ANCIENT HISTORY LIBRARY
LOOKING FOR JOSEPH, SON OF JACOB, FATHER OF ISRAEL
BABYLONIA, c.
2120-1800 B.C.
I.
THE THIRD DYNASTY OF UR
THE ancient
kingship of Sumer, so gloriously regained by Utu-khegal with
his expulsion of the Gutians, was his for a very
brief space, his reign lasting for not much more than seven years, coming to an abrupt end, and his city of Uruk therewith losing the sovereignty. During
these years and for some three decades longer the great impulse of
national sentiment and strength which had thrown off the enemy seemed to
have exhausted itself in that one exertion. Of Utu-khegal himself
nothing more was preserved by the historical memory of his country than
his one heroic act and a story about his fate. But the hazard of modern
discovery has been kinder; at Ur and in its neighbourhood inscriptions have been found
which show the sovereign concerning himself with the affairs of that city,
and thereby they explain the origin of the Third Dynasty of Ur which was
to supplant Uruk—by conquest, according to
the king-list’s unvarying phrase, but nothing is known of a war. In the
first of these inscriptions occurs the name of Ur-Nammu,
not yet king but only deputy over the city for Utu-khegal,
on whose behalf he undertook to restore a part of the great temple at Ur,
a work of which so much remains to this day.
The Third Dynasty
of Ur began therefore with the appointment of its first member by the preceding
king, who doubtless selected one of his principal adherents, perhaps not a
native of the place he was given to rule. Another inscription, upon
modest little clay cones from unknown sites, is of Utu-khegal himself. These
cones are dedicated to the deities Ningirsu and Nanshe, the owners of Lagash, and relate that Utu-khegal fixed the boundary of their possessions
‘to the man of Ur’. It is natural to conclude from this that a boundary
dispute had arisen between Ur and Lagash, in which Ur was the aggressor,
and that Utu-khegal was called upon, in his
superior capacity, to decide, whereupon he drew the boundary between two
cities as Mesilim had done in a former age
when the disputants were Lagash and Umma, each then, as now, being the
domain of its divine landlord. Several of these little clay cones have been
found and no doubt hundreds of them were made to fix in a low wall
which, together with a canal, marked the boundary. The
aggressive ‘man of Ur’, to whom the award is clearly indicated as a
rebuff, can be no other than Ur-Nammu, and it is
not unlikely that the offence given by this adjudication contributed to
his casting off allegiance to Uruk, and
possibly provoking a contest in which the rebel was successful.
Sparsity of
information about the history of the Third Dynasty of Ur, how it won,
sustained, and finally lost its sway, is one of the major disappointments
of Babylonian records. The geographical extent of its authority, even if it
should not be compared with that conquered by the kings of Agade, was
certainly wide, but no royal inscriptions make any mention of it, and few discoveries outside
the nearer Babylonian limits shed any light upon it. Most of the
information which exists is in the date-formulae appended to business
documents, that is, the official ‘names’ given to each year by which
almost every administrative or legal tablet was concluded. This cumbrous
system had been in use long before, but with the Third Dynasty the
formulae are, for the first time, preserved with tolerable completeness.
Valuable as these are, their shortcomings as historical evidence are manifest—their extreme brevity, their arbitrary
selection of one among the events of a year to give a designation to it,
their preoccupation with purely ceremonial occasions, and their dependence
for chronological value upon our having the means to fix their order. For
reasons unknown the obvious and much more satisfactory method
of dating by the regnal years of kings was not brought into
general use until the Kassite period. In respect of the Third Dynasty we are fortunate enough not only to possess
most of the formulae but to know also their official order, and can
therefore take full advantage of such information as they afford. This
does not apply to the whole period. At the beginning the dates of Ur-Nammu are largely unknown and unfixed, and even for
the first half of his successor’s reign they are not well attested, and have little interest. Again, at the end,
when the dynasty was sinking under converging attacks, the gallant and
effective struggle of Ibbi-Sin is but faintly
adumbrated by the mention of events which cannot be observed in a fixed
order.
Ur-Nammu reigned eighteen years, counted probably from
his breach with Uruk. By no means so many
date-formulae can be attributed with certainty to these years. One of them
shows him appointing a son to the priesthood of Uruk,
another marks a step to security, when ‘the wall of Ur was built’. From a
boast put into his mouth by a hymn it appears that he still had
to finish purging the land from the Gutian invaders,
but the only positive military achievement which is attested (and that by
himself) is a victory over Nammakhni, the ruler
of Lagash, as recorded in the prologue to his laws. This forcible reversal
of the diplomatic defeat inflicted by Utu-khegal can
hardly have been a major event in the rise of Ur to sovereignty, for even
amid the general collapse left behind them by the Gutians there
must have been stronger rivals than Lagash. Most interesting of
the date-formulae preserved is that which proclaims that ‘he
made straight the road from below to above’, which can be
understood to mean a march from the lower sea (the Persian Gulf) to
the upper sea (the Mediterranean, on the north Syrian coast),
but nothing more is known about it and there is no external
evidence, unless some doubtful indication of a palace-building at the
site now called Tell Brak, on the
Upper Khabur, may be thought enough to attest the presence of Ur-Nammu in the farther northwest. But nearer home was
the city of Mari, on the Middle Euphrates, which clearly owed him no
allegiance, for it was then under independent governors whose names have
been found in the recent excavations; one of these had a daughter taken
by marriage into the family of Ur-Nammu, in the
same way as the second king of Ur allied himself with neighbours on his northeastern borders. Moreover,
tablets of this period found at Mari do
not bear the date-formulae of Ur, and in those formulae
themselves, through the whole course of the dynasty, there is little appearance
of the Euphratean lands or of Syria until, in the fourth year of
Shu-Sin, the ‘wall of Amurru’ was built,
and this, so far from a measure of conquest, was a defence against invasion from that quarter. There
is the same complete want of information concerning any activity of Ur-Nammu in the districts beyond the Tigris, where his
successors had to fight so many campaigns.
The fragmentary
Laws of Ur-Nammu have recently received an, at least
probable, addition with the publication of two parts of tablets found at
Ur. The laws thus preserved deal with sexual offences, with defence of women against such charges,
with punishment of a slave-girl who presumes to set herself on a
level with her mistress, and with wrongful acts in connection with
land belonging to others. Juridical comments upon these have now been
published by V. Korosec, J. Klima, and J. J. Finkelstein.
Perhaps in tacit
acknowledgement of his limited sway he forbore to take the conquerors’ title
‘king of the four regions’, which was assumed afterwards by his dynasty.
The largest attributions of power and wealth to him are made in some
extant hymns of praise, one uttered by himself, extravagantly celebrating
the benefits he had conferred upon Ur and the glories vouchsafed
to him by the grateful gods; indeed, he was hailed as a god
himself in a song which, amid much conventional eulogy, has a
passing allusion to the ‘righteousness’ of the king, that is, to his laws. Somewhat
more explicit is another hymn about him which was evidently composed
to honour the king’s exertions
and munificence in restoring the temple of the divine ruler at
Nippur. A last poem, by contrast, is concerned with the death
and obsequies of Ur-Nammu, his laments and the
mourning of his family and city, consoled by the knowledge that rich gifts
to the underworld deities have secured for him a fitting place among
the shades. But the style of boast and flattery, as vague as it is
vain, which swelled these courtly compositions and set the pattern
for many others in the following generations, is destitute of
real information upon the actual events of the reign or upon
the personality of the monarch.
Inscriptions of
Ur-Nammu are found upon bricks, clay cones, and
stone door-hinges from the numerous buildings and other works which he
dedicated to the presiding gods in his capital and his subject cities.
These works, of which imposing remains still survive, were undertaken
principally in and about Ur, Nippur, Uruk,
and Larsa. Probably in virtue of his rule at Nippur he assumed a new title
‘king of Sumer and Akka’, and there
he built the temple of Enlil, leaving to his son as tradition
required the renovation of Tummal, shrine
of the god’s consort. At Uruk his chief
operations were upon the zikkurrat or
temple-tower of the goddess Inanna and the enclosure surrounding it, a
worthy counterpart to the greatest of all his monuments, the tower
of the Moon-god at Ur. Of this the main structure
still exists, impressive alike by its plan, its mass, and the excellence
of its construction and materials. Two or three later kings who undertook
to repair this gigantic pile have left traces of what seem by comparison
pygmy hands upon it. The last builder, Nabonidus, relates that it was
begun by Ur-Nammu and carried on by
his son, but that even he did not complete the work. Substantially it
was the achievement of Ur-Nammu, and the story of its
building was related by him in picture and word upon a great
stone monument, of which a few scenes remain. Of the
inscription nothing is left but the mention of certain canals which the
king dug out, among these being one which is the subject of a
clay cone found at Lagash—the canal called Nanna-gugal,
of which he made ‘its reservoir like a sea’. This waterway, it is added,
was a boundary-mark which must have divided the territories of Lagash
and of Ur, and since Ur-Nammu goes on to
celebrate the ‘justice’ he had established we may surmise that his
canal took a different line from that imposed upon Ur in the days
of his subordination to Utu-khegal.
Canals indeed
figure prominently in the surviving texts of Ur-Nammu,
and it is likely that restoration of the country’s means of communication
and water-supply accounted for much of his activity in repairing the dire
effects of Gutian wastage and neglect.
Nor was his purpose only local, although much work no doubt accompanied
his re-survey of the boundaries of city-states, in which canals were a notable
feature. An operation of much wider importance is attested by clay cones
found in an area called Diqdiqqah,
north-east of Ur, which relate in rather obscure terms that merchant-ships
from Magan were again able to berth in
a harbour at this place thanks to the
operations of Ur-Nammu who had restored its
direct communication with the open sea. This attests the resumption of an
overseas trade which had flourished under the Dynasty of Agade, but its
range is now found to be more restricted, for the remoter Meluhha (wherever that is to be sought) is never mentioned, and seems no longer to lie within the orbit
of voyages from southern Babylonia.
To whatever limits
confined, the reign of Ur-Nammu was beyond doubt
a time of increasing power and wealth, sufficiently witnessed by his many
great public works, although the tablets of administration, which furnish
ubiquitous evidence of thriving activity under his successors, make but a scanty
appearance in his time. A like progress may be assumed for the earlier
years of his successor, a famous king whose name is invariably written
with the signs SUL (or DUN)-GI, the reading of which is
uncertain, but it is known that the name ended in r; for the
present he can be called Shulgi. He reigned most probably forty-eight
years, but of these the first twenty-one seem to have passed with
little distinction, and the events commemorated by the
date-formulae are almost entirely religious observances of a local character.
The most interesting exception gives a glimpse of foreign affairs;
his eighteenth year was that in which a daughter of his ‘was
raised to the ladyship of Markhashe’, the
Elamite district (Barakhshe, Warakhshe)
which had played so prominent a part in the history of the Agadean kings. But there is no information how
this alliance (if such is meant) was brought about—conquest is in
no way indicated. In all of these earlier years
tablets are still rare, and
nearly all of those extant were found at Lagash. In the
capital itself, among more than seventeen hundred tablets of this period
published from the excavations, not one is dated before the twenty-fourth
year of this reign, the same in which these become common at other centres of the administration. It may be
concluded that new regulations were issued at this time for strict
collection and control of the rev8enues and outgoings, and this is also
attested by a date-formula (probably of the twenty-first year) which records
that the king, by divine commandment, set in order the registry of lands
belonging to the supreme god of Nippur and his consort. From care of this
real estate the same rigour of book-keeping
extended into all other branches of revenue, expenditure, and temple-business,
and henceforth the accounting was so multifarious and minute that even
single articles or heads of cattle and temporary lists were consigned
to tablets, large or (mostly) small, of excellent quality and
writing. Such ‘business documents of the Third Dynasty’ are now by
far the most numerous in modern collections of cuneiform tablets.
While it is not
possible to explain, for want of evidence, why this increased activity should
have been postponed, much contrary to usage, until almost half-way through a
long reign, it seems clear that the new fiscal control from the
twenty-first year of Shulgi was imposed as a mobilization of
resources to support a policy of expansion. The twentieth year was named
as that when ‘the men of Ur were sworn in as archers’, and the
twenty-fourth carries the record of the first foreign conquest. This
campaign set the direction for all that were to follow, as moves in
the neverending struggle against the
mountain-peoples of the north and east. Its objective, or at least its
conquest, on this occasion was a place called Karakhar, as yet unlocated, but its occurrence
in company with other localities, attacked in subsequent
campaigns, makes it certain that all of these are to be found in
southern Kurdistan, among the troublesome neighbours or
the elusive victims of later Assyrian kings. Some fixed points determine
the general situation of all; Urbilum,
captured in later expeditions of Shulgi and of his Son, is the
town called by the Assyrians Arba'ilu and
now Irbil, in the plain between the two Zab rivers. Another
place, Simurrum, has been sought in the neighbourhood of Altin Kopru on the Lesser Zab, or to the south of this,
being a neighbour to the land of Lullubum, which lay in the district of Sulaimaniyyah, as indicated by the rock-reliefs of Naram-Sin; and finally the town of Shashrum,
conquered by Shulgi and by his son, may with sufficient confidence be
found at the place called in the following age Shusharra and
now bearing the little-altered name of Shemshara,
an ancient mound ‘on the right bank of the Lesser Zab, eight kilometres south-east of Rania and five kilometres west of Darband-i Ramkan (Sungasur Gorge)’.
