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ASSYRIA (Ancient country) PERSIAN GULF
Assyria (he Assuria, Herod. ii. 17, iv. 39: Ptol. vi. 1. § 1; Steph.
B.; Arrian, Anab. vii. 21: Assyria, Tacit. Ann. xii. 13; Amm. Marc. xxiii. 6;
Atouria, Strab.xvi. p. 736; Steph. s. v. Ninos; Dion. Cass. lxviii.; Athura, on
Pers. Cun. Inscr., and Assura, on the Median, Rawl. J. As. Soc. xi. pt. i. p.
10: Eth. Assyrii, Assurioi, Steph. ; Herod. i. 193; Assures, Steph.; Eustath.
in Dion. de Situ Orbis, p. 70), a district of Asia, the boundaries of which are
variously given in the Greek and Roman writers, but which, in the strictest and
most original sense, comprehended only a long narrow territory, divided on the
N. from Armenia by M. Niphates, on the W. and SW. from Mesopotamia and Babylonia
by the Tigris; on tie SE. from Susiana, and on the E. from Media,by the chain
of the Zagrus. Itwas,in fact, nearly the same territory as the modern Pacha-lik
of Mosul, including the plain land below the Kurdistdan and Persian mountains.
Its original name, as appears from the Cuneiform Inscriptions, is best represented
by Aturia (Atouria), which strabo (xvi. 736) says was part of Assyria (as understood
at the time when he wrote); although Dion Cassius seems to consider that this
form of the name was a barbarous mis-pronunciation. In later times, as appears
from Pliny (vi. 12) and Ammianus Marcellinus (xxiii. 6), it bore the name of Adiabene,
which was properly a small province between the Tigris, Lycus (or Zabatus), and
the Gordiaean mountains. (Dion Cass. lxviii.; Ptol. vi. 1. § 2.)
In the wider sense Assyria comprehended the whole country which was
included in Mesopotamia and Babylonia (Strab. xvi. p. 736), while it was often
confounded with adjoining nations by the Greek and Roman writers: thus, in Virg.
(Georg. ii. 465), Assyrio veneno is used for Tyrio; in Nonn. Dionys. (xli. 19)
the Libanus is called Assyrian; and in Dion. Perieg. (v. 975) the Leuco-Syrians
of Pontus and Cappadocia are termed Assyrians. It is curious that Scylax of Caryanda
placed Assyria among the nations on the Pontus Enxinus, between the Chalybes and
Paphlagonia, and includes in it the river Thermodon and the Greek towns of Thermodon,
Sinope, and Harmene. (Scyl. Car. ap. Hudson. Geogr. Graec. Min. p. 33.) The author
of the Etymologicumn Magnum has preserved a tradition (Etym. Maqn. in voc.) from
Xenocrates, that this land was originally called Euphratis, then Chaldaea, and
lastly, from Assyrus the son of Suses, Assyria: he appears also to consider it
as the same as Babylonia.
The chief mountains of ancient Assyria are known under the general
name of the chain of Zagrus, which extended, under various denominations, along
the whole of its eastern frontier from N. to S., and separated it from Media and
Persia.
Its rivers may be all considered as feeders of the Tigris, and bore
the names of Zabatus (Zabatos), Zabas, Zerbis, or Lycus, which rose in the N.
mountains of Armenia; the Bumadus or Bumodus; the Caprus; the Tornadotus or Physcus
(Phuskos); the Silla or Delas,- probably the same stream which elsewhere bears
the names of Diabas, Durus (Douros), and Gorgus (Gorgos); and the Gyndes. Its
provinces are mentioned by Ptolemy and Strabo under the following names: Aturia,
Calacene or Calachene, Chazene, Arrhapachitis,Adiabene, Arbelitis, Apolloniatis
or Chalonitis, and Sittacene; though there is some difference between the two
geographers, both as to their relative extent and as to their positions.
Its chief cities were: Ninus (he Ninos), its most ancient and celebrated
capital, Nineveh; Ctesiphon (he Ktesiphon), the seat of government under the Parthian
rulers; Arbela (ta Arbela), Gaugamela (ta Gaugamela), Apollonia, Artemita, Opis,
Chala or Celonae (Kelonai), and Sittace (Slttake) or Sitta.
