READING HALLTHE DOORS OF WISDOM |
THE ASSYRIAN EMPIRE. TABLE OF CONTENTSCHAPTER IV
THE AGE OF ASHURBANIPAL
THE prince whom Esarhaddon had appointed as his
successor, Ashurbanipal (669—626 B.C.), had received an education which
rendered him conversant with the science and letters of his age without
neglecting the instruction in the chase and in warfare considered necessary for
one of royal birth. His particular pride was his mastery of the art of
tablet-writing (tup-sharruti), under
which term is to be understood literary composition as well as the technical
knowledge required for the writing of cuneiform; and that his boast of this
accomplishment was justified is well known from the two magnificent libraries
collected by him at Nineveh. Former princes—Sargon for example—had gathered
texts together; but Ashurbanipal did more than this. From a colophon on some few
tablets from the libraries it is clear that some texts were read to him for his
approval; and it is not fanciful to find in the splendid series of historical
records of the earlier part of his reign the work of the king himself. His
interest in art also was as personal as had been Sennacherib’s; in his palace
were discovered the reliefs which will always remain the finest examples of
Assyrian art. For modern students ‘the age of Ashurbanipal’ marks a definite
stage in the history of culture, and the modern term as rightly links that king’s
name with his of Augustus.
It is impossible, may always be impossible, to
appreciate justly this culture, largely because Assyrian cities have revealed
to the excavator little but architectural remains and records written in
cuneiform. The objects handled daily by this ancient people, whether of metal
or wood or clay, as well as the rare and magnificent treasures once stored in
their temples and palaces, have survived only in a few cases; so that, instead
of the convincing testimony of the material object, recourse must be had to the
laborious reconstruction of a civilization from the written word. Such a
reconstruction is sure to be incomplete, and sometimes incorrect. Thus it is
usual to assume that social and political organization in Babylon and Assyria
were closely parallel, largely because the details learnt from the study of the
one land have been used to complete our knowledge of the other; yet more recent
research shows that the two countries were probably as distinct as Greece and
Rome. The object of the following account of the Assyrian civilization is
partly to explain, partly to justify, the ascendancy the nation won and held in
Media, Mesopotamia, Syria, and Palestine.
I.
ASSYRIAN RELIGION
A race like the Assyrians, living in a land without
great natural advantages, condemned by their geographical position to constant
struggles with animals and men, as well as with adverse incidents due to
natural causes, is likely to hold gloomy views of the supernatural powers, and
at the same time to be fanatically devoted to the practice of religion. To such
a people, devils and evil spirits will seem to lurk in every desert place, and
to hide in every dark corner, and it is not surprising that whole series of
charms and incantations against all kinds of devils, against the utukku and the rabisu, the lilitu and
the labartu, have been found. The
priests who were entrusted with the task of exorcizing such demons had above
all to discover the particular kind of demon with whom they had to deal. But
the knowledge of the demon’s name was not always attainable, and then recourse
must be had to the recital of the name of every possible kind of demon. As a prevention against the entry of such demons into a child
or man, charms were worn, of various kinds. Demoniacal human heads, or
monstrous animal forms, made in clay and metal, were suspended round the neck,
on the principle that like averts like. Inscribed stone tablets, with seven
magical words seven times repeated, with a cabalistic significance, were
especially efficacious; and these tablets sometimes bore in relief
representations of a labartu suckling
her animal brood. It is unnecessary to linger on the details of these popular
superstitions; they resemble the superstitions of all subsequent ages, and are
exactly the same as those of Babylonia. It is, however, curious to note that
while the existence of witchcraft and black magic is well attested, the only
texts remaining are exorcisms; it is indeed scarcely to be expected that a test
enlightening us as to the procedure of a witch will ever be found.
The Assyrian, much like his modern successors in the
Tigris valley, had no taste for deductive reasoning. The mere fact that one
event succeeded another led him to believe the first event to be a cause. This
credulity, combined with great industry in observation, and infinite patience
in arranging the material, led to the collection of great series of ‘Omens,’ in
which the result of every kind of possible and impossible event was stated, and
the method of avoiding evil results prescribed. The baru, or ‘seer,’ the class of priest specially concerned with the
science of ‘omens,’ occupied a peculiarly important place in Assyrian religion,
and while much of the literature concerned with astronomical and terrestrial
observations was derived from foreign sources, especially Babylonia, a number
of the texts were actually compiled in Assyria. This pseudo-science was not
without its value in the ancient world; to it was due the habit of careful
observation, both in astronomy and medicine, and from these great collections
of observed facts real knowledge sprang, with which Greek and Roman writers
were familiar.
