
+ Tabal, showed any sign of disaffection were removed, the remainder were
+ confirmed in their dignities, subject to payment of the usual tribute, and
+ Mutton of Tyre was obliged to give one hundred talents of gold to ransom
+ his city. Ahaz came to salute his preserver, and to obtain a nearer view
+ of the soldiers to whom he owed continued possession of Jerusalem;* the
+ kings of Ammon, Moab, Edom, and Askalon, the Philistines and the nomads of
+ the Arabian desert, carried away by the general example, followed the lead
+ of Judah, until there was not a single prince or lord of a city from the
+ Euphrates to the river of Egypt who had not acknowledged himself the
+ humble vassal of Nineveh.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * 2 Kings xvi. 10-12. The <i>Nimroud Inscrip</i>. merely mentions
+ his tribute among that of the Syrian kings.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ With the downfall of rezin, Syria&rsquo;s last hope of recovery had vanished;
+ the few states which still enjoyed some show of independence were obliged,
+ if they wished to retain it, to make a parade of unalterable devotion to
+ their Ninevite master, or&mdash;if they found his suzerainty intolerable&mdash;had
+ to risk everything by appealing to Egypt for help.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Much as they may have wished from the very first to do so, it was too
+ early to make the attempt so soon after the conference at Damascus;
+ Tiglath-pileser had, therefore, no cause to fear a rebellion among them,
+ at any rate for some years to come, and it was just as well that this was
+ so, for at the moment of his triumph on the shores of the Mediterranean
+ his interests in Chaldæa were threatened by a serious danger. Nabonazîr,
+ King of Karduniash, had never swerved from the fidelity which he had sworn
+ to his mighty ally after the events of 745, but the tranquillity of his
+ reign had been more than once disturbed by revolt. Borsippa itself had
+ risen on one occasion, and endeavoured to establish itself as an
+ independent city side by side with Babylon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Nabonazîr died, in 734, he was succeeded by his son Nabunâdinzîri,
+ but at the end of a couple of years the latter was assassinated during a
+ popular outbreak, and Nabushumukîn, one of his sons, who had been
+ implicated in the rising, usurped the crown (732). He wore it for two
+ months and twelve days, and then abdicated in favour of a certain
+ Ukînzîr.*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The following is as complete a list as can at present be
+ compiled of this Babylonian dynasty, the eighth of those
+ registered in Pinches&rsquo; Canons (cf. Rost, <i>Untersucli. zur
+ altorient. Gesch.</i>, p. 27):&mdash;
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkBimage-0048" id="linkBimage-0048">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/292.jpg" width="100%"
+ alt="292.jpg Table of This Babylonian Dynasty " />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ It included twenty-two kings, and lasted for about three hundred and fifty
+ years.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The latter was chief of the Bît-Amukkâni, one of the most important among
+ the Chaldæan communities;* the descendants of the Aramaean nomads were
+ thus once more placed upon the throne, and their accession put an end to
+ the relations which had existed for several centuries between Assyria and
+ Karduniash.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The chronicle is silent with regard to the origin of
+ Ukînzîr, but Tiglath-pileser, who declines to give him the
+ title of &ldquo;King of Babylon,&rdquo; says that he was <i>mar Amuhlcâni</i>
+ = son of Amukkâni. Pinches&rsquo; <i>Canon</i> indicates that Ukînzîr
+ belonged to a dynasty the name of which may be read either
+ Shashi or Shapi. The reading Shapi at once recalls the name
+ of Shapîa, one of the chief cities of the Bît Amukkâni; it
+ would thus confirm the evidence of the Nimroud Inscription.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkBimage-0047" id="linkBimage-0047">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="figleft" style="width:48%;">
+ <img width="100%" src="images/290.jpg"
+ alt="290.jpg Arab Meharis Ridden Down by the Assyrian Cavalry " />
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Drawn by Faucher-Gudin,
+from the bas-relief reproduced
+by Layard.
+</pre>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ These marauders, who had always shown themselves impatient of any settled
+ authority, and had never proffered more than a doubtful submission to even
+ the most triumphant invader, were not likely to accept the subordinate
+ position which members of the presiding dynasty had been, for the most
+ part, content to occupy. It was more probable that they would, from the
+ very first, endeavour to throw off the suzerainty of Nineveh.
+ Tiglath-pileser gave the new dynasty no time to settle itself firmly on
+ the throne: the year after his return from Syria he got together an army
+ and marched against it. He first cleared the right bank of the Tigris,
+ where the Pukudu (Pekod) offered but a feeble resistance; he annexed their
+ territory to the ancient province of Arrapkha, then crossed the river and
+ attacked the Kaldi scattered among the plains and marshes of the Shatt
+ el-Haî.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkBimage-0049" id="linkBimage-0049">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="figright" style="width:22%;">
+ <img width="100%" src="images/294.jpg" alt="294.jpg a Kaldu " />
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Drawn by Faucher-
+Gudin, from a
+woodcut published
+by Tomkins
+</pre>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ The Bît-Shilâni were the first to succumb; their king Nabushabshi was
+ impaled before one of the gates of his capital, Sarrabânu, the town itself
+ was taken by storm, plundered and dismantled, and 55,000 of its
+ inhabitants were led captive into Assyria. After the Bît-Shilâni, came the
+ turn of the Bît-Shaali. Dur-Illataî, their capital, was razed to the
+ ground, and its population, numbering 50,400 men and women, was deported.
+ Their chief, Lakiru, who had shown great bravery in the struggle, escaped
+ impalement, but was sent into captivity with his people, a Ninevite
+ governor being appointed in his place. Ukînzîr, who was, as we know,
+ hereditary prince of the Bit-Amuk-kâni, came up in haste to defend his
+ appanage, and threw himself into his fortress at Shapîa: Tiglath-pileser
+ cut down the gardens and groves of palms which lent it beauty, burnt the
+ surrounding farms and villages, and tried, without success, to make a
+ breach in the walls; he still, however, maintained the siege, but when
+ winter came on and the place still held out, he broke up his camp and
+ retreated in good order, leaving the districts which he had laid waste
+ occupied by an Assyrian force. Before his departure, he received homage
+ and tribute from most of the Aramæan chiefs, including those of Balasu and
+ the Bît-Dakkuri, of Nadînu, and even of the Bît-Yakîn and
+ Merodach-baladan, whose ancestors had never before &ldquo;kissed the foot&rdquo; of an
+ Assyrian conqueror. In this campaign he had acquired nearly three-fourths
+ of the whole Babylonian kingdom; but Babylon itself still refused to
+ yield, and it was no easy task to compel it to do so. Tiglath-pileser
+ spent the whole of the year 730 in preparing for another attack, and in
+ 729 he again appeared in front of Shapîa, this time with greater success:
+ Ukînzîr fell into his hands, Babylon opened its gates, and he caused
+ himself to be proclaimed King of Sumir and Akkad within its walls.* Many
+ centuries had passed since the two empires had been united under the rule
+ of a single master, or an Assyrian king had &ldquo;taken the hands of Bel.&rdquo;
+ Tiglath-pileser accepted the condition attached to this solemn
+ investiture, which obliged him to divide his time between Calah and
+ Babylon, and to repeat at every festival of the New Year the mystic
+ ceremony by which the god of the city confirmed him in his office.**
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Contemporary documents do not furnish us with any
+ information as to these events. The <i>Eponym Canon</i> tells us
+ that &ldquo;<i>the king took the hands of Bel</i>.&rdquo; Pinches&rsquo;
+ <i>Chronicle</i> adds that &ldquo;in the third year of Ukînzîr,
+ Tiglath-pileser marched against Akkad, laid waste the Bît-
+ Amukkâni, and took Ukînzîr prisoner; Ukînzîr had reigned
+ three years in Babylon. Tiglath-pileser followed him upon
+ the throne of Babylon.&rdquo;
+
+ ** The <i>Eponym Canon</i> proves that in 728 B.C., the year of
+ his death, he once more took the hands of Bel.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ His Babylonian subjects seem to have taken a liking to him, and perhaps in
+ order to hide from themselves their dependent condition, they shortened
+ his purely Assyrian name of Tukulti-abal-esharra into the familiar
+ sobriquet of Puru or Pulu, under which appellation the native chroniclers
+ later on inscribed him in the official list of kings: he did not long
+ survive his triumph, but died in the month of Tebeth, 728 B.C., after
+ having reigned eighteen years over Assyria, and less than two years over
+ Babylon and Chaldæa.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The formulae employed by the scribes in recording historical events vary
+ so little from one reign to another, that it is, in most cases, a
+ difficult matter to make out, under the mask of uniformity by which they
+ are all concealed, the true character and disposition of each successive
+ sovereign. One thing, however, is certain&mdash;the monarch who now came
+ upon the scene after half a century of reverses, and in a brief space
+ restored to his armies the skill necessary to defeat such formidable foes
+ as the Armenians or the Syrians of Damascus, must have been an able
+ general and a born leader of men. Yet Nineveh had never suffered long from
+ a lack of capable generals, and there would be little to distinguish
+ Tiglath-pileser from any of his predecessors, if we could place nothing
+ more than a few successful campaigns to his credit. His claim to a
+ pre-eminent place among them rests on the fact that he combined the
+ talents of the soldier with the higher qualities of the administrator, and
+ organised his kingdom in a manner at once so simple and so effective, that
+ most of the Oriental powers down to the time of the Grecian conquest were
+ content to accept it as a model. As soon as the ambition of the Assyrian
+ kings began to extend beyond the region confined between the Khabur and
+ the Greater Zab, they found it necessary to parcel out their territory
+ into provinces under the authority of prefects for the purpose of
+ preserving order among the vanquished peoples, and at the same time of
+ protecting them from the attacks of adjacent tribes; these representatives
+ of the central power were supported by garrisons, and were thus enabled to
+ put down such minor insurrections as broke out from time to time. Some of
+ these provinces were already in existence in the reigns of Shalmaneser or
+ Tiglath-pileser I.; after the reverses in the time of Assurirba, their
+ number decreased, but it grew rapidly again as Assur-nazir-pal and
+ Shalmaneser III. gradually extended the field of their operations and of
+ their victories. From this epoch onwards, the monuments mention over a
+ score of them, in spite of the fact that the list thus furnished is not a
+ complete one; the provinces of which we know most are those whose rulers
+ were successively appointed to act as <i>limmi</i>, each of them giving
+ their name to a year of a reign. Assyria proper contained at least four,
+ viz. Assur (called <i>the country</i>, as distinguished from all others),
+ Calah, Nineveh, and Arbela. The basin of the Lesser Zab was divided into
+ the provinces of Kakzi, Arrapkha, and Akhizukhîna;* that of the Upper
+ Tigris into those of Amidi, Tushkhân, and Gôzan. Kirruri was bounded by
+ Mazamua, and Mazamua by Arrapkha and Lake Urumiah. We hear of the three
+ spheres of Nazibina (Nisibis), Tela, and Kazappa in Mesopotamia,** the two
+ former on the southern watersheds of the Masios, on the highways leading
+ into Syria; the latter to the south of the Euphrates, in the former
+ kingdom of the Laqî.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Akhizukhîna is probably identical with Arzukhîna = &ldquo;the
+ City of Zukhma,&rdquo; which is referred to as being situated in
+ the basin of the Lesser Zab.
+
+ ** Razappa is the biblical Rezeph (2 Kings xix. 12; Isa.
+ xxxvii. 12) and the Resapha of Ptolemy, now Er-Rasafa, to
+ the south of the Euphrates, on one of the routes leading to
+ Palmyra.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Most of them included&mdash;in addition to the territory under the
+ immediate control of the governor&mdash;a number of vassal states,
+ kingdoms, cities, and tribes, which enjoyed a certain measure of
+ independence, but were liable to pay tribute and render military service.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkBimage-0050" id="linkBimage-0050">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/298.jpg" width="100%"
+ alt="298.jpg Map of the Assyrian Empire Under Tiglath-pileser Iii. " />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Each new country was annexed, as soon as conquered, to the nearest
+ province, or, if necessary, was converted into a distinct province by
+ itself; thus we find that Assur-nazir-pal, after laying hands on the upper
+ valleys of the Radanu and the Turnat, rebuilt the ruined city of Atlîla,
+ re-named it Dur-Assur, placed a commandant, cavalry, and eunuchs there,
+ and established within it storehouses for the receipt of contributions
+ from the neighbouring barbarians. He followed the same course on each
+ occasion when the fortune of war brought him fresh subjects;* and his
+ successors, Shalmaneser III., Samsi-rammân IV., and Rammân-nirâri did the
+ same thing in Media, in Asia Minor, and in Northern Syria;**
+ Tiglath-pileser III. had only to follow their example and extend the
+ application of their system to the countries which he gradually forced to
+ submit to his rule.***
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * We read of the appointment of a governor in Bît-Khalupi,
+ at Tush-khân, in Naîri, and in the country of the Patina.
+
+ ** The territory of the Bit-Adini was converted into a
+ province by Shalmaneser III.
+
+ *** We find the formation of an Aramæan province, with Kar-
+ Assur as its capital, mentioned in the <i>Annals of Tiglatli-
+ pileser III</i>. Provinces were also established in Media, in
+ Unki, in the basin of the Orontes, and in Lebanon, from
+ nineteen districts formerly belonging to Hamath, six
+ maritime provinces in Northern Phoenicia and in Coele-Syria,
+ in Galilee, at Gaza.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkBimage-0057" id="linkBimage-0057">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="figleft" style="width:46%;">
+ <img width="100%" src="images/320.jpg"
+ alt="320.jpg Stele Or Bel-harran-beluzur. " />
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Drawn by Boudier, from the
+photograph published by Father
+Scheil.
+</pre>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ In his case, however, certain elements came into play which forced him to
+ modify several of their methods, and to have recourse to others which they
+ had seldom or never employed. The majority of the countries hitherto
+ incorporated had been near enough to the capital&mdash;whether it were
+ Assur, Calah, or Nineveh&mdash;to permit of strict watch being kept for
+ any sign of disaffection, and they could be promptly recalled to order if
+ they attempted to throw off the yoke. These provinces were, moreover, of
+ moderate area and sparsely populated: once drawn within the orbit of
+ Assyria&rsquo;s attraction, they were unable to escape from its influence by
+ their own unaided efforts; on the contrary, they gradually lost their
+ individuality, and ended by becoming merged in the body of the nation. The
+ Aramaean tribes of the Khabur and the Balikh, the Cossæans of the Turnat,
+ the marauding shepherds of the Gordyæan hills and the slopes of the
+ Masios, gradually became assimilated to their conquerors after a more or
+ less protracted resistance, till at length&mdash;in spite of differences
+ of origin, creed, and speech&mdash;they became the best of Assyrians,
+ every whit as devoted to the person of their king and as jealous of his
+ honour as the aboriginal Assyrians themselves. A similar result could not
+ be looked for in the case of the cities recently subdued. It was not to be
+ expected that Babylon and Damascus&mdash;to name but two of the most
+ important&mdash;would allow themselves to be influenced and to become
+ reconciled to their lot by artifices which had been successful enough with
+ the Medes and in the country of Tul-Abnî.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To take the case of Babylon first. It was no mere conglomeration of
+ tribes, nor a state of minor importance, but an actual empire, nearly as
+ large as that of Assyria itself, and almost as solidly welded together. It
+ extended from the Turnat and the mountains of Blam to the Arabian desert
+ and the Nâr-Marratûtn, and even though the Cossæans, Elamites, Kaldâ,
+ Sumerians, Akkadians, and other remnants of ancient peoples who formed its
+ somewhat motley population, had dwelt there for centuries in a state of
+ chronic discord, they all agreed&mdash;in theory, at any rate&mdash;in
+ recognising the common suzerainty of Babylon. Babylon was, moreover, by
+ general acknowledgment, the ancient metropolis to which Assyria owed its
+ whole civilisation; it was the holy city whose gods and whose laws had
+ served as a prototype for the gods and laws of Assyria; from its temples
+ and its archives the Assyrian scribes had drawn such knowledge as they had
+ of the history of the ancient world, their religious doctrines and
+ ceremonies, their methods of interpreting the omens and of forecasting the
+ future&mdash;in short, their whole literature, both sacred and profane.
+ The King of Nineveh might conquer Babylon, might even enter within its
+ gates in the hour of triumph, and, when once he had it at his mercy, might
+ throw down its walls, demolish its palaces, destroy its <i>ziggurât</i>,
+ burn its houses, exterminate or carry off its inhabitants, and blot out
+ its name from the list of nations; but so long as he recoiled from the
+ sacrilege involved in such irreparable destruction, he was not merely
+ powerless to reduce it to the level of an ordinary leading provincial
+ town, such as Tela or Tushkhân, but he could not even deprive it in any
+ way of its rank as a capital, or hope to make it anything less than the
+ second city of his empire. As long as it remained in existence, it
+ necessarily took precedence of all others, thanks to its extensive area,
+ the beauty and antiquity of its buildings, and the number of its
+ inhabitants. The pride of its nobles and priests, subdued for a moment by
+ defeat, would almost instantly have reasserted itself, had the victor
+ sought to lower the dignity of their city; Babylon only consented to
+ accept an alien master provided he bowed himself respectfully before its
+ superiority, and was willing to forget that he was a stranger within its
+ gates, and was ready to comply with its laws and masquerade as a
+ Babylonian. Tiglath-pileser III. never dreamt, therefore, of treating the
+ Babylonians as slaves, or of subordinating them to their Assyrian
+ descendants, but left their liberties and territory alike unimpaired. He
+ did not attempt to fuse into a single empire the two kingdoms which his
+ ability had won for him; he kept them separate, and was content to be
+ monarch of both on similar terms. He divided himself, as it were, into two
+ persons, one of whom reigned in Calah, while the other reigned in
+ Karduniash, and his Chaldæan subjects took care to invest this dual <i>rôle</i>
+ &mdash;based on a fiction so soothing to their pride&mdash;with every
+ appearance of reality; he received from them, together with all the titles
+ of the Babylonian kings, that name of Pulu, which later on found its way
+ into their chronicles, and which was so long a puzzle to historians, both
+ ancient and modern. Experience amply proved that this was the only means
+ by which it was possible to yoke temporarily together the two great powers
+ of the Euphrates and the Tigris. Among the successors of Tiglath-pileser,
+ the only sovereigns to rule over Babylon without considerable difficulty
+ were those who followed the precedent set by him and were satisfied to
+ divide their functions and reign as dual kings over a dual kingdom.*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * This was so in the case of Tiglath-pileser III.&lsquo;s
+ immediate successor, Shalmaneser V., of Esarhaddon, and of
+ Assur-bani-pal; Shalmaneser was known at Babylon by the name
+ of Ululai, Assur-bani-pal by that of Kanda-lanu.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ This combination, while gratifying to the ambition of its rulers, was,
+ perhaps, more a source of loss than of gain to Assyria itself. It is true
+ that the power of Karduniash had decreased under the previous dynasty, but
+ it had still been strong enough to hold back the Aramæans of the Persian
+ Gulf on one side, and the Elamite hordes on the other. It lay like a broad
+ barrier between these barbarians and the cities of the Middle Tigris; when
+ an unusually vigorous attack compelled it to give way at some point, it
+ appealed to Nineveh for help, and an Assyrian army, entering the country
+ at the fords of the Zab, hastened to drive back the aggressors to the
+ place from which they had set out. When, however, the kings of Assyria had
+ become kings of Babylon as well, the situation was altered. Several
+ branches of the Kaldâ had hitherto held possession of the city, and still
+ possessed representatives and allies among the other tribes, especially
+ among the Bît-Yakîn, who believed themselves entitled to reassert their
+ supremacy within in. The Elamite princes, on their part, accustomed to
+ descend at will into the plains that lay between the Tigris and the
+ Euphrates, and to enrich themselves by frequent raids, could not make up
+ their minds to change the habits of centuries, until they had at least
+ crossed swords with the new despot, and put his mettle to the test. The
+ Ninevite King of Babylon was thus in duty bound to protect his subjects
+ against the same enemies that had ceaselessly harassed his native-born
+ predecessors, and as the unaided resources of Karduniash no longer enabled
+ him to do so effectively, he was, naturally, obliged to fall back on the
+ forces at his disposal as King of Assyria. Henceforward it was no longer
+ the Babylonian army that protected Nineveh, but rather that of Nineveh
+ which had to protect Babylon, and to encounter, almost every year, foes
+ whom in former days it had met only at rare intervals, and then merely
+ when it chose to intervene in their affairs. Where the Assyrian sovereigns
+ had gained a kingdom for themselves and their posterity, Assyria itself
+ found little else but fresh battle-fields and formidable adversaries, in
+ the effort to overcome whom its energies were all but exhausted. In Syria
+ and on the shores of the Mediterranean, Tiglath-pileser had nations of
+ less stubborn vitality to deal with, nor was he bound by the traditions of
+ a common past to show equal respect to their prejudices. Arpad, Unki, the
+ Bekâa, Damascus, and Gilead were all consecutively swallowed up by
+ Assyria, but, the work of absorption once completed, difficulties were
+ encountered which now had to be met for the first time. The subordinate to
+ whom he entrusted the task of governing these districts* had one or two
+ Assyrian regiments assigned him as his body-guard,** and these exercised
+ the same ascendency over the natives as the Egyptian archers had done in
+ days gone by: it was felt that they had the whole might of Assyria behind
+ them, and the mere fact of their presence in the midst of the conquered
+ country was, as a rule, sufficient to guarantee the safety of the Assyrian
+ governor and ensure obedience to his commands.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The governor was called <i>Shaknu</i> = &ldquo;he whom the king has
+ established in his place,&rdquo; and <i>pekhu</i> = &ldquo;the pilot,&rdquo; &ldquo;the
+ manager,&rdquo; whence <i>pikhatu</i> = &ldquo;a district,&rdquo; and <i>bel-pikhati</i>
+ = &ldquo;the master of a district.&rdquo; It seems that the <i>shaknu</i> was
+ of higher rank than the <i>bel-pikhati</i>, and often had the
+ latter under his command.
