A HISTORY OF BABYLON FROM THE FOUNDATION OF THE MONARCHY TO THE PERSIAN CONQUESTCHAPTER VI
THE CLOSE OF THE FIRST DYNASTY OF BABYLON AND THE KINGS FROM THE COUNTRY OF THE SEA
IN the closing years of Hammurabi's reign Babylon had reached the climax of her early power. The proud phraseology of the Prologue to his Code conveys the impression that the empire was solidly compact, and its component cities the willing recipients of his royal clemency and favour. And there can be no doubt that he owed his success in great measure to the efficient administration he had established under his personal control. His son, Samsu-iluna, inherited his father's traditions, and in his letters that have survived we have abundant evidence that he exercised the same close supervision over the judicial and administrative officers stationed in cities distant from the capital. And it would appear that the first eight years of his reign passed under the same peaceful conditions, that had prevailed at the time of his accession to the throne. He cut two canals, and the names he gave them commemorate the wealth and abundance he hoped by their means to bestow upon the people. It was in his third and fourth years that the Samsu-iluna-nagab-nukhush-nishi and the Samsu-iluna-khegallum Canals were completed, and the royal activities were then confined to the further adornment of the great temples of Babylon and Sippar. His ninth year marks the crisis, not only in Samsu-iluna's own reign, but in the early fortunes of the kingdom. It is then that we first hear of Ivassite tribes appearing in force upon Babylon's eastern frontier, and, though Samsu-iluna doubtless defeated them, as he claims to have done, it is clear that their emergence from the foothills of Western Elam, followed speedily by their penetration of Babylonian territory, was the signal for setting the empire in a blaze. They must have met with some success before their onslaught was arrested by the army sent against
them, and the renewal of hostilities in any form must have aroused once more the fighting instinct of the
Elamite border tribes, which had been temporarily laid to rest by Hammurabi's victories. Hammurabi's old antagonist, Rim-Sin himself, had long been living in
comparative retirement, and, in spite of his advanced age, the news fired him to fresh efforts. His name was still on
the lips of
those who had fought under him, and since the death of his conqueror, Hammurabi, his prestige
must have
tended to increase. When, therefore, his native land of Emutbal, allying itself with the
neighbouring Elamite district of Idamaraz, followed up the Kassite onslaught by an organized invasion, Rim-Sin raised
a revolt in
Southern Babylonia, and succeeded in gaining possession of Erech and Nisin. It would appear that the Babylonian garrison in Larsa, too, was
overcome, and that the city passed once more under the independent control of its
old ruler.
With the whole south of the country in arms against him, we may conjecture that Samsu-iluna detailed
sufficient forces to contain Rim-Sin, while he dealt with the invasion of Babylon's home-territory. He had little difficulty in disposing of the Elamites, and,
marching southwards, he defeated Rim-Sin's forces and reoccupied Larsa. It may be that it was at
this time he captured, or burnt, Rim-Sin alive, and that the palace where this took place was the rebel leader's old
palace at Larsa, which he had been making his headquarters. But the revolt was not completely subdued. Ur and Erech still held out, and it was only after a
further campaign that Samsu-iluna recaptured them and razed their walls. He had thus succeeded in crushing the first series of organized attacks upon the empire,
but the effort
of dealing simultaneously with invasion and internal revolt had evidently strained the
national, resources. Garrisons had probably been reduced in distant provinces, others had been cut down in
order to
reinforce his armies in the field, and it is not surprising that in his
twelfth year these outlying districts should have followed the prevailing lead. In that year it is recorded that all the lands revolted against
him.
We may with some confidence trace the main source of Samsu-iluna's fresh troubles to the
action of
Iluma-ilum, who, probably at this time, headed a revolt in the Sea-Country on the shore of the Persian
Gulf, and
declared his independence of Babylon. Samsu-iluna's answer was to raise further levies and lead
them against his
new foe. The subsequent battle was fiercely contested on the very shore of the Gulf, for a
later chronicler
records that the bodies of the slain were carried off by the sea; yet it was either
indecisive, or resulted in the discomfiture of the Babylonians. We may conjecture that the king was prevented from employing his full forces to stamp out the
rebellion, in consequence of trouble in other quarters. For in the following two years we find him destroying the
cities Kisurra and
Sabum, and defeating the leader of a rebellion in the home-territory of Babylon itself.