The basis of Assyrian religion is shown by the popular
superstitions to be fear; and that fear was not relieved, as amongst some other
peoples, by the play of sprightly fancy. It is consonant with this that the
personal relation of the individual to his gods finds expression in the
confession of sin, wittingly or unwittingly committed. The sin may be a ritual
or a moral sin; in either case the result is equally disastrous. The confession
of sin, accompanied by a prayer for release from the consequence of the sin,
was not, so far as is known, connected with a do ut abeas formula. The great gods were benevolent and beneficent,
and reliance might be placed on their mercy. A distinctively Assyrian, as
opposed to Babylonian, theology concerning the great gods does not seem to have
existed save in one particular. The place occupied in the Babylonian pantheon
by Marduk belonged in the northern kingdom to Ashur. In the Assyrian version of
the Creation Epic recently found, Ashur was the hero of the great gods in their
war against Tiamat. Ashur descended into the underworld after Zu stole the
‘tablet of ordinances’, and was resurrected. ‘Ashur’ and ‘Marduk’ are possibly
epithets of one and the same god, used in distant ages by different tribes, in
which case Ashur existed long before his people came to the city of Ashur. Most
authorities, however, believe him to have been originally the local god of that
city. Such matters must necessarily be obscure, but there are certain features
of Ashur which show that in some respects Assyrian religion was independent of
Babylonian influence, and must therefore be mentioned here.
The peculiar symbol of Ashur was the winged disk,
within which the god himself is depicted leading his people in battle or
investing his chosen with authority. Ashur was thus never represented simply as
a human being with certain divine attributes, like the Babylonian deities. The
Assyrian army carried the divine symbol in battle, preferably in the chariot of
the king himself, and set it up in conquered cities to be worshipped by the new
subjects. Opposition to the Assyrian overlord or rebellion against him was
considered by Ashur’s people as sin against the supreme god; and it may be that
the extreme cruelty of this people, which, in truth, consists rather in the
frankness with which savage punishments are recapitulated than in the
punishments themselves, as compared with those of other nations and periods,
was due to the gloomy religious fanaticism which seems to have been natural to
them.
The expiation of sin against the national god could
only be accomplished by ritual ceremonies; and though the texts make no mention
of such rites when detailing the slaughter of prisoners, it is clear from a
bas-relief from the palace of Ashur-Nasir-Pal at Kalakh that such were
performed after a victory. On the relief referred to, there is a scene depicted
in which captives are brought before a priest, so marked by the stole he wears
across his left shoulder; he stands at the entrance of a tent which serves
certain religious purposes, as is clear from the two goats which adorn its
poles. In the upper register, representing by an artistic convention the
background, an Assyrian soldier may be seen leading away two captives clad in
lions’ heads and skins; that they are being led away to the slaughter is clear,
for immediately adjoining this scene soldiers may be seen displaying the heads
of their victims to the musicians and bowmen. The prisoners being dressed up in
animal hides in this way, and the presence of the priest, point unmistakably to
the conclusion that their execution was a religious ceremony. These facts serve
to show the nature of Ashur; he was a solar god, peculiar to the Assyrian
nation, leading and directing the nation, especially the king, in peace and
war, inspiring the soldiery by his presence, and exacting divine vengeance on the
enemies of his people. It is not difficult to understand why Ashur never gained
willing adherents among other nationalities. It should be remembered, however,
that when the Zoroastrian religion prevailed in the land which had once been
Ashur’s, the symbol of the god still remained to testify to his former glory;
for that symbol was adopted to represent the great and good Ahuramazda, and,
together with the symbol rites and ceremonies once connected with the worship
of Ashur, must have passed into the Zoroastrian faith.
The conquered provinces on which the worship of Ashur
was imposed must have recognized in him a counterpart of the Baalim they
themselves acknowledged; the religious difficulties with which Seleucid and
Roman rulers in Syria were faced never troubled the Assyrians. It is probable
that a bare tree trunk, ornamented with green branches and bound with metal
collars, played an important part in the Ashur cult; and this so closely
resembles the asherah worshipped in Syria, that apparently no dangerous alterations in local
cults had to be undertaken. The acknowledgment of the supremacy of Ashur could
then be easily imposed; for the same reason it was a
supremacy entirely dependent on the military accomplishments of his
people, and disappeared immediately once their arms failed to hold the field.
The Assyrians would seem to have been more gloomy and
fanatical in their religious beliefs than the Babylonians, and their consequent
fierceness and cruelty proved invaluable in enabling them to gain and keep
possession of lands which have throughout all history been reduced to order by
means of violence only. At the same time the fact that their national god was,
in essentials, similar to the gods of the peoples whom they had to govern
enabled them to impose on their subjects with the more ease a worship which did
not interfere with ancient rites. When their subjects were greatly inferior in
civilization, as in the northeastern and eastern provinces, the religion of
Ashur in certain respects made so great an impression that certain rites and
symbols connected with it actually persisted for many centuries after the god
himself was forgotten.
II.