It is of considerable importance to distinguish as accurately as we
can between the land or territory comprehended under the name of Assyria, and
the kingdom or empire which was established in that country. The former, as we
have seen, was, strictly speaking, only a small province, at first probably little
more than the district to the NE. of the junction of the Tigris and the Zabatus.
The latter varied very much, both in power and extent, according to the individual
influence and successful conquests of particular kings. For the history of the
Assyrian empire the materials at our command are extremely limited, and the sources
from which we must draw our conclusions have not - with the exception of the Bible,
which only describes the later portion of Assyrian history-been preserved to us
in the works of the original writers. Considerable discrepancy, therefore, prevails
in the accounts which the copyists of the more ancient documents have left to
us; so that it is by no means easy to derive from their comparison a satisfactory
view of the origin or progress of this ancient empire.
It seems, however, useful to put together as concisely as possible
the results of the narratives which occur in the three principal and differing
authorities; so that the amount of real knowledge to be obtained from them may
be more readily perceived. We shall therefore state what is known of Assyrian
history from: 1. The Bible. 2. Herodotus. 3. Ctesias, and others who have more
or less borrowed from his work.
1. The Bible. There is no reason to doubt that the earliest notice which
we have of Assyria is that in Gen. x. 10, et seq., in which Nimrod, the grandson
of Ham, is mentioned as possessing a kingdom at the cities of Babel, Erech, Accad,
and Calneh, in the land of Shinar; and Assur as having gone out from that land,
and founded the cities of Nineveh, Rehoboth, Calah, and Resen. The inference from
this statement is that the country round Babel (afterwards called Babylonia) was
the elder empire, and Assyria (which, according to universal opinion, has derived
its name from Assur) a colony or dependency of Nimrod's original kingdom. After
this first notice a long period elapsed, during which the Bible has no allusion
to Assyria at all; for the passages where that name occurs (Num. xxiv. 22; Psal.
lxxiii. 9) have no historical importance; and it is not till the reign of Menahem,
king of Israel, B.C. 769, that we have any mention of an Assyrian king. From that
time, however, to the absorption of the empire of Assyria Proper into that of
Babylon, we have a line of kings in the Bible, who shall be briefly mentioned
here, together with the dates during which they reigned, according to the general
consent of chronologers. 1. Pul, the first king of Assyria in Holy Scripture,
invaded Palestine about the fortieth year of Uzziah, B.C. 769 (2 Kings, xv. 19),
but was induced by Menahem to retire, on receiving a present of 1000 talents.
2. Tiglath-pileser, who succeeded Pul, was on the throne before the death of Pekah,
king of Israel, B.C. 738, and had previously conquered Syria (2 Kings, xv. 29,
xvi. 5-9); though the precise date of his accession is not determinable. 3. About
ten years later Shalmaneser was king, in the beginning of the reign of Hoshea,
B.C. 730, and he was still living at the capture of Samaria, B.C. 721. (2 Kings,
xvii. 1-9, xviii. 9-11.) 4. Sennacherib was on the throne eight years after the
fall of Samaria, and must therefore have succeeded his father between B.C. 721
and 713. (2 Kings, xviii. 13; Is. xxxvi. 1.) He was slain by his sons fifty-five
days after his flight from Palestine, B.C. 711. (Clinton, F. H. p. 273; Tobit,
i. 21.) 5. Esarhaddon, his son, succeeded Sennacherib (2 Kings, xix. 37), but
we have no means of determining from the Bible to what length his reign extended.
During some portion of it, it may be inferred from the story of Manasseh (2 Chron.
xxxiii. 11) that he was master of Babylon. 6. Nabuchodonosor is the last king
of Assyria mentioned in the Bible; but whether he immediately succeeded Esarhaddon
we have no means of telling. The date of his accession is fixed to B.C. 650, as
it coincided with the forty-eighth year of Manasseh. His reign is remarkable for
the overthrow of the Median king Arphaxad (Phraortes), B.C. 634, and the expedition
of Holophernes against Judaea in B.C. 633. During the last part of it, also, the
invasion of the Scythians must have occurred. Subsequently to Nabuchodonosor no
king of Assyria Proper appears in Holy Scripture, and the Empire of the East is
in the hands of the rulers of Babylon. The fall of Nineveh itself may be determined
to the year B.C. 606.