Iluma-ilum was thus afforded the opportunity of consolidating
his position, and we may perhaps see evidence of his growing influence in Southern Babylonia in
the fact that
at Tell Sifr not a single document has been found dated in a later year of Samsu-iluna's reign
than the tenth. In view of the fact that the central city of Nippur eventually passed under Iluma-ilum's
control, we
The fringe of territory in the extreme south-east
of Babylonia
always exhibited a tendency to detach itself from the upper riverain districts of Babylonia
proper. Forming the littoral of the Persian Gulf, and encroaching in its northern area upon Elam, it consisted of
great stretches
of rich alluvial soil interspersed with areas of marsh-land and swamps, which tended to increase where the rivers approached the coast. The swamps undoubtedly acted as a protection to the country,
for while
tracks and fords were known to the inhabitants, a stranger from the north-west would in many places have been completely baffled by them. The natives, too, in their light reed-boats could escape from
one district to
another, pushing along known passages and eluding their pursuers, when once the tall reeds
had closed
behind them. The later Assyrians at the height of their power succeeded in subduing a series of
revolts in the Sea-Country, but it was only by enlisting the help of native guides and by commandeering the
light canoes of
neighbouring villages. The earlier kings of Babylonia had always been content to leave the swamp-dwellers to themselves, and at most to exact
It is clear that the pressure exerted upon Babylonia by the West-Semitic migration must have tended to displace sections of the existing population. The direction of advance was always down-stream, and
the pressure
continued in force even after the occupation of the country. Those strains in the population, which differed most radically from the invaders, would be
the more likely
to seek sanctuary elsewhere, and, with the exception of Elam, the Sea-Country offered the onlv possible line of retreat. We may assume, therefore, that the marsh-dwellers of the south had been reinforced
for a considerable period by Sumerian refugees, and, though the first three rulers of the new
kingdom bore Semitic names and were probably Semites, the names of later rulers of the Sea-Country suggest
that the
Sumerian element in the population afterwards secured the control, no doubt with the assistance of fresh drafts from their own kindred after their successful occupation of Southern Babylonia. Under the more powerful kings of the Second Dynasty, the kingdom may have assumed a character resembling that of its predecessors in Babylonia. The centre of administration
was certainly shifted for a time to Nippur, and possibly even further north, but the Sea-Country,
as the
home-land of the dynasty, must have always been regarded as a dominant province of the kingdom, and
it offered a
secure refuge to its rulers in the event of their being driven again within its borders. In spite of
its extensive
marshes, it was capable of sustaining its inhabitants in a considerable degree of comfort,
for the date-palm flourished luxuriantly, and the areas under cultivation must have been at least as productive
as those
further to the north-west. Moreover, the zebu, or humped cattle of Sumer, thrived in the swamps and water-meadows, and not only formed an important source of supply, but were used for ploughing in
the agricultural
districts.
With such a country as a base of operations, protected
in no small degree by its marshes, it is not surprising that the Sea-Country kings should have
met with
considerable success in their efforts at extending the area of territory under their control.
After his second conflict with Iluma-ilum, Samsu-iluna appears to have reconciled himself to the
loss of his southern province, and to have made no further effort at reconquest. He could still boast of
successes in other districts, for he destroyed the walls of Shakhna and Zarkhanum, doubtless after the suppression of a revolt, and he strengthened the fortifications of
Kish. He also
retained the control of the Euphrates route to Syria, and he doubtless encouraged the commercial enterprise of Babylon in that direction as a
set-off to his losses in the south. We possess an interesting illustration of the close relations he maintained
with the west in the date-formula for the twenty-sixth year of his reign, which tells us that he procured a
monolith from the great mountain of the land of Amurru. This must have been quarried in the Lebanon, and transported
overland to the Euphrates, and thence conveyed by kelek to the capital. From the details he gives
us of its
size, it appears to have measured some thirty-six feet in length, and it was no small
achievement to have brought it so far to Babylon.
During this period of comparative tranquillity Samsu-iluna devoted himself once more to rebuilding and beautifying E-sagila and the temples of Kish
and Sippar; but
in his twenty-eighth year Babylon suffered a fresh shock, which appears to have resulted in
still further
loss of territory. In that year he claims to have slain Iadi-khabum and Muti-khurshana, two leaders
of an
invasion, or a revolt, of which we have no details. But it is clear that the victory, if such it was,
resulted in further trouble, for in the following two years no fresh date-formulas were promulgated, and it is
probable that the king himself was absent from the capital. It is significant that no document has been recovered
at Nippur
which is dated after Samsu-iluna's twenty-ninth year, although in the preceding period, from the thirty-first year of Hammurabi onward, when the city first passed into Babylon's possession, nearly every year
is well
represented in the dated series. It is difficult not to conclude that Samsu-iluna now lost the control of that city, and, since one of the documents from
Nippur is dated in
Iluma-ilum's reign, it can only have passed into the latter's possession. Further evidence of
the diminishing
territory of Babylon may be seen in the fact that Samsu-iluna should have rebuilt the old line of fortresses, founded by his ancestor Suma-la-ilum
at a time when
the kingdom was in its infancy. This work was doubtless undertaken when he foresaw the necessity of defending the Akkadian border, and he must have lost one at least of the fortresses, Dur-Zakar,
when Nippur was
taken. His activitives during his closing years were confined to the north and west, and to the task of keeping open the Euphrates route. For
he cut a canal
beside Kar-Sippar, recovered possession of Saggaratum, and probably destroyed the cities of Arkum and Amal. His defeat of an Amorite force some two years before his death is of interest
approving that the Western Semites of Akkad,
nearly two centuries after their
settlement
in the country, were experiencing the same treatment from their own
stock that they
themselves had caused to the land of their adoption.