+
+ ** Thus Assur-nazir-pal selected the horsemen and other
+ soldiers who were to form the body-guard of the governor of
+ Parzindu.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ This body-guard was never a very numerous one, for the army would have
+ melted away in the course of a campaign or two, had it been necessary,
+ after each fresh conquest, to detach from it a sufficient force to guard
+ against rebellion. It was strengthened, it is true, by auxiliaries
+ enlisted on the spot, and the tributary chiefs included in the provincial
+ district were expected to furnish a reasonable quota of men in case of
+ need;* but the loyalty of all these people was, at the best, somewhat
+ doubtful, and in the event of their proving untrustworthy at a critical
+ moment, the little band of Assyrian horse and foot would be left to deal
+ with the revolt unaided until such time as the king could come and relieve
+ them.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * In a despatch from Belibni to Assur-bani-pal we find
+ Aramæans from the Persian Gulf submitting to the authority
+ of an Assyrian officer, and fighting in Elam side by side
+ with his troops. Again, under Assur-bani-pal, an army sent
+ to repress a revolt on the part of Kedar and the Nabatseans
+ included contingents from Ammon, Moab, and Edom, together
+ with the Assyrian garrisons of the Haurân and Zobah.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The distance between the banks of the Jordan or Abana and those of the
+ Tigris was a long one, and in nearly every instance it would have been a
+ question of months before help could arrive. Meanwhile, Egypt was at hand,
+ jealous of her rival, who was thus encroaching on territory which had till
+ lately been regarded as her exclusive sphere of influence, and vaguely
+ apprehensive of the fate which might be in store for her if some Assyrian
+ army, spurred by the lust of conquest, were to cross the desert and bear
+ down upon the eastern frontiers of the Delta. Distrustful of her own
+ powers, and unwilling to assume a directly offensive attitude, she did all
+ she could to foment continual disturbances among the Hebrews and
+ Phoenicians, as well as in Philistia and Aram; she carried on secret
+ intrigues with the independent princes, and held out tempting hopes of
+ speedy intervention before the eyes of their peoples; her influence could
+ readily be traced in every seditious movement. The handful of men assigned
+ to the governors of the earlier provinces close to the capital would have
+ been of little avail against perils of this kind. Though Tiglath-pileser
+ added colony to colony in the distant regions annexed by him, he organised
+ them on a different plan from that which had prevailed before his time.
+ His predecessors had usually sent Assyrians to these colonies, and filled
+ the villages vacated by them with families taken from the conquered
+ region: a transfer of inhabitants was made, for instance, from Naîri or
+ from Media into Assyria, and <i>vice versâ</i>. By following this system,
+ Tiglath-pileser would soon have scattered his whole people over the
+ dependencies of his empire, and have found his hereditary states peopled
+ by a motley and incoherent collection of aliens; he therefore left his
+ Assyrians for the most part at home, and only effected exchanges between
+ captives. In his earlier campaigns he brought back with him, on one
+ occasion, 65,000 prisoners from the table-land of Iran, in order to
+ distribute them over a province which he was organising on the banks of
+ the Turnat and the Zab: he levied contributions of this kind without mercy
+ from all the states that he conquered from year to year, and dispersed the
+ captives thus obtained over the length and breadth of his empire; he
+ transplanted the Aramæans of the Mesopotamian deserts, and the Kaldâ to
+ the slopes of Mount Amanus or the banks of the Orontes, the Patinians and
+ Hamathæans to Ulluba, the inhabitants of Damascus to Kîr or to the borders
+ of Elam,* and the Israelites to some place in Assyria.**
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * 2 Kings xvi. 9.
+
+ ** 2 Kings xv. 29.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ He allowed them to take with them their wives and their children, their
+ herds, their chattels, their gods, and even their money. Drafted into the
+ towns and country districts in batches sufficiently numerous to be
+ self-supporting, but yet not large enough to allow of their at once
+ re-establishing themselves as a distinct nation in their new home, they
+ seem to have formed, even in the midst of the most turbulent provinces,
+ settlements of colonists who lived unaffected by any native influence or
+ resentment. The aborigines hated them because of their religion, their
+ customs, their clothing, and their language; in their eyes they were mere
+ interlopers, who occupied the property of relations or fellow-countrymen
+ who had fallen in battle or had been spirited away to the other end of the
+ world. And even when, after many years, the native owners of the soil had
+ become familiarised with them, this mutual antipathy had struck such deep
+ root in their minds that any understanding between the natives and the
+ descendants of the immigrants was quite out of the question: what had been
+ formerly a vast kingdom, occupied by a single homogeneous race, actuated
+ by a common patriotic spirit, became for many a year a region capriciously
+ subdivided and torn by the dissensions of a number of paltry antagonistic
+ communities. The colonists, exposed to the same hatreds as the original
+ Assyrian conquerors, soon forgot to look upon the latter as the oppressors
+ of all, and, allowing their present grudge to efface the memory of past
+ injuries, did not hesitate to make common cause with them. In time of
+ peace, the governor did his best to protect them against molestation on
+ the part of the natives, and in return for this they rallied round him
+ whenever the latter threatened to get out of hand, and helped him to
+ stifle the revolt or hold it in check until the arrival of reinforcements.
+ Thanks to their help, the empire was consolidated and maintained without
+ too many violent outbreaks in regions far removed from the capital and
+ beyond the immediate reach of the sovereign.* We possess very few details
+ with regard to the administration of these prefects.**
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * This was the history of the only one of those colonies
+ whose fate is known to us&mdash;that founded at Samaria by Sargon
+ and his successors.
+
+ ** The texts contain a certain number of names of offices,
+ the precise nature of which it is not easy to ascertain,
+ e.g. the Khâzanu, the Labuttu, and others. One of them,
+ apparently, should be read <i>Shuparshak</i>, and identical with
+ one of the titles mentioned in Ezra (v. 6, vi. 6) as being
+ in existence during the Persian epoch.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkBimage-0051" id="linkBimage-0051">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="figright" style="width:47%;">
+ <img width="100%" src="images/312.jpg"
+ alt="312.jpg Tiglath-pileser III. Besieging a Revellious City. " />
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Drawn by Boudier,
+from a photograph
+by Mansell.
+</pre>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ The various functionaries, governors of towns, tax-collectors, heads of
+ stations, and officers whose duty it was to patrol the roads and look
+ after the safety of merchants, were, for the most part, selected from
+ among natives who had thrown in their lot with Assyria, and probably few
+ Assyrians were to be found outside the more turbulent cities and important
+ fortresses. The kings and chiefs whose territory was attached to a given
+ province, either took their instructions direct from Nineveh, or were
+ sometimes placed under the control of a resident, or <i>kipu</i>, with
+ some sort of escort at his back, who kept watch over their movements and
+ reported them to the suzerain, and saw that the tribute was paid
+ regularly, and that the military service provided for in the treaties was
+ duly rendered. Governors and residents alike kept up a constant
+ correspondence with the court, and such of their letters as have chanced
+ to come down to us show what a minute account of even the most trifling
+ occurrences was required of them by the central authorities. They were not
+ only obliged to report any fluctuation in the temper or attitude of their
+ subordinates, or any intrigues that were being entered into across the
+ frontier; they had also to record the transfer of troops, the return of
+ fugitives, the pursuit of deserters, any chance scuffle between soldiers
+ and natives, as well as the punishment inflicted on the rebellious, the
+ appearance of a portent in the heavens, or omens noticed by the augurs.
+ There were plenty of envious or officious tongues among their followers to
+ report to headquarters the slightest failure of duty, and to draw
+ attention to their negligence. Moreover, it seems certain that the object
+ of thus compelling them to refer to the king at every turn, was not merely
+ in order to keep him informed of all that took place in his dependencies,
+ but also to lay bare the daily life of his prefects before his eyes. The
+ latter were entrusted with the command of seasoned troops; they had
+ considerable sums of money passing through their hands, and were often
+ obliged to take prompt decisions and enter into diplomatic or military
+ transactions on their own responsibility; in short, most of them, at any
+ rate, who were stationed at the furthest confines of the empire were
+ really kings in all but title, insignia, and birth. There was always the
+ danger lest some among them should be tempted to reassert, in their own
+ interest, the independence of the countries under their rule, and seek to
+ found a dynasty in their midst. The strict supervision maintained over
+ these governors generally nipped any ambition of this kind in the bud; in
+ some cases, however, it created the very danger it was intended to
+ prevent. If a governor who had been recalled to Nineveh or Calah in order
+ to explain his conduct failed to clear himself completely, he at once fell
+ into disgrace; and disgrace in Assyria, as in other countries of the East,
+ meant, nine times out of ten, confiscation of property, mutilation and
+ lifelong imprisonment, or death in its most hideous form. He would,
+ therefore, think twice before quitting his post, and if he had any reason
+ to suppose himself suspected, or viewed with disfavour in high quarters,
+ he would be in no hurry to obey a summons to the capital. A revolt was
+ almost certain to be crushed without fail, and offered merely a very
+ precarious chance of escape, but the governor was seldom likely to
+ hesitate between almost certain condemnation and the vague possibility of
+ a successful rising; in such a case, therefore, he staked everything on a
+ single throw.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The system was a defective on, in that it exposed to strong temptation the
+ very functionaries whose loyalty was most essential to the proper working
+ of the administration, but its dangers were out weighed by such important
+ advantages that we cannot but regard it as a very real improvement on the
+ haphazard methods of the past. In the first place, it opened up a larger
+ recruiting-ground for the army, and, in a measure, guaranteed it against
+ that premature exhaustion which had already led more than once to an
+ eclipse of the Assyrian power. It may be that the pick of these provincial
+ troops were, preferably, told off for police duties, or for the defence of
+ the districts in which they were levied, and that they seldom left it
+ except to do battle in the adjacent territory;* but, even with these
+ limitations they were none the less of inestimable value, since they
+ relieved the main army of Assyria from garrison duties in a hundred
+ scattered localities, and allowed the king to concentrate it almost in its
+ entirety about his own person, and to direct it <i>en masse</i> upon those
+ points where he wished to strike a decisive blow.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Thus, in the reign of Assur-bani-pal, we find the militia
+ of the governor of Uruk marching to battle against the
+ Gambulu.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ On the other hand, the finances of the kingdom were put on a more stable
+ and systematic basis. For nearly the whole of the two previous centuries,
+ during which Assyria had resumed its victorious career, the treasury had
+ been filled to some extent by taxes in kind or in money, and by various
+ dues claimed from the hereditary kingdom and its few immediate
+ dependencies, but mainly by booty and by tribute levied after each
+ campaign from the peoples who had been conquered or had voluntarily
+ submitted to Assyrian rule. The result was a budget which fluctuated
+ greatly, since all forays were not equally lucrative, and the new
+ dependencies proved so refractory at the idea of perpetual tribute, that
+ frequent expeditions were necessary in order to persuade them to pay their
+ dues. We do not know how Tiglath-pileser III. organised the finances of
+ his provinces, but certain facts recorded here and there in the texts show
+ that he must have drawn very considerable amounts from them. We notice
+ that twenty or thirty years after his time, Carchemish was assessed at a
+ hundred talents, Arpad and Kuî at thirty each, Megiddo and Manzuatu at
+ fifteen, though the purposes to which these sums were applied is not
+ specified.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkBimage-0052" id="linkBimage-0052">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/314.jpg" width="100%"
+ alt="314.jpg a Herd of Horses Brought in As Tribute " />
+ </div>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from one of the bronze bas-reliefs
+ on the gates of Balawat. The breed here represented seems to
+ have been common in Urartu, as well as in Cappadocia and
+ Northern Syria.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ On the other hand, we know the precise object to which the contributions
+ of several other cities were assigned; as, for instance, so much for the
+ maintenance of the throne in the palace, or for the divans of the ladies
+ of the harem; so much for linen garments, for dresses, and for veils;
+ twenty talents from Nineveh for the armaments of the fleet, and ten from
+ the same city for firewood. Certain provinces were expected to maintain
+ the stud-farms, and their contributions of horses were specially valuable,
+ now that cavalry played almost as important a part as infantry in military
+ operations. The most highly prized animals came, perhaps, from Asia Minor;
+ the nations of Mount Taurus, who had supplied chargers to Israel and Egypt
+ five centuries earlier, now furnished war-horses to the squadrons of
+ Nineveh. The breed was small, but robust, inured to fatigue and hard
+ usage, and in every way similar to that raised in these countries at the
+ present day. In war, horses formed a very considerable proportion of the
+ booty taken; in time of peace, they were used as part of the payment of
+ the yearly tribute, and a brisk trade in them was carried on with
+ Mesopotamia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkBimage-0053" id="linkBimage-0053">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/315.jpg" width="100%"
+ alt="315.jpg a Typical Cappadocian Horse " />
+ </div>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Drawn by Boudier, from a photograph by M. Alfred Boissier.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkBimage-0054" id="linkBimage-0054">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="figleft" style="width:34%;">
+ <img width="100%" src="images/316.jpg"
+ alt="316.jpg a Syrian BÎt-khilÂni " />
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Reproduced by Faucher-
+Gudin, from the
+restoration published
+by Luschan.
+</pre>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ After the king had deducted from his receipts enough to provide amply for
+ the wants of his family and court, the salaries of the various
+ functionaries and officials, the pay and equipment of his army, the
+ maintenance and construction of palaces and fortresses, he had still
+ sufficient left over to form an enormous reserve fund on which he and his
+ successors might draw in the event of their ordinary sources of income
+ being depleted by a series of repeated reverses.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tiglath-pileser thus impressed upon Assyria the character by which it was
+ known during the most splendid century of its history, and the
+ organisation which he devised for it was so admirably adapted to the
+ Oriental genius that it survived the fall of Nineveh, and served as a
+ model for every empire-maker down to the close of the Macedonian era and
+ even beyond it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The wealth of the country grew rapidly, owing to the influx of capital and
+ of foreign population; in the intervals between their campaigns its rulers
+ set to work to remove all traces of the ruins which had been allowed to
+ accumulate during the last forty years. The king had built himself a
+ splendid palace at Calah, close to the monuments of Assur-nazir-pal and
+ Shalmaneser III., and its terraces and walls overhung the waters of the
+ Tigris. The main entrance consisted of a <i>Bît-khilâni</i>, one of those
+ porticoes, flanked by towers and supported by columns or pillars, often
+ found in Syrian towns, the fashion for which was now beginning to spread
+ to Western Asia.*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The precise nature of the edifices referred to in the
+ inscriptions under the name of Bît-khilâni is still a matter
+ of controversy. It has been identified with the pillared
+ hall, or audience-chamber, such as we find in Sargon&rsquo;s
+ palace at Khorsabad, and with edifices or portions of
+ edifices which varied according to the period, but which
+ were ornamented with columns. It seems clear, however, that
+ it was used of the whole series of chambers and buildings
+ which formed the monumental gates of Assyrian palaces,
+ something analogous to the <i>Migdol</i> of Ramses III. at
+ Medinet-Habu, and more especially to the gates at Zinjirli.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Those discovered at Zinjirli afford fine examples of the arrangements
+ adopted in buildings of this kind; the lower part of the walls was covered
+ with bas-reliefs, figures of gods and men, soldiers mounted or on foot,
+ victims and fantastic animal shapes; the columns, where there were any,
+ rested on the back of a sphinx or on a pair of griffins of a type which
+ shows a curious mixture of Egyptian and Semitic influences.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkBimage-0055" id="linkBimage-0055">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/317.jpg" width="100%"
+ alt="317.jpg the Foundatins of a Bît-khil.ni " />
+ </div>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Drawn by Boudier, from a sketch published by Luschan.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The wood-work of the Ninevite Bît-khilâni was of cedar from Mount Amanus,
+ the door-frames and fittings were of various rare woods, inlaid with ivory
+ and metal. The entrance was guarded by the usual colossal figures, and the
+ walls of the state reception-rooms were covered with slabs of alabaster;
+ on these, in accordance with the usual custom,* were carved scenes from
+ the royal wars, with explanatory inscriptions. The palace was subsequently
+ dismantled, its pictures defaced and its inscriptions obliterated,** to
+ mark the hatred felt by later generations towards the hero whom they were
+ pleased to regard as a usurper; we can only partially succeed in
+ deciphering his annals by the help of the fragmentary sentences which have
+ escaped the fury of the destroyer.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The building of Tiglath-pileser&rsquo;s palace is described in
+ the Nimroud Inscription. It stood near the centre of the
+ platform of Nimroud.
+
+ ** The materials were utilised by Esarhaddon, but it does
+ not necessarily follow that the palace was dismantled by
+ that monarch; this was probably done by Sargon or by
+ Sennacherib.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkBimage-0056" id="linkBimage-0056">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="figright" style="width:49%;">
+ <img width="100%" src="images/318.jpg"
+ alt="318.jpg Base of a Column at Zinjireli " />
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a
+photograph published by Luschan.
+</pre>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ The cities and fortresses which he raised throughout the length and
+ breadth of Assyria proper and its more recently acquired provinces have
+ similarly disappeared; we can only conjecture that the nobles of his
+ court, fired by his example, must have built and richly endowed more than
+ one city on their hereditary estates, or in the territories under their
+ rule. Bel-harrân-beluzur, the marshal of the palace, who twice gave his
+ name to years of the king&rsquo;s reign, viz. in 741 and 727 B.C., possessed, it
+ would seem, an important fief a little to the north of Assur, near the
+ banks of the Tharthar, on the site of the present Tel-Abta. The district
+ was badly cultivated, and little better than a wilderness; by express
+ order of the celestial deities&mdash;Marduk, Nabu, Shamash, Sin, and the
+ two Ishtars&mdash;he dug the foundations of a city which he called
+ Dur-Bel-harrân-beluzur. The description he gives of it affords conclusive
+ evidence of the power of the great nobles, and shows how nearly they
+ approached, by their wealth and hereditary privileges, to the kingly rank.
+ He erected, we are told, a <i>ziggurât</i> on a raised terrace, in which
+ he placed his gods in true royal fashion; he assigned slaves, landed
+ property, and a yearly income to their priests, in order that worship
+ might be paid to them in perpetuity; he granted sanctuary to all freemen
+ who settled within the walls or in the environs, exemption from forced
+ labour, and the right to tap a water-course and construct a canal. A
+ decree of foundation was set up in the temple in memory of
+ Bel-harrân-beluzur, precisely as if he were a crowned king. It is a stele
+ of common grey stone with a circular top. The dedicator stands erect
+ against the background of the carving, bare-foot and bare-headed, his face
+ cleanshaven, dressed in a long robe embroidered in a chessboard pattern,
+ and with a tunic pleated in horizontal rows; his right elbow is supported
+ by the left hand, while the right is raised to a level with his eyes, his
+ fist is clenched, and the thumb inserted between the first and second
+ fingers in the customary gesture of adoration.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What the provost of the palace had done on his land, the other barons in
+ all probability did on theirs; most of the departments which had fallen
+ away and languished during the disturbances at the close of the previous
+ dynasty, took a new lease of life under their protection. Private
+ documents&mdash;which increase in number as the century draws to an end&mdash;contracts,
+ official reports, and letters of scribes, all give us the impression of a
+ wealthy and industrious country, stirred by the most intense activity, and
+ in the enjoyment of unexampled prosperity. The excellent administration of
+ Tiglath-pileser and his nobles had paved the way for this sudden
+ improvement, and had helped to develop it, and when Shalmaneser V.
+ succeeded his father on the throne it continued unchecked.* The new-comer
+ made no changes in the system of government which had been so ably
+ inaugurated. He still kept Assyria separate from Karduniash; his
+ Babylonian subjects, faithful to ancient custom, soon devised a nickname
+ for him, that of Ululai, as though seeking to persuade themselves that
+ they had a king who belonged to them alone; and it is under this name that
+ their annalists have inscribed him next to Pulu in the list of their
+ dynasties.**
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His reign was, on the whole, a calm and peaceful one; the Kaldâ, the
+ Medes, Urartu, and the races of Mount Taurus remained quiet, or, at any
+ rate, such disorders as may have arisen among them were of too trifling a
+ nature to be deemed worthy of notice in the records of the time. Syria
+ alone was disturbed, and several of its independent states took advantage
+ of the change of rulers to endeavour to shake off the authority of
+ Assyria.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * It was, for a long time, an open question with the earlier
+ Assyriologists whether or not Shalmaneser and Sargon were
+ different names for one and the same monarch. As for
+ monuments, we possess only one attributed to Shalmaneser, a
+ weight in the form of a lion, discovered by Layard at Nimroud,
+ in the north-west palace. The length of his reign, and
+ the scanty details we possess concerning it, have been
+ learnt from the <i>Eponym Canon</i> and <i>Pinches&rsquo; Babylonian
+ Chronicle</i>, and also from the Hebrew texts (2 Kings xvii. 3-
+ 6; xviii. 9-12).
+
+ ** The identity of Ululai and Shalmaneser V., though still
+ questioned by Oppert, has been proved by the comparison of
+ Babylonian records, in some of which the names Pulu and
+ Ululai occur in positions exactly corresponding with those
+ occupied, in others, by Tiglath-pileser and Shalmaneser. The
+ name Ululai was given to the king because he was born in the
+ month of Ulul; in Pinches&rsquo; list we find a gloss, &ldquo;Dynasty
+ of Tinu,&rdquo; which probably indicates the Assyrian town in
+ which Tiglath-pileser III. and his son were born.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Egypt continued to give them secret encouragement in these tactics, though
+ its own internal dissensions prevented it from offering any effective aid.
+ The Tanite dynasty was in its death-throes. Psamuti, the last of its
+ kings, exercised a dubious sovereignty over but a few of the nomes on the
+ Arabian frontier.*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * He is the Psammous mentioned by Manetho. The cartouches
+ attributed to him by Lepsius really belong to the Psammuthis
+ of the XXIXth dynasty. It is possible that one of the marks
+ found at Karnak indicating the level of the Nile belong to
+ the reign of this monarch.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ His neighbours the Saites were gradually gaining the upper hand in the
+ Delta and in the fiefs of middle Egypt, at first under Tafnakhti, and
+ then, after his death, under his son Bukunirînif, Bocchoris of the Greek
+ historians. They held supremacy over several personages who, like
+ themselves, claimed the title and rank of Pharaoh; amongst others, over a
+ certain Rudamanu Mîamun, son of Osorkon: their power did not, however,
+ extend beyond Siut, near the former frontier of the Theban kingdom. The
+ withdrawal of Piônkhi-Mîamun, and his subsequent death, had not disturbed
+ the Ethiopian rule in the southern half of Egypt, though it somewhat
+ altered its character. While an unknown Ethiopian king filled the place of
+ the conquerer at Napata, another Ethiopian, named Kashta, made his way to
+ the throne in Thebes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkBimage-0058" id="linkBimage-0058">
+ <!-- IMG --></a> <a href="images/321-large.jpg">ENLARGE TO FULL SIZE</a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img alt="321 (153K) Manuscript on Papyrus in Hieroglyphics"
+ src="images/321.jpg" width="100%" />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <a name="linkBimage-0059" id="linkBimage-0059">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="figleft" style="width:33%;">
+ <img width="100%" src="images/323.jpg"
+ alt="323.jpg Cone Bearing the Name of Kashta and Of His Daughter Amenertas " />
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Drawn by Faucher-Gudin,
+after Prisse d&rsquo;Avennes.