2. Herodotus. The notice in Herodotus of the history of Assyria is very
brief; and there seems reason to suppose that it is so because he had already
treated of Assyria in another work which is now lost (Her. i. 106-184); if, indeed,
we may infer from those passages that Herodotus really did compose a separate
work on Assyrian history.
According to him (Her. i. 95), the Assyrian empire had lasted 520
years, when the Medians revolted. Now, it may fairly be inferred, that the Median
revolt did not take place till after the death of Sennacherib, in B.C. 711. According,
therefore, to this theory, the Assyrian empire must have dated from about, B.C.
1231. Josephus (Ant. x. 2) confirms this for the period of the independence of
the Medes; though the subsequent evidence of the Bible proves that the Assyrian
empire was not overthrown, as he supposes, by the Median defection. Herodotus
mentions afterwards (Her. i. 106) the capture of Ninus (Nineveh) by Cyaxares the
Mede; the date of which - allowing for the twenty-eight years of the nomad Scythian
invasion - coincides, as we shall see hereafter, with the year B.C. 606. Herodotus
says little more about Assyria Proper. When, as in i. 177-178, he speaks of Assyria
and the great cities which it contained, it is clear from the context that he
is speaking of Babylonia; and when, as in vii. 63, he is describing the arms of
the Assyrians in the army of Xerxes, he evidently means the inhabitants of N.
W. Mesopotamia, for he adds that the people whom the Greeks called Syri, were
termed by the Barbarians, Assyrii.
3. Ctesias. The remains of Assyrian history in Ctesias, preserved by
Diodorus (ii. 1-31), differ widely from the Bible and Herodotus. According to
him, Ninus, the first king, was succeeded by Semiramis, and she by her son Ninyas,
who was followed by thirty kings, of whom Sardanapalus was the last. A period
of 1306 years is given to these thirty-three reigns, the last of which, according
to his chronology, must have been in B.C. 876, - as Ctesias adds four reigns (158
years) to the 128 years which Herodotus gives for the continuance of the separate
kingdom of Medes. On this theory, the commencement of the Assyrian empire must
have been in B.C. 2182; and, to make the story in Ctesias harmonize at all with
the Bible and Herodotus, we must suppose that there were two Median revolts: the
first, a partial one, in B.C. 876, when the Medes became independent of Assyria,
but did not destroy the seat of go. vernment; and the second, and more complete
one, in B.C. 606, when, in conjunction with the Babylonians, they sacked Ninus
(Nineveh), and put an end to the separate existence of the Assyrian empire. Ctesias
himself imagined that Nineveh was destroyed at the time of the first Median revolt
(Diod. ii. 7), - the only one, indeed, mentioned by him.
Many writers have more or less followed Ctesias in assigning a very
high antiquity to the Assyrian empire. Thus Strabo (xvi. p. 737) - grouping Assyria
and Babylonia together, as countries inhabited by those whom the Greeks called
generically Syrians - states that Ninus founded Nineveh, and his wife Semiramis
Babylon; and that he bequeathed the empire to his descendants to the time of Sardanapalus
and Arbaces. He adds that it was overthrown by the Medes, and that Ninus (its
capital) ceased to exist in consequence (ephanisthe parachrema meta ten ton Suron
katalusin).
Nicolaus Dam. (ap. Excerpt. Vales. p. 229) makes Ninus and Semiramis
the first rulers of Ninus. Aemilius Sura (ap. Velleium, i. 1, 6) gives 1995 years
as the time from Ninus to Antiochus, which would place the commencement of the
empire at B.C. 2185. Justin (i. 1, 3) mentions Ninus, Semiramis, and Ninyas, in
succession, and adds that the Assyrians, who were afterwards called Syrians, ruled
1300 years, and that Sardanapalus was their last king. Velleius (i. 6) gives 1070
years for the duration of the Assyrian empire, and makes its transference to the
Medes occur 770 years before his time. Duris (ap. Athenaeum, xii. p. 529, a.)
mention the names of Arbaces and Sardanapalus, but describes the fate of the latter
differently from other writers. Abydenus (ap. Euseb. Chron. i. 12, p. 36) speaks
of Ninus and Semiramis, and places the last king Sardanapalus 67 years before
the first Olympiad, or B.C. 840. Castor (ap. Euseb. Chron. i. 13, p. 36) calls
Belus the first Assyrian king in the days of the Giants; and names Ninus, Semiramis,
Zames (or Ninyas), and their descendants in order, to Sardanapalus.
