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Opis (Akkadian Upi or Upija): ancient Babylonian city on the
Tigris. It is probably the old name of Baghdad.
The precise location of Opis has not been established, but from the
Akkadian and Greeks texts, it is clear that it was situated on the east bank of
the river Tigris, not far from the confluence of Tigris and Diyala. A possible
candidate is Tulul al-Mugaili'.
Opis is mentioned for the first time at the beginning of second millennium
BCE. In the fourteenth century, it became the capital of an administrative region
in Babylonia. At an unknown moment, the Babylonians digged the 'royal canal' between
the Euphrates and the Tigris, which ended near Opis. The Babylonian king Nebuchadnezzar
built a wall between the two rivers to protect his country from a Median invasion.
This wall also ended near Opis.
Opis was also situated on the so-called Royal road, which connected
Elam's capital Susa with
the Assyrian heartland and -later- the Lydian capital Sardes.
In October 539, Opis was the theater of an important battle. The Babylonian
king Nabonidus defended his country against the Persians, who were commanded by
their king Cyrus the Great. The Babylonians were defeated and the native population
revolted against its government. Without further fighting, Cyrus marched to and
captured Babylon. The contemporary Nabonidus chronicle describes the event:
In the month of Tashritu, when Cyrus attacked the army of Babylonia in Opis
on the Tigris, the inhabitants of Babylonia revolted, but he [Cyrus, Nabonidus?]
massacred the confused inhabitants. On the fifteenth day [October 12], Sippar
was seized without battle. Nabonidus fled. On the sixteenth day, [the Persian
commander] Gobryas, the governor of Gutium, and the army of Cyrus entered Babylon
without battle. Afterwards, Nabonidus was arrested in Babylon when he returned
there.
Two centuries later, Opis was the place where the European soldiers
of the Macedonian conqueror Alexander the Great revolted (August 324).
They felt neglected because Alexander seemed to have given equal rights
to the Persians. You can read more about this mutiny over here.
At the end of the fourth century, king Seleucus, the successor of
Alexander, built Seleucia on the opposite bank of Opis. From now on, Opis was
a mere suburb. The Roman historian Tacitus informs us that in the first century,
Greek and native inhabitants were still recognizable and had institutions of their
own. The Parthians, who had taken over the country in the second century BCE,
had hardly any influence.
In the second century CE, the Parthians moved the center of this city
to the eastern bank, and renamed Opis Ctesiphon.
Jona Lendering, ed.
This text is cited July 2003 from the Livius Ancient History Website URL below, which contains interesting hyperlinks.
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