+</pre>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ It is possible that he was a son of Piônkhi, and may have been placed in
+ supreme power by his father when the latter reinstated the city in its
+ place as capital. With all their partiality for real or supposed
+ descendants of the Ramesside dynasty, the Thebans were, before all things,
+ proud of their former greatness, and eagerly hoped to regain it without
+ delay. When, therefore, they accepted this Kushite king who, to their
+ eyes, represented the only family possessed of a legitimate claim to the
+ throne, it was mainly because they counted on him to restore them to their
+ former place among the cities of Egypt. They must have been cruelly
+ disappointed when he left them for the Sacred Mountain. His invasion, far
+ from reviving their prosperity, merely served to ratify the suppression of
+ that pontificate of Amon-Râ which was the last remaining evidence of their
+ past splendour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All hope of re-establishing it had now to be abandoned, since the
+ sovereign who had come to them from Napata was himself by birth and
+ hereditary privelege and hereditary sole priest of Anion: in his absence
+ the actual head of the Theban religion could lay claim only to an inferior
+ office, and indeed, even then, the only reason for accepting a second
+ prophet was that he might direct the worship of the temple at Karnak. The
+ force of circumstances compelled the Ethiopians to countenance in the
+ Thebaid what their Tanite or Bubastite predecessors had been obliged to
+ tolerate at Hermopolis, Heracleopolis, Sais, and in many another lesser
+ city; they turned it into a feudatory kingdom, and gave it a ruler who,
+ like Auîti, half a century earlier, had the right to use the cartouches.
+ Once installed, Kashta employed the usual methods to secure his seat on
+ the throne, one of the first being a marriage alliance. The disappearance
+ of the high priests had naturally increased the importance of the
+ princesses consecrated to the service of Amon. From henceforward they were
+ the sole visible intermediaries between the god and his people, the
+ privileged guardians of his body and his double, and competent to
+ perpetuate the line of the solar kings. The Theban appanage constituted
+ their dowry, and even if their sex prevented them from discharging all
+ those civil, military, and religious duties required by their position, no
+ one else had the right to do so on their behalf, unless he was expressly
+ chosen by them for the purpose. When once married they deputed their
+ husbands to act for them; so long as they remained either single or
+ widows, some exalted personage, the prophet of Amon or Montu, the ruler of
+ Thebes, or the administrator of the Said, managed their houses and fiefs
+ for them with such show of authority that strangers were at times
+ deceived, and took him for the reigning monarch of the country.*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Thus Harua, in the time of Amenertas, was prince and chief
+ over the servants of the &ldquo;Divine Worshipper.&rdquo; Mantumihâit,
+ in the time of Taharqa and of Tanuatamanu, was ruler of
+ Thebes, and fourth prophet of Amon, and it is he who is
+ described in the Assyrian monuments as King of Thebes.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The Pharaohs had, therefore, a stronger incentive than ever to secure
+ exclusive possession of these women, and if they could not get all of them
+ safely housed in their harems, they endeavoured, at any rate, to reserve
+ for themselves the chief among them, who by purity of descent or seniority
+ in age had attained the grade of <i>Divine Worshipper</i>. Kashta married
+ a certain Shapenuapît, daughter of Osorkon III. and a Theban pallacide;*
+ it is uncertain whether he eventually became king over Ethiopia and the
+ Sudan or not. So far, we have no proof that he did, but it seems quite
+ possible when we remember that one of his children, Shabaku (Sabaco),
+ subsequently occupied the throne of Napata in addition to that of Thebes.
+ Kashta does not appear to have possessed sufficient energy to prevent the
+ Delta and its nomes from repudiating the Ethiopian supremacy. The Saites,
+ under Tafnakhti or Bocchoris, soon got the upper hand, and it was to them
+ that the Syrian vassals of Nineveh looked for aid, when death removed the
+ conqueror who had trampled them so ruthlessly underfoot. Ever since the
+ fall of Arpad, Hadrach, and Damascus, Shabaraîn, a town situated somewhere
+ in the valley of the Orontes or of the Upper Litany,** and hitherto but
+ little known, had served as a rallying-point for the disaffected Aramaean
+ tribes: on the accession of Shalmaneser V. it ventured to rebel, probably
+ in 727 B.C., but was overthrown and destroyed, its inhabitants being led
+ away captive.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * It may be that, in accordance with a custom which obtained
+ during the generations that followed, and which possibly
+ originated about this period, this daughter of Osorkon III.
+ was only the adoptive mother of Amenertas.
+
+ ** Shabaraîn was originally confounded with Samaria by the
+ early commentators on the Babylonian Chronicle. Halévy, very
+ happily, referred it to the biblical Sepharvaîm, a place
+ always mentioned in connection with Hamath and Arpad (2
+ Kings xvii. 24, 31; xviii. 34; xix. 13: cf. Isa. xxxvi. 19;
+ xxxvii. 13), and to the Sibraim of Ezekiel (xlvii. 16),
+ called in the <i>Septuagint</i> Samarêim. Its identification with
+ Samaria has, since then, been generally rejected, and its
+ connection with Sibraim admitted. Sibraim (or Sepharvaîm, or
+ Samarêîm) has been located at Shomerîyeh, to the east of the
+ Bahr-Kades, and south of Hamath.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ This achievement proved, beyond the possibility of doubt, that in spite of
+ their change of rulers the vengeance of the Assyrians was as keen and
+ sharp as ever. Not one of the Syrian towns dared to stir, and the
+ Phonician seaports, though their loyalty had seemed, for a moment,
+ doubtful, took care to avoid any action which might expose them to the
+ terrors of a like severity.* The Israelites and Philistines, alone of the
+ western peoples, could not resign themselves to a prudent policy; after a
+ short period of hesitation they drew the sword from its scabbard, and in
+ 725 war broke out.**
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The siege of Tyre, which the historian Menander, in a
+ passage quoted by Josephus, places in the reign of
+ Shalmaneser, ought really to be referred to the reign of
+ Sennacherib, or the fragment of Menander must be divided
+ into three parts dealing with three different Assyrian
+ campaigns against Tyre, under Tiglath-pileser, Sennacherib,
+ and Esarhaddon respectively.
+
+ ** The war cannot have begun earlier, for the <i>Eponym
+ Canon</i>, in dealing with 726, has the words &ldquo;in the country,&rdquo;
+ thus proving that no expedition took place in that year; in
+ the case of the year 725, on the other hand, it refers to a
+ campaign against some country whose name has disappeared.
+ The passages in the <i>Book of Kings</i> (2 Kings xvii. 1-6, and
+ xviii. 9-12) which deal with the close of the kingdom of
+ Israel, have been interpreted in such a way as to give us
+ two campaigns by Shalmaneser against Hoshea: (1) Hoshea
+ having failed to pay the tribute imposed upon him by
+ Tiglath-pileser, Shalmaneser made war upon him and compelled
+ him to resume its payment (2 Kings xvii. 1-3); (2) Hoshea
+ having intrigued with Egypt, and declined to pay tribute,
+ Shalmaneser again took the field against him, made him
+ prisoner, and besieged Samaria for three years (2 Kings
+ xvii. 4-6; xviii. 9-12). The first expedition must, in this
+ case, have taken place in 727, while the second must have
+ lasted from 725-722. Most modern historians believe that the
+ Hebrew writer has ascribed to Shalmaneser the subjection of
+ Hoshea which was really the act of Tiglath-pileser, as well
+ as the final war against Israel. According to Winckler, the
+ two portions of the narrative must have been borrowed from
+ two different versions of the final war, which the final
+ editor inserted one after the other, heedless of the
+ contradictions contained in them.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Hoshea, who had ascended the throne with the consent of Tiglath-pileser,
+ was unable to keep them quiet. The whole of Galilee and Gilead was now an
+ Assyrian province, subject to the governor of Damascus; Jerusalem, Moab,
+ Ammon, and the Bedâwin had transferred their allegiance to Nineveh; and
+ Israel, with merely the central tribes of Ephraim, Manasseh, and Benjamin
+ left, was now barely equal in area and population to Judah. Their tribute
+ weighed heavily on the Israelites; passing armies had laid waste their
+ fields, and townsmen, merchants, and nobles alike, deprived of their
+ customary resources, fretted with impatience under the burdens and
+ humiliations imposed on them by their defeat; convinced of their
+ helplessness, they again looked beyond their own borders for some nation
+ or individual who should restore to them their lost prosperity. Amid the
+ tottering fortunes of their neighbours, Egypt alone stood erect, and it
+ was, therefore, to Egypt that they turned their eyes. Negotiations were
+ opened, not with Pharaoh himself, but with Shabi, one of the petty kings
+ on the eastern frontier of the Delta, whose position made him better
+ qualified than any other to deal with Syrian affairs.*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * This individual is called Sua, Seveh, and So in the Hebrew
+ text (2 Kings xvii. 4), and the Septuagint gives the
+ transliteration Sebek side by side with Sêgôs. He is found
+ again under the forms Shibahi, Shabi, Shabé, in Sargon&rsquo;s
+ inscriptions.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Hannon of Gaza had by this time returned from exile, and it was,
+ doubtless, owing to Shabi&rsquo;s support that he had been able to drive out the
+ Assyrian generals and recover his crown.* The Israelite aristocracy was
+ led away by his example, but Shalmaneser hastened to the spot before the
+ Egyptian bowmen had time to cross the isthmus. Hoshea begged for mercy,
+ and was deported into Assyria and condemned to lifelong imprisonment.**
+ Though deserted by her king, Samaria did not despair; she refused to open
+ her gates, and, being strongly fortified, compelled the Assyrians to lay
+ regular siege to the city. It would seem that at one moment, at the
+ beginning of operations, when it was rumoured on all sides that Pharaoh
+ would speedily intervene, Ahaz began to fear for his own personal safety,
+ and seriously considered whether it would not be wiser to join forces with
+ Israel or with Egypt.***
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * This seems to be the inference from Sargon&rsquo;s inscription,
+ in which he is referred to as relying on the army of Shabi,
+ the <i>tartan</i> of Egypt.
+
+ ** 2 Kings xvii. 4.
+
+ *** The <i>Second Book of Kings</i> (xviii. 9,10; cf. xvii. 6)
+ places the beginning of the siege of Samaria in the seventh
+ year of Hoshea ( = fourth year of Hezekiah), and the capture
+ of the town in the ninth year of Hoshea ( = sixth year of
+ Hezekiah); further on it adds that Sennacherib&rsquo;s campaign
+ against Hezekiah took place in the fourteenth year of the
+ latter&rsquo;s reign (2 Kings xviii. 13; cf. Isa. xxxvi. 1). Now,
+ Sennacherib&rsquo;s campaign against Hezekiah took place (as will
+ be shown later on, in vol. viii. Chapter I.) in 702 B.C.,
+ and Samaria was captured in 722. The synchronisms in the
+ Hebrew narrative are therefore fictitious, and rest on no
+ real historical basis&mdash;at any rate, in so far as the king
+ who occupied the throne of Judah at the time of the fall of
+ Samaria is concerned; Ahaz was still alive at that date, and
+ continued to reign till 716 or 715, or perhaps only till
+ 720.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkBimage-0060" id="linkBimage-0060">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/328.jpg" width="100%" alt="328.jpg the Sword Dance " />
+ </div>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ After Painting by Gerome
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The rapid sequence of events, however, backed by the counsel of Isaiah,
+ speedily recalled him to a more reasonable view of the situation. The
+ prophet showed him Samaria spread out before him like one of those wreaths
+ of flowers which the guests at a banquet bind round their brows, and which
+ gradually fade as their wearers drink deeper and deeper. &ldquo;Woe to the crown
+ of pride of the drunkards of Ephraim, and to the fading flower of his
+ glorious beauty, which is on the head of the fat valley of them that are
+ overcome with wine. Behold, the Lord hath a mighty and strong one; as a
+ tempest of hail, a destroying storm, as a tempest of mighty waters
+ overflowing, shall be cast down to the earth with violence. The crown of
+ the pride of the drunkards of Ephraim shall be trodden underfoot, and the
+ fading flower of his glorious beauty, which is on the head of the fat
+ valley, shall be as the first ripe fig before the summer; which when he
+ that looketh upon it seeth, while it is yet in his hand he eateth it up.&rdquo;
+ While the cruel fate of the perverse city was being thus accomplished,
+ Jahveh Sabaoth was to be a crown of glory to those of His children who
+ remained faithful to Him; but Judah, far from submitting itself to His
+ laws, betrayed Him even as Israel had done. Its prophets and priests were
+ likewise distraught with drunkenness; they staggered under the effects of
+ their potations, and turned to scorn the true prophet sent to proclaim to
+ them the will of Jehovah. &ldquo;Whom,&rdquo; they stammered between their hiccups&mdash;&ldquo;whom
+ will He teach knowledge? and whom will He make to understand the message?
+ them that are weaned from the milk and drawn from the breasts? For it is
+ precept upon precept, precept upon precept, line upon line, line upon
+ line, here a little and there a little!&rdquo; And sure enough it was by the
+ mouth of a stammering people, by the lips of the Assyrians, that Jahveh
+ was to speak to them. In vain did the prophet implore them: &ldquo;This is the
+ rest, give ye rest to him that is weary;&rdquo; they did not listen to him, and
+ now Jahveh turns their own gibes against them: &ldquo;Precept upon precept,
+ precept upon precept, line upon line, line upon line, here a little and
+ there a little,&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;that they may go and fall backward, and be broken
+ and snared and taken.&rdquo; There was to be no hope of safety for Jerusalem
+ unless it gave up all dependence on human counsels, and trusted solely to
+ God for protection.*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Isa. xxviii. Giesebrecht has given it as his opinion that
+ only verses 1-6, 23-29 of the prophecy were delivered at
+ this epoch: the remainder he believes to have been written
+ during Sennacherib&rsquo;s campaign against Judah, and suggests
+ that the prophet added on his previous oracle to them, thus
+ diverting it from its original application. Others, such as
+ Stade and Wellhausen, regard the opening verses as embodying
+ a mere rhetorical figure. Jerusalem, they say, appeared to
+ the prophet as though changed into Samaria, and it is this
+ transformed city which he calls &ldquo;the crown of pride of the
+ drunkards of Ephraim.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ Samaria was doomed; this was the general belief, and men went about
+ repeating it after Isaiah, each in his own words; every one feared lest
+ the disaster should spread to Judah also, and that Jahveh, having once
+ determined to have done with the northern kingdom, would turn His wrath
+ against that of the south as well. Micah the Morashtite, a prophet born
+ among the ranks of the middle class, went up and down the land proclaiming
+ misery to be the common lot of the two sister nations sprung from the
+ loins of Jacob, as a punishment for their common errors and weaknesses.
+ &ldquo;The Lord cometh forth out of His place, and will come and tread upon the
+ high places of the earth. And the mountains shall be molten under Him, and
+ the valleys shall be cleft, as wax before the fire, as waters that are
+ poured down a steep place. For the transgression of Jacob is all this, and
+ for the sins of the house of Israel. What is the transgression of Jacob?
+ is it not Samaria? and what are the high places of Judah? are they not
+ Jerusalem?&rdquo; The doom pronounced against Samaria was already being carried
+ out, and soon the hapless city was to be no more than &ldquo;an heap of the
+ field, and as the plantings of a vineyard; and I will pour down the stones
+ thereof into the valley,&rdquo; saith the Lord, &ldquo;and I will discover the
+ foundations thereof. And all her graven images shall be beaten to pieces,
+ and all her hires shall be burned with fire, and all her idols will I lay
+ desolate; for of the hire of an harlot hath she gathered them, and into
+ the hire of an harlot shall they return.&rdquo; Yet, even while mourning over
+ Samaria, the prophet cannot refrain from thinking of his own people, for
+ the terrible blow which had fallen on Israel &ldquo;is come even unto Judah; it
+ reacheth unto the gate of my people, even to Jerusalem.&rdquo; Doubtless the
+ Assyrian generals kept a watchful eye upon Ahaz during the whole time of
+ the siege, from 724 to 722, and when once the first heat of enthusiasm had
+ cooled, the presence of so formidable an army within striking distance
+ must have greatly helped the king to restrain the ill-advised tendencies
+ of some of his subjects. Samaria still held out when Shalmaneser died at
+ Babylon in the month of Tebeth, 722. Whether he had no son of fit age to
+ succeed him, or whether a revolution, similar to that which had helped to
+ place Tiglath-pileser on the throne, broke out as soon as he had drawn his
+ last breath, is not quite clear. At any rate, Sargon, an officer who had
+ served under him, was proclaimed king on the 22nd day of Tebeth, and his
+ election was approved by the whole of Assyria. After some days of
+ hesitation, Babylon declined to recognise him, and took the oath of
+ allegiance to a Kaldu named Marduk-abalidinna, or Merodach-baladan. While
+ these events were taking place in the heart of the empire, Samaria
+ succumbed; perhaps to famine, but more probably to force. It was sacked
+ and dismantled, and the bulk of its population, amounting to 27,280 souls,
+ were carried away into Mesopotamia and distributed along the Balîkh, the
+ Khabur, the banks of the river of Gozân, and among the towns of the Median
+ frontier.*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Sargon does not mention where he deported the Israelites
+ to, but we learn this from the <i>Second Book of Kings</i> (xvii.
+ 6; xviii. 11). There has been much controversy as to whether
+ Samaria was taken by Shalmanoser, as the Hebrew chronicler
+ seems to believe (2 Kings xvii. 3-6; xviii. 9, 10), or by
+ Sargon, as the Assyrian scribes assure us. At first, several
+ scholars suggested a solution of the difficulty by arguing
+ that Shalmaneser and Sargon were one and the same person;
+ afterwards the theory took shape that Samaria was really
+ captured in the reign of Shalmaneser, but by Sargon, who was
+ in command of the besieging army at the time, and who
+ transferred this achievement, of which he was naturally
+ proud, to the beginning of his own reign. The simplest
+ course seems to be to accept for the present the testimony
+ of contemporary documents, and place the fall of Samaria at
+ the beginning of the reign of Sargon, being the time
+ indicated by Sargon in his inscriptions.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Sargon made the whole territory into a province; an Assyrian governor was
+ installed in the palace of the kings of Israel, and soon the altars of the
+ strange gods smoked triumphantly by the side of the altars of Jahveh (722
+ B.C.).*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Kings xvii. 24-41, a passage to which I shall have
+ occasion to refer farther on in the present volume. The
+ following is a list of the kings of Israel, after the
+ division of the tribes:&mdash;
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkBimage-0061" id="linkBimage-0061">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/333.jpg" width="100%"
+ alt="333.jpg Table of Kings Of Israel " />
+ </div>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ [In this table father and son are shown by a perpendicular
+ line. The king&rsquo;s name in italics signifies that he died a
+ violent death.&mdash;Tr.]
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Thus fell Samaria, and with Samaria the kingdom of Israel, and with Israel
+ the last of the states which had aspired, with some prospect of success,
+ to rule over Syria. They had risen one after another during the four
+ centuries in which the absence of the stranger had left them masters of
+ their own fate&mdash;the Hittites in the North, the Hebrews and the
+ Philistines in the South, and the Aramæans and Damascus in the centre;
+ each one of these races had enjoyed its years of glory and ambition in the
+ course of which it had seemed to prevail over its rivals. Then those whose
+ territory lay at the extremities began to feel the disadvantages of their
+ isolated position, and after one or two victories gave up all hope of ever
+ establishing a supremacy over the whole country. The Hittite sphere of
+ influence never at any time extended much further southwards than the
+ sources of the Orontes, while that of the Hebrews in their palmiest days
+ cannot have gone beyond the vicinity of Hamath. And even progress thus far
+ had cost both Hebrews and Hittites a struggle so exhausting that they
+ could not long maintain it. No sooner did they relax their efforts, than
+ those portions of Coele-Syria which they had annexed to their original
+ territory, being too remote from the seat of power to feel its full
+ attraction, gradually detached themselves and resumed their independence,
+ their temporary suzerains being too much exhausted by the intensity of
+ their own exertions to retain hold over them. Damascus, which lay almost
+ in the centre, at an equal distance from the Euphrates and the &ldquo;river of
+ Egypt,&rdquo; could have desired no better position for grouping the rest of
+ Syria round her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkBimage-0062" id="linkBimage-0062">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="figright" style="width:42%;">
+ <img width="100%" src="images/334.jpg"
+ alt="334.jpg Sargon of Assyria and his Vizier " />
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Drawn by Faucher-Gudin,
+from a sketch by Flandin.
+</pre>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ If any city had a chance of establishing a single kingdom, it was
+ Damascus, and Damascus alone. But lulled to blissful slumbers in her shady
+ gardens, she did not awake to political life and to the desire of conquest
+ until after all the rest, and at the very moment when Nineveh was
+ beginning to recover from her early reverses. Both Ben-hadads had had a
+ free hand given them during the half-century which followed, and they had
+ taken advantage of this respite to reduce Coele-Syria, the Lebanon,
+ Arvadian Phoenicia, Hamath, and the Hebrews&mdash;in fact, two-thirds of
+ the whole country&mdash;to subjection, and to organise that league of the
+ twelve kings which reckoned Ahab of Israel among its leaders. This
+ rudimentary kingdom had scarcely come into existence, and its members had
+ not yet properly combined, when Shalmaneser III. arose and launched his
+ bands of veterans against them; it however successfully withstood the
+ shock, and its stubborn resistance at the beginning of the struggle shows
+ us what it might have done, had its founders been allowed time in which to
+ weld together the various elements at their disposal. As it was, it was
+ doomed to succumb&mdash;not so much to the superiority of the enemy as to
+ the insubordination of its vassals and its own internal discords. The
+ league of the twelve kings did not survive Ben-hadad II.; Hazael and his
+ successors wore themselves out in repelling the attacks of the Assyrians
+ and in repressing the revolts of Israel; when Tiglath-pileser III. arrived
+ on the scene, both princes and people, alike at Damascus and Samaria, were
+ so spent that even their final alliance could not save them from defeat.