Cephalion - according to Suidas, an historian in the reign of Hadrian
(Euseb. Chron. i. 15, p. 41) - followed Ctesias in most particulars, but made
Sardanapalus the twenty-sixth king, and placed his accession in the 1013th year
of the empire, throwing back the period of the revolt of Arbaces 270 years. According
to him, therefore, the Median independence began in B.C. 1150, and the Assyrian
empire in B.C. 2184. Eusebius himself mentions thirty-six kings, and gives 1240
years from Ninus to Sardanapalus; placing the Median revolt forty-three years
before O1. 1, er at B.C. 813. (Euseb. Chron. i. p. 114.) Georgius Syncellus (p.
92, B.) commences with Belus, and reckons forty-one reigns, and 1460 years; placing
the commencement in B.C. 2285, and the termination in B.C. 826. His increased
number is produced byinterpolating four reigns after the twenty-seventh king of
Eusebius. Lastly, Agathias (ii. 25, p. 120) gives 1306, and Augustine (Civ. Dei,
xviii. 21) 1305 years, for the duration of the Assyrian empire.
We have been thus particular in mentioning the views of Ctesias and
his successors on the subject of the duration of the Assyrian empire, because
it seemed of importance that all which has been handed down to us should be made
accessible to students. We do not pretend to maintain that Ctesias has given us
the history as it really was,because it is contrary to universal experience that
there should be so numerous a succession of kings, reigning in order for the number
of years which must on the average have fallen to each, - and this, too, in an
Oriental land, where the per-petuity of any one dynasty is far less common than
in Europe. Yet, though the list of kings and their number may be wholly imaginary,
though there may never have been either a Ninus or Semiramis, the statement of
Ctesias - who, as Court Physician to Artaxerxes Mnemon had abundant opportunity
of consulting, and did consult the royal records (basilikai diphtherai) - is valuable,
as indicating a general belief that the Assyrian empire ascended to a far remoter
antiquity than that assigned to it by Herodotus. It is not, indeed, necessary
to suppose that the records of Herodotus and Ctesias contradict each other; though,
as we have shown, there is considerable discrepancy between them. A very acute
writer (Fergusson, Palaces of Nineveh and Persepolis, Lond. 1851, p. 43) has conjectured,
and, we think with some probability on his side, that the two accounts confirm
and elucidate one another, and that one is the necessary complement to the other;
though we confess we are not wholly convinced by some of the chronological arguments
which he adduces.
According to Mr. Fergusson, the earlier period given by Ctesias to
the Median revolt, which that author says took place by the agency of Arbaces
the Mede and Belesys the Babylonian, is to be accounted for on the supposition,
that the result of the outbreak was the establishment of Arbaces and his descendants
on the throne of Ninus, under the name of Arbacidae ; and that Herodotus does
not allude to this, because he is speaking only of a native revolution under Deioces,
which he placed 100 years later. Mr. Fergusson considers that this theory is proved
by a passage which Diodorus quotes from (possibly some lost work of) Herodotus,
in which Herodotus states that between the overthrow of the Assyrian empire by
the Medes, and the election of Deioces an interregnum of several generations occurred
(Diod. ii. 32). We confess, however, that, though much ingenuity has been shown
in its defence, we are not converts to this new theory, but are content to believe
that the Median revolt did not take place till after the death of Sennacherib
B.C. 711, and that even then, agreeably with what the Bible would naturally lead
us to suppose, no change of dynasty took place-and that, though Media continued
for some years independent of the Assyrian power, it was not till the final overthrow
of Ninus (Nineveh) about B.C. 606, that the Medes succeeded in completely subduing
the territory which had. belonged for so many years to the Elder Empire.
With regard to the kings of Assyria mentioned in the Bible, commencing
with Pul, it may be worth while to state briefly some of the identifications with
classical names which have been determined by chronological students. Mr. Clinton
(F. H. vol. i. p. 263-283) has examined this subject with great learning, and
to him we are indebted for the outline of what follows. According to Mr. Clinton,
it is clear that the Sennacherib of Holy Scripture does not correspond with the
Sennacherib of Polyhistor and Abydenus, who have ascribed to him many acts which
are much more likely to be true of his son Esarhaddon. Esarhaddon (under the name
of Sardanapalus) loses the Median Empire, and is commemorated as the founder of
Tarsus and Anchiale (Schol. in Aristoph. Aves, v. 1022 ; Athen. xii. p. 529).
