A HISTORY OF BABYLON FROM THE FOUNDATION OF THE MONARCHY TO THE PERSIAN CONQUESTCHAPTER I
INTRODUCTORY BABYLON'S PLACE IN THE HISTORY OF
THE name of Babylon suggests one of the great centres from which civilization radiated to other peoples of the ancient world. And it is true that from the second millennium onwards we have evidence of the gradual spread of Babylonian
culture throughout the greater part of Western Asia. Before the close of the fifteenth century, to cite a
single example of such influence, we find that Babylonian had become the language of Eastern diplomacy. It is
not surprising
perhaps that the Egyptian king should have adopted the Babylonian tongue and method of writing for his correspondence with rulers of Babylon
itself or of Assyria. But it is remarkable that he should employ this foreign script and language for sending orders
to the
governors of his Syrian and Palestinian dependencies, and that such Canaanite officials should use the
same medium for
the reports they despatched to their Egyptian master. In the same period we find the Aryan rulers of Mitanni, in Northern Mesopotamia, writing in cuneiform the language of their adopted country. A few decades later the Hittites of
Anatolia, discarding their old and clumsy system of hieroglyphs except for monumental purposes, borrow the same character for their own speech, while their
treaties with Egypt are drawn up in Babylonian. In the ninth century the powerful race of the Urartians, settled
in the
mountains of Armenia around the shores of Lake Van, adopt as their national script the writing of
These illustrations of Babylonian influence on foreign races are
confined to one department of culture only, the language and the system of
writing. But they have a very much wider implication. For when a foreign
language is used and written, a certain knowledge of its literature must be
presupposed. And since all early literatures were largely religious in
character, the study of the language carries with it some acquaintance with
the legends, mythology and religious beliefs of the race from whom it was
borrowed. Thus, even if we leave out of account the obvious effects of commercial
intercourse, the single group of examples quoted necessarily implies a strong
cultural influence on contemporary races.
It may thus appear a paradox to assert that the civilization, with which
the name of Babylon is associated, was not Babylonian. But it is a fact that
for more than a thousand years before the appearance of that city as a great
centre of culture, the civilization it handed on to others had acquired in all
essentials its later type. In artistic excellence, indeed, a standard had been
already reached, which, so far from being surpassed, was never afterwards
attained in Mesopotamia. And although the Babylonian may justly be credited
with greater system in his legislation, with an extended literature, and
perhaps also with an increased luxury of ritual, his efforts were entirely
controlled by earlier models. If we except the spheres of poetry and ethics,
the Semite in Babylon, as elsewhere, proved himself a clever adapter, not a
creator. He was the prophet of Sumerian culture and merely perpetuated the achievements
of the race whom he displaced politically and absorbed. It is therefore the more remarkable that
his particular
city should have seen but little of the process by which that culture had been gradually evolved. During those eventful centuries Babylon had been
but little more
than a provincial town. Yet it was reserved for this obscure and unimportant city to absorb
within herself the
results of that long process, and to appear to later ages as the original source of the culture
she enjoyed.
Before tracing her political fortunes in detail it will be well to consider briefly the causes
which contributed
to her retention of the place she so suddenly secured for herself.
The fact that under her West-Semitic kings Babylon should have taken
rank as the capital city does not in itself account for her permanent enjoyment
of that position. The earlier history of the lands of Sumer and Akkad abounds
with similar examples of the sudden rise of cities, followed, after an interval
of power, by their equally sudden relapse into comparative obscurity. The
political centre of gravity was continually shifting from one town to another,
and the problem we have to solve is why, having come to rest in Babylon, it
should have remained there. To the Western Semites themselves, after a
political existence of three centuries, it must have seemed that their city was
about to share the fate of her numerous predecessors. When the Hittite raiders
captured and sacked Babylon and carried off her patron deities, events must
have appeared to be taking their normal course. After the country, with her
abounding fertility, had been given time to recover from her temporary depression,
she might have been expected to emerge once more, according to precedent, under
the regis of some other city. Yet it was within the ancient walls of Babylon
that the Kassite conquerors established their headquarters; and it was to
Babylon, long rebuilt and once more powerful, that the Pharaohs of the
eighteenth Dynasty and the Hittite kings of Cappadocia addressed their
diplomatic correspondence. During Assyria's long struggle with the southern
kingdom Babylon was always the protagonist, and no raid by
Aramaean or Chaldean tribes ever succeeded in ousting her
from that
position. At the
height of Assyrian power she continued to be the chief
check upon that empire's expansion, and the vacillating
policy of the Sargonids in their
treatment of the city
sufficiently testifies to the dominant rĂ´le she continued to play in politics.