+ Its lack of geographical unity and political combination had once more
+ doomed Syria to the servitude of alien rule; the Assyrians, with
+ methodical procedure, first conquered and then made vassals of all those
+ states against which they might have hurled their battalions in vain, had
+ not fortune kept them divided instead of uniting them in a compact mass
+ under the sway of a single ruler. From Carchemish to Arpad, from Hamath to
+ Damascus and Samaria, their irresistible advance had led the Assyrians on
+ towards Egypt, the only other power which still rivalled their prestige in
+ the eyes of the world; and now, at Gaza, on the frontier between Africa
+ and Asia, as in days gone by on the banks of the Euphrates or the Balîkh,
+ these two powers waited face to face, hand on hilt, each ready to stake
+ the empire of the Asiatic world on a single throw of the dice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkBimage-0063" id="linkBimage-0063">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/336.jpg" width="100%" alt="336.jpg Tailpiece " />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ SARGON OF ASSYRIA (722-705 B.C.).
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkCimage-0005" id="linkCimage-0005">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/337.jpg" width="100%" alt="337.jpg Page Image " />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkCimage-0006" id="linkCimage-0006">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/338.jpg" width="100%" alt="338.jpg Page Image " />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ <i>SARGON AS A WARRIOR AND AS A BUILDER.</i>
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <i>The origin of Sargon II.: the revolt of Babylon, Merodach-baladan and
+ Elam&mdash;The kingdom of Elam from the time of the first Babylonian
+ empire; the conquest&rsquo;s of Shutruh-nalkunta I.; the princes of Malamîr&mdash;The
+ first encounter of Assyria and Elam, the battle of Durilu (721 B.C.)&mdash;Revolt
+ of Syria, Iaubîdi of Hamath and Hannon of Gaza&mdash;Bocchoris and the
+ XXIVth Egyptian dynasty; the first encounter of Assyria with Egypt, the
+ battle of Raphia (720 B.C.).</i>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>Urartu and the coalition of the peoples of the north-east and
+ north-west&mdash;Defeat of Zikartu (719 B.C.), of the Tabal (718), of the
+ Khâti (717), of the Mannai, of the Medes and Ellipi (716), and of the
+ Modes (715)&mdash;Commencement of XXVth Ethiopian dynasty: Sabaco (716)&mdash;
+ The fall of Urzana and Rusas (714) and the formation of an Assyrian
+ province in Cappadocia (713-710)&mdash;The revolt and fall of Ashdod.</i>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <i>The defeat of Merodach-baladan and of Shutruk-nakhunta II.: Sargon
+ conquers Babylon (710-709 B.C.)&mdash;Success of the Assyrians at Mushhi:
+ homage of the Greeks of Cyprus (710)&mdash;The buildings of Sargon:
+ Dur-sharrukîn&mdash;The gates and walls of Dur-sharrukîn; the city and its
+ population&mdash;The royal palace, its courts, the ziggurât, the harem&mdash;Revolt
+ of Kummukh (709 B.C.) and of Ellipi (708 B.C.)&mdash;Inauguration of
+ Dur-sharrukîn (706 B.C.)&mdash;Murder of Sargon (705 B.C.): his character.</i>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkC2HCH0001" id="linkC2HCH0001">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a> <a name="linkCimage-0007" id="linkCimage-0007">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/339.jpg" width="100%" alt="339.jpg Page Image " />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER III&mdash;SARGON OF ASSYRIA (722-705 B.C.)
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <i>Sargon as a warrior and as a builder.</i>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whether Sargon was even remotely connected with the royal line, is a
+ question which for the present must remain unanswered. He mentions in one
+ of his inscriptions the three hundred princes who had preceded him in the
+ government of Assyria, and three lines further on he refers to the kings
+ his ancestors, but he never mentions his own father by name, and this
+ omission seems to prove that he was not a direct descendant of Shalmaneser
+ V., nor of Tiglath-pileser III. nor indeed of any of their immediate
+ predecessors. It is, however, probable, if not certain, that he could
+ claim some sort of kinship with them, though more or less remote. It was
+ customary for the sovereigns of Nineveh to give their daughters in
+ marriage to important officials or lords of their court, and owing to the
+ constant contraction of such alliances through several centuries, there
+ was hardly a noble family but had some royal blood in its veins; and that
+ of Sargon was probably no exception to the rule. His genealogy was traced
+ by the chroniclers, through several hundred generations of princes, to the
+ semi-mythical heroes who had founded the city of Assur; but as
+ Assur-nazir-pal and his descendants had claimed Bel-kapkapi and Sulili as
+ the founders of their race, the Sargonids chose a different tradition, and
+ drew their descent from Belbâni, son of Adasi. The cause and incidents of
+ the revolution which raised Sargon to the throne are unknown, but we may
+ surmise that the policy adopted with regard to Karduniash was a factor in
+ the case. Tiglath-pileser had hardly entered Babylon before the
+ fascination of the city, the charm of its associations, and the sacred
+ character of the legends which hallowed it, seized upon his imagination;
+ he returned to it twice in the space of two years to &ldquo;take the hands of
+ Bel,&rdquo; and Shalmaneser V. much preferred it to Calah or Nineveh as a place
+ of residence. The Assyrians doubtless soon became jealous of the favour
+ shown by their princes to their ancient enemy, and their discontent must
+ have doubtless conduced to their decision to raise a new monarch to the
+ throne. The Babylonians, on the other hand, seem to have realised that the
+ change in the dynasty presaged a disadvantageous alteration of government;
+ for as soon as the news reached them a movement was set on foot and search
+ made for a rival claimant to set up in opposition to Sargon.*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The succession of events, as indicated in <i>Pinches&rsquo;
+ Babylonian Chronicle</i>, seems indeed to imply that the
+ Babylonians waited to ascertain the disposition of the new
+ king before they decided what line to adopt. In fact,
+ Shalmaneser died in the month Tebeth, and Sargon ascended
+ the throne at Assur in the same month, and it was only in
+ the month Nisân that Mero-dach-baladan was proclaimed king.
+ The three months intervening between the accession of Sargon
+ and that of Merodach-baladan evidently represent a period of
+ indecision., when it was not yet known if the king would
+ follow the policy of his predecessors with regard to
+ Babylon, or adopt a different attitude towards her.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Of all the nations who had in turn occupied the plains of the Lower
+ Euphrates and the marshes bordering on Arabia, the Kaldâ alone had
+ retained their full vitality. They were constantly recruited by immigrants
+ from their kinsfolk of the desert, and the continual infiltration of these
+ semi-barbarous elements kept the race from becoming enervated by contact
+ with the indigenous population, and more than compensated for the losses
+ in their ranks occasioned by war. The invasion of Tiglath-pileser and the
+ consequent deportations of prisoners had decimated the tribes of
+ Bît-Shilâni, Bît-Shaali, and Bît-Amuhkâni, the principalities of the Kaldâ
+ which lay nearest to Babylonian territory, and which had borne the brunt
+ of attack in the preceding period; but their weakness brought into notice
+ a power better equipped for warfare, whose situation in their rear had as
+ a rule hitherto preserved it from contact with the Assyrians, namely,
+ Bît-Yakîn. The continual deposit of alluvial soil at the mouths of the
+ rivers had greatly altered the coastline from the earliest historic times
+ downwards. The ancient estuary was partly filled up, especially on the
+ western side, where the Euphrates enters the Persian Gulf: a narrow
+ barrier of sand and silt extended between the marshes of Arabia and
+ Susiana, at the spot where the streams of fresh water met the tidal waters
+ of the sea, and all that was left of the ancient gulf was a vast lagoon,
+ or, as the dwellers on the banks called it, a kind of brackish river, <i>Nâr
+ marratum</i>. Bît-Yakîn occupied the southern and western portions of this
+ district, from the mouth of the Tigris to the edge of the desert. The
+ aspect of the country was constantly changing, and presented no
+ distinctive features; it was a region difficult to attack and easy to
+ defend; it consisted first of a spongy plain, saturated with water, with
+ scattered artificial mounds on which stood the clustered huts of the
+ villages; between this plain and the shore stretched a labyrinth of fens
+ and peat-bogs, irregularly divided by canals and channels freshly formed
+ each year in flood-time, meres strewn with floating islets, immense
+ reed-beds where the neighbouring peasants took refuge from attack, and
+ into which no one would venture to penetrate without hiring some friendly
+ native as a guide. In this fenland dwelt the Kaldâ in their low, small
+ conical huts of reeds, somewhat resembling giant beehives, and in all
+ respects similar to those which the Bedawin of Irak inhabit at the present
+ day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkCimage-0008" id="linkCimage-0008">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/343.jpg" width="100%"
+ alt="343.jpg Assyrian Soldiers Pursuing Kalda Refugees in A Bed of Reeds " />
+ </div>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a bas-relief reproduced in
+ Layard.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Dur-Yakîn, their capital, was probably situated on the borders of the
+ gulf, near the Euphrates, in such a position as to command the mouths of
+ the river. Merodach-baladan, who was King of Bît-Yakîn at the time of
+ Sargon&rsquo;s accession, had become subject to Assyria in 729 B.C., and had
+ paid tribute to Tiglath-pileser, but he was nevertheless the most powerful
+ chieftain who had borne rule over the Chaldæans since the death of
+ Ukînzîr.*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Dur-Yakîn was situated on the shores of the Persian gulf,
+ as is proved by a passage in the <i>Bull Inscription</i>, where
+ it is stated that Sargon threw into the sea the corpses of
+ the soldiers killed during the siege; the neighbourhood of
+ the Euphrates is implied in the text of the <i>Inscription des
+ Fastes</i>, and the <i>Annals</i>, where the measures taken by
+ Merodach-baladan to defend his capital are described. The
+ name of Bît-Yakîn, and probably also that of Dur-Yakin, have
+ been preserved to us in the name of Aginis or Aginnê, the
+ name of a city mentioned by Strabo, and by the historians of
+ Alexander. Its site is uncertain, but can be located near
+ the present town of Kornah.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ It was this prince whom the Babylonians chose to succeed Shalmaneser V. He
+ presented himself before the city, was received with acclamation, and
+ prepared without delay to repulse any hostilities on the part of the
+ Assyrians.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkCimage-0009" id="linkCimage-0009">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/344.jpg" width="100%"
+ alt="344.jpg a Reed-hut of the Bedawin Of Irak " />
+ </div>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a photograph in Peters.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ He found a well-disposed ally in Elani. From very ancient times the
+ masters of Susa had aspired to the possession of Mesopotamia or the
+ suzerainty over it, and fortune had several times favoured their ambitious
+ designs. On one occasion they had pressed forward their victorious arms as
+ far as the Mediterranean, and from that time forward, though the theatre
+ of their operations was more restricted, they had never renounced the
+ right to interfere in Babylonian affairs, and indeed, not long previously,
+ one of them had reigned for a period of seven years in Babylon in the
+ interval between two dynasties. Our information with regard to the order
+ of succession and the history of these energetic and warlike monarchs is
+ as yet very scanty; their names even are for the most part lost, and only
+ approximate dates can be assigned to those of whom we catch glimpses from
+ time to time.* Khumban-numena, the earliest of whom we have any record,
+ exercised a doubtful authority, from Anshân to Susa, somewhere about the
+ fourteenth century B.C., and built a temple to the god Kirisha in his
+ capital, Liyan.**
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * These names are in the majority of cases found written on
+ stamped and baked bricks. They were first compared with the
+ names contained in the Annals of Sargon and his successors,
+ and assimilated to those of the princes who were
+ contemporary with Sennacherib and Assur-bani-pal; then they
+ were referred to the time of the great Elamite empire, and
+ one of them was identified with that Kudur-Nakhunta who had
+ pillaged Uruk 1635 years before Assur-bani-pal. Finally,
+ they were brought down again to an intermediate period, more
+ precisely, to the fourteenth or thirteenth century B.C. This
+ last date appears to be justified, at least as the highest
+ permissible, by the mention of Durkurigalzu, in a text of
+ Undasgal.
+
+ ** Jensen was the first to recognise that Liyan was a place-
+ name, and the inscriptions of Shilkhak-Inshusinak add that
+ Liyan was the capital of the kingdom; perhaps it was the
+ name of a part of Susa. Khumban-numena has left us no
+ monuments of his own, but he is mentioned on those of his
+ son.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ His son Undasgal carried on the works begun by his father, but that is all
+ the information the inscriptions afford concerning him, and the mist of
+ oblivion which for a moment lifted and allowed us to discern dimly the
+ outlines of this sovereign, closes in again and hides everything from our
+ view for the succeeding forty or fifty years.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkCimage-0010" id="linkCimage-0010">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/346.jpg" width="100%"
+ alt="346.jpg Brick Bearing the Name of The Susian King Shilkhak-inshushinak " />
+ </div>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a photograph by Marcel
+ Dieulafoy.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkCimage-0011" id="linkCimage-0011">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="figleft" style="width:34%;">
+ <img width="100%" src="images/348.jpg"
+ alt="348.jpg Bas-relief of Nakam-sin, Tkansported to Susa By Shutkuk-nakhunta " />
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Drawn by Boudier,
+from a photograph
+by M. de Morgan.
+</pre>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ About the thirteenth century a gleam once more pierces the darkness, and a
+ race of warlike and pious kings emerges into view&mdash;Khalludush-In-shushinak,
+ his son Shutruk-nakhunta, the latter&rsquo;s two sons, Kutur-nakhunta and
+ Shilkhak-Inshu-shinak,* and then perhaps a certain Kutir-khuban.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The order of succession of these princes is proved by the
+ genealogies with which their bricks are covered. Jensen has
+ shown that we ought to read Khalludush-Inshushinak and
+ Shilkhak-Inshushinak, instead of the shorter forms
+ Khalludush and Shilkhak read previously.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The inscriptions on their bricks boast of their power, their piety, and
+ their inexhaustible wealth. One after another they repaired and enlarged
+ the temple built by Khumban-numena at Liyan, erected sanctuaries and
+ palaces at Susa, fortified their royal citadel, and ruled over Habardîp
+ and the Cossæans as well as over Anshân and Elam. They vigorously
+ contested the possession of the countries on the right bank of the Tigris
+ with the Babylonians, and Shutruk-nakhunta even succeeded in conquering
+ Babylon itself. He deprived Zamâmâ-shumiddin, the last but one of the
+ Cossæan kings, of his sceptre and his life, placed his own son
+ Kutur-nakhunta on the throne, and when the vanquished Babylonians set up
+ Bel-nadinshumu as a rival sovereign, he laid waste Karduniash with fire
+ and sword. After the death of Bel-nadinshumu, the Pashê princes continued
+ to offer resistance, but at first without success. Shutruk-nakhunta had
+ taken away from the temple of Esagilla the famous statue of Bel-Merodach,
+ whose hands had to be taken by each newly elected king of Babylon, and had
+ carried it off in his waggons to Elam, together with much spoil from the
+ cities on the Euphrates.*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The name of the king is destroyed on the Babylonian
+ document, but the mention of Kutur-nakhunta as his son
+ obliges us, till further information comes to light, to
+ recognise in him the Shutruk-nakhunta of the bricks of Susa,
+ who also had a son Kutur-nakhunta. This would confirm the
+ restoration of Shutruk-nakhunta as the name of a sovereign
+ who boasts, in a mutilated inscription, that he had pushed
+ his victories as far as the Tigris, and even up to the
+ Euphrates.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Nebuchadrezzar I. brought the statue back to Babylon after many
+ vicissitudes, and at the same time recovered most of his lost provinces,
+ but he had to leave at Susa the bulk of the trophies which had been
+ collected there in course of the successful wars. One of these represented
+ the ancient hero Naram-sin standing, mace in hand, on the summit of a
+ hill, while his soldiers forced their way up the slopes, driving before
+ them the routed hosfcs of Susa. Shutruk-nakhunta left the figures and
+ names untouched, but carved in one corner of the bas-relief a dedicatory
+ inscription, transforming this ancient proof of Babylonian victories over
+ Elam into a trophy of Blamite victories over Babylon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His descendants would assuredly have brought Mesopotamia into lasting
+ subjection, had not the feudal organisation of their empire tolerated the
+ existence of contemporary local dynasties, the members of which often
+ disputed the supreme authority with the rightful king. The dynasty which
+ ruled Habardîp* seems to have had its seat of government at Tarrisha in
+ the, valley of Malamîr.**
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The prince represented on the bas-reliefs gives himself
+ the title Apirra, the name of Apîr, Apirti, or Habardîp.
+
+ ** Tarrisha is the name of a town, doubtless the capital of
+ the fief of Malamîr; it is probably represented by the
+ considerable ruins which Layard identified as the remains of
+ the Sassanid city of Aidej.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Three hundred figures carved singly or in groups on the rocks of
+ Kul-Firaun portray its princes and their ministers in every posture of
+ adoration, but most of them have no accompanying inscription. One large
+ bas relief, however, forms an exception, and from its legend we learn the
+ name of Khanni, son of Takhkhi-khîkhutur.*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The name of Khanni has been explained by Sayce as <i>the
+ desirable</i>, and that of his father, Takhkhi-khîkhutur, as
+ <i>help this thy servant</i>.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkCimage-0012" id="linkCimage-0012">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/349.jpg" width="100%"
+ alt="349.jpg the Great Rock Bas-relief of MalamÎr " />
+ </div>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a photograph by Babin and Houssay.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ This prince, even if possessed of no royal protocol, was none the less a
+ powerful and wealthy personage. His figure dominates the picture, the
+ central space of which it completely fills;* his expression is calm, but
+ somewhat severe. His head is covered by a low cap, from which long locks
+ escape and flow over his shoulders; the hair on his face is symmetrically
+ curled above the level of his mouth, and terminates in a pointed beard.
+ The figure is clothed from head to foot in a stiff robe and mantle adorned
+ with tufted fringes, and borders of embroidered rosettes; a girdle at the
+ waist completes the misleading resemblance to the gala-dress of a Nine
+ vite, monarch. The hands are crossed on the breast in an attitude of
+ contemplation, while the prince gazes thoughtfully at a sacrifice which is
+ being offered on his behalf. At the bottom of the picture stands a small
+ altar, behind which a priest in a short tunic seems to be accomplishing
+ some cérémonial rite, while two men are cutting the throat of a ram.
+ Higher up the heads of three rams lie beside their headless trunks, which
+ are resting on the ground, feet in the air, while a servant brandishes a
+ short sword with which he is about to decapitate the fourth beast. Above
+ these, again, three musicians march in procession, one playing on a harp,
+ another on a five-stringed lyre, and the third on a tambourine. An
+ attendant holding a bow, and the minister Shutsururazi, stand quietly
+ waiting till the sacrifice is accomplished. The long text which runs
+ across several of the figures is doubtless a prayer, and contains the
+ names of peoples and princes mingled with those of deities.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Perrot and Chipiez, misled by the analogy of the Hittite
+ bas-relief at Ibriz, took the largest figure for the image
+ of a god. The inscription engraved on the robe, <i>U Khanni
+ shak Takkhi-khikutur</i>, &ldquo;I am Khanni, son of Takhkhi-
+ khîkhutur,&rdquo; leaves no doubt that the figure represents the
+ prince himself, and not a divinity.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The memory of these provincial chiefs would be revived, and more of their
+ monuments discovered, if the mountains and inaccessible valleys of ancient
+ Elam could be thoroughly explored: it is evident, from the small portion
+ of their history which has been brought to light, that they must have been
+ great sources of trouble to the dynasties which reigned in Susa, and that
+ their revolts must often have jeopardised the safety of the empire, in
+ spite of the assistance afforded by the Aramæans from the tenth or
+ eleventh centuries onwards. All the semi-nomadic tribes which densely
+ peopled the banks of the Tigris, and whose advance towards the north had
+ been temporarily favoured by the weakness of Assyria&mdash;the Gambulu,
+ the Pukudu, the Eutu, and the Itua&mdash;had a natural tendency to join
+ forces with Elam for the purpose of raiding the wealthy cities of Chaldæa,
+ and this alliance, or subjection, as it might be more properly termed,
+ always insured them against any reprisals on the part of their victims.
+ The unknown king who dwelt at Susa in 745 B.C. committed the error of
+ allowing Tiglath-pileser to crush these allies. Khumban-igash, who
+ succeeded this misguided monarch in 742 B.C., did not take up arms to
+ defend Bit-Amuk-kâni and the other states of the Kaldâ from 731 to 729,
+ but experience must have taught him that he had made a mistake in
+ remaining an unmoved spectator of their misfortunes; for when
+ Merodach-baladan, in quest of allies, applied to him, he unhesitatingly
+ promised him his support.*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The date of his accession is furnished by the passage in
+ <i>Pinches&rsquo; Babylonian Chronicle</i>, where it is stated that he
+ ascended the throne of Elam in the fifth year of Nabonazir.
+ The Assyrian and Babylonian scribes assimilated the Susian
+ <i>b</i> to the <i>m</i>, and also suppressed the initial aspirate of
+ the Elamite name, writing generally Umman-igash for Khumban-
+ igash.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Assyria and Elam had hitherto seldom encountered one another on the field
+ of battle. A wide barrier of semi-barbarous states had for a long time
+ held them apart, and they would have had to cross the territory of the
+ Babylonians or the Cossæans before coming into contact with each other.