Samsu-iluna, with the possible exception of Ammi-ditana, was the last great king of the West-Semitic dynasty. It is true that his son Abi-eshu' made a
fresh attempt to
dislodge Iluma-ilum from his hold upon Central and Southern Babylonia. A late chronicle records that he took the offensive and marched
against Iluma-ilum. It would seem that his attack was in the nature of a surprise, and that he succeeded in
cutting off the king and part of his forces, possibly on their return from some other expedition. It is clear that he
came into touch
with him in the neighbourhood of the Tigris, and probably forced him to take refuge in a
fortress, since he attempted to cut off his retreat by damming the river. He is said to have succeeded in damming the stream, but he failed to catch Iluma-ilum. The chronicle records no further conflict between the
two, and we may
assume that he then adopted his father's later policy of leaving the Sea-Country in
possession of its conquered territory. In some of his broken date- formulge we have echoes of a few further campaigns,
and we know
that he cut the Abi-eshu Canal, and built a fortress at the gate of the Tigris, which he also
named after
himself, Dur-Abi-eshu. This was probably a frontier fortification, erected for the defence of
the river at
the point where it passed from Babylon's area of control to that of the Sea-Country. He also
built the town of
Lukhaia on the Arakhtu Canal in the immediate neighbourhood of Babylon. But
both Abi-eshu and his successors on the throne give evidence of having become more and more engrossed in cult-observances. The supply of temple-furniture begins
to have for
them the importance that military success had for their fathers. And it is a symptom of decadence that, even in the religious sphere, they are as
much concerned with their own worship as with that of the gods.
It is significant that Abi-eshu should have named one of his years of rule by his decoration of a statue of Entemena, the early patesi of Lagash, who had been accorded divine honours, and, at some period after Hammurabi's occupation of that city, had received a cult-centre of his own in Babylon. For the act indicates an increased interest, on Abi-eshu's part, in the deification of royalty. This honour was peculiarly associated with the possession of Nippur, the central city and shrine of the country, and Babylon had adopted the practice of deification for her kings after Nippur had been annexed by Hammurabi. Though the city had now passed from Babylon's control, Abi-eshu did not relinquish the privilege his father and grandfather had legitimately enjoyed. Since Babylon no longer possessed the central shrine of Enlil, in which his own divine statue should have been set up, he dedicated one in Enlil's local temple at Babylon. But not content with that he fashioned no less than five other statues of himself, which he set up in the temples of other gods, at Babylon, Sippar and elsewhere. His three successors followed the same practice,
and Ammi-ditana
and Ammi-zaduga, his son and grandson, have left descriptions of some of these cult-images of themselves. A
favourite character, in which the king was often represented, was holding a lamb for divination, and another
was in the attitude of prayer. The later kings of the First Dynasty love, too, to dwell on their sumptuous votive offerings. Marduk is
supplied with innumerable weapons of red gold, and the Sun-god's shrine at Sippar is decorated with solar
disks of precious dushu-stone, inlaid with red gold, lapis-lazuli, and silver. Great reliefs, with representations of
rivers and mountains, were cast in bronze and set up in the temples; and Samsu-ditana, the last of his
line, records
among his offerings to the gods the dedication to Sarpanitum of a rich silver casket for perfumes.