Again. the Sardanapalus of Abydenus is most likely the Nabuchodonosor of the Book
of Judith, who reigned 44 years, and invaded Judaea 27 years before the destruction
of Nineveh. The combined testimony of Hellanicus, Callisthenes, and Clitarchus,
go to establish the fact that the ancients believed in two Sardanapali-one, a
warlike prince who was reigning when the Medes revolted, and who seems to correspond
with the Scriptural Esarhaddon; and the other, named Saracus by Abydenus, but
by Ctesias,Sardanapalus,who was luxurious and effeminate in his habits, but who,
when his capital was attacked, made a gallant defence, and was burnt in his palace,
on the capture of his city. The Bible, as we have seen, does not mention the name
of the king who was on the throne at the time of the fall of Nineveh. Again, it
appears from Alexander Polyhistor and the Astronomical Canon, that Babylon had
always kings of her own from the earliest times: that they were sometimes subject
to the Assyrians, and sometimes independent - and that they never acquired extensive
dominion till the time of Nebuchadnezzar. The same view is confirmed as we have
seen from the narrative in the Bible (2 Kings xvii. 24.; Ezra iv. 2).
It may be remarked, that Clinton, agreeing with Usher and Prideaux,
attempts to distinguish between what he and they call the Assyrian Empire and
the Assyrian monarchy, supposing that the first terminated in the revolts of the
Medes, but that the latter was continued to the time of the final destruction
of Nineveh. We confess that we see no advantage in maintaining any such distinction.
It is clear that an Assyrian Royal house continued exercising great power till
the fall of Nineveh, whether we term that power an empire or a monarchy; and we
are not convinced that there is any statement of weight in any ancient author
from which it may be satisfactorily inferred that there was any change in the
ruling dynasty. One great impediment to the correct comparison of the account
in the Bible with those in profane authors, is the great variety of names under
which the Assyrian rulers are named - add to which the strong probability that
at the period of the compilation of the records of the Bible, the name Assyria
was not used with its proper strictness, and hence that some rulers who are there
called kings of Assyria were really chief governors of Babylonia or Mesopotamia.
The late remarkable discoveries in Assyria, many of them, as may fairly
be presumed, upon the site of its ancient capital Ninus, have thrown an unexpected
light upon the manners and customs of the ancient people of that land. The world
are greatly indebted to the zeal with which the excavations in that country have
been carried on by Mr. Layard and M. Botta, and it is probably only necessary
that the numerous inscriptions which have been disinterred should be fully decyphered,
for us to know more of the early history of Assyria than we do at present of any
other Eastern nation. Already a great step has been made towards this end, and
Col. Rawlinson, who has been so honourably distinguished for his remarkable decypherment
of the Rock Inscriptions of Dareius the son of Hystaspes, with other scholars
in England and France, has made considerable progress in determining the correct
interpretation of the Assyrian Cuneiform records. It is premature here to attempt
to lay before the public the results of their investigations, as the constant
discovery of new inscriptions tends almost necessarily to change, or at least
to modify considerably, previous statements, and earlier theories. It may, however,
be stated generally, that all that has yet been done appears to show that the
monuments of ancient Assyria ascend to a very early period; that many towns, known
from other sources to have been of very ancient foundation, have been recognised
upon the inscriptions, and that it is quite clear that the ruling city Ninus and
the kings resident in it possessed a very extensive empire at least as early as
the 15th century B.C. Those who wish to consider the bearing of the discoveries
of the inscriptions will find all that has yet been done in Rawlinson, Journ.
of As. Soc. vol. xii. pt. 2, vol. xiv. pt. 1; Hincks, Ibid. vol. xii. pt. 1; Botta,
Mem. sur l'Ecriture Assyr., Paris, 8vo. 1848; Lowenstein, Essai de dechiffr. de
l'Ecrit. Assyr. Paris, 4to. 1850.