Other towns
listed as destroyed in the unremitting wars of Shulgi and his son in
this region are Kimash and Khumurti, named with Madqa,
from which Gudea had obtained
asphalt, and therefore likely to be near the places associated with the
present petroleum industry; and Kharshi, which
seems to be identified by a seal-inscription as near Tuz Khurmatli, on the 'Adhaim river. Although the suggestion that Shashrum was an older form of the name of Ashur
itself has now been superseded by the discoveries at Shusharra (Shemshara),
noticed above, it is evident that so much concern with the
immediately neighbouring lands of the later
Assyrian kingdom implied control of the Assyrian territory itself by the
kings of Ur, and there is direct witness of this. From Ashur itself comes
a stone tablet dedicated by Zariqum,
calling himself governor of Ashur, ‘for the life of Amar-Sin the mighty,
king of Ur, king of the four regions’, whereby it is certain that Ashur
was a vassal-city of Ur under its next king. Hardly less clear is the
testimony of certain stone figures found in the excavations there; a
headless statue and a relief, perhaps also a female figure, are in a style
which assigns them to the Third Dynasty. More recently the aforesaid
discovery of written documents at Shemshara has
revealed how the rule of these neighbouring lands
passed naturally to Assyria itself when a powerful kingdom had been established
there following upon the collapse of Ur under the flood of West Semitic
immigration, and how the troubles of controlling the borderlands
with their alien and unruly inhabitants were then transferred to
the new overlords.
Compared with the
almost boundless conquests achieved by, or at least attributed to, the greatest
kings of Agade, these wars of the Ur Dynasty may appear local, but they
were far from being mere jars with neighbours,
although perhaps waged as much with the ultimate purpose of defence as of acquisition. The theatre of war was
at a mean distance of 400 miles from Ur, by the road up the east bank of
the Tigris, rendered difficult by the successive tributaries to be crossed
and by the nature of the ground. Reason enough for these repeated
expeditions of Shulgi and of his sons, in which the same places may
be ‘destroyed’ as often as ‘nine times’, may be found in the opponents,
among whom still appear the Gutians,
unreconciled to banishment from their long supremacy. But these were only
one of several peoples having in common the
character of hardy mountaineers, difficult to encounter, and inhabiting towns
and villages of simple construction, easily restored after the retirement of
each punitive expedition—such troublesome neighbours have
continued to pose a problem unsolved by a succession of governments
in Mesopotamia even down to the present day. At this time a
fresh element of unrest was making its presence felt—the people
called Hurrians, first discernible in the period of Agade, were now gathering
strength in the north-east, and a number of individuals with names characteristic of this nation appear in the tablets
of the Third Dynasty. As yet it seems that they
were still mostly confined to the lands east of the Tigris, and that the
spread of their population to northern Mesopotamia and Syria took
place in the succeeding generations. One of their homes was
the oft-stricken Simurrum, and it was
perhaps there that Shulgi captured a persistent enemy, Tappa-darakh, as the omens recorded; it is almost the only
detail preserved concerning the wars of Shulgi.
More to the south,
and despite the nominal rule of an Elamite king of Simashki,
the ascendancy of Shulgi over the settled land of Susiana, with
its appendages to the east and north, was well established, and what can
be discerned of his policy there is described in the next chapter. From
the north-west of Babylonia, the region of the Euphrates, there is
virtually no news, and peace seems mostly to have been kept. A slight
allusion to Mari and Rapiqum appears in a
fragmentary letter to the king, there is one mention of ‘booty from Amurru’ towards the end of his reign, and not long
beforehand two of the date-formulae appointed were ‘year’ [and ‘year
after’] ‘the wall of the land was built’. Nothing, however, is known of
the location or purpose of this defence,
but it might be at least supposed a predecessor of Shu-Sin’s wall against
western invaders, so that Shulgi may have found in his later
years a necessity to hold this other front while his main strength was
employed in the east. It is true that a very different picture of the
situation in this quarter is suggested by one or two isolated tablets
which record the delivery of single sheep to the official cattle-park from
the governors of four cities not merely of the middle and upper Euphrates
(Mari, Tuttul, and Ibla)
but of farthest Syria (Byblos itself). Two of these governors have the title
of ensi, normally given to local
officers appointed by the kings of Ur over their subject cities. But in
the total absence of supporting evidence this is not enough to
make it seem likely that the dynasty of Ur really held any effective sway in
the north-west.
The very little more that tradition has to relate about a king who was nevertheless held to be
one of the outstanding figures of the past may suggest that the want of
historical records for this period was a real omission, not a mere
accident of time. Chronicles and omens, which contribute so much to our
knowledge of the Agadean kings, do not
entirely omit Shulgi, but what they have to tell of him is jejune, unimportant, and not wholly trustworthy. He was
remembered as a builder of the Tummal at
Nippur, and he appears in two passages of the chronicles; one of these,
from a tablet found at Ashur, relates that the god Marduk ‘gave to Shulgi the son of Ur-Nammu the kingdom over the whole of the lands’,
but ‘he did not fulfil the ordinances, he defiled its ritual, and his sin
(was grievous)’. In this passage, apart from the neglect of Ur-Nammu as king, the ignoring of everything but the
election by Marduk and the forfeiture
because of impiety betrays not only the bigotry but perhaps also the
ignorance of the compiler. His preoccupation makes it certain that the
Ashur chronicle was a copy of a Babylonian original, and it was
at Babylon where the other chronicle concerning Shulgi was
found. Its notice of the great king is no less trivial and
biased—he ‘cared greatly for Eridu which
is on the shore of the sea, but he sought after evil, and the possessions
of E-sagil and of Babylon he brought forth
sacrilegiously’. The care for Eridu, as a
rival seat of the god Ea, may have seemed
to this partial scribe almost as criminal as the plunder of Marduk’s temple, and it is possible that Shulgi did
in fact despoil Babylon. A like accusation against Sargon reveals the same
distortion in this writer’s view of history, and his allegations are the more
improbable or irrelevant as Babylon was not, in the days either of
Sargon or of Shulgi, a place of much importance, though it did receive a
royal appointee as governor in the latter years of Shulgi. One or two
quite insignificant references in omen-texts, and the beginning of an alleged
self-description, are all that we have from later generations concerning
one of the greatest kings; unless indications are deceptive, not very much
more was long remembered.
But at least until
the succeeding age—the Old Babylonian period—Shulgi remained a conspicuous
figure in the scribal schools, where two kinds of literary texts
concerning him were studied and freely copied by pupils. One of these was
letters, written by or to the monarch, and preserved apparently
more for their style as courtly addresses and elegant compositions
than for the importance of their contents; for most of their lines,
when addressed to the king, were occupied by reiterated salvoes
of extravagant compliment. Several of such letters belonging to
the reign of Shulgi have been identified. The best preserved are
a report from Ir-mu, a royal representative
abroad, and what is apparently a reply to this from the king. Ir-mu was a very important and powerful officer,
probably the one who, under the name of Ir-Nanna,
was able later to build a shrine at Lagash to the reigning king and
dedicate it with an inscription detailing his great domains and calling
himself ‘high commissioner’. In the days of Shulgi he was (if
the same) in charge of a military force and detailed to represent his king
in discussions with border chieftains. The letter of Ir-mu relates to an occasion of this kind, when the
opposite party was an independent or rebellious ruler, perhaps designated
by his own name or by a title, but not otherwise known, and having his realm in
some northern district no less vaguely called Subir (Subartu).
The envoy reports that he was received by this potentate and his court
without the becoming marks of respect, the ruler behaving in his presence
with ostentatious freedom. He was, nevertheless, entertained honourably, which did not save him from some insults
by the servants. What was the outcome of this mission does not appear. Shulgi’s answer was
discontented but ineffective—he complains that his representatives did not so
act as to compel proper deference from the opponent, and he seems to
exhort them to bear themselves more imperiously, but nothing solid can be
gathered from the empty phrases which occupy most of the letter.
The other kind of
literature, in which Shulgi is more prominent than any other king, is
the royal hymns, where he appears saluted with almost divine honours from his court-poets, or speaking of himself in a like strain. Some thirty of these hymns are still
extant, in whole or parts; amid much verbiage of extravagant eulogy
appears some light upon the personality and even upon the achievements of
their hero. The blessings of his rule and the signal favour which he received from the gods are
naturally common topics, but this favour was
bestowed not upon a stranger, however meritorious, but upon a kinsman, a
descendant himself of gods and kings; his father (i.e. ancestor)
was, he declares, the ancient demigod-king Lugalbanda,
and his mother the goddess Nin-sun, mother also of Gilgamesh, whom Shulgi therefore
freely called his ‘brother’. Going still farther, he audaciously
claimed a like relation with the Sun-god himself.
A boast which he makes of his education and literary talent might suggest
that some of these fulsome effusions of his own praise were of his own
composition. More factually, the king sometimes refers to his
military successes in terms which clearly recall the manifold
‘destruction’ of places so prominent in the date-formulae. The enemies
inhabiting these are grouped under the name of ‘Gutians’,
evidently as a general designation for the mountain-peoples, of
sinister memory. Most informative of all, though concerning a
matter more important to the king’s pride than to his history, is
the hymn which celebrates a journey made by him at wondrous speed in
the same day from Nippur to Ur and back, in defiance of a raging storm of
wind and hail. This feat was made possible not only by Shulgi’s own physical powers (described, of
course, as superhuman), but by using the roads and relay-houses
which his prudence had constructed. Such were the bubbles of
regal vanity and of hireling adulation, which were blown anew with
the old breath in many of the succeeding reigns, until a desert
orator came forward with the bare truth ‘no king is powerful by himself’.
But upon Shulgi, at least, in a period of greater consolidation, no such
verdict could have been justly pronounced.
As if literary
pre-eminence were not enough, a recently published text ascribes also to Shulgi the
title of first royal musician, traditionally claimed by David. It reckons up no
less than eight instruments upon which he was a master-performer,
including the lyre of thirty strings, and the instrument so strangely
named after the Sargonic king of Kish, Ur-Zababa.
The
half-century-long reign of Shulgi ended with his burial in a
splendidly built, and doubtless richly furnished, sepulchre at Ur,
but not a trace of his family’s remains or of their funeral pomp has
survived the disaster which was to overwhelm the last of his line.
Meanwhile, the succession of Amar-Sin (or Bur-Sin), his son, followed
without any appearance of domestic strife or revolt, in strong contrast
with the experience of the Agadean kings.
The legitimacy of the Third Dynasty was accepted by the people, and
the splendour of Shulgi’s reign
continued to adorn the nine years of his son. There was little respite in
the north-east, and the second year of the new reign received the name
‘year (when) King Amar-Sin ravaged Urbilum’,
renewing the chastisement inflicted five years before by Shulgi. Likewise the sixth and seventh years were called after
expeditions against Shashrum and some
new names in the date-lists—Khukhnuri with two
other localities perhaps to be read Bitum-rabium and Beshru, and another town called Iaprum. The first of these, Khukhnuri,
was afterwards described by Ibbi-Sin as the
‘bolt of the land of Anshan (or, Elam)’, and may perhaps therefore be
sought east of Eshnunna : others are unknown but not likely to be far away.
These are all of the incidents which appear in the dates, apart from
religious ceremonies, and the evidence of the tablets draws no very
different picture. In sundry districts and towns, even upon the eastern
frontier, commanders and governors are appointed by, and hold their office in
submission to, the king of Ur, often undisturbed from one reign to the
next. But there are signs that the empire was consolidated, even if not
extended, by Amar-Sin, for governors are found installed for the first time in
Mar-khashe, Simanum, Khamazi, and even in the newly subdued Khukhnuri. From the east and north a continual traffic
of ‘messengers’ thronged the roads into Babylonia, testifying to and
perhaps securing the peaceful condition of the realm. In this happy
situation Amar-Sin was able to devote much of his ample revenue to temples
and public edifices; he worked extensively at Nippur, where he seems to
have received some special mark of favour from
the god, which he included in his titles, but his principal activity was in
the capital itself, where several important buildings are named in the
inscriptions, and others found in the excavations have proved to be his.
Most of all, his monument was the vast temple and tower called the apsu in Eridu,
where the remains of his great structures cover the site and have been
investigated by recent excavators. Here the credit belongs to him more
than to his father, despite the beginning made by the latter and the
‘great care’ of the sacred city for which he was praised —or perhaps
blamed—by the chronicler. Later tradition knew hardly anything about Amar-Sin : as though in derision of our ignorance an omen
mocks us with the detail that he died from the ‘bite’ of a shoe,
presumably a poisoned foot. He had built on to the funerary dwelling of
his father in Ur a smaller addition with a similar plan, which also
included two vaults for the principal burials.
In regular
succession again he was followed on the throne by Shu-Sin (or Gimil-Sin), whom the king-list calls his son, but
more direct evidence establishes that he was a brother. From the date
formulae it might seem that his reign was mostly peaceful, but one of
the troublesome neighbours in the
north-east, Simanum, had to be punished in
the third year, and similarly Zabshali in the
seventh. The bare mention of these names is supplemented by the remains of
some inscriptions graven upon trophies and monuments which the victor
dedicated in Nippur. These inscriptions were copied by scribes, and
consequently something of their contents survives while the monuments have
long disappeared— just as similar copies are the source of much that is
known about the kings of Agade. Both of the campaigns figuring in the date-formulae were represented by sculptured or cast
figures. From conquered Simanum captives
were carried away and were settled in a new cantonment which the king
founded near Nippur, probably as a labour-camp
for slaves to toil upon his public works. Of Zabshali more
details are preserved from the copied inscriptions. The principal enemy was
named Indasu, called governor of Zabshali (but Ziringu,
and perhaps another, bear the same title). Together with him some ten more
princes are named, with the places over which they ruled; the monument
showed the king setting his foot upon the neck of Indasu,
followed by the other captives, each marked with his own name, and the
whole scene might be imagined not much unlike the celebrated sculpture
of Darius at Bihistan. From Zabshali and its neighbouring lands was
brought back a rich spoil of metals,1 copper, tin, bronze, but also gold, out
of which the king made a figure of himself which he set up before the
supreme god Enlil.