+ Tiglath-pileser I., however, had come into conflict with the northern
+ districts of Elam towards the end of the twelfth century B.C., and more
+ recently the campaigns of Assur-nazir-pal, Shalmaneser III., and
+ Rammân-nirâri had frequently brought these sovereigns into contact with
+ tribes under the influence of Susa; but the wildness and poverty of the
+ country, and the difficulties it offered to the manoeuvres of large
+ armies, had always prevented the Assyrian generals from advancing far into
+ its mountainous regions.* The annexation of Aramæan territory beyond the
+ Tigris, and the conquest of Babylon by Tiglath-pileser III., at length
+ broke through the barrier and brought the two powers face to face at a
+ point where they could come into conflict without being impeded by almost
+ insurmountable natural obstacles, namely, in the plains of the Umliash and
+ the united basins of the Lower Ulai and the Uknu. Ten years&rsquo; experience
+ had probably sufficed to convince Khumban-igash of the dangers to which
+ the neighbourhood of the Assyrians exposed his subjects. The vigilant
+ watch which the new-comers kept over their frontier rendered raiding less
+ easy; and if one of the border chieftains were inclined to harry, as of
+ old, an unlucky Babylonian or Cossæan village, he ran the risk of an
+ encounter with a well-armed force, or of being plundered in turn by way of
+ reprisal.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Sargon declares distinctly that Merodach-baladan had
+ invoked the aid of Khumban-igash.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ An irregular but abundant source of revenue was thus curtailed, without
+ taking into consideration the wars to which such incidents must perforce
+ lead sooner or later. Even unaided the Elamites considered themselves
+ capable of repelling any attack; allied with the Babylonians or the Kaldâ,
+ they felt certain of victory in any circumstances. Sargon realised this
+ fact almost as fully as did the Elamites themselves; as soon, therefore,
+ as his spies had forewarned him that an invasion was imminent, he resolved
+ to take the initiative and crush his enemies singly before they Succeeded
+ in uniting their forces. Khumban-igash had advanced as far as the walls of
+ Durîlu, a stronghold which commanded the Umliash, and he there awaited the
+ advent of his allies before laying siege to the town: it was, however, the
+ Assyrian army which came to meet him and offered him battle. The conflict
+ was a sanguinary one, as became an engagement between such valiant foes,
+ and both sides claimed the victory. The Assyrians maintained then-ground,
+ forcing the Elamites to evacuate their positions, and tarried some weeks
+ longer to chastise those of their Aramæan subjects who had made common
+ cause with the enemy: they carried away the Tumuna, who had given up their
+ sheikh into the hands of the emissaries of the Kaldâ, and transported the
+ whole tribe, without Merodach-baladan making any attempt to save his
+ allies, although his army had not as yet struck a single blow.*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The history of this first campaign against Merodach-
+ baladan, which is found in a mutilated condition in the
+ <i>Annals of Sargon</i>, exists nowhere else in a complete form,
+ but the facts are very concisely referred to in the <i>Fastes</i>
+ and in the <i>Cylinders</i>. The general sequence of events is
+ indicated by <i>Pinches&rsquo; Babylonian Chronicle</i>, but the author
+ places them in 720 B.C., the second year of Merodach-
+ baladan, contrary to the testimony of the <i>Annals</i>, and
+ attributes the victory to the Elamites in the battle of
+ Durîlu, in deference to Babylonian patriotism. The course of
+ events after the battle of Durflu seems to prove clearly
+ that the Assyrians remained masters of the field.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Having accomplished this act of vengeance, the Assyrians suspended
+ operations and returned to Nineveh to repair their losses, probably
+ intending to make a great effort to regain the whole of Babylonia in the
+ ensuing year. Grave events which occurred elsewhere prevented them,
+ however, from carrying this ambitious project into effect. The fame of
+ their war against Elam had spread abroad in the Western provinces of the
+ empire, and doubtless exaggerated accounts circulated with regard to the
+ battle of Durîlu had roused the spirit of dissatisfaction in the west.
+ Sargon had scarcely seated himself securely on a throne to which he was
+ not the direct heir, when he was menaced by Elam and repudiated by
+ Chaldæa, and it remained to be seen whether his resources would prove
+ equal to maintaining the integrity of his empire, or whether the example
+ set by Merodach-baladan would not speedily be imitated by all who groaned
+ under the Assyrian yoke. Since the decline of Damascus and Arpad, Hamath
+ had again taken a prominent place in Northern Syria: prompt submission had
+ saved this city from destruction in the time of Tiglath-pileser III., and
+ it had since prospered under the foreign rule; it was, therefore, on
+ Hamath that all hopes of deliverance still cherished by rulers and people
+ now centred. A low-born fellow, a smith named Iaubîdi, rose in rebellion
+ against the prince of Hamath for being mean-spirited enough to pay
+ tribute, proclaimed himself king, and in the space of a few months revived
+ under his own leadership the coalition which Hadadezer and Rezon II. had
+ formed in days gone by. Arpad and Bît-Agusi, Zimyra and Northern
+ Phoenicia, Damascus and its dependencies, all expelled their Assyrian
+ garrisons, and Samaria, though still suffering from its overthrow,
+ summoned up courage to rid itself of its governor. Meanwhile, Hannon of
+ Gaza, recently reinstated in his city by Egyptian support, was carrying on
+ negotiations with a view to persuading Egypt to interfere in the affairs
+ of Syria. The last of the Tanite Pharaohs, Psamuti, was just dead, and
+ Bocchoris, who had long been undisputed master of the Delta, had now
+ ventured to assume the diadem openly (722 B.C.), a usurpation which the
+ Ethiopians, fully engaged in the Thebaid and on the Upper Nile, seemed to
+ regard with equanimity. As soon as the petty kings and feudal lords had
+ recognised his suzerainty, Bocchoris «listened favourably to the
+ entreaties of Hannon, and promised to send an army to Gaza under the
+ command of his general Shabê. Sargon, threatened with the loss of the
+ entire western half of his empire, desisted for a time from his designs on
+ Babylon, Khumban-igash was wise enough to refrain from provoking an enemy
+ who left him in peace, and Merodach-baladan did not dare to enter the
+ lists without the support of his confederate: the victory of Durîlu,
+ though it had not succeeded in gaining a province for Nineveh, had at
+ least secured the south-eastern frontier from attack, at all events for so
+ long as it should please Sargon to remain at a distance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkCimage-0013" id="linkCimage-0013">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="figright" style="width:49%;">
+ <img width="100%" src="images/356.jpg"
+ alt="356.jpg IaubÎdi of Hamath Being Flayed Alive. " />
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Drawn by Faucher-Gudin,
+from a sketch by Flandin.
+</pre>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ The league formed by Hamath had not much power of cohesion. Iaubîdi had
+ assembled his forces and the contingents of his allies at the town of
+ Qarqar as Hadadezer had done before: he was completely defeated, taken
+ prisoner, and flayed alive. His kingdom was annexed to the Assyrian
+ empire, Qarqar was burnt to the ground, the fortifications of Hamath were
+ demolished, and the city obliged to furnish a force of two hundred
+ charioteers and six hundred horsemen, probably recruited from among the
+ families of the upper classes, to serve as hostages as well as
+ auxiliaries. Arpad, Zimyra, Damascus, Samaria, all succumbed without
+ serious opposition, and the citizens who had been most seriously
+ compromised in the revolt paid for their disaffection with their lives.
+ This success confirmed the neighbouring states of Tyre, Sidon, Judah,
+ Ammon, and Moab in their allegiance, which had shown signs of wavering
+ since the commencement of hostilities; but Gaza remained unsubdued, and
+ caused the more uneasiness because it was perceived that behind her was
+ arrayed all the majesty of the Pharaoh. The Egyptians, slow to bestir
+ themselves, had not yet crossed the Isthmus when the Assyrians appeared
+ beneath the walls of Gaza: Hannon, worsted in a preliminary skirmish,
+ retreated on Raphia, where Shabê, the Egyptian general, had at length
+ arrived, and the decisive battle took place before this town. It was the
+ first time that the archers and charioteers of the Nile valley had
+ measured forces with the pikemen and cavalry of that of the Tigris; the
+ engagement was hotly contested, but the generals and soldiers of
+ Bocchoris, fighting according to antiquated methods of warfare, gave way
+ before the onset of the Assyrian ranks, who were better equipped and
+ better led. Shabê fled &ldquo;like a shepherd whose sheep had been stolen,&rdquo;
+ Hannon was taken prisoner and loaded with chains, and Raphia fell into the
+ hands of the conqueror; the inhabitants who survived the sack of their
+ city were driven into captivity to the number of 9033 men, with their
+ flocks and household goods. The manifest superiority of Assyria was
+ evident from the first encounter, but the contest had been so fierce and
+ the result so doubtful that Sargon did not consider it prudent to press
+ his advantage. He judged rightly that these troops, whom he had not
+ dispersed without considerable effort, constituted merely an advanced
+ guard. 4 Egypt was not like the petty kingdoms of Syria or Asia Minor,
+ which had but one army apiece, and could not risk more than one pitched
+ battle. Though Shabê&rsquo;s force was routed, others would not fail to take its
+ place and contend as fiercely for the possession of the country, and even
+ if the Assyrians should succeed in dislodging them and curbing the power
+ of Bocchoris, the fall of Sais or Memphis, far from putting an end to the
+ war, would only raise fresh complications. Above Memphis stretched the
+ valley of the Nile, bristling with fortresses, Khininsu, Oxyrhynchus,
+ Hermopolis, Siut, Thinis, and Thebes, the famous city of Amon, enthroned
+ on the banks of the river, whose very name still evoked in the minds of
+ the Asiatics a vivid remembrance of all its triumphal glories.*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Thebes was at that time known among the Semites by its
+ popular name of <i>the city of Amon</i>&mdash;which the Hebrew writers
+ transcribed as Nô-Amon (<i>Nahum</i> iii. 8) or Nô alone (Jer.
+ xlvi. 25; Ezek. xxx. 14, 15, 16), and the Assyrians by Ni.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Thebes itself formed merely one stage in the journey towards Syene,
+ Ethiopia, Napata, and the unknown regions of Africa which popular
+ imagination filled with barbarous races or savage monsters, and however
+ far an alien army might penetrate in a southerly direction, it would still
+ meet with the language, customs, and divinities of Egypt&mdash;an Egypt
+ whose boundary seemed to recede as the invader advanced, and which was
+ ever ready to oppose the enemy with fresh forces whenever its troops had
+ suffered from his attacks. Sargon, having reached Kaphia, halted on the
+ very threshold of the unexplored realm whose portals stood ajar ready to
+ admit him: the same vague disquietude which had checked the conquering
+ career of the Pharaohs on the borders of Asia now stayed his advance, and
+ bade him turn back as he was on the point of entering Africa. He had
+ repulsed the threatened invasion, and as a result of his victory the
+ princes and towns which had invoked the aid of the foreigner lay at his
+ mercy; he proceeded, therefore, to reorganise the provinces of Philistia
+ and Israel, and received the homage of Judah and her dependencies. Ahaz,
+ while all the neighbouring states were in revolt, had not wavered in his
+ allegiance; the pacific counsels of Isaiah had once more prevailed over
+ the influence of the party which looked for safety in an alliance with
+ Egypt.*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Sargon probably alludes to homage received at this time,
+ when he styles himself &ldquo;the subduer of far-off Judah.&rdquo; It
+ is not certain that Ahaz was still King of Judah; it was for
+ a long time admitted that Hezekiah was already king when
+ these events took place, in accordance with 2 Kings xviii.
+ 9, 10, where it is stated that Samaria was destroyed in the
+ sixth year of Hezekiah. I consider, in agreement with
+ several historians, that the date of Sennacherib&rsquo;s invasion
+ of Judah must have remained more firmly fixed in the minds
+ of the Jewish historians than that of the taking of Samaria,
+ and as 2 Kings xviii. 13 places this invasion in the
+ fourteenth year of Hezekiah, which corresponds, as we shall
+ see, to the third year of Sennacherib, or 702 B.C., it seems
+ better to place the accession of Hezekiah about 715, and
+ prolong the reign of Ahaz till after the campaign of Sargon
+ against Hannon of Gaza.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The whole country from the Orontes to the mountains of Seir and the river
+ of Egypt was again reduced to obedience, and set itself by peaceful
+ labours to repair the misfortunes which had befallen it during the
+ previous quarter of a century. Sargon returned to his capital, but fate
+ did not yet allow him to renew his projects against Babylon. Barely did an
+ insurrection break out in any part of the country on the accession of a
+ new king at Nineveh without awaking echoes in the distant provinces of the
+ empire. The report of a revolt in Chaldæa roused a slumbering
+ dissatisfaction among the Syrians, and finally led them into open
+ rebellion: the episodes of the Syrian campaign, narrated in Armenia or on
+ the slopes of the Taurus with the thousand embellishments suggested by the
+ rancour of the narrators, excited the minds of the inhabitants and soon
+ rendered an outbreak inevitable. The danger would have been serious if the
+ suppressed hatred of all had found vent at the same moment, and if
+ insurrections in five or six different parts of his empire had to be faced
+ by the sovereign simultaneously; but as a rule these local wars broke out
+ without any concentrated plan, and in localities too remote from each
+ other to permit of any possible co-operation between the assailants; each
+ chief, before attempting to assert his independence, seemed to wait until
+ the Assyrians had had ample time to crush the rebel who first took the
+ field, having done which they could turn the whole of their forces against
+ the latest foe. Thus Iaubîdi did not risk a campaign till the fall of Elam
+ and Karduniash had been already decided on the field of Durilu; in the
+ same way, the nations of the North and East refrained from entering the
+ lists till they had allowed Sargon time to destroy the league of Hamath
+ and repel the attack of Bharaoh.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They were secretly incited to rebellion by a power which played nearly the
+ same part with regard to them that Egypt had played in Southern Syria.
+ Urartu had received a serious rebuff in 735 B.C., and the burning of
+ Dhuspas had put an end to its ascendency, but the victory had been
+ effected at the cost of so much bloodshed that Tiglath-pileser was not
+ inclined to risk losing the advantage already gained by pushing it too
+ far: he withdrew, therefore, without concluding a treaty, and did not
+ return, being convinced that no further hostilities would be attempted
+ till the vanquished enemy had recovered from his defeat. He was justified
+ in his anticipations, for Sharduris died about 730, without having again
+ taken up arms, and his son Busas I. had left Shalmaneser V. unmolested:*
+ but the accession of Sargon and the revolts which harassed him had
+ awakened in Busas the warlike instincts of his race, and the moment
+ appeared advantageous for abandoning his policy of inactivity.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The name of this king is usually written Ursa in the
+ Assyrian inscriptions, but the <i>Annals of Sargon</i> give in
+ each case the form Rusa, in accordance with which Sayce had
+ already identified the Assyrian form Ursa or Rusa with the
+ form Rusas found on some Urartian monuments. Belck and
+ Lehmann have discovered several monuments of this Rusas I.,
+ son of Sharduris.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The remembrance of the successful exploits of Menuas and Argistis still
+ lived in the minds of his people, and more than one of his generals had
+ entered upon their military careers at a time when, from Arpad and
+ Carchemish to the country of the Medes, quite a third of the territory now
+ annexed to Assyria had been subject to the king of Urartu; Eusas,
+ therefore, doubtless placed before himself the possibility of reconquering
+ the lost provinces, and even winning, by a stroke of fortune, more than
+ had been by a stroke of fortune wrested from his father. He began by
+ intriguing with such princes as were weary of the Assyrian rule, among the
+ Mannai, in Zikartu,* among the Tabal, and even among the Khâti.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Zikruti, Zikirtu, Zikartu, may probably be identified with
+ the Sagartians of Herodotus.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkCimage-0014" id="linkCimage-0014">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="figright" style="width:50%;">
+ <img width="100%" src="images/364.jpg"
+ alt="364.jpg Taking of a Castle in Zikartu " />
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Drawn by Faucher-Gudin,
+from the facsimile by Flandin.
+</pre>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Iranzu, who was at that time reigning over the Mannai, refused to listen
+ to the suggestions of his neighbour, but two of his towns, Shuandakhul and
+ Durdukka, deserted him in 719 B.C., and ranged themselves under Mitâtti,
+ chief of the Zikartu, while about the same time the strongholds of Sukkia,
+ Bala, and Abitikna, which were on the borders of Urartu, broke the ties
+ which had long bound them to Assyria, and concluded a treaty of alliance
+ with Rusas. Sargon was not deceived as to the meaning of these events, and
+ at once realised that this movement was not one of those local agitations
+ which broke out at intervals in one or other of his provinces. His
+ officers and spies must have kept him informed of the machinations of
+ Eusas and of the revolutions which the migrations of the last thirty years
+ had provoked among the peoples of the Iranian table-land. A new race had
+ arisen in their rear, that of the Cimmerians and Scythians, which, issuing
+ in irresistible waves from the gorges of the Caucasus, threatened to
+ overwhelm the whole ancient world of the East. The stream, after a
+ moment&rsquo;s vacillation, took a westerly direction, and flooded Asia Minor
+ from one end to the other. Some tribes, however, which had detached
+ themselves from the main movement sought an outlet towards the south-east,
+ on to the rich plains of the Araxes and the country around Lake Urumiah.
+ The native races, pressed in the rear by these barbarians, and hemmed in
+ on either side and in front by Urartu and Assyria, were forced into closer
+ proximity, and, conscious of their individual weakness, had begun to form
+ themselves into three distinct groups, varying considerably in
+ compactness,&mdash;the Medes in the south, Misianda in the north, with
+ Zikartu between them. Zikartu was at that time the best organised of these
+ nascent states, and its king, Mitâtti, was not deficient either in
+ military talent or political sagacity. The people over whom he ruled were,
+ moreover, impregnated with the civilisation of Mesopotamia, and by
+ constantly meeting the Assyrians in battle they had adopted the general
+ principles of their equipment, organisation, and military tactics. The
+ vigour of his soldiers and the warlike ardour which inspired them rendered
+ his armies formidable even to leaders as experienced, and warriors as
+ hardened, as the officers and soldiers of Nineveh. Mitâtti had strongly
+ garrisoned the two rebel cities, and trusted that if the Assyrians were
+ unable to recapture them without delay, other towns would not be long in
+ following their example; Iranzu would, no doubt, be expelled, his place
+ would be taken by a hostile chief, and the Mannai, joining hands with
+ Urartu on the right and Zikartu on the left, would, with these two states,
+ form a compact coalition, whose combined forces would menace the northern
+ frontier of the empire from the Zagros to the Taurus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sargon, putting all the available Assyrian forces into the field, hurled
+ them against the rebels, and this display of power had the desired effect
+ upon the neighbouring kingdoms: Busas and Mitâtti did not dare to
+ interfere, the two cities were taken by assault, burnt and razed to the
+ ground, and the inhabitants of the surrounding districts of Sukkia, Bala,
+ and Abitikna were driven into exile among the Khâti. The next year,
+ however, the war thus checked on the Iranian table-land broke out in the
+ north-west, in the mountains of Cilicia. A Tabal chief, Kiakku of
+ Shinukhta, refused to pay his tribute (718). Sargon seized him and
+ destroyed his city; his family and adherents, 7500 persons in all, were
+ carried away captives to Assyria, and his principality was given to a
+ rival chief, Mattî of Atuna, on a promise from the latter of an increased
+ amount of tribute.*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The name of Atuna is a variant of the name Tuna, which is
+ found in the inscriptions of Tiglath-pileser III., and Tuna
+ recalls the name of the old city of Tyana, or that of Tynna
+ or Tunna, near Tyana, in the Taurus. Shinukhta, not far from
+ Atuna, must be the capital of a district situated on the
+ Karmalas or the Saros, on the borders of Cilicia or
+ Cataonia.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ In 717 B.C. more serious dangers openly declared themselves. The Khâti had
+ not forgotten that they had once been the allies of Urartu, and that their
+ king, Pisiris, together with Matîlu of Agusi, had fought for Sharduris
+ against Tiglath-pileser III. Pisiris conspired with Mita, chief of the
+ Mushki, and proclaimed his independence; but vengeance swiftly and surely
+ overtook him. He succumbed before his accomplice had time to come to his
+ assistance, and was sent to join Kiakku and his adherents in prison, while
+ the districts which he had ruled were incorporated into Assyrian
+ territory, and Carchemish became the seat of an Assyrian prefect who
+ ranked among the <i>limmi</i> from whom successive years took their names.
+ The fall of Pisiris made no impression on his contemporaries. They had
+ witnessed the collapse of so many great powers&mdash;Elam, Urartu, Egypt&mdash;that
+ the misfortunes of so insignificant a personage awakened but little
+ interest; and yet with him foundered one of the most glorious wrecks of
+ the ancient world. For more than a century the Khâti had been the dominant
+ power in North-western Asia, and had successfully withstood the power of
+ Thebes; crushed by the Peoples of the Sea, hemmed in and encroached upon
+ by the rising wave of Aramæan invasion, they had yet disputed their
+ territory step by step with the Assyrian generals, and the area over which
+ they spread can be traced by the monuments and inscriptions scattered over
+ Cilicia, Lycaonia, Cappadocia, and Northern Syria as far as the basins of
+ the Orontes and the Litâny. So lasting had proved their influence on all
+ around them, and so fresh was the memory of their greatness, that it would
+ have seemed but natural that their vitality should survive this last blow,
+ and that they should enjoy a prosperous future which should vie with their
+ past. But events proved that their national life was dead, and that no
+ recuperative power remained: as soon as Sargon had overthrown their last
+ prince, their tribes became merged in the general body of Aramæans, and
+ their very name ere long vanished from the pages of history.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Up to this time Eusas had not directly interfered in these quarrels
+ between the suzerain and his vassals: he may have incited the latter to
+ revolt, but he had avoided compromising himself, and was waiting till the
+ Mannai had decided to make common cause with him before showing his hand
+ openly. Ever since the skirmish of the year 719, Mitâtti had actively
+ striven to tempt the Mannai from their allegiance, but his intrigues had
+ hitherto proved of no avail against the staunch fidelity first of Irânzu
+ and then of Azâ, who had succeeded the latter about 718. At the beginning
+ of the year 716 Mitâtti was more successful; the Mannai, seduced at length
+ by his promises and those of Eusas, assembled on Mount Uaush, murdered
+ their king, and leaving his corpse unburied, hastened to place themselves
+ under the command of Bagadatti, regent of Umildîsh. Sargon hurried to the
+ spot, seized Bagadatti, and had him flayed alive on Mount Uaush, which had
+ just witnessed the murder of Azâ, and exposed the mass of bleeding flesh
+ before the gaze of the people to demonstrate the fate reserved for his
+ enemies. But though he had acted speedily he was too late, and the fate of
+ their chief, far from discouraging his subjects, confirmed them in their
+ rebellion. They had placed upon the throne Ullusunu, the brother of Azâ,
+ and this prince had immediately concluded an alliance with Eusas, Mitâtti,
+ and the people of Andia; his example was soon followed by other Eastern
+ chiefs, Assurlî of Karallu and Itti of Allabria, whereupon, as the spirit
+ of revolt spread from one to another, most of the districts lately laid
+ under tribute by Tiglath-pileser took up arms&mdash;Niksama, Bîtsagbati,
+ Bîtkhirmâmi, Kilam-bâfci, Armangu, and even the parts around Kharkhar, and
+ Ellipi, with its reigning sovereign Dalta. The general insurrection
+ dreaded by Sargon, and which Eusas had for five years been fomenting, had,
+ despite all the efforts of the Assyrian government, at last broken out,
+ and the whole frontier was ablaze from the borders of Elam to those of the
+ Mushku. Sargon turned his attention to where danger was most urgent; he
+ made a descent on the territory of the Mannai, and laid it waste &ldquo;as a
+ swarm of locusts might have done;&rdquo; he burnt their capital, Izirtu,
+ demolished the fortifications of Zibia and Armaîd, and took Ullusunu
+ captive, but, instead of condemning him to death, he restored to him his
+ liberty and his crown on condition of his paying a regular tribute. This
+ act of clemency, in contrast with the pitiless severity shown at the
+ beginning of the insurrection, instantly produced the good effects he
+ expected: the Mannai laid down their arms and swore allegiance to the
+ conqueror, and their defection broke up the coalition. Sargon did not give
+ the revolted provinces time to recover from the dismay into which his
+ first victories had thrown them, but marched rapidly to the south, and
+ crushed them severally; commencing with Andia, where he took 4200
+ prisoners with their cattle, he next attacked Zikartu, whose king,
+ Mitâtti, took refuge in the mountains and thus escaped death at the hands
+ of the executioner. Assurlî of Karalla had a similar fate to Bagadatti,
+ and was flayed alive. Itti of Allabria, with half of his subjects, was
+ carried away to Hamath. The towns of Niksama and Shurgadia were annexed to
+ the province of Parsuash. The town of Kishîsim was reduced to ashes, and
+ its king, Belsharuzur, together with the treasures of his palace, was
+ carried away to Nineveh. Kharkhar succumbed after a short siege, received
+ a new population, and was henceforward known as Kar-Sharrukîn; Dalta was
+ restored to favour, and retained his dominion intact. Never had so great a
+ danger been so ably or so courageously averted. It was not without good
+ reason that, after his victory over the Mannai, Sargon, instead of
+ attacking Busas, the most obstinate of his foes, turned against the Medes.