This text is from: Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography (1854) (ed. William Smith, LLD). Cited October 2004 from The Perseus Project URL below, which contains interesting hyperlinks
(In Greek, Assuria; in Assyrian inscriptions called Assur; in
the Persian, Athura; and in the Median, Assura). The country properly so called,
in the narrowest sense, was a district of Asia, extending along the east side
of the Tigris, which divided it on the west and northwest from Mesopotamia and
Babylonia, and bounded on the north and east by Mount Niphates and Mount Zagrus,
which separated it from Armenia and Media, and on the southeast by Susiana. It
was watered by several streams flowing into the Tigris from the east, two of which,
the Lycus or Zabatus (Great Zab) and the Caprus or Zabas (Little Zab), divided
the country into three parts. The district between the upper Tigris and the Lycus,
called Atturia, was probably the most ancient seat of the monarchy, containing
the capital, Nineveh or Ninus. The Lycus and the Little Zab bounded the finest
portion, called Adiabene. The district southeast of the Little Zab contained the
two subdivisions Apolloniatis and Sittacene. In a wider sense the name Assyria
was used to designate the whole country watered by the Tigris and Euphrates, including
Mesopotamia and Babylonia; and in a still more extended application it meant the
whole Assyrian Empire, one of the first great states of which we have any record.
The remarkable fertility of the country enabled it to support
a large population; and its great material prosperity, power, and culture are
attested by ancient writers, as well as by the monuments that remain to us in
the shape of ruins of cities, extensive canals and water-works, and proofs secured
by excavators of the possession of the arts and sciences. At the present day the
country is almost a desert; but from Tekrit to Bagdad, and in the vicinity of
Nineveh, abundant ruins mark the former wealth and splendour of the people.
Ethnology.--The Assyrians were a branch of the Semitic race,
to which the Syrians, Ph?nicians, Jews, and Arabs belonged, and which in Chaldaea
appears to have supplanted the Scythic or Turanian stock as early as B.C. 2100.
Assyria had in the earliest times a close connection with Aethiopia and Arabia.
Hence Herodotus speaks of Sennacherib as king of the Arabians as well as of the
Assyrians.
Language.--The language of the Assyrians is allied to the North
Branch of the Semitic family, its vocabulary showing a close affinity to Hebrew
and Phoenician. In the fulness of its verbal system and richness of synonyms,
however, it resembles the Arabic. The ethnic type of the Assyrians is the Semitic
modified by some admixture with Akkadian elements.
Assyrian literature is known to us chiefly from the discovery
in the palace of Assur-bani-pal, at Nineveh, of a library of many thousand tablets
collected by that king and his father, Esar-haddon. Duplicate copies of some of
these tablets have been found in excavating the Babylonian cities. Of these tablets,
many are syllabaries, dictionaries, geographies, and other educational works,
often couched in the ancient Akkadian and Sumirian tougues; so that from them,
Assyriologists have learned much about the older languages of Chaldaea. The richest
literary discoveries, however, have been in the field of poetry and mythology.
In 1872 the late Mr. George Smith, of the British Museum, discovered a series
of tablets containing an epic in twelve books, one of which relates to the legend
of the Deluge, and bears a very striking resemblance to the account given in the
Old Testament. In both accounts the Deluge is a punishment for human sins; in
both, the builder of an ark gathers into it his family and the beasts of the field;
in both, the ark rests upon a mountain; in both, peace between God and man is
restored; and in both, a sign of the restoration is the appearance of the rainbow.
Many other interesting resemblances to portions of the Book of Genesis are contained
in the Assyrian tablets. The hymns and prayers are likewise beautiful and poetic.
Results of Excavations.--Successful excavations have been made
by Botta, Layard, Oppert, Rawlinson, Smith, and others, with the result of opening
up very many palaces and temples, and bringing to light sculptures covered with
inscriptions, and including obelisks, sphinxes, winged lions and bulls, and bas-reliefs
of battle-scenes, sieges, hunts, etc. Many smaller objects are no less interesting,
such as ornaments, bells, engraved gems, and bronzes. It has been learned that
the Assyrians were acquainted with glass; that they employed the arch in building;
that they used the lens as a magnifying instrument; and had, among other mechanical
appliances, the lever and the roller.
Religion.--The religion of Assyria was simpler than that of
the Babylonians, although polytheistic in character. The national deity was Assur,
regarded as the founder of the nation. Beside him there are two principal triads,
with many minor deities. The first triad is known as the Nature Triad (Ann "the
Progenitor," Bel "the Lord of the World," Hea "the Lord of
the Sea, Rivers, and Fountains"). The second triad is the Celestial Triad
(Sin the Moon-god, Shamas the Sun-god, Istar the Stargoddess). Minor gods are
Merodach or Marduk, son of Hea; Nebo the god of learning, who possesses many of
the attributes of the Greek Hermes; and Nergal and Nusku the war-gods.