Despite all this,
the peace in the east was uneasy, for although Shu-Sin was able to put in his
officers as governors of Elamite cities (Urua and
Susa), and to exact the homage of a temple erected to his ‘divinity’
in Eshnunna, he found it necessary
to entrust the warding of the eastern marches to a lieutenant
with exceptional powers. For this responsibility he chose Ir-Nanna, governor of Lagash, who subsequently built
there a shrine in honour of his master,
upon the door-hinge stones of which he inscribed his titles. He was,
first, ‘high commissioner (sukkal-mah) of the king, and bore as domestic offices the governorship of
Lagash and the priesthood of the god Enki. Others of his styles are
governor (ensi) or commander (sakkana) of a number of towns and districts on the eastward frontiers, the best-known of which
are Urbilum, Khamazi,
and Karakhar, all familiar from the wars
of Shulgi, and also the Su-people
or Subarians, at that time living in the country east of the modern
Mosul, perhaps including Assyria itself, which was certainly subject in
the reign of Amar-Sin. Over this extensive lordship the exertions of Ir-Nanna, whatever they were, sufficed to keep order among or against
the petty princedoms which existed in a state of semi-independence interspersed
between the vassals of the king.
But no doubt the
weightiest reason for this appointment of a commissioner in the east was the
emergence, early in the reign of Shu-Sin, of a new danger menacing the
empire of Ur as it had the Akkadian empire under Shar-kali-sharri. The fourth official formula was ‘year (when)
the wall of Amurru was built’, and
a fuller version adds that the wall was called Muriq-Tidnim, ‘keeping
away Tidnum’, which was another name for the
tribes of western origin and the lands from which they came. A
double shadow began to fall again over Babylonia, but it could not
close in until the successor of Shu-Sin was exhausted by a long
and not unsuccessful defence. In what
circumstances the tribes attacked is quite unknown, but it seems clear
that they were defeated in battle and forced to flee by the way they came,
along the Euphrates, pursued by the royal troops who advanced
some distance upstream1—how far is not clear. The question depends largely
upon the location—whether at Hit or farther north— of a town Duddul or Tuttul; in
view of what follows the nearer seems the more likely. How slight a
confidence was inspired by this victory is shown by the decision to build
a defensive line against a fresh advance of the Amorites, a measure of
doubt, if not of despair, whether in Babylonia, in China, or in Britain,
when the limits of power are thought to have been reached, and barbarians
are to be fenced off, no longer subdued in their own haunts.
This defence for the kingdom of Shu-Sin was ominously close
to its heart. A fragmentary Sumerian letter gives some curious and
surprising particulars about the extent and location of the ‘Fender
of Tidnum’. Its writer was Sharrum-bani, probably not the same as one of that
name who had been already a citygovernor in
the reign of Amar-Sin; the receiver’s name is missing; it was not the king
himself but rather a minister, for Sharrum-bani introduces
himself as ‘expert of the committee, your servant’, that is, a member of
the board of technicians assembled by the king to plan and execute the
great work. His instructions were to take advantage of the repulse of the
Amorites and to build a wall so as to bar their
further access. The work would involve the breaching of the banks both of the Tigris and the Euphrates (perhaps to fill a
moat), but he was to take care that the breaching did not overwhelm the
fields. The earthwork began from the Apkallat canal,
and certain other intermediate points marked the line, but their names are
not adequately preserved for the most part. There is, however, a clear
statement that the (total?) length of the wall was 26 danna or beru, that is to say some 275 kilometres or
170 miles.
There are two
principal arguments which suggest that the wall ran across the country in a
region not far north-west of Baghdad.6The first is its beginning from the Apkallat canal—this name was already modified in
a later syllabary to Aplakkat, which may
be supposed the same as the Pallakottas canal
cleared by Alexander in a later age, and this stream is associated with
the town of Pallukat, generally sought in the
modern Fallujah. Secondly, the length of the wall, about 170 miles,
although much greater than the distance between the rivers at their
closest, requires that it should have been situated where they approach each
other, for the wall must have rested against some natural bastions on the
far sides of each river. For the western end the neighbourhood of the
present Lake Habbaniyah is strongly
suggested, for the eastern there is only the possibility that a ‘Fortress
before the Mountain’ (which was easily carried or outflanked by
the nomads) lay near a ridge of high ground between Fallujah and Aqarquf. If subsequent discovery is able
to confirm this siting it will be necessary to conclude that
Shu-Sin was already narrowly constricted by the twin pressures which were
finally to crush his successor. As for his great wall, it proved even more
ineffectual than such barriers have always been in the end. No more
is heard of this vast and vain work, even if, as seems likely,
it furnished a line or a foundation for similar works in later
ages. Babylonia has no natural defences,
and they were not to be provided by an artificial rampart so long that it
could have hardly been effectually garrisoned.
The reign of
Shu-Sin closed in this uneasy equilibrium, and his son Ibbi-Sin
entered upon a tenure of twenty-four years, destined to be illuminated by
flashes of glory and heroic episodes, with which the king himself may be fairly credited, though it was to close in utter
disaster. His first two years were untroubled and devoted to civil duties.
Then came a routine chastisement of Simurrum,
one of the troublesome north-eastern neighbours,
then two or three more years of peace, during which, however,
the approach of danger was signalled by
the need to repair the walls of Ur and Nippur. Chronology after this is
uncertain—more date-formulae are preserved, with much interesting
information, but no list of their order has been found. It is best,
consequently, to consider in distribution the events which the formulae
briefly indicate as occurring upon the two warlike fronts and at home.
To begin with the
east—Ibbi-Sin in his sixth year repeated the policy
of attempting to secure the fidelity of a foreign prince by a marriage-alliance, and sent his daughter Tukin-khatta-migrisha to
the ensi of Zabshali,
doubtless with as little permanent result as before. A later occasion upon
the eastern frontier was one of triumph, for in a long formula Ibbi-Sin claims that he ‘smote like a tempest
Susa, Adamdun, and the land of Awan,
subdued them in one day, and captured their ruler’. This prisoner may
be identified as one of a local dynasty which had recently occupied the
throne of a border state named Simashki. His
defeat was not severe enough to bring down the state, for a successor upon
the throne of Simashki was certainly
the wreaker of the great Elamite revenge upon the city of Ur. An ally was
found by the insurgents in the land or city of Khukhnuri,
the old opponent of Amar-Sin, for over this enemy too Ibbi-Sin boasted of a resounding victory; he calls it
‘the bolt of the land of Anshan’, and says that he smote it
‘like a tempest and a deluge’. These valiant exploits staved off calamity
for a considerable time, but it is only too clear that the successes were
far from decisive. Other allies of the Elamites, at least in the final
struggle with Ur, were the people; however these
are to be identified, they seem to have lived in more primitive communities,
not such as to suffer much from a mere burning and devastation.
Events at home
were closely bound up with those on the Euphrates front, but the defect of chronology
obscures the picture. It may be assumed that pressure on this side
was continuous, since it had first been felt before the fourth year
of Shu-Sin, but with the reign of his successor the menace
became formidable. This coincided with the emergence of a
dubious figure Ishbi-Erra, the ‘man’, that
is governor, of Mari; not, as it seems, a westerner himself but a
time-serving vassal who was able to turn the western invasion to his own
advantage. There is no doubt that the invaders had easily passed the unavailing
wall of Shu-Sin, and were already in the northern
parts of the homeland early in the reign of Ibbi-Sin.
Two models of the ominous sheep’s liver found at Mari show the fatal marks
which accompanied the loss of part of his kingdom—not so much a revolt
as detachment of his territory under Amorite lordships. Ibbi-Sin was not without his successes against these
intruders, for one of his dates celebrates a year in which ‘the Amorites,
a torrent force which from of old knew not a city, made submission’ to
him. Cowed as a vanguard may have been by this reverse the
following hordes were but little affected and evidence of the inroads
of Ishbi-Erra soon became ubiquitous. There
are tablets which contain lists of articles in gold, silver, bronze, and
copper, collected from the temple-treasuries to pay ‘the price of Isin’,
whether as a ransom for the city or to buy supplies for the capital. It is
certain that negotiations were going on between the two rulers, possibly
up to the eve of the Elamite raid which obliterated Ur and led to the
captivity of Ibbi-Sin. In the year of
triumph over Susa, Adamdun, and Awan a
tablet from Ur registers the issue of a travelling allowance to three men
described as ‘messengers of Ishbi-Erra’ and a
‘man of Isin’. By this time, therefore, Ishbi-Erra was
in possession of Isin, and the fear which he inspired is proved by
this payment to his envoys, perhaps the bearers of other unwelcome
messages.
To judge by the
cessation of documents bearing the official date-formulae of Ur, the defection
of various cities began early in the reign of Ibbi-Sin.
But Isin seems to have retained some degree of loyalty until
about the twelfth year of its nominal over-lord, after which Ishbi-Erra began using independent formulae as a
ruler in his own right. Many scraps of information about the manoeuvres of this man and other wavering vassals are
conveyed by a number of letters, very imperfectly
preserved in later school-copies. One of the more complete is from Ishbi-Erra himself, written at the time when he was
still active in the service of Ur. He had been sent, he writes, to buy
supplies of grain in the cities of Isin and Kazallu,
north-west of the capital, and had laid out the great sum of twenty
talents of silver, with which he had amassed a vast quantity of
provisions. But the invaders had broken in and were spreading everywhere,
and because of the general insecurity Ishbi-Erra had
concentrated his stores in Isin; he now had to find transport to Ur,
and his letter asked for 600 barges to be sent up for this purpose. It
ended with an encouragement to the king that he should press on with his
war against Elam, not being deterred by fears for his own country, since
(the writer assures him) there was a great surplus of provisions in hand,
and all the cities, particularly Isin and Nippur, were firmly
held by him (probably in usurpation). Ibbi-Sin’s
reply to this reveals the strait to which he had been reduced —he was
willing to pay double the cost of the grain, but he had not the barges to
send, his agent must try to find these among the northern cities. As
to Isin and Nippur, the king behoved to
grant formal confirmation of the authority which Ishbi-Erra had
already assumed.
A similar
correspondence, of which something is preserved, was going on with the governor
of Kazallu, a man who seems to have borne different names at
different periods in his career. He is once addressed, by the king,
as Puzur-Numushda, but again as Puzur-Shulgi, and in either name there is a letter from him
to the king. The alternation is significant, in that he
probably changed his name when renouncing the allegiance of Ur,
his style of Puzur-Shulgi being
official and indicative of loyalty to the empire. Further, it is of
interest that a Puzur-Shulgi, so named and
not likely to be a different person, was one of the ‘messengers’ of Ishbi-Erra to whom a viaticum was paid by Ibbi-Sin, as related above. The letter of Puzur-Shulgi (or Puzur-Numushda)
reports the successful usurpation of Ishbi-Erra,
and his attempt to add Kazallu to the cities which had already
fallen under his sway. He had sent a messenger with a summons to surrender;
the message was a mixture of boasts and promises, detailing the lands
which had already acknowledged his rule, along ‘the banks of the Tigris
and Euphrates, the Apkallat and Me-Enlil
canals, from the land Khamazi to the sea
of Magan’. To these he announced that he
would soon add Nippur and Ur itself, and would
fortify his own capital Isin. All this, writes Puzur-Shulgi,
he has already accomplished; he has seized Nippur, plundered Khamazi, installed his own nominees in Eshnunna, Kish, and elsewhere, and severely chastised those
who sought to resist. The letter ends with a despairing appeal to
a master who no longer had power to help, for Ibbi-Sin
was penned closer and closer in his own territory.
A letter from him
to the same vassal, possibly a reply to the above, throws light upon the
position in the north—reinforcements, it seems, had already been sent to Kazallu,
but had not come into action, for fear of Ishbi-Erra,
who had already begun his revolt, with so much success that (the king
bitterly concludes) he must have been elected by the gods to rule over
Sumer, despite his mean origin and alien birth. Yet Puzur-Numushda should beware—when Ishbi-Erra is master of everything he will be
unmindful of those who helped him to triumph, and will
not confirm them in the rule of their cities, as they expected. But the
hard-pressed king had not yet abandoned hope: the god Enlil (he continues)
has brought in the Amorites from their deserts, and he seems to rely also
upon alliance with Elam. Evidently the political situation was one of
sudden change, with the friends of today becoming the foes of tomorrow.
Especially surprising is it to find Ibbi-Sin,
at some moment in his reign, looking for aid to an Amorite invasion, for
it appears from other places in the letters that the beginning of disaster
for Ur had been the breaching of the ‘Amorite wall’. One extremity of this
had been the ‘Mountain’ so described in the letter of Sharrum-bani,
and this keypoint was defended by a
stronghold called ‘Fort before the Mountain’. In one of Ibbi-Sin’s letters there is a bitter complaint that the
commander of this, named Puzur-Marduk,
had by cowardice or treachery abandoned it to the enemy,
thus allowing them to turn the whole flank of the defences.
Neither the course
of events nor the final agency of the conquest which led to the downfall of Ur
can be accurately described. It was not, at least outwardly, a steady
progress of decline, but an era of vicissitude. There was a year
remembered for a natural disaster when ‘a great flood by the will of the
gods devastated the bounds of heaven and earth’, but Ibbi-Sin was still able to save his city from the
wrath of nature as from the envy of man. Other years were tranquil, and
once the king had even leisure to admire ‘a huge ape which its country
captured’ and sent to him. Upon the whole success predominated and
at last seemed secure, with victories over the Amorites and
the Elamites, and favourable signs
from the gods in heaven, when ‘for Ibbi-Sin,
king of Ur, the Moon-god his beloved rose brightly’, and even this seemed
to be outshone in a ‘year (when) the god Enlil yoked the splendour of Ibbi-Sin
upon the lands’—a plain reference to the appearance of the Yoke-Star
(Jupiter) standing in a region of the sky known as the 'way of
Enlil', accompanied with other circumstances interpreted as a
presage of triumph. But the downfall of an empire, which was in
fact portended, required a more fatal sign; an eclipse of the
moon was observed with terror by the citizens on the 14th of
the month Adar, ‘beginning in the south and ending in the
north, beginning in the first watch and ending in the last’. It bore
a message to the doomed emperor, ‘desolation of Ur, destruction of
its walls’. Even the sign of Jupiter found its true interpretation, after the
event, in one of the darkest passages of the astrologers’ books—‘if the Yoke-Star rises with its face towards the west
and looks at the face of heaven and no wind blows at all, there will be
famine, the ruler will meet the fate of Ibbi-Sin,
king of Ur, who went in bonds to Anshan’. The gods, or the stargazers, had
cruelly paltered with the people’s faith.