And when Nineveh had fallen, it was Babylon that took
her place in a great part of Western Asia.
This continued pre-eminence of a single city is in striking contrast to
the ephemeral authority of earlier capitals, and it can only be explained by
some radical change in the general conditions of the country. One fact stands
out clearly: Babylon's geographical position must have endowed her during this
period with a strategical and commercial importance which enabled her to
survive the rudest shocks to her material prosperity. A glance at the map will
show that the city lay in the north of Babylonia, just below the confluence of
the two great rivers in their lower course. Built originally on the left bank
of the Euphrates, she was protected by its stream from any sudden incursion of
the desert tribes. At the same time she was in immediate contact with the broad
expanse of alluvial plain to the south-east, intersected by its network of
canals.
But the real strength of her position lay in her near neighbourhood to
the transcontinental routes of traffic. When approaching Baghdad from the north
the Mesopotamian plain contracts to a width of some thirty-five miles, and,
although it has already begun to expand again in the latitude of Babylon, that
city was well within touch of both rivers. She consequently lay at the
meeting-point of two great avenues of commerce. The Euphrates route linked
Babylonia with Northern Syria and the Mediterranean, and was her natural line
of contact with Egypt; it also connected her with Cappadocia, by way of the
Cilician Gates through the Taurus, along the track of the later Royal Road. Farther north the trunk-route through
That she owed her importance to her
strategic position, and not to any
particular virtue on the part of her inhabitants, will be
apparent from the
later history of the country. It has indeed been pointed out
that the
geographical conditions render necessary the existence of a
great urban centre
near the confluence of the Mesopotamian rivers. And this fact is
amply attested by the relative positions of the capital cities,
which succeeded
one another in that region after the supremacy had passed from
Babylon.
Seleucia, Ctesiphon and Baghdad are all clustered in the narrow
neck of the
Mesopotamian plain, and for only one short period, when normal
conditions were
suspended, has the centre of government been transferred to any
southern city. The sole change has consisted in the permanent selection
of the Tigris for the
site of each new capital, with a decided tendency to remove it
to
Throughout the whole period of Babylon's supremacy the Persian Gulf, so far from being a channel of international commerce, was as great a barrier as any mountain range. Doubtless a certain amount of local coasting traffic was always carried on, and the heavy blocks of diorite which were brought to Babylonia from Magan by the early Akkadian king Naram-Sin, and at a rather later period by Gudea of Lagash, must have been transported by water rather than over land. Tradition, too, ascribed the conquest of the island of Dilmun, the modern Bahrein, to Sargon of Akkad; but that marked the extreme limit of Babylonian penetration southwards, and the conquest must have been little more than a temporary occupation following a series of raids down the Arabian coast. The fact that two thousand years later Sargon of Assyria, when recording his receipt of tribute from Uperi of Dilmun, should have been so far out in his estimate of its distance from the Babylonian coastÂline, is an indication of the continued disuse of the waters of the gulf as a means of communication. On this supposition we may readily understand the difficulties encountered by Sennacherib when transporting his army across the head of the gulf against certain coast-towns of Elam, and the necessity, to which he was put, of building special ships for the purpose. There is evidence that in the Neo-Babylonian period the possibilities of
transport by way of the gulf had already begun to attract attention, and
Nebuchadnezzar II is said to have attempted to build harbours in the swamp of the mouths of the
delta. But his object
must have been confined to encouraging coastal trade, for the sea-route between the
Persian Gulf and India was
certainly not in use before the fifth century, and in all probability was inaugurated
by Alexander. According to
Herodotus it had been opened by Darius after the return of the Greek Scylax
of Caryanda from his journey
to India, undertaken as one of the surveying expeditions on the basis of which
Darius founded the assessment
of his new satrapies. But, although there is no need to doubt the historical
character of that voyage,
there is little to suggest that Scylax coasted round, or even entered, the Persian
Gulf. Moreover, it
is clear that, while Babylon's international trade received a great impetus under the
efficient organization of
the Persian Empire, it was the overland routes which benefited. The outcrops of rock, or
cataracts, which blocked the
Tigris for vessels of deeper draft, were not removed until Alexander levelled them; and the problem of Babylon's
sea-traffic, to which he devoted the closing months of his life, was undoubtedly
one of the factors which,
having now come into prominence for the first time, influenced Seleucus in selecting
a site on the Tigris for
his new capital.