History.--Ancient accounts of Assyrian history are those of
Berosus, a Graeco-Chaldean priest, who wrote at Babylon, where he had access to
the inscriptional records, about B.C. 268; of Herodotus; and of Ctesias of Cnidus,
physician to the Persian king Artaxerxes Mnemon (B.C. 405). The narrative of Berosus
has met with much confirmation from recent excavations and explorations. In the
Bible narrative we are told that Nineveh was founded from Babylonia. "Out
of that land [Babylonia] he [Nimrod] went forth into Assyria" --and this
statement is fully confirmed by the results of recent explorations. The earliest
inscriptions found on the bricks from Assur (Kileh-Shergat), the ancient capital,
give to the first rulers of the land the Akkadian title of Patesi, or "high-priest
of the city of Assur," and to the city itself the Akkadian name of Pal-bi-ki.
The next notice of Assyria does not occur until the Assyrian king Pul, or Tiglath-pileser
II., invaded Palestine, and was bought off by Menahem, king of Israel (B.C. 738).
In the same reign we find the Jewish king Jehoahaz (Ahaz) becoming a vassal of
the court of Assyria, and the tribes beyond Jordan carried away captive (B.C.
734). In B.C. 722, Samaria is captured by Sargon the Tartan, who had usurped the
throne from his weak master, Shalmaneser IV. The next reference to Assyria is
that of the siege and capture of Jerusalem by Sargon, and the siege of Ashdod
(B.C. 712-711). This event is now proved to be distinct from the siege by Sennacherib
in B.C. 701, which terminated apparently in a disaster for the Assyrian army.
The last mention of Assyria is the record of the murder of Sennacherib by his
sons in B.C. 681, and the accession of his faithful son Esar-haddon, the most
powerful of all the Assyrian monarchs, for he carried his arms as far as the Mediterranean
and conquered Egypt. Little credit is to be attached to the expedition of Holofernes
recorded in the apocryphal Book of Judith.
After this the Empire appears to have gradually decayed, until
at last, in the reign of Assur-banipal or Sardanapalus, or that of Esar-haddon
II. (Sarakos), a league for its destruction was formed between Nabopolassar, governor
of Babylon, and Cyaxares, king of Media, which was strengthened by the marriage
of Nebuchadnezzar, son of the former, to Nitocris, daughter of the latter. The
war and siege are said to have been interrupted by an invasion of the Scythians,
which drew off Cyaxares; but at length Nineveh was taken and destroyed about B.C.
605, or, according to Rawlinson, 625. In the time of Darius Hystaspes Assyria
rebelled without success in conjunction with Media. In the time of Herodotus the
capital had ceased to exist; and when Xenophon passed it the very name was forgotten,
though he testifies to the extent of the deserted city, and asserts the height
of the ruined walls to be 150 feet. An inconsiderable town seems to have existed
on its ruins in the reign of Claudius; and the last notice we have of Nineveh
in the classics is in Tacitus.
The fanciful history related by Ctesias is now found to be
based on distorted Graeco-Persian traditions; and though the writer managed to
make the ancient world give credit to him in preference to Herodotus, his work
is now proved to be very untrustworthy. According to him, for thirty generations
after Ninyas the kings led a life of luxury and indolence in their palace; the
last of them, Sardanapalus, made a vigorous defence against Arbaces, the rebel
governor of Media, but, finding it impossible to defend Nineveh, he set fire to
his palace, and burned himself with all his treasures. This event took place 1306
years after Ninus. Now, the above account represents Nineveh to have perished
nearly three centuries before the real date, which was about B.C. 606, and is
utterly incompatible with Scripture. Herodotus assigns to the Empire a duration
of 520 years, and Berosus of 526. In order to reconcile these conflicting accounts,
historians have supposed that Nineveh was twice destroyed, but this supposition
is now generally rejected. However, that part of Nineveh was actually destroyed
by fire is proved by the condition of the slabs and statues found in its ruins,
which show the action of intense heat.
This text is cited Oct 2002 from The Perseus Project URL below, which contains interesting hyperlinks
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