A reference in the
correspondence of Ibbi-Sin with his lieutenant,
described above, suggests that he may have relied at one moment upon Elamite
aid against Ishbi-Erra. In this
fragile alliance too were the people of the land of Subartu; for
the date formulae of Ishbi-Erra (which
he was certainly issuing before the fall of Ur)3relate once that ‘he smote
the man of Subartu and Elam’. The wavering passions and
faithless conduct of the actors in this many-sided drama are exposed by
another of the liver models found at Mari—‘when
the Subarians sent unto Ishbi-Erra,
but then the Subarians turned elsewhere, this (liver) was thus
disposed’. The situation was chaotic, every party fighting the other, but
rushing desperately into short-lived leagues ; Elam and Ur were equally threatened, but they had not the wisdom
to combine. Meantime, the city had come into desperate straits, and
famine prices were prevailing. Tablets found at Ur indicate the values of
oxen, sheep, barley, dates, and oil, first in terms of each other, and
then in silver, at a level of prices multiplied many times the normal for
that period, and still more exorbitantly above those which kings were
accustomed to boast or beseech for their prosperous reigns. Despite these
marks of distress the tablets detail fairly large
supplies of all these commodities, and might be taken to show that Ur had
not then, at least, sunk into the plight of Samaria, where ‘an ass’s head
was sold for fourscore pieces of silver’ before its miraculous
deliverance.
In the final
catastrophe, as all the evidence agrees, it was chiefly the peoples of the east
and north who turned upon Ur and sacked it with a ferocious thoroughness
which was never forgotten in Babylonian tradition. The perpetrators named
are the Elamites and the Subarians, to whom are added the Gutians, as the historic enemies. This national
disaster was commemorated in two poetical lamentations which, amid much
pathetic but prolix detail of ruin and longing for recovery, have some
allusions to actual or believed occurrences at the time. According to
these, devastation was by no means confined to Ur, but widespread
over much of Sumer and Akkad. The first lament has two lists
of destroyed or occupied cities, the second has one, very
much fuller. All include many cities in the south, some in the
middle of the country. It may be observed that in all of them figure Isin itself
and Nippur, while Kish, Kazallu, and Eshnunna also make
an appearance. Since these cities were respectively the capital of Ishbi-Erra and subsequent acquisitions of his, it is
not possible to regard all the places named as victims of a
single invasion from the east. To the authors of the laments, citizens
of Ur and witnesses of the collapse of its rule together with its
walls, all the cities of Sumer and Akkad were limbs of the body centred in Ur, and their disaster was one, whether
inflicted by easterners or westerners—for Tidnum too
is once numbered among the destroyers. But wherever else ruin descended it
was in the capital that the drama centred and
has left traces even until today, for the excavations have revealed
abundant evidence of plunder and devastation which no later building-up
was able to obliterate. Never again was Ur to play an important part in
history, and Ibbi-Sin became the typical figure
of an ill-starred king, remembered only for his captivity and death in a
strange land.
A praise poem of Shulgi(Culgi) (Urim=Ur)
To make his name famous for all time until distant
days, and to transmit to posterity and the days to come the praise poems of his
power, the songs of his might, and the lasting fame of his exceptional
intelligence, King Culgi, king of Urim,
has brought the songs' latent wisdom before the mighty son of Ninsumun. He praises his own power in song, and lauds his
own superior native intelligence:
I am a king, offspring begotten by a king and borne by
a queen. I, Culgi the noble, have been blessed with a favourable destiny right from the womb. When I was small, I was at the academy, where I
learned the scribal art from the tablets of Sumer and Akkad. None of the
nobles could write on clay as I could. There where people regularly went for
tutelage in the scribal art, I qualified fully in subtraction, addition,
reckoning and accounting. The fair Nanibgal, Nisaba, provided me amply with knowledge and comprehension.
I am an experienced scribe who does not neglect a thing.
When I sprang up, muscular as a young lion, galloping
like a spirited ass at full gallop, the favour of An brought me joy; to my delight Enlil spoke favourably about me, and they gave me
the sceptre because of my righteousness. I place my
foot on the neck of the foreign lands; the fame of my weapons is established as
far as the south, and my victory is established in the highlands. When I set
off for battle and strife to a place that Enlil has commanded me, I go ahead of the main body of my troops and I clear the terrain for my scouts. I have a
positive passion for weapons. Not only do I carry lance and spear, I also know how to handle slingstones with a sling. The clay
bullets, the treacherous pellets that I shoot, fly around like a violent
rainstorm. In my rage I do not let them miss.
I sow fear and confusion in the foreign land. I look
to my brother and friend, youthful Utu, as a source of divine encouragement. I, Culgi, converse with him whenever he rises over
there; he is the god who keeps a good eye on my battles. The youth Utu, beloved in the mountains, is the protective deity of
my weapons; by his words I am strengthened and made pugnacious (?). In those
battles, where weapon clashes on weapon, Utu shines on me. Thus I broke the weapons of
the highlands over my knees, and in the south placed a yoke on the neck
of Elam. I make the populations of
the rebel lands -- how could they still resist my weapons? -- scatter like
seed-grain over Sumer and Akkad.
Let me boast of what I have done. The fame of my power
is spread far and wide. My wisdom is full of subtlety. Do not my achievements
surpass all qualifications?
I stride forward in majesty, trampling endlessly
through the esparto grass and thickets, capturing elephant after elephant,
creatures of the plain; and I put an end to the heroic roaring in the plains of
the savage lion, dragon of the plains, wherever it approaches from and wherever
it is going. I do not go after them with a net, nor do I lie in wait for them
in a hide; it comes to a confrontation of strength and weapons. I do not hurl a
weapon; when I plunge a bitter-pointed lance in their throats, I do not flinch
at their roar. I am not one to retreat to my hiding-place but, as when one
warrior kills another warrior, I do everything swiftly on the open plain. In
the desert where the paths peter out, I reduce the roar at the lair to silence.
In the sheepfold and the cattle-pen, where heads are laid to rest (?), I put
the shepherd tribesmen at ease. Let no one ever at any time say about me,
"Could he really subdue them all on his own?" The number of lions
that I have dispatched with my weapons is limitless; their total is unknown.
Let me boast of what I have done. The fame of my power
is spread far and wide. My wisdom is full of subtlety. Do not my achievements
surpass all qualifications?
I am Culgi, god of manliness, the foremost of the troops.
When I stretch the bowstring on the bow, when I fit a perfect arrow to it, I
shoot the bow's arrow with the full strength of my arms. The great wild bull,
the bull of heaven, the wild cow and the bison bellow.
As they pass across the foothills of the mountains, I shoot barbed arrows at
them with my powerful strength.
As they collapse (?) on the plain, I topple them like
old towers. I make their heads plunge to the ground like crushing pestles. For
the wild asses I set no snares, dig no pits, shoot no arrows against them. But
I race after them as against my own rivals; I do not try to surround them to
kill their young, as people kill slim ass foals.
When a burly wild boar (?) is running across the
plain, I pierce its lungs with an arrow. With only one shot of mine I bring it
to the ground; no single clansman from my regiments can surpass me in archery.
I am a man with sharp eyes. When I lead the ...... of the crack troops, I know
best of all how to cast the throwstick, running as
quick as light radiating from heaven. What I hit no longer rises from its
place.
I can throw an ellag (a
weapon) as high in the air as if it is a rag. I can bring down quadrupeds lightning-quick with the sling. I, Culgi, can catch a goat
with a quick pace; nothing checks my power. ...... has been given to me.
Wherever I direct my steps, I always achieve something; when I return from the
desert, I always bring something more for her -- for Ninsumun, my own mother, I
am her son of five things, of ten things (= of everything) .
Let me boast of what I have done. The fame of my power
is spread far and wide. My wisdom is full of subtlety. Do not my achievements
surpass all qualifications?
I, the king, am the Land's most excellent fighter
against the enemy. I, Culgi, am respected for my immense bodily strength. I am mighty; nothing resists
me; I know no setbacks. My barges on the river do not sink (?) under me (alludes
to a proverb (?)) ; my teams of asses do not
collapse under me. Striding forward like my brother and friend, the youth Utu, as if with the legs of a lion, I am the good groom
of my dust-making asses that bray like lions roaring. Like that of a stallion,
my strength is unwavering during the running-race; I come first in the race,
and my knees do not get tired. I am fearless; I dance with joy. My words shall
never be forgotten. Praise for me because of my reliable judgments is on
everyone's lips.
I am a ritually pure interpreter of omens. I am the
very Nintud (creator deity) of the collections of omens. These words of
the gods are of pre-eminent value for the exact performance of hand-washing and
purification rites, for eulogy of the en priestess
or for her enthronement in the jipar, for
the choosing of the lumah and nindijir priests by sacred extispicy,
for attacking the south or for defeating the uplands, for the opening of the
emblem house, for the washing of lances in the "water of battle" (blood)
, for the taking of subtle decisions about the rebel lands. After I have
determined a sound omen through extispicy from a
white lamb and a sheep, water and flour are libated at the place of invocation.
Then, as I prepare the sheep with words of prayer, my diviner watches in
amazement like an idiot. The prepared sheep is placed at my disposal, and I
never confuse a favourable sign with an unfavourable one. I myself have a
clear intuition, and I judge by my own eyes. In the insides of just one sheep
I, the king, can find the indications for everything and everywhere.
Let me boast of what I have done. The fame of my power
is spread far and wide. My wisdom is full of subtlety. Do not my achievements
surpass all qualifications?
I, Culgi, king of Urim, have also devoted myself to the art of music. Nothing is too complicated
for me; I know the full extent of the tigi and
the adab, the perfection of the art of
music. When I fix the frets on the lute, which enraptures my heart, I never
damage its neck; I have devised rules for raising and lowering its intervals.
On the gu-uc lyre I know the
melodious tuning. I am familiar with the sa-ec and
with drumming on its musical soundbox. I can take in my hands the miritum, which ....... I know the finger technique
of the aljar and sabitum, royal creations. In the same way I can
produce sounds from the urzababitum,
the harhar, the zanaru,
the ur-gula and the dim-lu-magura. Even if they bring
to me, as one might to a skilled musician, a musical instrument that I have not
played previously, when I strike it up I make its true
sound known; I am able to handle it just like something that has been in my
hands before. Tuning, stringing, unstringing and
fastening are not beyond my skills. I do not make the reed pipe sound like a
rustic pipe, and on my own initiative I can wail a sumunca or
make a lament as well as anyone who does it regularly.
I bestow joy and gladness, and I pass my days in pomp
and splendour. But people should consider for
themselves -- it is a matter to keep in one's sights -- that at the inescapable
end of life, no one will be spared the bitter gall of the land of oppression.
But I am one who is powerful enough to trust in his own power. He who trusts in
his own exalted name may carry out great things. Why should he do less? Since
it was for my true mother Ninsumun that my mother together with her actually bore me to bestow joy and gladness, lovingly she cherished my unborn fruit. She did
not endure scandal from anyone's mouth. Before she released her little one,
this lady passed her time in my palace in the greatest joy.
Before Utu son of Ningal, I, Culgi, declare that in my long life in which I have achieved great things since
the day that my kingly destiny was determined, in my life in which everything
was richly provided in contentment, I have never lacked anything. Until the
distant future may this song bless the name of me, the king, with a life of
long days. As I am musical, as I am eloquent, I am a heavenly star of
steadfastness. It is an awe-inspiring brow that establishes palaces, just as a
peg and a measuring cord are the builders of cities. With the awesomeness that
radiates from my forehead, which I make the foreign lands wear like a
nose-rope, and the fear-inspiring lustre, my personal
weapon, which I impose on the Land like a neck-stock, I am
able to root out and undo crime. I have the ability to reconcile great matters with one word.
When I ...... like a torrent with the roar of a great
storm, in the capture of a citadel in Elam ......, I can understand what their spokesman answers. By origin I am
a son of Sumer; I am a warrior, a warrior
of Sumer. Thirdly, I can conduct a
conversation with a man from the black mountains. Fourthly, I can do service as
a translator with an Amorite, a man of the mountains ....... I myself can
correct his confused words in his own language. Fifthly, when a man of Subir yells
......, I can even distinguish the words in his language, although I am not a
fellow-citizen of his. When I provide justice in the legal cases of Sumer, I give answers in all five languages. In my palace
no one in conversation switches to another language as quickly as I do.
When I pronounce a completed verdict, it is heartily
welcomed, since I am wise and exalted in kingship. So that my consultative
assemblies, sitting together to care for the people, inspire respect in their
hearts when the chief herald sounds the horn, they should deliberate and debate;
and so that the council should decide policy properly, I have taught my
governors to deliberate and to debate. While the words at their dining tables
flow like a river, I tackle crime, so that the foundations are securely
established for my wide dominions. I vanquish a city with words as weapons, and
my wisdom keeps it subjected just as violence with burning torches would. I
have taught them the meaning of the words "I have no mother". My
words can be words smooth as the finest quality oil; I know how to cool hearts
which are hot as fire, and I know how to extinguish a mouth set on fire like a
reed-bed. I weigh my words against those of the braggart. I am a man of the
very highest standards of value. The importance of the humble is of particular value to me, and they cannot be
counter-productive to any of my activities. By command of An and by command of Enlil, prayers are said for the life of the Land and for the life of the foreign
lands, and I neither neglect them nor allow them to be interrupted.