But that was not the only cause of Babylon's deposition. For after her
capture by Cyrus, new forces came into play which favoured a transference of
the capital eastward. During the earlier periods of her history Babylon's chief
rival and most persistent enemy had lain upon her eastern frontier. To the
early Sumerian rulers of city-states Elam had been "the mountain that
strikes terror", and during subsequent periods the cities of
Sumer and Akkad could never be sure of immunity from invasion in that quarter.
We shall see that in Elam the Western Semites of Babylon found the chief
obstacle to the southward extension of their authority, and that in later
periods any symptom of internal weakness or dissension was the signal
for renewed
attack. It is true that the Assyrian danger drew these ancient foes together for a time, but
even the sack of
Susa by Ashurbanipal did not put an end to their commercial rivalry.
During all this period there was small temptation to transfer the
capital to any point within easier striking distance of so powerful a
neighbour; and with the principal passes for eastward traffic under foreign control,
it was natural that the Euphrates route to Northern Mesopotamia and the
Mediterranean coast should continue to be the chief outlet for Babylonian
commerce. But on the incorporation of the country within the Persian empire all
danger of interference with her eastern trade was removed; and it is a testimony
to the part Babylon had already played in history that she continued to be the
capital city of Asia for more than two centuries. Cyrus, like Alexander,
entered the city as a conqueror, but each was welcomed by the people and their
priests as the restorer of ancient rights and privileges. Policy would thus
have been against any attempt to introduce radical innovations. The prestige
the city enjoyed and the grandeur of its temples and palaces doubtless also
weighed with the Achaemenian kings in their choice of Babylon for their
official residence, except during the summer months. Then they withdrew to the
cooler climate of Persepolis or Ecbatana, and during the early spring, too,
they might transfer the court to Susa; but they continued to recognize Babylon
as their true capital. In fact, the city only lost its importance when the
centre of government was removed to Seleucia in its own immediate
neighbourhood. Then, at first possibly under compulsion, and afterwards of
their own free will, the commercial classes followed their rulers to the west
bank of the Tigris; and Babylon suffered in proportion. In the swift rise of
Seleucia in response to official orders, we may see clear proof that the older
city's influence had been founded upon natural conditions, which were shared in
an equal, and now in even a greater degree, by the site of the new capital.
The secret of Babylon's greatness
is further illustrated
by still later events in the valley of the Euphrates and the
Tigris. The rise of
Ctesiphon on the left
bank of the river was a further result of the eastward trend
of commerce. But it lay
immediately opposite
Seleucia, and marked no fresh shifting of the centre of
gravity. Of little
importance under the Seleucid
rulers, it became the chief city of the Arsacidae,
and, after the Parthian Empire had been conquered
by Ardashir I, it continued to be the principal city of the province and
became the winter residence of the Sassanian kings. When in 636 AD the
Moslem invaders defeated the Persians near the ruins of Babylon and in
the following year captured Ctesiphon, they found that city and
Seleucia, to
which they gave
the joint name of Al-Madain, or "the cities", still
retaining the importance their site had
acquired in the third century BC. Then follows a period
of a hundred and twenty-five years which is peculiarly instructive for
comparison with the earlier epochs of Babylonian history.