+ Bllipi, Parsuash, and Kharkhar, comprising half the countries which had
+ joined in the insurrection, were on the borders of Elam or had frequent
+ relations with that state, and it is impossible to conjecture what turn
+ affairs might have taken had Elam been induced to join their league, and
+ had the Elamite armies, in conjunction with those of Merodach-baladan,
+ unexpectedly fallen upon the Assyrian rear by the valleys of the Tigris or
+ the Turnât.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkCimage-0015" id="linkCimage-0015">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/369.jpg" width="100%"
+ alt="369.jpg Taking of the City Of KishÎsim by The Assyrians " />
+ </div>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from the facsimile by Plandin. The
+ figures resembling stags&rsquo; horns, which crown three of the
+ upper towers, are tongues of flame, as was indicated by the
+ red colouring which still remained on them when the bas-
+ relief was discovered.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Had the Elamites, however, entertained a desire to mingle in the fray, the
+ promptness with which Sargon had re-established order must have given them
+ cause to reflect and induced them to maintain their neutrality. The year
+ which had opened so inauspiciously thus ended in victory, though the
+ situation was still fraught with danger. The agitation which had
+ originated in the east and northeast in 716 reached the north-west in 715,
+ and spread as far as the borders of Southern Syria. Rusas had employed the
+ winter in secret negotiations with the Mannai, and had won over one of
+ their principal chiefs, a certain Dayaukku, whose name seems to be
+ identical with that which the Greeks transliterated as Deiokes.*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The identity of the name Dayaukku with that of Deiokes is
+ admitted by all historians.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ As soon as spring had returned he entered the territory of Ullusunu, and
+ occupied twenty-two strongholds, which were probably betrayed into his
+ hands by Dayaukku. While this was taking place Mita of Mushki invaded
+ Cilicia, and the Arab tribes of the Idumsean desert&mdash;the Thamudites,
+ the Ibadites, the Marsimanu, and Khayapâ&mdash;were emboldened to carry
+ their marauding expeditions into Assyrian territory. The Assyrian monarch
+ was thus called on to conduct three distinct wars simultaneously in three
+ different directions; he was, moreover, surrounded by wavering subjects
+ whom terror alone held to their allegiance, and whom the slightest
+ imprudence or the least reverse might turn into open foes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkCimage-0016" id="linkCimage-0016">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="figleft" style="width:50%;">
+ <img width="100%" src="images/372.jpg"
+ alt="372.jpg the Town of BÎt-bagaÎa Burnt by The Assyrians " />
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from the
+facsimile by Flandin. The tongues
+of flame which issue from the towers
+still bore traces of red and yellow
+colouring when the bas-relief was
+discovered.
+</pre>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Sargon resolutely faced the enemy at all three points of attack. As in the
+ previous year, he reserved for himself the position where danger was most
+ threatening, directing the operations against the Mannai. He captured one
+ by one the twenty-two strongholds of Ullusunu which Rusas had seized, and
+ laying hands on Dayaukku, sent him and his family into exile to Hamath.
+ This display of energy determined Ianzu of Naîri to receive the Assyrian
+ monarch courteously within the royal residence of Khubushkia and to supply
+ him with horses, cattle, sheep, and goats in token of homage. Proceeding
+ from thence in an oblique direction, Sargon reached Andia and took
+ prisoner its king Tilusînas. Having by this exploit reduced the province
+ of Mannai to order, he restored the twenty-two towns to Ullusunu, and
+ halting some days in Izirtu, erected there a statue of himself, according
+ to his custom, as a visible witness of Assyrian supremacy, having done
+ which, he retraced his steps to the south-east. The province of Kharkhar,
+ which had been reduced to subjection only a few months previously, was
+ already in open revolt, and the district of Kar-Sharrukîn alone remained
+ faithful to its governor: Sargon had to reconquer it completely, town by
+ town, imposing on the four citadels of Kishislu, Kindâu, Bît-Bagaiâ, and
+ Zaria the new names of Kar-Nabu, Kar-Sin, Kar-Rammânu, and Kar-Ishtar,
+ besides increasing the fortifications of Kar-Sharrukîn. The Medes once
+ more acknowledged his suzerainty, and twenty-two of their chiefs came to
+ tender the oath of allegiance at his feet; two or three districts which
+ remained insubordinate were given up to pillage as far as Bît-Khambân, and
+ the inhabitants of Kimirra were sent into captivity. The eastern campaign
+ was thus brought to a most successful issue, fortune, meanwhile, having
+ also favoured the Assyrian arms in the other menaced quarters. Mita, after
+ pushing forward at one point as far as the Mediterranean, had been driven
+ back into the mountains by the prefect of Kuî, and the Bedâwin of the
+ south had sustained a serious reverse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These latter were mere barbarians, ignorant of the arts of reading and
+ writing, and hitherto unconquered by any foreign power: their survivors
+ were removed to Samaria, where captives from Hamath had already been
+ established, and where they were soon joined by further exiles from
+ Babylon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This episode had greater effect than its importance warranted; or perhaps
+ the majority of the neighbouring states made it a convenient pretext for
+ congratulating Sargon on his victories over more serious enemies. He
+ received gifts from Shamshiê, the Arabian queen who had formerly fought
+ against Tiglath-pileser, from Itamar the Saboan, and the sheikhs of the
+ desert, from the kings of the Mediterranean sea-board, and from the
+ Pharaoh himself. Bocchoris had died after a troublous reign of seven
+ years.*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The two dynasties of Tanis and Sais may be for the present
+ reconstituted as follows:&mdash;
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkCimage-0017" id="linkCimage-0017">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/373.jpg" width="100%"
+ alt="373.jpg Table of Dynasties Of Tanis and Sais " />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ His real character is unknown, but as he left a deep impression on the
+ memories of his people, it is natural to conclude that he displayed, at
+ times, both ability and energy. Many legends in which the miraculous
+ element prevailed were soon in circulation concerning him. He was,
+ according to these accounts, weak in body and insignificant in appearance,
+ but made up for these defects by mental ability and sound judgment. He was
+ credited with having been simple in his mode of life, and was renowned as
+ one of the six great legislators produced by Egypt. A law concerning debt
+ and the legal rates of interest, was attributed to him; he was also famed
+ for the uprightness of his judgments, which were regarded as due to divine
+ inspiration. Isis had bestowed on him a serpent, which, coiling itself
+ round his head when he sat on the judgment-seat, covered him with its
+ shadow, and admonished him not to forget for a moment the inflexible
+ principles of equity and truth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Neither Tafnakhti nor any of the local sovereigns mentioned on the stele
+ of Piônkhi wore comprised in the official computation; there is,
+ therefore, no reason to add them to this list.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A collection of the decisions he was reputed to have delivered in famous
+ cases existed in the Græco-Roman period, and one of them is quoted at
+ length: he had very ingeniously condemned a courtesan to touch the shadow
+ of a purse as payment for the shadowy favours she had bestowed in a dream
+ on her lover.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkCimage-0018" id="linkCimage-0018">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/374.jpg" width="100%"
+ alt="374.jpg King Bocchoris Giving Judgment Between Two Women, Rival Claimants to a Child " />
+ </div>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Drawn by Faucher-Gudin.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ An Alexandrian poet, Pancrates, versified the accounts of this juridical
+ collection,* and the artists of the Imperial epoch drew from it motives
+ for mural decoration; they portrayed the king pronouncing judgment between
+ two mothers who disputed possession of an infant, between two beggars
+ laying claim to the same cloak, and between three men asserting each of
+ them his right to a wallet full of food.**
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Pancrates lived in the time of Hadrian, and Athenæus, who
+ has preserved his memory for us, quotes the first book of
+ his Bocchoreidion.
+
+ ** Considerable remains of this decorative cycle have been
+ discovered at Pompeii and at Rome, in a series of frescoes,
+ in which Lumbroso and E. Lowy recognise the features of the
+ legends of Bocchoris; the dispute between the two mothers
+ recalls the famous judgment of Solomon (1 Kings iii. 16-28).
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ A less favourable tradition represents the king as an avaricious and
+ irreligious sovereign: he is said one day to have conceived the
+ sacrilegious desire to bring about a conflict between an ordinary bull and
+ the Mnevis adored at Heliopolis. The gods, doubtless angered by his
+ crimes, are recorded to have called into being a lamb with eight feet,
+ which, suddenly breaking into articulate speech, predicted that Upper and
+ Lower Egypt would be disgraced by the rule of a stranger.*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * This legend, preserved by Manetho and Ulian is also known
+ from the fragments of a demotic papyrus at Vienna, which
+ contains the prophecy of the lamb.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkCimage-0019" id="linkCimage-0019">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="figleft" style="width:27%;">
+ <img width="100%" src="images/375.jpg" alt="375.jpg Sabaco " />
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Drawn by Faucher-Gudin,
+from Lepsius.
+</pre>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ The monuments of his reign which have come down to us tell us nothing of
+ his deeds; we can only conjecture that after the defeat sustained by his
+ generals at Raphia, the discords which had ruined the preceding dynasties
+ again broke out with renewed violence. Indeed, if he succeeded in
+ preserving his crown for several years longer, he owed the fact more to
+ the feebleness of the Ethiopians than to his own vigour: no sooner did an
+ enterprising prince appear at Barkal and demand that he should render an
+ account of his usurpation, than his power came to an end. Kashto having
+ died about 716,* his son Shabaku, the Sabaco of the Greeks, inherited the
+ throne, and his daughter Amenertas the priesthood and principality of
+ Thebes, in right of her mother Shapenuapît.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The date of the accession of Sabaco is here fixed at 716-
+ 715, because I follow the version of the lists of Manetho,
+ which gives twelve years as the reign of that prince; an
+ inscription from Hammamât mentions his twelfth year.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Sabaco was an able and energetic prince, who could by no means tolerate
+ the presence of a rival Pharaoh in the provinces which Piônkhi had
+ conquered. He declared war, and, being doubtless supported in his
+ undertaking by all the petty kings and great feudal nobles whose jealousy
+ was aroused by the unlooked-for prosperity of the Saite monarch, he
+ defeated Bocchoris and took him prisoner. Tafnakhti had formerly
+ recognised the Ethiopian supremacy, and Bocchoris, when he succeeded to
+ his father&rsquo;s dominions, had himself probably sought investiture at the
+ hands of the King of Napata. Sabaco treated him as a rebel, and either
+ burnt or flayed him alive (715).*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * According to Manetho, he was burnt alive; the tradition
+ which mentions that he was flayed alive is found in John of
+ Antioch.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The struggle was hardly over, when the news of Sargon&rsquo;s victories reached
+ Egypt. It was natural that the new king, not yet securely seated on his
+ throne, should desire to conciliate the friendship of a neighbour who was
+ so successful in war, and that he should seize the first available pretext
+ to congratulate him. The Assyrian on his part received these advances with
+ satisfaction and pride: he perceived in them a guarantee that Egyptian
+ intrigues with Tyre and Jerusalem would cease, and that he could
+ henceforth devote himself to his projects against Busas without being
+ distracted by the fear of an Ethiopian attack and the subversion of Syria
+ in his rear.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkCimage-0020" id="linkCimage-0020">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="figright" style="width:47%;">
+ <img width="100%" src="images/378.jpg"
+ alt="378.jpg Taking of a Town in Urartu by the Assyrians " />
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Drawn by Faucher-Gudin,
+from the drawing by Botta.
+</pre>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Sargon took advantage of these circumstances to strike a final blow at
+ Urartu. He began in the spring of 714 by collecting among the Mannai the
+ tribute due from Ullusuna, Daltâ, and the Median chiefs; then pushing
+ forward into the country of the Zikartu, he destroyed three forts and
+ twenty-four villages, and burnt their capital, Parda. Mitatti escaped
+ servitude, but it was at the price of his power: a proscribed fugitive,
+ deserted by his followers, he took refuge in the woods, and never
+ submitted to his conqueror; but he troubled him no further, and
+ disappeared from the pages of history. Having achieved this result, Sargon
+ turned towards the north-west, and coming at length into close conflict
+ with Eusas, did not leave his enemy till he had crushed him. He drove him
+ into the gorges of Uaush, slaughtered a large number of his troops, and
+ swept away the whole of his body-guard&mdash;a body of cavalry of two
+ hundred men, all of whom were connected by blood with the reigning family.
+ Eusas quitted his chariot, and, like his father Sharduris on the night of
+ the disaster at Kishtân, leaped upon a mare, and fled, overwhelmed with
+ shame, into the mountains. His towns, terror-stricken, opened their gates
+ at the first summons to the victor; Sargon burnt those which he knew he
+ could not retain, granted the district of Uaush to his vassal Ullusunu as
+ a recompense for his loyalty, and then marched up to rest awhile in Naîri,
+ where he revictualled his troops at the expense of Ianzu of Khubushkia. He
+ had, no doubt, hoped that Urzana of Muzazîr, the last of the friends of
+ Eusas to hold out against Assyria, would make good use of the respite
+ thus, to all appearances unintentionally, afforded him, and would come to
+ terms; but as the appeal to his clemency was delayed, Sargon suddenly
+ determined to assume the aggressive. Muzazîr, entrenched within its
+ mountain ranges, was accessible only by one or two dangerous passes;
+ Urzana had barricaded these, and believed himself in a position to defy
+ every effort of the Assyrians. Sargon, equally convinced of the futility
+ of a front attack, had recourse to a surprise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkCimage-0021" id="linkCimage-0021">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="figleft" style="width:30%;">
+ <img width="100%" src="images/379.jpg"
+ alt="379.jpg the Seal of Urzana, King Of MuzazÎr " />
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Drawn by Faucher-Gudin,
+from an impression of
+the original seal which
+is preserved at the Hague.
+</pre>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Taking with him his chariots and one thousand picked horsemen, he left the
+ beaten track, and crossing the four or five mountain chains&mdash;the
+ Shiak, the Ardinshi, the Ulayau, and the Alluria&mdash;which lay between
+ him and Muzazîr, he unexpectedly bore down upon the city. Urzana escaped
+ after a desperate resistance, but the place was taken by assault and
+ sacked, the palace destroyed, the temple overthrown, and the statues of
+ the gods Khaldîa and Bagbartu dragged from their sanctuary. The entire
+ royal family were sent into slavery, and with them 20,170 of the
+ inhabitants who had survived the siege, besides 690 mules, 920 oxen,
+ 100,225 sheep, and incalculable spoils in gold, silver, bronze, iron, and
+ precious stones and stuffs, the furniture of Urzana, and even his seal,
+ being deposited in the treasury at Nineveh.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The disaster at Muzazîr was the final blow to Urartu; it is impossible to
+ say what took place where Eusas himself was, and whether the feudatories
+ refused him any further allegiance, but in a short time he found himself
+ almost forsaken, without friends, troops, or a place of refuge, and
+ reduced to choose between death or the degradation of appealing to the
+ mercy of the conqueror. He stabbed himself rather than yield; and Sargon,
+ only too thankful to be rid of such a dangerous adversary, stopped the
+ pursuit. Argistis II. succeeded to what was left of his father&rsquo;s kingdom,*
+ and, being anxious above all things to obtain peace for his subjects,
+ suspended hostilities, without however disarming his troops.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * No text states positively that Argistis II. immediately
+ succeeded his father; but he is found mentioned as King of
+ Urartu from 708 onwards, and hence it has been concluded,
+ not without some reason, that such was the fact. The Vannic
+ inscriptions have not as yet given us this sovereign&rsquo;s name.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkCimage-0022" id="linkCimage-0022">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="figright" style="width:44%;">
+ <img width="100%" src="images/381.jpg"
+ alt="381.jpg the Assyrians Taking a Median Town " />
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from the
+facsimile by Flandin. It seems that
+this town was called Amkaru, and its name
+appears, as far as I know, in none of
+the accounts which we possess of the
+campaigns. The town was apparently situated
+in Karalla or in Median territory.
+</pre>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ As was the case under Tiglath-pileser III., Urartu neither submitted to
+ Assyria, nor was there any kind of treaty between the belligerents to
+ prescribe the conditions of this temporary truce. Both sides maintained
+ their positions on their respective territories: Sargon kept the frontier
+ towns acquired by him in previous years, and which he had annexed to the
+ border provinces, retaining also his suzerainty over Muzazîr, the Mannai,
+ and the Median states implicated in the struggle; Argistis, on his side,
+ strengthened himself in the regions around the sources of the Euphrates
+ and Lake Van&mdash;in Biaînas, in Etius, and in the plains of the Araxes.
+ The material injuries which he had received, however considerable they may
+ appear, were not irreparable, and, as a fact, the country quickly
+ recovered from them, but the people&rsquo;s confidence in their prince and his
+ chiefs was destroyed. The defeat of Sharduris, following as it did on a
+ period of advantageous victories, may have seemed to Argistis one of those
+ unimportant occurrences which constantly take place in the career of the
+ strongest nations; the disaster of Rusas proved to him that, in attempting
+ to wipe out his first repulse, he had only made matters worse, and the
+ conviction was borne in upon his princes that they were not in a position
+ to contest the possession of Western Asia with the Assyrians. They
+ therefore renounced, more from instinct than as the result of
+ deliberation, the project of enlarging their borders to the south, and if
+ they subsequently reappeared on the Mesopotamian plains, it was in search
+ of booty, and not to acquire territory. Any attempt to stop their
+ incursions, or to disturb them in their mountain fastnesses, found them
+ prepared to hold their own with the same obstinacy as of old, and they
+ were quite able to safeguard their independence against an intruder.
+ Besides this, the Cimmerians and the Scythians were already pressing on
+ their frontier, and were constantly harassing them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This fresh danger absorbed their entire attention, and from this time
+ forward they ceased to play a part in general history; the century which
+ had seen the rise and growth of their power was also a witness of their
+ downfall under the attacks of Assyria. During the last months of 714, the
+ tribes which had formerly constituted the kingdom of Karalla mutinied
+ against the tyranny of their governor, and invited Ami-tashshi, the
+ brother of their ancient lord Assurlî, to rule over them. Sargon attacked
+ them in the spring of 713, dispersed their troops, held them to ransom,
+ and after having once more exacted homage from Bît-Dayaukku,* Ellipi, and
+ Allabria.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The Dayaukku who gave his name to this province was at
+ first confounded with the personage who was entangled in the
+ affairs of Ullusunu, and was then banished by Sargon to
+ Hamath. A good number of historians now admit that they were
+ different persons. Bît-Dayaukku is evidently the district of
+ Ecbatana.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ He made a raid extending as far as the confines of the Iranian desert, the
+ barren steppes of Eastern Arabia,* and the district of Nagira belonging to
+ the &ldquo;powerful&rdquo; Manda.*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The Eastern Arabs mentioned here were nomadic, and
+ inhabited the confines of the Great Desert to the south-east
+ of Media, or the steppes of Northern Iran. They are those
+ mentioned in a passage of Appian, together with Parthians,
+ Bactrians, and Tapyræans, as having submitted to Seleucus.
+
+ ** The &ldquo;powerful&rdquo; Manda, encamped in the mountain and
+ desert, and who were named after the Eastern Arabs, must be
+ the peoples situated between the Caspian and the steppes of
+ the Iranian plateau, and a branch of the Scythians who are
+ soon to appear in Asiatic history.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ While he was thus preparing the way for peace in his Median domains, one
+ of his generals crossed the Euphrates to chastise the Tabal for their ill
+ deeds. The latter had figured, about the year 740 B.C., among the peoples
+ who had bowed before the supremacy of Urartu, and their chief, Uassarmi,
+ had been the ally or vassal of Sharduris. Contemptuously spared at the
+ taking of Arpad, he had not been able to resign himself to the Assyrian
+ yoke, and had, in an ill-timed moment, thrown it off in 731; he had,
+ however, been overcome and forced to surrender, and Tiglath-pileser had
+ put in his place a man of obscure birth, named Khulli, whose fidelity had
+ remained unshaken throughout the reign of Shalmaneser V. and the first
+ years of Sargon. Khulli&rsquo;s son, Ambaridis, the husband of a Ninevite
+ princess, who had brought him as dowry a considerable part of Cilicia, had
+ been unable to resist the flattering offers of Kusas; he had broken the
+ ties which attached him to the new Assyrian dynasty, but had been left
+ unmolested so long as Urartu and Muzazir remained unshaken, since his
+ position at the western extremity of the empire prevented him from
+ influencing in the smallest degree the issue of the struggle, and it was
+ well known that when the fall of Kusas took place Ambaridis would be
+ speedily brought to account. He was, in fact, seized, banished to the
+ banks of the Tigris, and his hereditary fief of Bît-Burutash annexed to
+ Cilicia, under the rule of an Assyrian. The following year was signalised
+ by a similar execution at which Sargon himself deigned to preside in
+ person. Tarkhunazi, the King of Miliddu, not only had taken advantage of
+ the troubles consequent on the Armenian war to rebel against his master,
+ but had attacked Gunzinânu, who held, and had ruthlessly pillaged, the
+ neighbouring district of Kammanu.* Sargon overcame him in the open field,
+ took from him his city of Miliddu, and stormed the town of Tulgarimmê in
+ which he had taken refuge.**
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Kammanu is probably not the Kammanênc of the Greek
+ geographers, which is too far north relatively to Melitênè,
+ but is probably Comana of Cappadocia and its district.