I also know how to serve the gods, and I can cool the
hearts of the Anuna gods. I am Culgi, whose thick neck becomes fat (?) in majesty. Grand achievements that I
have accomplished which bring joy to my heart I do not cast negligently aside; therefore I give pride of place to progress. I give no
orders concerning the development of waste ground, but devote my energies to extensive building plots. I have planted trees in fields
and in agricultural land; I devote my powers to dams, ......, ditches and
canals. I try to ensure a surplus of oil and wool. Thanks to my efforts flax
and barley are of the highest quality. The thirst and hunger of the gods are a
cause of the greatest anxiety to me; I, Culgi, am the life of Sumer.
I have no equal among even the most distant rulers,
and I can also state that my deeds are great deeds. Everything is achievable by
me, the king. Since the time when Enlil gave me the direction of his numerous people in view of my wisdom, my
extraordinary power and my justice, in view of my
resolute and unforgettable words, and in view of my expertise, comparable to
that of Ictaran, in verdicts, my heart has never committed violence against even one other
king, be he an Akkadian or a son
of Sumer, or even a brute from Gutium.
I am no fool as regards the knowledge acquired since
the time that mankind was, from heaven above, set on its path: when I have
discovered tigi and zamzam hymns from past days, old ones from
ancient times, I have never declared them to be false, and have never
contradicted their contents. I have conserved these antiquities, never
abandoning them to oblivion. Wherever the tigi and
the zamzam sounded, I have recovered
all that knowledge, and I have had those cir-gida songs
brilliantly performed in my own good house. So that they should never fall into
disuse, I have added them to the singers' repertoire, and thereby I have set
the heart of the Land on fire and aflame.
Whatever is acquired is destined to be lost. What
mortal has ever reached the heavens? At some time in the distant future, a man
of Enlil may arise, and if he is
a just king, like myself, then let my odes, prayers and learned songs about my
heroic courage and expeditions follow that king in his good palace. He should
take to heart the benefit that has been conferred on him; he should exalt the
power of my odes, absorb the exuberance of my songs, and value highly my great
wisdom. Just as a strong person can consider on an equal basis even those
things which he has not brought about by his own efforts, let him applaud and
welcome my achievements. Let him call upon my good name.
But if his heart devises treason against me, and he
commits violence against anything of mine, may Nanna then adjudicate against this rebel, and let Utu the torch catch him. Wherever that king's path
may lead, his word shall be wiped out. Until he has completed the days of his
life, he shall do everything in his power to keep the hymns in their proper
form. Through becoming familiar thereby with me, the king, he will speak of me
in awed amazement. Because of my extraordinary wisdom and my ancient fame as a
master, he should choose my hymns as examples, and himself beget heavenly
writings.
In the south, in Urim, I caused a House of the Wisdom of Nisaba to spring up in sacrosanct ground for the
writing of my hymns; up country in Nibru I established another. May the scribe be on duty there and transcribe
with his hand the prayers which I instituted in the E-kur; and may the
singer perform, reciting from the text. The academies are never to be altered;
the places of learning shall never cease to exist. This and this only is now my accumulated knowledge! The collected words of all
the hymns that are in my honour supersede all other
formulations. By An, Enlil, Utu and Inana, it is no lie --
it is true!
Furthermore no one will assert under oath that to this
day there is any mention in my inscriptions of a single city that I have not
devastated, or wall that I have not demolished, or land that I have not made
tremble like a reed hut, or praise that I have not completely verified. Why
should a singer put them in hymns? An eminent example deserves eternal fame.
What is the use of writing lies without truth? For me, the king, the singer has
recorded my exploits in songs about the strength of the protective deity of my
power; my songs are unforgettable, and my words shall not fall into oblivion. I
am the best king of the Land. From the very first origins until the full
flourishing of mankind, there will never be any king who can measure himself
against my achievements whom An will let wear his crown or wield his sceptre from a royal throne.
I am gifted with power, insight and wisdom. The high point of my great deeds is the culling of lions before the
lance as if they were garden weeds, the snapping of fierce felines like reeds
as if under the carding-comb, and the crushing (?) of their throats under the
axe as if they were dogs. Great powerful wild cows, indomitable bulls, cattle
on their way to their mountain pastures, which were killed in the plain, were
...... the mountains. That the hills were impenetrable and inaccessible ......
-- those are pure lies. Where, in important words on tablets, my wisdom and my power
He who knows, and does not
...... the truth about me as lies, will applaud and praise me.
I am a warrior whose might is enormous might. I
am Culgi, whose shadow lies over the mountain lands. I am the king, the weapon and the downfall of rebel lands. Thus I have spread far and wide my everlasting renown.
Now, I swear by Utu on this very day -- and my younger brothers shall be witnesses of it
in foreign lands where the sons of Sumer are not known, where people do not have the use of paved (?) roads,
where they have no access to the written word -- that the firstborn son is a
fashioner of words, a composer of songs, a composer of words, and that they
will recite my songs as heavenly writings, and that they will bow down before
my words as a ......
For that house, I am the right man to step over the
threshold. I am the man whose name has been chosen by Nanna. I am the steward of Enlil's temple, the domestic slave of An. I am Culgi, and my house E-hursaj is the palace of palaces. My royal residence is above all praise; I
made it tower up like a lapis-lazuli mountain. Inana, the queen of the gods, the protective deity of
my power, has perfected the songs of my might -- the foremost among kings -- in
respect of everything in the whole world. It is good to praise me. Praise be
to Nisaba.
II.
THE KING AND HIS OFFICERS
The attempt made
in the preceding pages to follow the fortunes of the Third Dynasty of Ur has
met at every turn a tantalizing want of information due to the singular
unwillingness of the age to record even the triumphs, much less the
failures, of its kings. For the internal conditions of the land at this time there is, on the contrary, a wealth of
documentation which is hardly less embarrassing; it is copious beyond measure,
and yet is very one-sided. The ‘business-documents’ of this dynasty, which
are ubiquitous in all collections of tablets, begin to be abundant with
the expansion of conquest in the middle years of Shulgi. Visibly under
the impulse of the king himself a most meticulous system of bookkeeping
was instituted, and since this clerking was consigned to admirably made
tablets in a fine clear style of writing, we are now in possession of
ample records, from five of the main centres of the
kingdom, concerning administration of temple or royal properties, ranging in
contents from digests of accounts over a period of time to half-a-dozen lines registering the receipt of a goat. The impression
produced by this soulless industry is that of a rigid bureaucracy, a
system highly congenial to the Sumerian mind and having its roots deep in
their past. The ‘scribe’ is everywhere, busily employed in the presence of
almost as many overseers and checkers, without whom not the slightest
affair can be transacted.
Over these again
stood greater officers, such as the managers of the temple workshops or the
city governors or the stewards of the temples who administered the whole
of their estates and activities. Above all of them, at the apex of the
pyramid, was the king himself. It has already been observed that his was
the impulse which set in motion this formidable accounting machinery, and
there is evidence that Shulgi was himself the inspirer of more
efficient methods of business, for he rearranged the calendar, set up a
bureau of standards, and issued accurate weights which were preserved and
imitated to the latest days of Babylonian history. Far more than this, the
king was the principal contributor to the wealth and offerings of the temples,
the head to whom all officials owed their appointments, and he
is individually acknowledged as master of all these underlings
upon their seals, a few of which are engraved with the image of the
king upon the seat and in the attitude of a god, making a
presentation of an office and a special mark of favour to
the owner of the seal, which itself bears a statement that it was conferred
by the king.
A superior rank
among his servants was held by the governors of provinces and cities, with the
titles of sakkana or ensi, and it is in their position that we may
best understand the assumption of divinity by the kings of the Third
Dynasty. There is some reason to believe that the revival at this period
of the old Sumerian ideas was strict (in reaction against the Gutian oppression), and one of the most
deep-seated of these had been the representation of the city-god in earthly affairs by his agent, the ensi. In the older centuries of the Sumerian
states interference by the lugal, even
in such important matters as the personality of the governor, seems to have
been limited, he being content with formal
acknowledgement and possibly some payment of tribute and service. But the
formation of a great empire by the kings of Agade had put an end to this
easy condition, and the constant unrest of the Sumerian cities under their
rule had obliged them to take care that only men well-affected towards themselves
were placed in positions of control there. The king had thus openly
assumed the function of a god, and a god he must become. In the dynasty
of Agade this need must already have been sensible, and no doubt
the vast accession of power and width of sway won by such a
mighty figure as Naram-Sin helped to make
him appear superhuman.
In the Third
Dynasty of Ur this assumption of divinity coincided similarly with the great
expansion in the middle years of Shulgi. Vainglory and popular
superstition supported it, but it may also have been deemed a necessary
measure of policy to justify the otherwise inadmissible appointment of an
earthly governor by another human. There is, indeed, one example of
a governor (ensi) who was himself
deified, presumably upon the sole account of his achievements, but this
must be regarded as anomalous and perhaps merely a piece of flattery.
These new-minted gods caused to be set aside or built for them their
own temple in each city, receiving the daily provision and
special allowances for their images. Thus they
lived among their people and upon their own estates and set their own
stewards to manage their properties; in short, they fulfilled the
strictest ideas of human life and divine government. As there could not
well be two masters in a house, it may be supposed that they often tended
to dispossess the older patron-deities of their privileges ; it has
been noticed above that a city governor is found to have taken the
king’s name to the exclusion of the old god of his city, and to have
been ready to lay it aside when the power of Ur was visibly doomed.
The other side to
this conception of the royal office was the necessity of doing right, of
‘shepherding’ the people under their charge, or committed to the rule of
an agent with a like responsibility. At the outset of this period is found the
beginning of legal regulation in Babylonia. What the state of formal
justice was under the old Sumerian rulers of the Early Dynastic age
we have little ability to judge. But the language and proceedings of Urukagina certainly suggest that the ensi of that time was regarded as so entirely the
god’s representative that justice was administered by him under his ‘contract’
with the god, and thus depended upon his own sense of propriety and his
own integrity alone, so that he could, like Urukagina,
quite alter custom and rule, if it seemed to him unjust, and would have
the full authority of the god to do so. But now, again, the king had
become in an effective measure the local god of each city and found
himself thereby obliged to let his will be known in more precise
terms, which would apply to an area far wider than one city.
Few Sumerian laws survive which are or may be of Third Dynasty date,
but it is significant that, in the closely sequent period, compiling of
‘codes’ of law was undertaken by several kings, that of Hammurabi being
not unique, but only the first known and the best preserved. This
widespread activity does no more than create a supposition that the ideas
of fixed law and regular justice were realized in the preceding dynasty,
but there is much more positive evidence. Among the multifarious tablets
of administration more than 150, mostly from Lagash, form a special
class concerned with proceedings and decisions of the law-courts in cases
of family transactions, debts, purchases, and criminal offences. These
proceedings were heard occasionally before the king himself, but more
often by city-governors or members of an order of judges, many of whom,
residents in Lagash, are named in the tablets.
III.
ECONOMY AND WEALTH
To give any
sufficient description of the economic system over which the king thus reigned
supreme is hardly yet possible, in spite of the
superabundant material of one kind offered by the business documents—and
indeed also because of this superabundance. For although very large numbers of
these tablets have been published perhaps as many more are known to
be extant, and to resolve their endless details into a
comprehensive picture of the whole society is a task which only the future
and perhaps the application of techniques now evolving can expect
to master. How these records were kept is partly revealed by
clay dockets attached to the boxes or jars which contained various
classes. Upon these labels were inscribed the container to which they belonged,
the kind of records which it contained, and the date-formula; from the
second entry it is possible to summarize the principal orders of accounts
which were kept. The simplest were the single lists or mere notes of
commodities received and issued. These details were digested and summarized and a kind of balance struck in the larger
tablets called ‘reckonings’, which totalled the
receipts and outlays over periods of time.
The two other
principal classes of documents, according to the container-tickets, and
according to the surviving material, were the offering lists, detailing
the food and treasures offered to the gods upon ordinary and special days;
these tablets yield incidentally much information about the divine ‘inhabitants’
of the temples, their daily life and service, the religious calendar
of the months and years, even the topography and furnishings of
the various buildings in which the cult was performed. Most interesting of
all, perhaps, are the tablets called ‘inspections’ which survey the
stocks, personnel, output, expenses, and work in hand of the large
workshops which were maintained by the temples to supply their own needs
and probably to furnish a quota to the court, even perhaps to
sell in the market, but there is little evidence about the disposal of the
produce. Wool, dates, and onions seem also to have been distributed in
part under a like system. It may be supposed that the surplus produce of
the temple estates and manufactories was also put on sale in this
way to private consumers.
It has already
been said that the abundant evidence of business activity in this period is
mostly confined to the temple economy, which covered so many undertakings
that it may be considered as no inadequate index of the general economy of
the land. But it has the disadvantage that no reliable notion is given of
the extent and importance of private property. Just as before, in
the old Sumerian period, the accident of the preponderance of
one kind of record only has perhaps distorted our view of the
affairs and even the polity of that time, so the Third Dynasty
appears in its business documents as too exclusively a world of officials
and serfs, between whom the private citizen is scarcely visible. Yet among the
endless lists there appear ‘contracts’, using already the form and many of
the clauses found in the more numerous deeds of the succeeding age, and
letter-requisitions (but these are probably official). A book of legal
phrases, in Sumerian and Akkadian, which in its extant version
belongs mostly to the succeeding period, yet takes some of its formulae out of clauses already exemplified in the
private deeds of the Ur dynasty. From both of these sources it may be learnt that property in slaves and houses was bought,
sold, and exchanged, though most land, perhaps, belonged to temples and
certainly most of the accounts concerning it, including surveys of
estates, are records of its cultivation and produce for the profit of
these corporations. Borrowing of commodities is also a
prominent article in these documents, and there is no proof that the
borrowing was always from the temple stores. Among the objects of dealing
in this form were cattle, birds, metals, bricks, reeds, and especially
wool, an item in the life of the land hardly less important than cereals.