Incidentally, these references afford striking
proof of the
wealth Babylon had now acquired, due no doubt to her increased commercial activities. Elam on the one side and Syria on the other had furnished her with imports of precious stone, metal, and wood; and her craftsmen had learnt much from foreign teachers. In spite of the contraction of Hammurabi's empire, the life of the people in both the town and country
districts of Akkad was not materially altered. The organized supervision of all departments of national
activity, pastoral, agricultural and commercial, which the nation owed in great measure to Hammurabi, was continued under these later kings; and some of the royal
letters that have been recovered show that orders on comparatively unimportant
matters continued to be issued in the king's name. We know, too, of a good many public works carried out by Ammi-ditana, Abi-eshu's son. He cut only one canal, and he built fortresses for the protection of others, and named them after himself. Thus, in addition to the Ammi-ditana
Canal, we learn of a Dur-Ammi-ditana, which he erected on the Zilakum Canal, and another fortress of the same name on the Me-Enlil Canal. He strengthened the wall of Ishkun-Marduk, which was also on the
Zilakum, and built Mashkan-Ammi-ditana and the wall of Kar-Shamash, both on the bank of the Euphrates.
The systematic fortification of the rivera and canals may perhaps be interpreted as marking an advance of the frontier southward, in consequence of which it was advisable to protect the crops and the water-supply of the districts thus recovered from the danger of sudden raids. On two occasions Ammi-ditana claims, in rather vague terms, to have freed his land from danger, once by restoring the might of Marduk, and later on by loosing the pressure from his land; and that, in his seventeenth year, he should have claimed to have conquered Arakhab, perhaps referred to as "the Sumerian", is an indication that the Sea-Country kings found ready assistance from the older population of the South. Moreover, of the later West-Semitic kings, Ammi-ditana alone appears to have made headway against the encroachments of the Sea-Country. The most conclusive proof of his advance is to be seen in the date-formula for his thirty-seventh year, which records that he destroyed the wall of Nisin, proving that he had penetrated to the south of Nippur. That Nippur itself was held by him for a time is more than probable, especially as one of his building-inscriptions, still unpublished, is said to have been found there; and we know also, from a Neo-Babylonian copy of a similar text, that he claimed the title "King of Sumer and Akkad". Under him, then, Babylon recovered a semblance of her former strength, but we may conjecture that the Sea-Country retained its hold on Larsa and the southern group of cities. We are furnished with a third valuable synchronism between the dynasties of Babylon and of the south
by the
reference to Ammi-ditana's destruction of the wall of Nisin, for the date-formula adds that this had
been erected by
the people of Damki-ilishu. The ruler referred to is obviously the third king in the dynasty of the Sea-Country, who succeeded Itti-ili-nibi
upon the throne. We may conclude that it was in his reign, or shortly after it, that Ammi-ditana succeeded in
recovering Nisin, after having already annexed Nippur on his southward advance. In his thirty-fourth year, two years before the capture of Nisin, he had dedicated
an image of
Samsu-iluna in the temple E-namtila, and we may perhaps connect this tribute to his grandfather
with the fact
that in his reign Babylon had last enjoyed the distinction conferred by the suzerainty of Nippur.
In the year following the recovery of Nisin Ammi-zaduga succeeded his father on the throne, and
since he ascribes
the greatness of his kingdom to Enlil, and not to Marduk or any other god, we may see in this a further indication that Babylon continued to control his ancient shrine. But the remaining date-formulae for Ammi-zaduga's reign do not suggest
that Ammi-ditana's
conquests were held permanently. A succession of religious dedications is followed in his tenth year by the conventional record that he
loosed the
pressure of his land, suggesting that his country had been through a period of conflict; and, though
in the
following year he built a fortress, Dur-Ammi-zaduga "at the mouth of the Euphrates", the
nearly unbroken succession of votive acts, commemorated during his remaining years and
in the reign of his son Samsu-ditana, makes it probable that the kings of Sea-Country were gradually regaining some of the territory they had temporarily
lost. (Success doubtless fluctuated from one side to the other,
Ammi-zaduga in one of his later years commemorating that he had
brightened his land like the Sun-god, and Samsu-ditana recording that he
had restored his dominion with the weapon of Marduk. How far these
rather vague claims were justified it is impossible to say. Apart from
votive acts, the only definite record of this period is that of
Ammi-zaduga's sixteenth year, in which he celebrates the cutting of the
Ammi-zaduga-nukhush-nishi Canal.).
But it was not from the Sea-Country that the West Semitic Dynasty of Babylon received its death-blow. In the late chronicle, which has thrown so much
light on the
earlier conflicts of this troubled period, we read of another invasion, which not only brought
disaster to Babylon but probably put an end to her first dynasty. The chronicler states that during the reign of
Samsu- ditana, the
last king of the dynasty, "men of the land of Khatti marched against the land of
Akkad", in other words, that Hittites from Anatolia marched down the Euphrates and invaded Babylonia from the north-west.