The last of the great Semitic migrations from Arabia had resulted in the conquests of Islam, when, after the death of Mohammed, the Arab armies poured into Western Asia in their efforts to convert the world to their faith. The course of the movement, and its effect upon established civilizations which were overthrown, may be traced in the full light of history ; and we find in the valley of the Tigris and Euphrates a resultant economic condition which forms a close parallel to that of the age before the rise of Babylon. The military occupation of Mesopotamia by the Arabs closed for a time the great avenues of transcontinental commerce ; and, as a result, the political control of the country ceased to be exercised from the capital of the Sassanian kings and was distributed over more than one area. New towns sprang into being around the permanent camps of the Arab armies. Following on the conquest of Mesopotamia, the city of Basra was built on the Shatt el-'Arab in the extreme south of the country, while in the same year, 638 ad, Kufa was founded more to the north-west on the desert side of the Euphrates. A third great town, Wasit, was added sixty-five years later, and this arose in the centre of the country on both banks of the Tigris, whose waters were then passing along the present bed of the Shatt el-Hai. It is true that Madain retained a measure of local importance, but during the Omayyad Caliphate Kufa and Basra were the twin capitals of Irak Thus the slackening of international connections led at once to a distribution
of authority between a north and a south Babylonian site. It is true that both
capitals were under the same political control, but from the economic
standpoint we are forcibly reminded of the era of city-states in Sumer and
Akkad. Then, too, there was no external factor to retain the centre of gravity in the north; and Erech more
than once secured the
hegemony, while the most stable of the shifting dynasties was the latest of the
southern city of Ur. The
rise of Babylon as the sole and permanent capital of Sumer and Akkad may be traced, as
we shall note, to increased
relations with Northern Syria, which followed
the establishment of her dynasty of West-Semitic kings. And
again we may see history repeating
herself, when Moslem authority is removed to Baghdad at the close of the first
phase in the Arab occupation
of Mesopotamia. For on the fall of the Omayyad
dynasty and the transference of the Abbasid capital from Damascus to the east,
commercial intercourse with Syria and the west was restored to its old footing. Basra and Kufa at once failed
to respond to the changed
conditions, and a new administrative centre
was required. It is significant that Baghdad should have been built a few miles
above Ctesiphon, within the
small circle of the older capitals; and
that, with the
exception of a single short period, she should have
remained the capital city of Irak. Thus the history of Mesopotamia under the
Caliphate is instructive for the study of the closely parallel conditions which enabled Babylon at a far earlier
period to secure the hegemony
in Babylonia and afterwards to retain it.
From this brief survey of events it will have been noted that Babylon's
supremacy falls in the middle period of her country's history, during which she
distributed a civilization in the origin of which she played no part. When she
passed, the culture she had handed on passed with her, though on Mesopotamian
soil its decay was gradual. But she had already delivered her message, and it
has left its mark on the remains of
other races of antiquity which have come down
to us. We shall see that it was in three main periods that her influence made itself
felt in any marked degree
beyond the limits of the homeland. The earliest of these periods of external contact
was that of her First
Dynasty of West-Semitic rulers, though the most striking evidence of its effect is
only forthcoming after some
centuries had passed. In the second period the process was indirect, her culture
being carried north and west
by the expansion of Assyria. The last of the three epochs coincides with the rule of the
Neo-Babylonian kings, when,
thanks to her natural resources, the country
not only regained her independence, but for a short time established an empire which
far eclipsed her earlier
effort. And in spite of her speedy return, under Persian rule, to the position of a
subject province, her foreign
influence may be regarded as operative, it is true in diminishing intensity, well into
the Hellenic period.
The concluding chapter will deal in some detail with certain features of
Babylonian civilization, and with the extent to which it may have moulded the
cultural development of other races. In the latter connection a series of claims
has been put forward which cannot be ignored in any treatment of the nation's
history. Some of the most interesting contributions that have recently been
made to Assyriological study undoubtedly concern the influence of ideas, which
earlier research had already shown to be of Babylonian origin. Within recent
years a school has arisen in Germany which emphasizes the part played by
Babylon in the religious development of Western Asia, and, in a minor degree,
of Europe. The evidence on which reliance has been placed to prove the spread
of Babylonian thought throughout the ancient world has been furnished mainly by
Israel and Greece; and it is claimed that many features both in Hebrew religion
and in Greek mythology can only be rightly studied in the light thrown upon
them by Babylonian parallels from which they were ultimately derived. It will
therefore be necessary to examine briefly the theory which underlies most
recent speculation on this subject, and to ascertain, if possible, how far it
may be relied on to furnish results of permanent value.
But it will be obvious that, if the theory is to be accepted in whole or
in part, it must be shown to rest upon a firm historical basis, and that any
inquiry into its credibility should be more fitly postponed until the history
of the nation itself has been passed in review. After the evidence of actual
contact with other races has been established in detail, it will be possible to
form a more confident judgment upon questions which depend for their solution
solely on a balancing of probabilities. The estimate of Babylon's foreign
influence has therefore been postponed to the closing chapter of the volume.
But before considering the historical sequence of her dynasties, and the
periods to which they may be assigned, it will be well to inquire what recent
excavation has to tell us of the actual remains of the city which became the
permanent capital of Babylonia.
CHAPTER II
THE CITY OF BABYLON AND ITS REMAINS : A DISCUSSION OF THE RECENT EXCAVATIONS
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