Grain, dates, and silver were loaned at interest, the time of due
repayment, often after the harvest, being specified, guarantees of payment
given, penalties fixed for non-fulfilment, an oath required by the life of
the king, and the deed was concluded with names of witnesses and notary and the
official date. Such tablets were produced as proof in the courts of law.
From this description it will be clear that the general form of the Old
Babylonian ‘contracts’ had already been moulded in
the preceding age.
A factor in the
economy of the Third Dynasty which cannot be overlooked because it is so
prominent in the account-tablets was the raising of large and small
cattle, and the great numbers of these which were maintained prove in
their turn the fertility of the soil and the abundance of the
grain-crops. Apart from a religious text glorifying the Moon-god of Ur, which professes to reckon the number of his cows
only in multiples of 36,000, there is the more factual evidence of the constant
motion of flocks and herds in and out of a central cattle-park, ‘The House
of Puzrish-Dagan’, near Nippur, at the site now
called Drehem. Lists register, similarly, the quantities
of barley and bran fed to animals upon a sheep-run near Lagash; it appears that
in one month there was maintained a stock of over 22,000 sheep, nearly a
thousand cows, and still more of other meat cattle; in three months fodder
was provided for over 50,000 sheep and 1500 oxen, and this was but one of
many such stations. If anything like a comprehensive figure could be
reckoned for the whole country it would, on this proportion, be massive.
Another necessity which employed a great many hands was the grinding of
the grain crops; this was largely a female occupation but in some places women were outnumbered by men, and always helped
by children. A typical account of one mill which employed about forty
hands gives a register of the names of all workers, the kind of work they
were doing, and their output, and it shows that their wage accounts were
made up daily, these wages being in kind, consisting of the primary
articles of diet, barley, beer, and oil, some of which it was permissible
to forego in one kind so as to have more of another.
Wool working was
the other principal occupation of women and girls, though again not to the
exclusion of men. The kinds of wool used, the operations performed,
the colouring, and the cloths manufactured
and made into garments give rise to a wealth of technical terms which can
hardly be interpreted in detail. The wool-workers and tailors were, in the capital at least, but one department of a great
manufactory, of which we possess comprehensive surveys. One such establishment
comprised no less than eight workshops; apart from the clothiers there
were (1) carpenters and joiners who turned out furniture (tables,
chairs, boxes, shrines, and cabinets) as well as constructional
work, (2) carvers of wood and ivory, who decorated this furniture
with inlaid work, and made small figures, (3) smiths, of precious
and base metals, with whose work was closely associated that of
(4) the jewellers, who produced all kinds
of little figures and ornaments and often enriched with gold mounts the beads
and other miniature products of (5) the cutters and engravers of gems
and semi-precious stones. The last two shops were occupied by (6)
the leather workers and (7) those who used reeds and bitumen
for making mats and baskets and for waterproofing the seams of boats.
IV.
FOREIGNERS FROM THE EAST
The foregoing
sketch of the economy which reigned in southern Babylonia under the Third
Dynasty of Ur gives a measure of the contrast between its wealth and the
primitive condition of its neighbours.
Babylonian caravans and ships had travelled near and far in search of the
primary resources needed to support this complex civilization,
and had brought back as associates or slaves inhabitants of the
foreign lands, some of whom remained to make a career or at least a living
for themselves in the empire, while others returned to inflame their ruder
countrymen with tales of the riches to be plundered if ever the strong man
armed grew weak. Even while guard was fully maintained the population
of Babylonia was unequally affected by peaceful immigration
of foreigners from the two directions, north-east and
north-west, which had never ceased to pour their bolder spirits into
the wealthy plain, favoured by the
lack of natural boundaries to keep them out. This inflow was no doubt
continuous and mostly unnoticed, producing a turmoil only when it
became too violent.
In this period the
accession from the eastern frontier is noticeable chiefly in the names of a
people, using neither the Sumerian nor the Akkadian language, who, whatever
they may have called themselves, are now most often known as Hurrians,
a name certainly used by themselves afterwards in their own
documents; they were the ‘Horites’ of the Old Testament. This people was to form, in later centuries, a distinct and
powerful nation under their own kings, but for a long time after their
first appearance they are found only as individuals. That first appearance
may be placed under the Dynasty of Agade, when a few names more or less certainly identified with this people are
borne by local rulers, some said to have been conquered by Naram-Sin.
The geographical
position of their kingdoms (Karakhar, Markhashe, Simurrum, Tukrish, to which other names can be added
subsequently— Shashrum, Simanum, Urbilum), although only a few of these have been definitely located, was in most cases within that
area which was the persistent enemy of the kings of Ur, bounded
by the Tigris, the Diyala, and the
mountains to the east. Only two most ancient surviving monuments, has been
sought as far west as the tributaries of the Khabur.
Continual
hostilities did not prevent inhabitants of these lands beyond the Tigris from
moving more and more frequently into Babylonia, so that in the tablets of
the Third Dynasty is found a quotum of
Hurrian names, most of them, it is true, still dwelling in their home-lands east of the Tigris, where men of this
stock are mentioned as governors of cities. But in Babylonia itself
there is a sprinkling of these names, some borne even by minor
officials who soon showed the thoroughness of their assimilation
by giving, in certain instances, Akkadian names to their sons.
If these foreigners cannot be said to have introduced a serious
or disturbing factor into the life of Babylonia, even less
noticeable was the admixture of another eastern race, the people
called Su, the Shubaru or Subarians. These tribesmen, against
whom one of the campaigns of Sargon had been directed, were also
originally inhabitants of a district east of the Tigris, but seem to have spread themselves widely at an early period over North
Mesopotamia, whither the Hurrians were to follow them in the
years after the end of the Third Dynasty. Indeed, these two
peoples were so alike in origin and destiny that their difference has
been argued mainly upon dissimilarity of names. There was little difference
in the status of their immigrants, who came for the most part as menials
or even slaves, occasionally made their way upwards in the society which
adopted them, and in either case sank unperceived into the mass.
V.
THE AMORITE INVASION
Far different was
the effect of a much more weighty migration from the
north-west, bringing in those forces which were to aid in subverting the
kingdom of Ibbi-Sin and, after a
second conflict, to expel the Elamites and set up new kingdoms
with most of the old traditions in the Babylonian homeland. In
the reign of Shu-Sin began an inflow of those western Semites
who were called martu or amurru, Amorites, propelled down the valley of the
Euphrates by indefinable forces. Neither the name nor, essentially, the
people were new; as well as the occurrence of individuals in the older
tablets, references to their barbarous character were put even into
stories about Lugalbanda and Enmerkar, old kings of legend in the First Dynasty of Uruk, but these are perhaps anachronous. Equally
uncertain is a ‘Khuwaruwash king of Amurri’ in a Hittite version of the revolt of
seventeen kings against Naram-Sin. As a menace
to Babylonia they first appear in the reign of Shar-kali-sharri, who defeated them at Basar,
when the double threat from east and west was hanging over him, as later
over Ibbi-Sin. Little more is heard of this
people until the reign of Shu-Sin, when they came in force upon the
north-western quarter of Babylonia and not only compelled the withdrawal
of the power of Ur from whatever it held in Syria but could be checked
from actual invasion only by the desperate expedient of building the
‘Western Wall’.
These intruders
were regarded with distaste by the native Babylonians, who looked upon them as
barbarians, had many scornful things to say about their manner of life,
and even regarded their territorial god Amurru as
a crude nomad who had not so much as a house when he came towards the
civilized districts and had to be provided with a decent establishment
and a wife before he could be admitted to the divine society. Yet
this hostility was almost more of a class than of a national
feeling; these Semites were not of the same tribes nor even of the
same language among themselves, and none of them were utterly
alien to the society of the great southern cities, which already
contained as ordinary citizens a large admixture of Semitic
immigrants, who differed from the newcomers only in being assimilated
to the predominantly Sumerian civilization. Infiltration from
the Syrian steppe to the alluvium was, in truth, an unceasing
process, which caused no alarm, and even had its advantages, when it
was gradual. But when circumstances, always invisible to us, quickened
this flow, as at the times of the Akkadian and afterwards the Amorite
invasion, the immigrants seized power by their very weight and provoked an
indignant reaction which took on the unreal appearance of a national
resistance. In turn these strangers themselves were assimilated and though
they modified they never could have transformed the society which had striven
to reject them. It was possible to speak of driving out Gutians, but after a comparatively few years who could
have found the Akkadians or the Amorites, to cast these out from the land
where they had ceased to be distinguishable?
The Amorite
invasion evidently had all of these characteristics; there is no doubt that
‘Amorites’, that is, men of Syrian origin, were always entering Akkad and
Sumer between the days of Shar-kali-sharri and
of Shu-Sin. These are not always distinguishable in written records, for they
bore (or assumed) names common to the land where they came to sojourn. On
entering the country they were recruited as
soldiers or as a menial class of ‘coolies’, some having been brought in as
slaves, and it is these, no doubt, who are sometimes shown upon monuments
wearing a peculiar short dress and occupied in lowly tasks. ‘Amorite’ was
indeed a designation signifying ‘workman’ (a term which in
Babylonian ideas applied to both civil and military duties), and their
work was done in groups under their own officers, with ranks such
as ‘general’, ‘chief’, ‘lieutenant’, ‘overseer’, ‘scribe’, the
functions of which are barely definable. Though all (when distinguished particularly)
were called martu or Amorites it is
possible to trace earlier and later waves of these Syrians coming into the
south country. The earlier, beginning under the Third Dynasty of
Ur, is marked by a set of names characterized by the ending -anum; a later, which followed
after the rise of Ishbi-Erra, had names
of a very distinctive cast, which are the earliest representatives of
what is now called the West-Semitic dialect. Despite the
extraordinary limitation of a material confined to a mere set of names,
with no other literature, it is beyond doubt that a real difference was
found between the language of these newcomers and those both
of the Semitic-speaking Babylonians and of previous western
immigrants. The clearest indication is the verbal form of the third person
which began with ia-, whereas
Akkadian used the form beginning with i-.
In addition the West-Semitic names contain both
ordinary words and special divinities which were unknown to Akkadian and
peculiar to the language (that is, the names) of this people.
With this
criterion it is possible to discern that the forces which contributed to the
overthrow of Ur were somewhat in advance of the tribes with West-Semitic
speech. The kings of Isin bore Akkadian names, but the founder of the
kingdom at Larsa was Naplanum, whose
name was of the older ‘Amorite’ style first found under the Dynasty of Ur.
West-Semitic
names come into Larsa with the later kings Abisare and Sumuel,
then, with the establishment of a third parallel dynasty at
Babylon, about the same time as these, West-Semitic names appear at
once in the royal family and become common in the documents
of private business. The evidence, given its limitations, is thus
fairly clear; at a point of time before half-way through the dynasties of Isin and Larsa a
new wave of Syrian invaders, with a characteristic dialect, appeared in
southern Babylonia where, although unable to subvert the established if
inglorious kings who nominally divided the land, they conquered several
cities and finally set up, at a place almost unknown before, a third
kingdom which was eventually to devour the survivor of the other two. At
about the same time men of this stock were found ruling in Kish
and Sippar, in the neighbouring land
east of the Tigris, and up the Euphrates at least as far as Mari.
VI.
CHANGE IN ART
The long-sustained
infiltration, sometimes the inrush, of foreign elements and the resultant
change in the population is clearly marked for us by its effect upon the
representational arts of the country. The period of the Third Dynasty of
Ur and of the succeeding, mainly Amorite, kingdoms is still not very
well supplied with surviving artistic productions, even after the
more recent discoveries both in the capital city and at certain
outlying places such as Mari and Eshnunna.
It is now evident that stone sculptures continued to be produced in all
the principal centres at a high level
of technical ability, both in relief and in the round, though our evidence
suggests that the latter was the more in favour.
The most important monument executed in relief was the great stele of Ur-Nammu at Ur. This work appears to have been, when
complete, a vividly descriptive presentation of all the episodes attending
that king’s building of the Moon-god’s temple at Ur, of which imposing
remains are still to be seen. Both the religious preliminaries and the actual
operations were depicted in detail, so that the whole, had it survived,
would have been the best illustration we could have of contemporary life.
The most striking
difference it shows from the style of the Early Dynastic and Agade periods is
in the costume of the principal figures. This dress first comes to notice
in the statues of Gudea; it is a wide
shawl, with fringed edges, draped round the body and thrown over the left
shoulder (leaving the right arm and shoulder bare), with one of the
corners tucked into the first fold of the garment and another edge of the
shawl supported over the left arm. The material seems to be of smooth
texture and is sharply distinguished from the shaggy fleece-like robe worn
by the earlier Sumerian figures—this is now reserved for gods.
No longer is there, in the figures of this time, the preponderance
of shaven heads which marks the style of the earlier ages. Again it is the heads of Gudea which
lead the change of fashion; one, perhaps two, of these are still shaven,
but the rest wear a kind of turban with an exaggeratedly thick band made
of some fabric which displays symmetrical tufts or curls. The same form
of head-dress continues in the Ur and Amorite dynasties as a close fitting cap with a less bulky bandage; in the
case of a bronze figure from Mari this cap is garnished with horns to mark
the ‘divine’ nature of the wearer.
Another difference
in the sculpture is the apparent preference for harder stones. Once more the
change comes in with the statues of Gudea.
It was made possible by an increasing access to, or at least exploitation
of, foreign supplies, such as Gudea describes.