(We may confidently regard the phrase as referring to the Anatolian
Hittites, whose capital at Boghaz Keui must have been founded far
earlier than the end of the fifteenth century when we know that it bore
the name of Khatti. It is true that, after the southern migration of the
Hittites in the twelfth century. Northern Syria was known as "the land
of Khatti", but, if the invasion of Babylonia in Samsu-ditana's reign
had been made by Semitic tribes from Syria, no doubt the chronicler
would have employed the correct designation, Amurru, which is used in an
earlier section of the text for Sargon's invasion of Syria. In the late
omen-literature, too, the use of the early geographical terms is not
confused. Both chronicles and omen-texts are transcripts of early
written originals, not late compilations based on oral tradition).The
chronicle does not record the
result of the
invasion, but we may probably connect it with the fact that the Kassite king Agum-kakrime brought back to Babylon from Khani, the old Khana on the middle Euphrates, the cult-images of Marduk and- Sarpanitum and installed them once more with great pomp and ceremony within their shrines in E-sagila. We may legitimately conclude that they were carried off by the Hittites during their invasion in
Samsu-ditana's reign.
If the Hittites succeeded in despoiling Babylon of her most sacred deities, it is clear that they
must have raided the city, and they may even have occupied it for a time. Thus the West-Semitic Dynasty of Babylon may have been brought to an end by these Hittite conquerors, and Samsu-ditana himself may have
fallen in defence
of his own capital. But there is no reason for supposing that the Hittites occupied Babylon
for long. Even
if their success was complete, they would soon have returned to their own country, laden with heavy spoil; and they doubtless left some of
their number in
occupation of Ivhana on their withdrawal up the Euphrates. Southern Babylonia may also have suffered in the raid, but we may assume that its force was felt most in the north, and that the kings of
the Sea-Country profited by the disaster. We have as yet no direct evidence of their occupation of Babylon,
but, as their kingdom had been Babylon's most powerful rival prior to the Hittite raid, it may well have
increased its borders after her fall.
To this period we may probably assign a local dynasty of Erech, represented by the names of Sin-gashid, Sin-gamil and An-am. From bricks and foundation-records recovered at Warka, the site of
the ancient city,
we know that the first of these rulers restored the old temple of E-anna and built himself a new palace. But the most interesting of
Sin-gashid's records is a votive cone, commemorating the dedication of E-kankal to Lugal-banda and the goddess Ninsun,
for, when
concluding his text with a prayer for abundance, he inserts a list or tariff, stating the
maximum-price which he had fixed for the chief articles of commerce during his reign. Sin-gamil was An-am's
immediate predecessor on the throne of Erech, and during his reign the latter dedicated on his behalf a temple to
Nergal in the town of Usipara. An-am was the son of a certain Bel-shemea, and his principal work was the
restoration of the wall of Erech, the foundation of which he ascribes to the semi-mythical ruler Gilgamesh.
Doubtless other local kingdoms arose during the period following Babylon's temporary disappearance as a political force, but we have recovered no traces
of them, and the only fact of which we are certain is the continued succession of the Sea-Country kings. To one of these rulers, Gulkishar, reference is made
upon a boundary
stone of the twelfth century, drawn up in the reign of Enlil-nadin-apli, an early king of the
Fourth Dynasty. On
it he is given the title of King of the Sea-Country, which is also the late chronicler's
designation for E-gamil, the last member of the dynasty, in the account he has left us of the Ivassite invasion.
Such evidence
seems to show that the administrative centre of their rule was established at those periods in
the south ; but
the inclusion of the dynasty in the Kings' List is best explained on the assumption that at
least some of its
later members imposed their suzerainty over a wider area. They were evidently the only stable line of rulers in a period after the most powerful administration the country had yet known had been suddenly shattered. The land had suffered much, not only from the Hittite raid, but also during the continuous conflicts of more than a century that
preceded the final fall of Babylon. It must have been then that many of the old Sumerian cities of
Southern and Central Babylonia were deserted, after being burned down and destroyed; and they were never afterwards re-occupied. Lagash, Unima, Shuruppak, Kisurra and Adah play no part in the subsequent history of Babylonia.
Of the fortunes of Babylon at this time we know nothing, but the fact that the Kassites should have made the city their capital shows that the economic forces, which had originally raised her to that
position, were still in operation. The Sumerian elements in the population of Southern Babylonia may now have enjoyed
a last period of influence, and their racial survival in the Sea-Country may in part explain its
continual striving for independence. But in Babylonia as a whole the effects of three centuries of West-Semitic rule
were permanent.
When, after the Kassite conquest, Babylon emerges once more into view, it is apparent that
the traditions inherited from her first empire have undergone small change.
KASSITE DYNASTY AND RELATIONS WITH EGYPT AND THE HITTITE EMPIRE
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