+
+ ** Tulgarimmê has been connected with the Togarmah of the
+ Bible (Gen. x. 3) by Halévy and Delitzsch, and their views
+ on this subject have been adopted by most historians.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Here again the native kingdom disappeared, and was replaced by an Assyrian
+ administration. Kammanu, wedged in between Urartu and Mushki, separated
+ these two countries, sometimes rivals to each other, but always enemies to
+ Nineveh. Its maintenance as an independent kingdom prevented them from
+ combining their efforts, and obtaining that unity of action which alone
+ could ensure for them, if not a definite triumph, at least preservation
+ from complete extinction and an opportunity of maintaining their liberty;
+ the importance of the position, however, rendered it particularly perilous
+ to hold, and the Assyrians succeeded in so doing only by strongly
+ fortifying it. Walls were built round ten cities, five on the Urartian
+ frontier, three on that of Mushki, and two on the north, and the country
+ which they protected was made into a new province, that of Tulgarimmê, the
+ district of Miliddu being confided to the care of Mutallu, Prince of
+ Kummukh (710). An incident which took place in the following year
+ furnished a pretext for completing the organisation and military defence
+ of this western border province. Gurgum had been for thirty years or more
+ in the possession of Tarkhulara; this prince, after having served
+ Sharduris, had transferred his homage to Tiglath-pileser, and he had
+ thenceforward professed an unwavering loyalty to the Assyrian sovereigns.
+ This accommodating personage was assassinated by his son Mutallu; and
+ Sargon, fearing a revolt, hastened, at the head of a detachment of picked
+ troops, to avenge him. The murderer threw down his arms almost without
+ having struck a blow, and Gurgum was thenceforward placed under the direct
+ rule of Nineveh. The affair had not been brought to a close before an
+ outbreak took place in Southern Syria, which might have entailed very
+ serious consequences had it not been promptly dealt with. Egypt, united
+ from end to end under the sceptre of Sabaco, jealously kept watch over the
+ political complications in Asia, and though perhaps she was not sure
+ enough of her own strength to interfere openly before the death of Eusas,
+ she had renewed negotiations with the petty kingdoms of the Hebrews and
+ Philistines. Ashdod had for some time past showed signs of discontent, and
+ it had been found necessary to replace their king, Azuri, who had refused
+ to pay tribute, by his brother Akhimiti; shortly after this, however, the
+ people had risen in rebellion: they had massacred Akhimiti, whom they
+ accused of being a mere thrall of Assyria, and had placed on the throne
+ Yamani, a soldier of fortune, probably an adventurer of Hellenic
+ extraction.* The other Philistine cities had immediately taken up arms;
+ Edom and Moab were influenced by the general movement, and Isaiah was
+ striving to avert any imprudent step on the part of Judah. Sargon
+ despatched the Tartan,** and the rapidity with which that officer carried
+ out the campaign prevented the movement from spreading beyond Philistia.
+ He devastated Ashdod, and its vassal, Gath, carried off their gods and
+ their inhabitants, and peopled the cities afresh with prisoners from Asia
+ Minor, Urartu, and Media. Yamani attempted to escape into Egypt, but the
+ chief of Milukhkha intercepted him on his way, and handed him over in
+ chains to the conqueror.***
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * This prince&rsquo;s name, usually written Yamani, is also
+ written Yatnani in the <i>Annals</i>, and this variation, which
+ is found again in the name of the island of Cyprus and the
+ Cypriotes, gives us grounds for believing that the Assyrian
+ scribe took the race-name of the prince for a proper name:
+ the new king of Ashdod would have been a Yamani, a Greek of
+ Cyprus.
+
+ ** The Assyrian narratives, as usual, give the honour of
+ conducting the campaign to the king. Isaiah (xx. 1)
+ distinctly says that Sargon sent the Tartan to quell the
+ revolt of Ashdod.
+
+ *** The <i>Annals</i> state that Yamani was made prisoner and
+ taken to Assyria. The <i>Fastes</i>, more accurate on this point,
+ state that he escaped to Muzri, and that he was given up by
+ the King of Milukhkha. The Muzri mentioned in this passage
+ very probably here means Egypt.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The latter took care not to call either Moab, Edom, or Judah to account
+ for the part they had taken in the movement, perhaps because they were not
+ mentioned in his instructions, or because he preferred not to furnish
+ them, by an untimely interference, with a pretext for calling in the help
+ of Egypt. The year was doubtless too far advanced to allow him to dream of
+ marching against Pharaoh, and moreover that would have been one of those
+ important steps which the king alone had the right to take. There was,
+ however, no doubt that the encounter between the two empires was imminent,
+ and Isaiah ventured to predict the precise date of its occurrence. He
+ walked stripped and barefoot through the streets of Jerusalem&mdash;a
+ strange procedure which he explained by the words which Jahveh had put
+ into his lips: &ldquo;Like as My servant Isaiah hath walked naked and barefoot
+ three years for a sign and a wonder upon Egypt and upon Kush (Ethiopia);
+ so shall the King of Assyria lead away the captives of Egypt and the
+ exiles of Kush, young and old, naked and barefoot, and with buttocks
+ uncovered, to the shame of Egypt. And they shall be dismayed and ashamed,
+ because of Kush their expectation, and of Egypt their glory. And the
+ inhabitants of this coastland shall say in that day, Behold, such is our
+ expectation, whither we fled for help to be delivered from the King of
+ Assyria: and we, how shall we escape?&rdquo; *
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Isa. xx.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The fulfilment of this prophecy did not take place as quickly as the
+ prophet perhaps desired. Egypt appeared too strong to be openly attacked
+ by a mere section of the battalions at the disposal of Assyria, and
+ besides, it may have been deemed imprudent to involve the army to any
+ serious extent on so distant a field as Africa, when Babylon was ready and
+ waiting to fall upon the very heart of Assyria at the first news of a real
+ or supposed reverse. Circumstances seemed, moreover, to favour a war
+ against Merodach-baladan. This sovereign, who had been received with
+ acclamation by the Babylonians, had already lost the popularity he had
+ enjoyed at his accession. The fickle character of the people, which made
+ them nearly always welcome a fresh master with enthusiasm, soon led them
+ from love and obedience to hatred, and finally to revolt. Merodach-baladan
+ trusted to the Kaldâ to help him to maintain his position, and their rude
+ barbarity, even if it protected him against the fickleness of his more
+ civilised subjects, increased the discontent at Kutha, Sippar, and
+ Borsippa. He removed the statues of the gods from these towns, imprisoned
+ the most turbulent citizens, confiscated their goods, and distributed them
+ among his own followers; the other cities took no part in the movement,
+ but Sargon must have expected to find in them, if not effective support,
+ at least sympathies which would facilitate his work of conquest. It is
+ true that Elam, whose friendship for the Aramæan was still undiminished,
+ remained to be reckoned with, but Elam had lost much of its prestige in
+ the last few years. The aged Khumban-igash had died in 717,* and his
+ successor, Shutruk-nakhunta, had not apparently inherited all the energy
+ of his father,** and it is possible that troubles had arisen among the
+ vassals of his own kingdom which prevented him from interfering on behalf
+ of his ally. Sargon took account of all these circumstances in arranging
+ his plan of campaign. He divided his army into two forces, one of which,
+ under his own command, was to be directed against Merodach-baladan, while
+ the other was to attack the insurgent Aramæans on the left bank of the
+ Tigris, and was to be manoeuvred so as to drive Shutruk-nakhunta back on
+ the marshes of the Uknu.*** The eastern force was the first to be set in
+ movement, and it pushed forward into the territory of the Gambulu. These
+ latter had concentrated themselves round Dur-Atkharas, one of their
+ citadels;**** they had increased the height of the walls, and filled the
+ ditches with water brought from the Shurappu by means of a canal, and
+ having received a reinforcement of 600 horsemen and 4000 foot soldiers,
+ they had drawn them up in front of the ramparts.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * The date of the death of Khumban-igash is indirectly given
+ in the passage of the <i>Babylonian Chronicle of Pinches</i>,
+ where it is said that in the first year of Ashshur-nâdin-
+ shumu, King of Babylon, Ishtar-khundu (= Shutruk-nakhunta)
+ was dethroned by his brother, Khallushu, after having
+ reigned over Elam eighteen years: these events actually took
+ place, as we shall see below, about the year 699 before our
+ era.
+
+ ** Shutruk-nakhunta is the Susian form of the name; the
+ Assyrian texts distort it into Shutur-nankhundi, and the
+ <i>Babylonian Chronicle of Pinches</i>, into Ishtar-khundu, owing
+ to a faint resemblance in the sound of the name of the
+ goddess Ishtar with the form <i>Shutur, Sthur</i>, itself derived
+ from Shutruk, with which the name began.
+
+ *** The earlier historians of Assyria, misled in the first
+ place by the form in which the scribes have handed down the
+ account in the Annals and the <i>Fastes</i>, assumed the
+ existence of a single army, led by Sargon himself, and which
+ would have marched on all the above-mentioned places of the
+ country, one by one. Tiele was the first to recognise that
+ Sargon must have left part of his forces to the command of
+ one of his lieutenants, and Winckler, enlarging on this
+ idea, showed that there were then two armies, engaged at
+ different seats of war, but manoeuvring as far as possible
+ by mutual arrangement.
+
+ **** The site of Dur-Atkharas is unknown. Billerbeck places
+ it hypotheti-cally on the stream of Mendeli, and his
+ conjecture is in itself very plausible. I should incline,
+ however, to place it more to the south, on account of the
+ passage in which it is said that the Kaldâ, to complete the
+ defences of the town, brought a canal from the Shurappu and
+ fortified its banks. The Shurappu, according to Delitzsch,
+ would be the Shatt Umm-el-Jemâl; according to Delattrc, the
+ Kerkha; the account of the campaign under consideration
+ would lead me to recognise in it a watercourse like the Tib,
+ which runs into the Tigris near Amara, in which case the
+ ruins of Kherîb would perhaps correspond with the site of
+ Dur-Atkharas.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ A single morning sufficed to disperse them, and the Assyrians, entering
+ the city with the fugitives, took possession of it on the same day. They
+ made 16,490 prisoners, and seized horses, mules, asses, camels, and both
+ sheep and oxen in large numbers. Eight of the chiefs of the neighbourhood,
+ who ruled over the flat country between the Shurappu and the Uknu, begged
+ for mercy as soon as they learned the result of the engagement. The name
+ of Dur-Atkharas was changed to that of Dur-Nebo, the territory of the
+ Gambulu was converted into a province, and its organisation having been
+ completed, the army continued its march, sweeping before it the Euâ, the
+ Khindaru, the Puqudu, in short, all the tribes occupying the district of
+ Yatbur. The chiefs of these provinces sought refuge in the morasses of the
+ lower Kerkha, but finding themselves surrounded and short of provisions,
+ they were forced by famine to yield to the enemy, and came to terms with
+ the Assyrians, who imposed a tribute on them and included them within the
+ new province of Gambulu. The goal of this expedition was thus attained,
+ and Blam separated from Karduniash, but the issue of the war remained
+ undecided as long as Shutruk-nakhunta held the cities at the edge of the
+ plain, from which he could emerge at will into the heart of the Assyrian
+ position. The conqueror therefore turned in that direction, rapidly took
+ from him the citadels of Shamuna and Babduri, then those of Lakhirimmu and
+ Pillutu, and pitched his camp on the bank of the Naditi, from whence he
+ despatched marauding bands to pillage the country. Dismay spread
+ throughout the district of Rashi; the inhabitants, abandoning their cities&mdash;Tîl-Khumba,
+ Durmishamash, Bubî, and Khamanu&mdash;migrated as far as Bît-Imbi;
+ Shutruk-nakhunta, overcome with fear, took refuge, so it was said, in the
+ distant mountains to preserve his life.*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * None of these places can be identified with certainty. So
+ far as I can follow the account of this campaign on the map,
+ it seems that the attacks upon Shutruk-nakhunta took place
+ on the plain and in the mountains between the Ab-î-Gengir
+ and the Tib, so that the river Naditi would be the Aftâh or
+ one of its tributaries. If this were so, Lakhirimmu and
+ Pillutu would be situated somewhere near the Jughaî ben Ruan
+ and the Tope Ghulamen of de Morgan&rsquo;s map of Elam, Shamuna
+ near Zirzir-têpî, Babdurî near Hosseini-yeh. But I wish it
+ to be understood that I do not consider these comparisons as
+ more than simple conjectures. Bît-Imbi was certainly out of
+ the reach of the Assyrians, since it was used as a place of
+ refuge by the inhabitants of Rashî; at the same time it must
+ have been close to Rashî, since the people of this country
+ fled thither. The site of Ghilân which de Morgan has adopted
+ on his map seems to me to be too far north to comply with
+ these conditions, and that of Tapa, approved by Billerboek,
+ too southerly. If, as I believe, Rashî corresponds to the
+ regions of Pushti-kuh which lie on both sides of the upper
+ waters of the Mendeli stream, we ought to look for Bît-Imbi
+ somewhere near the Desht-î-Ghoaur and the Zenjan, near a
+ point where communication with the banks of the Ab-î-Kirind
+ would be easy.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Sargon, meanwhile, had crossed the Euphrates with the other force, and had
+ marched straight upon Bît-Dakkuri; having there noticed that the fortress
+ of Dur-Ladînu was in ruins, he rebuilt it, and, firmly installed within
+ the heart of the country, he patiently waited until the eastern force had
+ accomplished its mission. Like his adversary, Merodach-baladan, he had no
+ desire to be drawn into an engagement until he knew what chance there was
+ of the latter being reinforced by the King of Elam. At the opening of
+ hostilities Merodach-baladan claimed the help of the Elamite king, and
+ lavished on him magnificent presents&mdash;a couch, a throne, a portable
+ chair, a cup for the royal offerings, and his own pectoral chain; these
+ all reached their destination in good condition, and were graciously
+ accepted. But before long the Elamite prince, threatened in his own
+ domain, forgot everything except his own personal safety, and declared
+ himself unable to render Merodach-baladan any assistance. The latter, on
+ receiving this news, threw himself with his face in the dust, rent his
+ clothes, and broke out into loud weeping; after which, conscious that his
+ strength would not permit of his meeting the enemy in the open field, he
+ withdrew his men from the other side of the Tigris, escaped secretly by
+ night, and retired with his troops to the fortress of Ikbîbel. The
+ inhabitants of Babylon and Borsippa did not allow themselves to be
+ disconcerted; they brought the arks of Bel, Zarpanît, Nebo, and Tashmît
+ out of their sanctuaries, and came forth with chanting and musical
+ instruments to salute Sargon at Dûr-Ladînu. He entered the city in their
+ company, and after he had celebrated the customary sacrifices, the people
+ enthroned him in Merodach-baladan&rsquo;s palace. Tribute was offered to him,
+ but he refused to accept any part of it for his personal use, and applied
+ it to a work of public utility&mdash;the repairing of the ancient canal of
+ Borsippa, which had become nearly filled up. This done, he detached a body
+ of troops to occupy Sippara, and returned to Assyria, there to take up his
+ winter quarters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkCimage-0023" id="linkCimage-0023">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="figleft" style="width:22%;">
+ <img width="100%" src="images/396.jpg" alt="396.jpb Stele at Larnaka " />
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+Drawn by Faucher-
+Gudin, from the
+plaster cast in
+the Louvre.
+</pre>
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ Once again, therefore, the ancient metropolis of the Euphrates was ruled
+ by an Assyrian, who united in one protocol the titles of the sovereigns of
+ Assur and Kar-duniash. Babylon possessed for the kings of Nineveh the same
+ kind of attraction as at a later date drew the German Cæsars to Rome.
+ Scarcely had the Assyrian monarchs been crowned within their own domains,
+ than they turned their eyes towards Babylon, and their ambition knew no
+ rest till the day came for them to present themselves in pomp within the
+ temple of its god and implore his solemn consecration. When at length they
+ had received it, they scrupulously secured its renewal on every occasion
+ which the law prescribed, and their chroniclers recorded among the
+ important events of the year, the ceremony in which they &ldquo;took the hand of
+ Bel.&rdquo; Sargon therefore returned, in the month Nisan of the year 709, to
+ preside over the procession of the god, and he devoutly accomplished the
+ rites which constituted him the legitimate successor of the semi-fabulous
+ heroes of the old empire, foremost among whom was his namesake Shargâni of
+ Agadê. He offered sacrifices to Bel, Nebo, and to the divinities of Sumir
+ and Akkad, and he did not return to the camp until he had fulfilled all
+ the duties incumbent on his new dignity. He was involved that year in two
+ important wars at opposite points of his empire. One was at the
+ north-western extremity, against the Mushki and their king Mita, who,
+ after having supported Eusas, was now intriguing with Argistis; the other
+ in the south-east, against the Kaldâ, and probably also against Elam. He
+ entrusted the conduct of the former to the governor of Kuî, but reserved
+ to himself the final reckoning with Merodach-baladan. The Babylonian king
+ had made good use of the respite given him during the winter months. Too
+ prudent to meet his enemy in the open plain, he had transformed his
+ hereditary principality into a formidable citadel. During the preceding
+ campaign he had devastated the whole of the country lying between the
+ marshes and the territory occupied by the Assyrians, and had withdrawn the
+ inhabitants. Most of the towns&mdash;Ikbîbel, Uru, Uruk, Kishik, and
+ Nimid-laguda&mdash;were also deserted, and no garrisons were left in them.
+ He had added to the fortifications of Dur-Yakîa, and enlarged the moat
+ till it was two hundred cubits wide and eighteen deep, so as to reach the
+ level of infiltration; he then turned into it the waters of the Euphrates,
+ so that the town appeared to be floating on a lake, without either bridges
+ or quays by means of which the besiegers might have brought their machines
+ within range and their troops been able to approach for an assault.
+ Merodach-baladan had been careful not to shut himself within the town, but
+ had taken up a position in the marshes, and there awaited the arrival of
+ the Assyrians. Sargon, having left Babylon in the month of Iyyâr,
+ encountered him within sight of Dur-Yakîn. The Aramæan infantry were
+ crushed by repeated charges from the Mnevito chariotry and cavalry, who
+ pursued the fugitives to the outer side of the moat, and seized the camp
+ with all its baggage and the royal train, including the king&rsquo;s tent, a
+ canopy of solid silver which protected the throne, his sceptre, weapons,
+ and stores of all kinds. The peasants, to the number of 90,580, crowded
+ within the lines, also fell into their hands, together with their flocks
+ and herds&mdash;2500 horses, 610 mules, and 854 camels, as well as sheep,
+ oxen, and asses; the remainder of the fugitives rushed within the outworks
+ for refuge &ldquo;like a pack of wild boars,&rdquo; and finally were driven into the
+ interior of the place, or scattered among the beds of reeds along the
+ coast. Sargon cut down the groves of palm trees which adorned the suburbs,
+ and piled up their trunks in the moat, thus quickly forming a causeway
+ right up to the walls. Merodach-baladan had been wounded in the arm during
+ the engagement, but, nevertheless, fought stubbornly in defence of his
+ city; when he saw that its fall was inevitable, he fled to the other side
+ of the gulf, and took refuge among the mud flats of the Lower Ulaî. Sargon
+ set fire to Dur-Yakîn, levelled its towers and walls with the ground, and
+ demolished its houses, temples, and palaces. It had been a sort of penal
+ settlement, to which the Kaldâ rulers used to consign those of their
+ subjects belonging to the old aboriginal race, who had rendered themselves
+ obnoxious by their wealth or independence of character; the number of
+ these prisoners was considerable, Babylon, Borsippa, Nipur, and Sippar,
+ not to speak of Uni, Uruk, Eridu, Larsam, and Kishîk, having all of them
+ furnished their share. Sargon released them all, and restored their gods
+ to the temples; he expelled the nomads from the estates which, contrary to
+ all justice, had been distributed among them in preceding years, and
+ reinstated the former owners. Karduniash, which had been oppressed for
+ twelve long years by a semi-barbarian despot, now breathed again, and
+ hailed Sargon as its deliverer, while he on his part was actively engaged
+ in organising his conquest. The voluntary submission of Upiri, King of
+ Dilmun, who lived isolated in the open sea, &ldquo;as though in a bird&rsquo;s nest,&rdquo;
+ secured to Sargon possession of the watercourses which flowed beyond the
+ Chaldæan lake into the Persian Gulf: no sooner had he obtained it than he
+ quitted the neighbourhood of Dur-Yakîn, crossed the Tigris, and reinforced
+ the garrisons which lined his Elamite frontier on this side. He had just
+ finished building a strongly fortified citadel on the site of Sagbat,*
+ when ambassadors arrived from Mita.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * This Sagbat, which must not be confused with the district
+ of Bît-Sagbati mentioned in the reign of Tiglath-pileser
+ III., seems to correspond with a post to the south of
+ Durîlu, perhaps the ruins of Baksayeh, on the Tchengula.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The governor of Kuî had at length triumphed over the obstinacy of the
+ Mushki, and after driving them from village to village, had compelled them
+ to sue for terms: the tidings of the victories over the Kaldâ had
+ doubtless hastened their decision, but they were still so powerful that it
+ was thought wiser not to impose too rigorous conditions upon them. Mita
+ agreed to pay tribute, and surrendered one or two districts, which were
+ turned into an Aramæan settlement: the inhabitants were transferred to
+ Bît-Yakîn, where they had to make the best they could of lands that had
+ been devastated by war. At this juncture the Greeks of Cyprus flattered
+ the pride of the Assyrians in a most unexpected way: after the manner of
+ their race they scoured the seas, and their fleets persistently devastated
+ the coasts of Syria and Cilicia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Seven of their kings were so far alarmed by the report of Sargon&rsquo;s
+ achievements as to dread punishment for their misdeeds. They therefore
+ sent him presents, and, for the moment, abandoned their piratical
+ expeditions in Phoenician waters. The homage of these inveterate robbers
+ raised Sargon in his own eyes and in those of his subjects. Some years
+ later, about 708 B.C., he presented them with a stele of black marble, on
+ which he had engraved his own portrait, together with a long inscription
+ setting forth his most glorious exploits. They set it up at Kition
+ (Citium), where it has been preserved amongst the ruins, a priceless
+ witness to the greatness of Assyria.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While war thus raged around him, Sargon still found time for works of a
+ peaceful character. He set himself to remodel and complete the system of
+ irrigation in the Assyrian plain; he repaired the dykes, and cleaned out
+ and made good the beds of the canals which had been neglected during the
+ troublous times of the last generation. He erected buildings at Calah* and
+ at Nineveh, but in these cities everything seemed to recall too vividly
+ the memory of the sovereigns who had gone before him: he wished for a
+ capital which should belong to himself alone, where he would not be
+ reminded of a past in which he had no part. After meditating day and
+ night, his choice fell upon the village of Maganubba, a little to the
+ north-east of Nineveh, in a wide plain which extends from the banks of the
+ Khuzur to the hills of Muzri, and by a single decree he expropriated all
+ its inhabitants. He then built on the land which he had purchased from
+ them a city of unrivalled magnificence, which he called by his own name,
+ Dur-Sharrukîn.**
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * At Calah, he lived in an old palace of Assur-nazir-pal
+ restored and adapted for his use, as shown by the
+ inscription published by Layard.