Something may be due also to improved methods of stone-working, but of
this there is no clear evidence. The statues themselves are undoubtedly
much better rendered, and beginning from
the Gudea figures the level remains
generally high. Among the Gudeas there
are indeed some markedly inferior, especially in the fault of a squat appearance,
a lack of proportion being accentuated by shortness or even absence of the
neck. Under the Amorite dynasties the costume remains much as it was under
the kings of Ur, save that there is an increasing tendency to decoration;
the robe is more richly ornamented, and the beards are fancifully dressed.
These characteristics are particularly noticed upon examples of the more
provincial art which come from Ashur, Mari, or Eshnunna.
Two beautiful little female heads found at Ur give an indication of what the
capital made and might have yielded if the Elamite sack had not been so
thorough.
A still more
notable change was in the style of the cylinder seals which, in fact,
underwent two alterations within the periods of Ur and of the Amorites. The
first was the more complete, for it meant turning away entirely from the
highly varied, closely packed, narrative themes of the Agade period and
reducing the device almost to a bare uniformity of subject. This produced
the familiar ‘introduction scene’, in which three figures only
are essential, and occasionally there are less. It can hardly
be doubted that the centralizing effort of royal policy brought
about the imposition of this style. Most of the surviving seals
and impressions are those of officials in various ranks, with whom
the expression of individual piety, or interest in the scene, gave
place to the need for an act of homage to the king or the local
governor, that is, the inscription became paramount. In a few of the
Third Dynasty seals the royal prescription of the device is
peculiarly apparent; these examples actually portray the king in the dress and attitude of the gods (except perhaps for the
horns) seated on the throne in the god’s usual place, and receiving, like
him, the owner of the seal, sometimes with his advocate. The
monarch tenders to his worshipper a small vial, and the inscription
declares that the king ‘has presented to him’ (this seal), no doubt
along with his office, a prerogative which, in certain cases, he
seemed to have usurped from the god himself.
The second change
began to come into the seals under the dynasties of Isin and Larsa, but was not in full vigour until
about the middle of the First Dynasty of Babylon. The
‘introduction scene’ continued to be the common device and the individuality to
depend mainly upon the inscription, but most often now the god was
standing, not seated, and there is a preponderance of western
weather-gods, Amurru or Adad. The escorting
deity now hardly ever takes the owner by the hand, but is generally a goddess and stands beside the owner, holding up hands in
prayer for him. Yet whatever the fresh elements of the population
may have been able to effect in altering certain styles of art,
the remarkable absorptive power of the old Sumerian civilization
was still impressively demonstrated. Barbarian leaders began
almost instantly to play the traditional part of kings, to adopt language,
expression, and modes of thinking accepted from their
Sumerian predecessors, while the subjects, though they introduced no
small changes in the social and economic structure of the
country, adopted with equal rapidity and thoroughness a city life
under gods and kings, conformed with the general pattern of
their physical and cultural environment, and produced articles of
use, devotion, and luxury little different in their various kinds
from the traditional types. It cannot be observed that any new art
was invented or any old one discarded by the Amorite kingdoms,
if compared with the Early Dynastic cities of Sumer. Indeed, in a few
details such as the reintroduction of clay cones1 and bronze figures as
bearers of foundation records, this age went back to the customs of its
remoter forerunners.
VII.
SUCCESSORS OF THE UR DYNASTY
After the few
stirring years when Ishbi-Erra was engaged
in war and intrigue against the last king of Ur, and then in a
struggle with his Elamite associates from whom he finally wrested
the devastated city, his reign, of thirty-three years in all, was
devoted to the defence of his capital
and his territories by the building of fortifications, to the discharge of
his religious functions as king, and to the forming of widespread
commercial relations—with cities of the Upper Euphrates, the eastern lands
of Karakhar and Simurrum (old
enemies of the Third Dynasty), and even with overseas Tilmun. He had no scruple (though he had
several competitors) in assuming, while the empire of Ur yet
subsisted, the divine designation9 and also the
title of universal dominion, and he plainly regarded himself and his city
of Isin as the legitimate successors of Ur in the old Sumerian
tradition of struggle for the ‘kingship’. Accordingly, it is this dynasty
which concludes the Sumerian king-list, and the obvious attention given
to its compilation at this time, bringing down the tale of succession from
‘the Flood’ to the present, evinces the ambition of Isin11 to claim a
supremacy as of right amid circumstances which were far from assenting to
it.
Even while Ishbi-Erra was struggling to free himself from the
failing grasp of Ur, similar local potentates, former vassals of the
empire or newcomers, were active in setting up ‘kingdoms’ for themselves
in their own cities and as much of the neighbouring territories
as they could control. Almost at the same time as Ishbi-Erra arose
a parallel founder of a dynasty at Larsa, one Naplanum,
of whom nothing more is known than what can be inferred from the form of
his name—he was the first of the immigrant Amorites to make himself a
ruler in Babylonia. East of the Tigris, and thus farther removed from the
old seat of power, rulers at Eshnunna and also at Der, not far away, set themselves up as
‘gods’, as royal benefactors, as independent rulers, and even as
conquerors. In the following generations appeared yet others, including
that which was finally to absorb them all—a veritable ‘heptarchy’ (if the
number be taken no more strictly in Old Babylonian than in Old English
history), more or less flourishing within limits
much narrower than the recent dominions of Ur, and little exceeding the
old homeland of Sumer and Akkad.
Amid this growing
confusion the parallel dynasties of Isin and Larsa settled
down as best they could to divide a limited realm which they ruled long
but uneventfully. That they could thus subsist for about two centuries
less than a hundred miles apart without more than occasional jars simply
proves their weakness. Nearly all that is known of these obscure kings has to be gathered from date-formulae of their years,
incompletely preserved and sometimes lacking a fixed arrangement. Their
few inscriptions are limited to building-records, and in later tradition
there is nothing but a slight anecdote concerning the succession of
a ‘gardener’ Enlil-bani, to his master Erra-imitti on the throne of Isin. Even the
date-formulae mostly concern religious occasions, thus leaving their age
one of the dimmest in Babylonian history. But it is hardly probable that
more evidence would have much to reveal about the unenterprising figures
who occupied the twin thrones of Isin and Larsa for so
many years. Each of the cities could boast one ruler of some distinction, but
their achievements were different and although their reigns partly coincided,
neither city challenged the other.
A recently-published Sumerian text has revealed an important
incident in the broils of cities during these rather uneventful years. The
city of Larsa was attacked and reduced to great
straits (described in very conventional language) by an uncertain
enemy, perhaps the Babylonians. The inscription was set up by
King Sin-iddinam, the sixth king of Larsa,
to accompany a silver statue of his father Nur-Adad, which, according
to the ideas of the times, was to address the Sun-god in the terms of the inscription. Nur-Adad, to whom the tablet ascribes a
special election by the Sun-god, waged a
victorious campaign by means of which he restored the water-supply
of Larsa and overcame the enemy. Sin-idinnam claims
for himself the rule over Ur, Larsa, Eridu, and
Lagash.
At Larsa it
was Gungunum, the fifth king, who in a reign of
twenty-seven years won a certain meed of
military glory. His arms were directed against the eastern boundary-lands;
in the king’s third year is recorded the devastation of Bashimi, a city belonging to the Elamite king, and in
the fifth year an attack was pressed home into Anshan itself. The land was
overrun and, though no more than the bare event is recorded in the date
formulae, some further details are perhaps to be gathered from an
inscription of Anum-muttabil, governor of Der,
who claimed to have smitten the heads of Anshan, Elam, Simashki, and to have conquered Warakhshe: but it is uncertain whether these
two rulers were contemporaries, and thus whether the date-formula and
the inscription relate to the same campaign. It is significant that about
this time the long line of kings who had lorded over Elam from the city
of Simashki came to an end, the last of his
line being Indattu II.
After this success
early in his reign Gungunum devoted himself
to peaceful works until his nineteenth year, when in circumstances unknown he
defeated the army of Malgium, a place on the
Elamite border, built relay-houses along his roads, as the great Shulgi had
done before him, and set in order the waterways of his realm. An event of
importance in his reign was the transfer of Ur into his authority from
that of Isin. This is, strangely, not recorded in any date-formula,
and has been revealed only by inscriptions found at Ur; why the transfer
was made, and by what process, warlike or peaceful, is unknown. An ancient
and especially sacred institution at Ur was the office of high-priestess to the
Moon-god, which was always held by daughters or
sisters of reigning monarchs. Ishme-Dagan,
fourth king of Isin, had accordingly dedicated his own daughter, who took
the sacerdotal name of Enannatum, after a
pattern prescribed by custom. In several inscriptions this lady calls
herself only ‘child of Ishme-Dagan, king of
Sumer and Akkad’, but in three she invokes blessings upon the life of ‘Gungunum, mighty man, king of Ur’, whereby it appears
not only that Gungunum had taken over the
charge of Ur from the king of Isin, but that he had, out of scruple
or perhaps by agreement, allowed the daughter and nominee of the former
masters of the city to remain undisturbed, in return for an overt
expression of her homage. This transfer, unexplained and only indirectly
attested, took place under Lipit-Ishtar,
himself the most considerable figure of his line after its founder.
The glory of Lipit-Ishtar sprang from a work of peace notable rather for
what still remains of it than for any unique quality
it had in its own age. In a date-formula at the outset of his
reign, and in various inscriptions, he refers with pride to his
having ‘made righteousness’ in Sumer and Akkad. The phrase
employed, both Sumerian and Akkadian, became almost a hall-mark of the Old Babylonian kings from Ishme-Dagan
of Isin downwards, and was often embroidered with other phrases
announcing in high but vague terms the reforms and justice which the ruler
had bestowed upon his land—the tradition of these goes back to
the beginning of the Third Dynasty and even, in the earlier
period, to Urukagina. There is ample
evidence to prove that the immediate significance of the phrase was a
cancellation of charges upon certain classes or individuals arising out of
social conditions or out of specific contracts; a typical example is the
clause in a later enactment (of the Babylonian king Ammisaduqa) decreeing that all inhabitants of certain
cities and lands in the king’s dominions who had been compelled by debt to sell
themselves or their families into slavery should be forthwith released and
restored to freedom, ‘since the king has made righteousness for the
land’. Either in connexion with such
proclamations or later in their reigns a number
of kings issued ‘codes’ of laws, as best exemplified in the celebrated ‘Code of
Hammurabi’, generally garnished with a prologue and an epilogue setting forth
the king’s services to the gods and to men, and embodying those rules and
principles of conduct which he ordered to be observed and was prepared
to enforce. These were by no means always changes, for much of each
‘code’ appears in the others, so far as their preservation allows of a judgement,
but they aimed to demonstrate their authors' attachment to justice, as
opinion at the time conceived it.
Some later
material bearing upon the ‘righteousness’ (mesarum)
decreed by kings has now been obtained; there is a new edict of King Samsuiluna of Babylon and discussions by J.
J. Finkelstein and J. Klima. The laws of Lipit-Ishtar
have also received a probable accession.
The laws of Lipit-Ishtar, so far as they are preserved, are written in
Sumerian; it is possible that an Akkadian version was also published. The
existing provisions, all from the latter part of the document, treat a
variety of civil causes—hire of boats, care of orchards, regulations
concerning slaves, possession of a house, family laws concerning marriage
and inheritance, nearly all of which have more or less
close analogies with the better-known laws of Hammurabi, nearly a
century and a half later in date. Even more markedly is this the case with
the laws of Eshnunna, large extracts of which
have recently been recovered; it has been reckoned that the substance of
about three-quarters of these reappears in the Hammurabi ‘Code’, and the
rest are concerned with similar subjects. The date of these laws,
which are written in Akkadian, is not certain—the extant copies seem to
be of about the time of Dadusha, a contemporary
of Hammurabi himself, but their composition may go back to the age of the
earlier legislator, Lipit-Ishtar.
Eshnunna was
not the least among the powers contending for mastery or at least independence
in these centuries of division. Like many other cities it had broken away
in the last days of the Ur Dynasty and proclaimed its own kings, only to
fall later under the precarious sway of Isin. Emerging gradually from
this, in proportion as the grasp of Isin loosened, Eshnunna was to have its years of glory under
three kings, Naram-Sin, Dadusha,
and Ibalpiel II, whose reigns occupied the
century ending with Hammurabi. The first of
these even made himself for a while king of Assyria, and all three were
prominent in the affairs of Upper Mesopotamia, the last of them being
directly concerned in putting an end to the Assyrian rule in Mari, and attaining a height of power such that he
could at one moment be reckoned the equal both of Hammurabi and of
Rim-Sin. But fortune declared for Hammurabi, and in rapid succession
both Larsa and Eshnunna fell
before him. Being somewhat out of the direct path of the invaders, Eshnunna had no West-Semitic names of kings until
the end of their line; on the contrary, its faith in the old tradition is
testified by the Sumerian names Ur-Ninmar and Ur-Ningizzida borne by two of its earlier kings.
A like resistance,
however unavailing, to the all-pervasive inflow of the tribes is still better
attested at Uruk, the very kernel of Sumerian
culture, which also makes its appearance in this ‘heptarchy’. Not only did
two of its kings similarly bear Sumerian names, Anam and Irdanene, but the former, when he repaired the city
wall, recalled with patriotic pride that it was an ‘ancient work of the
divine Gilgamesh’. The anxiety of these kings to rescue their city and its
treasured values from the enveloping flood of tribesmen, whose aid they
nevertheless did not scruple to call in against their local enemies, is
exposed by a curiously prolix and embarrassed letter, mingling
explanations, excuses, appeals, and protests, which Anam addressed to Sin-muballit of
Babylon, the father of Hammurabi. Not unexpectedly in view of the
West-Semitic names among his predecessors, Sin-muballit is
addressed as the acknowledged ruler of bedawin tribes called Amnan-Iakhrur and Iamutbal,
which had established themselves mainly in the neighbourhood of
Sippar and in a district east of the Middle Tigris. It is in singular
contrast with the deep distrust of the nomads manifested by Anam in his letter that Sin-kashid,
the first of this line of kings at Uruk, took
pride in his title as chief of the Amnan.
The purpose, in fact, of this oddly rambling screed is to justify and to
maintain Anam’s refusal to admit into
his city the tribal auxiliaries sent by Sin-muballit as a
military reinforcement, almost certainly against Rim-Sin of Larsa,
although no enemy is named. It appears also from the letter that ever
since the early days of the dynasties at Babylon and Uruk, when Sabium and
Sin-kashid were kings, there had been
continual co-operation (as there was also a marriage alliance) between the
two kindred families. But the Babylonian branch had later, as it seems, taken
over the headship of the tribes, for Anam appeals
to a friendship only once interrupted in the past, and protests his
loyalty in the present. Since the letter was found at Uruk it was evidently not despatched, and may perhaps be regarded as a draft for an actual missive which
should be better considered and kept more to the point.
After seven kings
each had reigned at Isin and Larsa in a mutual forbearance
which they durst not violate, their impotence was exposed by the setting
up of a third power within an even shorter distance on the other side
of Isin. At Babylon, which herewith comes for the first time into
history as a capital city, the Amorites founded a dynasty which
established itself without effective opposition from either of the
constituted kings. Absence of hostility from Larsa is partly
explained by names of the two contemporary kings, Abisare and Sumuel, which show that the Amorites had gained a
footing at the same moment in that older seat of power. Isin itself,
since the reign of Lipit-Ishtar,
was probably no longer formidable, and the kings, both of Babylon and
of Larsa, were then more preoccupied by a danger from the town
of Kazallu, where a turbulent character named Iakhzirel continued
to give trouble for several years, notwithstanding the defeats which the
armies of Babylon and of Larsa are alleged by the date-formulae
to have inflicted upon him.
Thus the three major dynasties which now divided
Sumer and Akkad included by no means all the independent rulers of
that day. Petty kings set themselves up in cities hard by the
greater seats of power and were little molested by these. At about the same
time as Sumuabum possessed himself of
Babylon other Amorite chiefs were ruling over Kish, only a short distance
away, others were at Sippar, a related line has been noticed at Uruk, others again at Marad,
and elsewhere, all of them revealed by no more than a few date-formulae or
by their names in oaths ratifying private contracts. As an epitome of its
age may be viewed the inscription which Ashduni-arim,
a minor potentate otherwise unknown but calling himself king of Kish, has
left written upon appropriately diminutive clay cones which sort
ludicrously with the pompous language in which his achievements are set
forth. The four regions of the world (no less) were at enmity with him,
and he fought for eight years until his army was reduced to three hundred men.
But the gods of Kish came to his aid; he took provisions, went out a full
day’s march, and in forty days he subdued the hostile land. Then he
repaired the wall of Kish and of another place and put in order two
canals. The success was real, but only among dwarfs could so small
a figure boast himself a giant.
VIII.
INTERVENTION FROM ABROAD
When the gaze is
lifted to a wider horizon than Sumer and Akkad alone still other faces are seen
bearing in upon that centre. Withdrawal of the
power of Ur had left in fragments the whole of the world once under its
sway, and some of these fragments had coalesced into powers now able to
exercise considerable influence in the opposite direction. The greatest of
these was certainly Subartu, a land which had been in various conflict
with Sumerian and Akkadian rulers since the Early Dynastic period.
Though its limits are always hard to define there can be no doubt that
it included, at this time, the city and land of Ashur, or that
its rulers, whatever the extent of their authority, may be
identified with the early kings of Assyria, known both by their own inscriptions and
from their inclusion in the royal lists of that country. One of
these, Ilushuma, who lived in the generation
before Sumuabum, founder of the First Dynasty of
Babylon, and uses the old title islak of
the god Ashur, has left two inscriptions in which, after relating his
continuance with building the temple of Ishtar, he adds that he
established the immunity of Akkad, specifying as recipients of his benefit
the cities of Ur and Nippur in Sumer together with Awal, Kismar, and Der of the god Sataran in
the lands east of the Tigris. These he decreed to be in the same status as
Ashur with respect to freedom from taxation, for this is the meaning of
the term he employs. If he imagined these arrangements were likely to be long-enduring he was much deceived. There is no record
from the south which gives any hint of this Assyrian incursion, nor of the
king at whose expense it was made. Despite the suggestion of permanence, it
can have been no more than a raid, and the six next successors of Ilushuma, although there were powerful kings among them,
did not again interfere in the affairs of Sumer and Akkad.
Nearly a hundred
years after this a new dynasty was founded in Assyria by Shamshi-Adad, the greatest figure of his
generation, who was to exercise upon the politics of Babylonia an
influence which far outmatched any of the principalities established
there. His own inscriptions claim the control of ‘the land between the Tigris
and Euphrates’, and boast the tribute of the kings
of Tukrish and the ‘upper land’, districts
to the east of Assyria. Far wider conquests in the west are announced not
only by himself but by much other evidence. The history of his origin and
of his reign does not belong to this place, but he seems to have
been a freebooter chief who had in his earlier days been obliged
to escape into Babylonia before a danger which threatened
him, evidently from the reigning king of Assyria. After certain years of
exile strength or opportunity allowed him to re-enter Assyria with forces
sufficient to depose the reigning king and raise himself to a throne which
he occupied for thirty-three years. That he afterwards interposed strongly
in the affairs of Babylonia is not directly attested, but one who wielded
decisive power in two of the neighbouring states
must have largely controlled the fortunes of the south itself in the
period of native decline before a limited supremacy was achieved by
Hammurabi. The death of Shamshi-Adad is known to
have occurred after the tenth year of Hammurabi, so that his reign in Assyria
had extended back over Sin-muballit’s reign
in Babylon. But he was not paramount in the south for all this time, as is
proved by the freedom of those kingdoms to indulge in mutual strife, which
they could never have done under an effective overlord. Nevertheless it is at least probable that the early years of Hammurabi himself were
passed in a state of deference, if not subservience, to this
formidable neighbour.
The later years of
the dynasties of Isin and of Larsa coincide with the middle
years of the First Dynasty of Babylon, and thus for some sixty years they
were sharing a territory of only moderate extent, without more than
occasional collisions. The date formulae of all three cities exhibit
sporadic conflicts, both with one another and with places farther afield.
But these broils were intermittent, and not apparently of much importance,
the three being, in fact, too weak or too much subject to pressures from outside
to indulge in a struggle to the death. This became a possibility only with
a change in the ruling family at Larsa, where after the brief and
violently interrupted reign of Silli-Adad
the throne was taken by Warad-Sin, as a
nominee of his father, Kudur-Mabuk.
The advent of this
family, father and two sons, to power in Larsa and Ur is an event of
which no specific record exists. But in several inscriptions Kudur-Mabuk alludes to enemies who had done
mischief to Larsa and its Sun-temple, of which he proclaims himself
the vindicator. In one place these enemies are specified as the armies
of Kazallu and Mutiabal, and Kudur-Mabuk boasts of having expelled these from Larsa,
pursued them into Emutbal and discomfited
them, and then captured Kazallu and beaten down its wall. The
same victory is also commemorated in the second year-formula of Warad-Sin, and must therefore
have been won in the first year of his reign, preluding his
occupation of the throne. The father’s patronage in this appointment
is repeatedly attested by the son, who includes his father in
prayers for blessings to be vouchsafed in reward for his pious
foundations. Throughout all his reign, and even into that of his brother
Rim-Sin, who came to the throne twelve years later, the father’s influence was
predominant; the origin and the rise of such a commanding figure are
consequently of interest.
First, his name
itself is significant in the same sense as his father’s, whom he often
mentions, Simti-Shilkhak, for there can be
no doubt that these are Elamite : Kudur(Kutir)- is unmistakable, although -Mabuk,
which should be a divine name, is unknown, and again -Shilkhak perhaps
derives from, and certainly recalls, the king Shilkhakha,
who reigned not much before this time, and was celebrated through a long
line of Elamite dynasts. These names, consequently, leave no doubt
that both father and son had passed their lives at least on the
border of Elamite territory, and had probably assumed names in compliment
to the Elamite court. But s7econdly, in seeming opposition to this stands
a curious title ‘father of Amurru’, or ‘of Emutbal’, double both in form and content, for as well
as the geographical difference, it is also written both in Sumerian and
Akkadian. The location of Emutbal is fairly well fixed—it lay in the plains east of the Tigris
and in front of the mountains, the district traversed by the Diyala river. On the other hand, the name Amurru denoted for the Babylonians their north-west in
general, the home of those Amorites whose invasions dominated the history
of this period. The seeming contradiction must be explained by
the movement, probably a generation before, of the Amorite tribe Iamutbal which, instead of following the Euphrates
downstream, had crossed the steppe and settled in
the east-Tigris land, where their chiefs had accepted some kind of
vassalage to the Eparti kings of Elam. It
was, therefore, from this neighbouring chieftaincy
that the powerful tribal leader Kudur-Mabuk had
moved into the boundaries of Larsa during a period of decline, possessed himself
of the city itself, driving out an enemy in brief possession, and set up
there as kings in succession his two sons who were for a while to revive
its fortunes.
Warad-Sin has
left a number of wordy inscriptions, chiefly upon clay
cones from buildings which he repaired in Ur and Larsa, but his rule
extended over Nippur and some other minor cities as well. Perhaps the most
interesting event of his untroubled years was the appointment of his sister to
the high dignity of priestess to the Moon-god at
Ur, an office customarily reserved for the closest female relatives of
kings. The solemn occasion was registered as one of the year-formulae, a
ceremonial name Enanedu, in the form
prescribed by ancient usage, was assumed by the new abbess who later in
the reign of her second brother was able to restore her ‘convent’ at Ur
with funds provided by him after his final victory over Isin. Of this
work she had composed a memorial written upon clay cones in a high-flown
Sumerian style; this was recovered and perused with satisfaction by Nabonidus in
the last years of Babylonian independence, and has lately reappeared after another twenty-five centuries.
Rim-Sin, who
succeeded his brother, must have been a young man at his accession, for not
only was he to reign sixty years but it would seem that
some natural anxiety recalled Kudur-Mabuk to
supervise his first steps in kingship, for the father’s name occurs again
in dedications by his son. This tutelage cannot have lasted long in
Rim-Sin’s reign, which began to unroll quietly enough in the company of the
rival dynasties of Isin, now in its decline, and Babylon, now
approaching the verge of its greatest days. These early years have nothing
to record but religious buildings, care of canals, and dedications of
statues representing Kudur-Mabuk, his
brother Warad-Sin and, surprisingly,
his predecessor Sin-iddinam. The first warlike
enterprise is mentioned in the date of his fourteenth year, when ‘the army
of Uruk, Isin, Babylon, Sutium, and Rapiqum,
and Irdanene, king of Uruk, were smitten with weapons’, an event related in
similar terms upon clay cones found at Ur, which add the
picturesque detail that he trod with his foot upon the head of the hostile
king of Uruk as though he had been a
serpent. This struggle was in itself no more than
characteristic of the petty warfare which had been endemic since the
strong control of Ur had disappeared, but it was nearly the end of the
local dynasty at Uruk, and it foreshadowed
the contest for supremacy with Isin and Babylon, whereas the
more distant alliance with Rapiqum and of
the Sutu nomads must have been the outcome of a temporary
political grouping.
In this fourteenth
year of Rim-Sin the last king, Damiq-ilishu, was
on the throne of Isin, and Sin-muballit recently
come to that of Babylon. The succeeding years were divided between
civil undertakings and desultory warfare in which Rim-Sin
captured several towns of little account and uncertain location; in
his twenty-first year he claims a victory, which he used
mercifully, against Uruk. At length, in his
twenty-fifth year, he appears as beginning the decisive struggle
with Isin, for he announced the capture of a ‘city (of) Damiq-ilishu’ with thousands of prisoners whom he
brought captive to Larsa and ‘established his victory for ever’.
Despite this emphatic language and the name of Damiq-ilishu it
is difficult to construe this as the capture of Isin itself, for that
triumph was not expressly claimed until five years later, and it is still
more curious that in the seventeenth year of Sin-muballit,
a year which fell between the twenty-fifth and the thirtieth year of
Rim-Sin, a capture of Isin is actually recorded by
the king of Babylon. The strange situation that a complete victory
over Isin was related on at least two and possibly
three occasions within five years, and that by two different rulers,
is not one that we can elucidate with the slight information that we have.
What is certain is that Rim-Sin upon his thirtieth year published a long
and almost lyrical date-formula to describe how ‘with the exalted weapon
of Anu, Enlil, and Enki the true shepherd Rim-Sin captured Isin,
the royal city, with every one of its inhabitants, as many as there were,
and then bestowed life upon its widespread people, and made his royal name
famous for evermore’.
Thus ended the
kingdom saved by Ishbi-Erra out of the
ruins of Ur and lost by Damiq-ilishu two
and a quarter centuries afterwards. Its fall left the
dominion to be contested by two powers, so long its rivals, Larsa and
Babylon itself. The decision was to be delayed for another thirty years,
during which Rim-Sin rested so complacently upon his laurels that he
suffered no other reckoning of time than ‘year x (after) he captured Isin’,
thereby cutting off our only supply of historical information. This royal
lethargy, however, was by no means typical of the times, for there
is massive and ever-growing testimony that the reigns of Rim-Sin, of
Hammurabi, and of his son Samsuiluna embraced
the period when literature, crafts, and all kinds of learning, true and
false, were cultivated and even created with an ardour and
achievement never matched again. Concerning these something may
be reserved for a more general survey of what is called, from
its dominant figure, the age of Hammurabi.
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