+
+ ** In most of the texts the village of Maganubba is not
+ named; it is mentioned in the <i>Cylinder Inscription</i>, and
+ this document is the only one which furnishes details of the
+ expropriation, etc. The modern name of the place is
+ Khorsabad, <i>the city of Khosroes</i>, but the name of its
+ founder was still associated with its ruins, in the time of
+ Yakut, who mentions him under the name of Sarghun. It was
+ first explored in 1843 by Botta, then by Place and Oppert.
+ The antiquities collected there by Botta and Place
+ constitute the bulk of the Assyrian Museum in the Louvre;
+ unfortunately, a part of the objects collected by Place went
+ to the bottom of the Tigris with the lighter which was
+ carrying them.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The ground plan of it is of rectangular shape, the sides being about 1900
+ yards long by 1800 yards wide, each corner exactly facing one of the four
+ points of the compass. Its walls rest on a limestone sub-structure some
+ three feet six inches high, and rise fifty-seven feet above the ground;
+ they are strengthened, every thirty yards or so, by battlemented towers
+ which project thirteen feet from the face of the wall and stand sixteen
+ feet higher than the ramparts.*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * Place reckoned the height of the wall at 75 feet, a
+ measurement adopted by Perrot and Chipiez; Dieulafoy has
+ shown that the height of the wall must be reduced to 47
+ feet, and that of the towers about 65 feet.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkCimage-0024" id="linkCimage-0024">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/398.jpg" width="100%"
+ alt="398.jpg Plan of the Royal City Of Dur-sharrukÎn " />
+ </div>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Reduction by Faucher-Gudin, from the plan published in
+ Place.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Access was gained to the interior by eight gates, two on each side of the
+ square, each of them marked by two towers separated from one another by
+ the width of the bay. Every gate had its patron, chosen from among the
+ gods of the city; there was the gate of Shamash, the gate of Rammân, those
+ of Bel and Beltis, of Ami, of Tshtar, of Eâ, and of the Lady of the Gods.
+ Each of them was protected externally by a <i>migdol</i>, or small castle,
+ built in the Syrian style, and flanked at each corner by a low tower
+ thirteen yards in width; five allowed of the passage of beasts as well as
+ men. It was through these that the peasants came in every morning, driving
+ their cattle before them, or jolting along in waggons laden with fruit and
+ vegetables. After passing the outposts, they crossed a paved courtyard,
+ then made their way between the two towers through a vaulted passage over
+ fifty yards long, intersected at almost equal intervals by two transverse
+ galleries. The other three gates had a special arrangement of their own; a
+ flight of twelve steps built out in front of the courtyard rendered them
+ inaccessible to animals or vehicles. At the entrance to the passage
+ towered two colossal bulls with human heads, standing like sentinels&mdash;their
+ faces and foreparts turned outward, their hind-quarters ranged along the
+ inner walls&mdash;as though gazing before them into space in company with
+ two winged genii. The arch supported by their mitred heads was ornamented
+ by a course of enamelled bricks, on which other genii, facing one another
+ in pairs, offered pine-cones across a circular ornament of many colours.
+ These were the mystic guardians of the city, who shielded it not only from
+ the attacks of men, but also from invasions of evil spirits and pernicious
+ diseases. The rays of the sun made the forecourt warm in winter, while it
+ was always cool under the archway in summer; the gates served as resorts
+ for pleasure or business, where old men and idlers congregated to discuss
+ their affairs and settle the destinies of the State, merchants bargained
+ and disposed of their goods, and the judge and notables of the
+ neighbouring quarter held their courts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkCimage-0025" id="linkCimage-0025">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/400.jpg" width="100%"
+ alt="400.jpg Part of the Enamelled Course Of a Gate " />
+ </div>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a drawing published in Place.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ It was here that the king generally exposed to view the chieftains and
+ kings whom he had taken captive; here they lay, chained like dogs in
+ cages, dependent on the pity of their guards or of passers-by for such
+ miserable fare as might be flung to them, and, the first feeling of
+ curiosity once passed, no longer provoking even the jeers of the crowd,
+ until a day came when their victor took it into his head to remove them
+ from their ignominious position, and either restored them to their thrones
+ or sent them to the executioner.* The town itself, being built from plans
+ drawn up by one mind, must have presented few of the irregularities of
+ outline characteristic of ancient cities.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * To mention but a single instance, it was in this way that
+ Assur-bani-pal treated the Arab kings captured by him.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The streets leading from the gates were of uniform breadth throughout,
+ from one side of the enclosure to the other. They were paved, had no
+ sideways or footpaths, and crossed one another at right angles. The houses
+ on either side of them seem, for the most part, to have consisted of a
+ single story. They were built of bricks, either baked or unbaked, the
+ outer surfaces of which were covered with white or tinted rough-casting.
+ The high and narrow doors were nearly always hidden away in a corner of
+ the front; the bare monotony of the walls was only relieved here and there
+ at long intervals by tiny windows, but often instead of a flat roof the
+ building was surmounted by a conical dome or by semi-cupolas, the concave
+ sides of which were turned inwards. The inhabitants varied greatly in race
+ and language: Sargon had filled his city with prisoners collected from all
+ the four quarters of his empire, from Elam, Chaldæa, and Media, from
+ Urartu and Tabal, Syria and Palestine, and in order to keep these
+ incongruous elements in check he added a number of Assyrians, of the
+ mercantile, official, or priestly classes. He could overlook the whole
+ city from the palace which he had built on both sides the north-eastern
+ wall of the town, half within and half without the ramparts. Like all
+ palaces built on the Euphratean model, this royal castle stood on an
+ artificial eminence of bricks formed of two rectangles joined together in
+ the shape of the letter T. The only entrance to it was on the city side,
+ foot-passengers being admitted by a double flight of steps built out in
+ front of the ramparts, horsemen and chariots by means of an inclined plane
+ which rose in a gentle gradient along the right flank of the masonry work,
+ and terminated on its eastern front. Two main gates corresponded to these
+ two means of approach; the one on the north-east led straight to the royal
+ apartments, the other faced the city and opened on to the double
+ staircase. It was readily distinguishable from a distance by its two
+ flagstaffs bearing the royal standard, and its two towers, at the base of
+ which were winged bulls and colossal figures of Gilgames crushing the
+ lion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkCimage-0026" id="linkCimage-0026">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/402.jpg" width="100%"
+ alt="402.jpg Bird&rsquo;s Eye View of Sargon&rsquo;s Palace At Dur-sharrukîn " />
+ </div>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Drawn by Boudier, from the restoration by Thomas in Place.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Two bulls of still more monstrous size stood sentry on either side of the
+ gate, the arch was outlined by a course of enamelled bricks, while higher
+ up, immediately beneath the battlements, was an enamelled mosaic showing
+ the king in all his glory. This triumphal arch was reserved for his
+ special use, the common people being admitted by two side doors of smaller
+ size less richly decorated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkCimage-0027" id="linkCimage-0027">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/403.jpg" width="100%"
+ alt="403.jpg One of the Gates Of The Palace at Dur-sharrukÎn " />
+ </div>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from the restoration by Thomas, in
+ Place.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Saragon resided at Caleh, where he had taken up his quarters in the former
+ palace of Assur-nazir-pal, while his new city was still in the hands of
+ the builders. Every moment that he could spare from his military and
+ administrative labours was devoted to hastening on the progress of the
+ work, and whenever he gained a victory or pillaged a district, he
+ invariably set aside a considerable part of the booty in order to meet the
+ outlay which the building involved. Thus we find that on returning from
+ his tenth campaign he brought with him an immense convoy laden with
+ timber, stone, and precious metals which he had collected in the
+ neighbourhood of Mount Taurus or among the mountains of Assyria, including
+ coloured marbles, lapis-lazuli, rock crystal, pine, cedar, and
+ cypress-wood, gold, silver, and bronze, all of which was destined for
+ Dur-Sharrukîn; the quantity of silver included among these materials was
+ so great that its value fell to a level with that of copper.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkCimage-0028" id="linkCimage-0028">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/404.jpg" width="100%"
+ alt="404.jpg Plan of the Excavated Portions Of The Palace At Dur-sharrukÎn " />
+ </div>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from the plan by Thomas, in Place.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The interior of the building, as in the case of the old Chaldæan palaces,
+ was separated into two well-marked divisions. The larger of these was used
+ by the king in his public capacity, and to this the nobles and soldiers,
+ and even the common people, were admitted under certain conditions and on
+ certain days prescribed by custom. The outer court was lined on three
+ sides by warehouses and depots, in which were stored the provisions,
+ commodities, and implements required for the host of courtiers and slaves
+ who depended on the sovereign for support. Each room had, as may still be
+ seen, its own special purpose. There were cellars for wine and oil, with
+ their rows of large oblong jars; then there were store-rooms for
+ implements of iron, which Place found full of rusty helmets, swords,
+ pieces of armour, maces, and ploughshares; a little further on were rooms
+ for the storage of copper weapons, enamelled bricks, and precious metals,
+ and the king&rsquo;s private treasury, in which were hidden away the spoils of
+ the vanquished or the regular taxes paid by his subjects; some fine bronze
+ lions of marvellous workmanship and lifelike expression were found still
+ shut up here.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkCimage-0029" id="linkCimage-0029">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/405.jpg" width="100%"
+ alt="405.jpg One of the Bronze Lions from Dur-sharrukÎn " />
+ </div>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from the original in the Louvre.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The kitchens adjoined the pantries, and the stables for horses and camels
+ communicated direct with the coach-houses in which the state chariots were
+ kept, while the privies were discreetly hidden in a secluded corner. On
+ the other side, among the buildings occupying the southern angle of the
+ courtyard, the menials of the palace lived huddled together, each family
+ quartered in small, dark rooms. The royal apartments, properly so called,
+ stood at the back of these domestic offices, facing the south-east, near
+ the spot where the inclined plane debouched on to the city ramparts. The
+ monumental entrance to these apartments was guarded, in accordance with
+ religious custom, by a company of winged bulls; behind this gate was a
+ lawn, then a second gate, a corridor and a grand quadrangle in the very
+ centre of the palace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkCimage-0030" id="linkCimage-0030">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/406.jpg" width="100%"
+ alt="406.jpg a Hunting Expedition in the Woods Near Dur-sharrukÎn " />
+ </div>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from a drawing by Flandin, in Botta.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The king occupied a suite of some twenty rooms of a rather simple
+ character; here he slept, ate, worked, and transacted the greater part of
+ his daily business, guarded by his eunuchs and attended by his ministers
+ and secretaries. The remaining rooms were apartments of state, all of the
+ same pattern, in which the crowd of courtiers and employés assembled while
+ waiting for a private audience or to intercept the king as he passed. A
+ subdued light made its way from above through narrow windows let into the
+ massive arches. The walls were lined to a height of over nine feet from
+ the floor with endless bas-reliefs, in greyish alabaster, picked out in
+ bright colours, and illustrating the principal occupations in which the
+ sovereign spent his days, such as the audiences to ambassadors, hunting in
+ the woods, sieges and battles. A few brief inscriptions interspersed above
+ pictures of cities and persons indicated the names of the vanquished
+ chiefs or the scenes of the various events portrayed; detailed
+ descriptions were engraved on the back of the slabs facing the brick wall
+ against which they rested. This was a precautionary measure, the necessity
+ for which had been but too plainly proved by past experience. Every one&mdash;the
+ king himself included&mdash;well knew that some day or other Dur-Sharrukîn
+ would be forsaken just as the palaces of previous dynasties had been, and
+ it was hoped that inscriptions concealed in this manner would run a better
+ chance of escaping the violence of man or the ravages of time; preserved
+ in them, the memory of Sargon would rise triumphant from the ruins. The
+ gods reigned supreme over the north-east angle of the platform, and a
+ large irregular block of buildings was given up to their priests; their
+ cells contained nothing of any particular interest, merely white walls and
+ black plinths, adorned here and there with frescoes embellished by
+ arabesques, and pictures of animals and symbolical genii. The <i>ziggurât</i>
+ rose to a height of some 141 feet above the esplanade. It had seven
+ storeys dedicated to the gods of the seven planets, each storey being
+ painted in the special colour of its god&mdash;the first white, the second
+ black, the third purple, the fourth blue, the fifth a vermilion red; the
+ sixth was coated with silver, and the seventh gilded. There was no chamber
+ in the centre of the tower, but a small gilded chapel probably stood at
+ its base, which was used for the worship of Assuf or of Ishtar. The harem,
+ or <i>Bît-riduti</i>, was at the southern corner of the enclosure, almost
+ in the shadow of the <i>ziggurât</i>. Sargon had probably three queens
+ when he founded his city, for the harem is divided into three separate
+ apartments, of which the two larger look out on the same quadrangle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkCimage-0031" id="linkCimage-0031">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/408.jpg" width="100%"
+ alt="408.jpg the Ziggurat at Dur-sharrukin " />
+ </div>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from the restoration by Thomas, in Place.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Two courses of enamelled bricks ran along the base of the façade, while
+ statues were placed at intervals against the wall, and the bay of the
+ gateway was framed by two bronze palm trees gilt: the palm being the
+ emblem of fruitfulness and grace, no more fitting decoration could have
+ been chosen for this part of the building. The arrangement was the same in
+ all three divisions: an ante-chamber of greater width than length; an
+ apartment, one half of which was open to the sky, while the other was
+ covered by a half-dome, and a flight of twelve steps, leading to an alcove
+ in which stood a high wooden couch. The queens and princesses spent their
+ lives in this prison-like <i>bît-riduti</i>: their time was taken up with
+ dress, embroidery, needlework, dancing and singing, the monotony of this
+ routine being relieved by endless quarrels, feuds, and intrigues. The male
+ children remained in the harem until the age of puberty, when they left it
+ in order to continue their education as princes and soldiers under the
+ guidance of their father.*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * An inscription of Assur-bani-pal, gives a summary
+ description of the life led in the harem by heirs to the
+ throne, and describes generally the kind of education
+ received by them from their earliest childhood.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkCimage-0032" id="linkCimage-0032">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/409.jpg" width="100%"
+ alt="409.jpg Section of a Bedroom in the Harem " />
+ </div>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from the restoration by Thomas, in
+ Place.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ This group of buildings was completed by a park, in which cedars of
+ Lebanon, pines, cypresses, gazelles, stags, wild asses and cattle, and
+ even lions, were acclimatised, in addition to a heterogeneous collection
+ of other trees and animals. Here, the king gave himself up to the
+ pleasures of the chase, and sometimes invited one or other of his wives to
+ come thither and banquet or drink with him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After Mita&rsquo;s surrender, Sargon had hoped to be allowed to finish building
+ his city in peace; but an ill-advised movement in Kummukh obliged him to
+ don his harness again (708 B.C.). King Mutallu had entered into an
+ alliance with Argistis of Urartu, and took the field with his army; but
+ when details of what had taken place in Chaldæa reached his ears, and he
+ learnt the punishment that had been inflicted on the people of Bît-Yakin,
+ his courage failed him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="linkCimage-0033" id="linkCimage-0033">
+ <!-- IMG --></a>
+ </p>
+ <div class="fig" style="width:80%;">
+ <img src="images/410.jpg" width="100%"
+ alt="410.jpg Main Book of the Harem at Duk-sharrukÎn " />
+ </div>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Drawn by Faucher-Gudin, from the restoration by Thomas, in
+ Place.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ He fled without waiting for the Assyrians to appear, and so great was his
+ haste that he had no time to take his family and treasure with him. Sargon
+ annexed his kingdom, placed it under the government of the <i>tartan</i>,
+ and incorporated into his own the whole army of Kummukh, including 150
+ chariots, 1500 horsemen, 20,000 archers, and 10,000 pikemen. In the
+ following year (707) his vassal Dalta died, leaving two sons, Nibi and
+ Ishpabara, both of whom claimed possession of the fief of Ellipi; Nibi
+ appealed to Elam for help, and Ishpabara at once turned for aid to
+ Assyria. Sargon sent him a body of troops, commanded by seven of his
+ generals, while Shutruk-nakhunta lent his <i>protégé</i> 4500 bowmen;
+ Ishpabara won the day, took the city of Marubishti by storm, and compelled
+ his brother to take refuge in Susian territory. The affair wras over so
+ quickly that it caused practically no delay in the completion of the works
+ at the capital. The consecration of a new city necessitated the observance
+ of a host of complicated ceremonies, which extended over several months.
+ First of all provision had to be made for its religious worship; the omens
+ were consulted in order to determine which of the gods were to be invoked,
+ and, when this was decided, there followed the installation of the various
+ statues and arks which were to preside over the destinies of the city and
+ the priests to whom they were intrusted; the solemn inauguration took
+ place on the 22nd day of Tisri, in the year 707 B.C., and from that day
+ forward Dur-Sharrukîn occupied the rank officially assigned to it among
+ the capitals of the empire. Sargon, however, did not formally take up his
+ residence within it till six months later, on the 6th day of Iyyâr, 706.
+ He must, by this time, have been advancing in years, and even if we assume
+ him to have been a young man when he ascended the throne, after the
+ sixteen years of bodily fatigue and mental worry through which he had
+ passed since coming into power, he must have needed repose. He handed over
+ the government of the northern provinces to his eldest son Sin-akhê-irba,
+ better known to us as Sennacherib, whom he regarded as his successor; to
+ him he transferred the responsibility of keeping watch over the movements
+ of the Mannai, of Urartu, and of the restless barbarians who dwelt beyond
+ the zone of civilised states on the banks of the Halys, or at the foot of
+ the distant Caucasus: a revolt among the Tabal, in 706, was promptly
+ suppressed by his young and energetic deputy. As for Sargon himself, he
+ was content to retain the direct control of the more pacific provinces,
+ such as Babylon, the regions of the Middle Euphrates, and Syria, and he
+ doubtless hoped to enjoy during his later years such tranquillity as was
+ necessary to enable him to place his conquests on a stable basis. The
+ envious fates, however, allowed him but little more than twelve short
+ months: he perished early in 705 B.C., assassinated by some soldier of
+ alien birth, if I interpret rightly the mutilated text which furnishes us
+ with a brief mention of the disaster. Sennacherib was recalled in haste
+ from the frontier, and proclaimed king immediately on his arrival, thus
+ ascending unopposed to the throne on the 12th day of Ab. His father&rsquo;s body
+ had been left unburied, doubtless in order that he might verify with his
+ own eyes the truth of what had been told him concerning his death, and
+ thus have no ground for harbouring suspicions that would have boded ill
+ for the safety of the late king&rsquo;s councillors and servants. He looked upon
+ his father&rsquo;s miserable ending as a punishment for some unknown
+ transgression, and consulted the gods to learn what it was that had
+ aroused their anger, refusing to authorise the burial within the palace
+ until the various expiatory rites suggested by the oracle had been duly
+ performed.*
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ * This is my interpretation of the text published and
+ translated by Winckler. Winckler sees in it the account of
+ a campaign during which Sargon was killed by mountaineers,
+ as was Cyprus in later times by the Massagetse; the king&rsquo;s
+ body (according to him) remained unburied, and was recovered
+ by Sennacherib only after considerable delay. In support of
+ his version of this event Winckler cites the passage in Isa.
+ xiv. 4-20, which he takes as having been composed to exult
+ over the death of Sargon, and then afterwards adapted to the
+ death of a king of Babylon.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Thus mysteriously disappeared the founder of the mightiest dynasty that
+ ever ruled in Assyria, perhaps even in the whole of Western Asia. At first
+ sight, it would seem easy enough to determine what manner of man he was
+ and to what qualities he owed his greatness, thanks to the abundance of
+ documents which his contemporaries have bequeathed to us; but when we come
+ to examine more closely, we soon find the task to be by no means a simple
+ one. The inscriptions maintain so discreet a silence with regard to the
+ antecedents of the kings before their accession, and concerning their
+ education and private life, that at this distance of time we cannot
+ succeed in forming any clear idea as to their individual temperament and
+ character. The monuments record such achievements as they took pride in,
+ in terms of uniform praise which conceal or obliterate the personality of
+ the king in question; it is always the ideal Assyrian sovereign who is
+ held up for our admiration under a score of different names, and if, here
+ and there, we come upon some trait which indicates the special genius of
+ this or that monarch, we may be sure that the scribe has allowed it to
+ slip in by accident, quite unconscious of the fact that he is thus
+ affording us a glimpse of his master&rsquo;s true character and disposition. A
+ study of Sargon&rsquo;s campaigns as revealed in his annals will speedily
+ convince us that he was something more than a fearless general, with a
+ keen eye to plunder, who could see nothing in the most successful
+ expedition but a means of enriching his people or adding to the splendours
+ of his court. He was evidently convinced that certain nations, such as
+ Urartu and Elam, would never really assimilate with his own subjects, and,
+ in their case, he adhered strictly to the old system of warfare, and did
+ all he could to bring about their ruin; other nations, on the contrary, he
+ regarded as capable of amalgamation with the Assyrians, and these he did
+ his best to protect from the worst consequences of their rebellion and
+ resistance. He withdrew them from the influence of their native dynasties,
+ and converted their territories into provinces under his own vigilant
+ administration, and though he did not scruple to send the more turbulent
+ elements among them into exile, and did his best to weaken them by
+ founding alien colonies in their midst, yet he respected their religion,
+ customs, and laws, and, in return for their obedience to his rule,
+ guaranteed them an equitable and judicious government. Moreover, he took
+ quite as much interest in their well-being as&rsquo; in his own military
+ successes, and in the midst of his heroic struggles against Rusas and
+ Merodach-baladan he contrived to find time for the consideration of such
+ prosaic themes as the cultivation of the vine and of corn; he devoted his
+ attention to the best methods of storing wine, and sought to prevent &ldquo;oil,
+ which is the life of man and healeth wounds, from rising in price, and the
+ cost of sesame from exceeding that of wheat.&rdquo; We seem to see in him, not
+ only the stern and at times cruel conqueror, but also the gracious
+ monarch, kind and considerate to his people, and merciful to the
+ vanquished when policy permitted him to indulge his natural leaning to
+ clemency.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ END OF VOL. VII. <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+
+
+
+
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