THE ASSYRIAN STATE
It appears useless to attempt to explain Assyrian
supremacy on geographical grounds, since the Assyrian people occupied a part of
the Tigris valley not specially distinguished from any
other except perhaps by certain military disadvantages. The essential difference
between Assyria and the kingdoms which fell to the rank of tributaries in the
empire is to be found in the constitution of the Assyrian state. From the
earliest times, it would seem, the Assyrians formed a
nation, not a congeries of city states, or tribal districts. The land of Ashur
could be ruled by one king only; the district governors were his officers and
servants. There was one institution above all which prevented the district
governors from striving to set themselves up as independent kings, that of the
office known as limmu. The limmu was the eponym official of the
year; it is probable that the year was named after him in virtue of the fact
that he conducted the religious ceremonies at the Nisan festival. At Babylon,
it was the king himself who ‘took the hands of Bel,’ that is, he led Marduk out
in his triumphal procession, after submitting to a ceremony in which he was
yearly re-chosen and re-invested by the god. In Assyria the king performed this
ceremony in his second year or as soon as military necessities allowed;
thereafter the officers who were district governors performed the ceremony in
the order of their importance. It is clear that such an institution must have
great significance in supporting a central, national authority. Thus the limmu
official who immediately followed the king was the turtanu, the commander-in-chief, and governor of the district of
Harran. No one could be governor of Harran unless he were limmu the year after the king; no one
could be limmu in that year unless he
were the turtanu nominated by the
king. For the years 856—752 the names of five turtans are known, partially accounting for 100 years, and in no
case does a son succeed his father. In this way the central authority of the
king must have been much more efficient than that exercised, for example, by a
king of Babylon, for in that country the district officials conducted the
religious ceremonies of the New Year in their own capitals and held office by
hereditary right. In the home province of Ashur, indeed, the succession of son
to father, in Babylonian fashion, is attested, in one case for four
generations, but even here it was the exception rather than the rule.
Throughout Assyrian history the prominent men in Assyria were the king’s
personal attendants. The ill-advised attempt to abrogate the rotation of the
limmu office by Ashur-Nirari IV was soon seen to be a mistake, and the
institution remained in force until the fall of the empire.
In this unity of the Assyrian people, centred about
the king, is to be sought the origin of Assyrian supremacy. In the time of
Tukulti-Ninurta II, Ashur-Nasir-Pal and Shalmaneser III the state organization
was still elementary; but their conquests necessitated an extension of the
king’s authority, and the invention of new political terms which should meet
the needs of their imperial designs. In their time, in addition to the king’s
natural subjects, the people of the Assyrian lands, three other kinds of
subjects are found. Firstly, the tributary peoples, bound to pay a fixed amount
of goods yearly, were much in the same position as tributary peoples had
always been. Secondly, certain tributary peoples were bound to respect the
king’s authority by the installation of an official in their own princes’
palaces, the zabil kuduri, who
attended to the exaction not only of tribute but of forced labour. Thirdly,
certain cities were reduced to a state of complete subjection by the presence
of a governor, shaknu or urasu, whose word was law. These
governors were themselves responsible to one of the great district governors.
The only change in this administrative system
introduced in later times consisted in a division of the great territorial
districts into smaller administrative areas. Thus the home province of Ashur
was divided into two, Ashur and Ekallate. These smaller areas were termed pakhati, a term borrowed apparently from
Babylonia, where these smaller administrative districts had long been
established. The governor of the new area is indifferently termed bel pakhati, the lord of the district,
or shaknu, a term belonging
originally to the ruler of the older territories. These district governors were
supported by deputies, amelu shanu, burgomasters, khazanu, and other
civil and military officers. The government of each of these areas was, in
fact, in the Sargonid period, a replica of the Assyrian government in
miniature; the total effect of the change must have been to secure a more
effective control of the detail of government in distant provinces by the
central authority. Tiglath-Pileser III was most probably the ruler who
introduced the new division, which remained in force until the fall of Assyria,
and the system is one more proof of the outstanding ability of that remarkable
man. It is unfortunate that the general terms employed in the historical
inscriptions for the various kinds of subjection to Assyrian authority do not
allow of our distinguishing in all cases the class to which a province
belonged. It is very often impossible to say whether a particular city or district
retained an independent ruler under the tutelage of an Assyrian shaknu, or whether it was entirely
subjected. The difficulty appears most clearly in the north-western provinces,
where native rulers are mentioned almost immediately after their lands had been
constituted Assyrian provinces. The careful government of the provinces is
attested not only by the letters but by such documents as the Census-lists from
Harran. Many details remain uncertain, but the Assyrian provincial government,
in certain features exactly similar to that adopted by Rome in the same
country, must be commended as a considerable development of, and advance on,
the methods of Babylonian, Egyptian and Hittite kings.
The power of the king was probably unlimited, at least
in theory; and, though none but skilful and energetic monarchs were able to
maintain Assyrian supremacy, the country was in general well governed. In
practice, however, a check upon their authority did exist, as it existed in the
case of Croesus, or the Greek tyrants. In Assyria the personal application to
the gods for guidance became, in the case of the king, a demand for direction
in affairs of national importance. Esarhaddon and Ashurbanipal were only
copying the example of their forefathers when they asked Ishtar of Arbela
whether they should set out on such and such an expedition, what the success of
certain enemies was likely to be, and whether they should nominate such an one to a certain post. The oracles of the gods thus held
a peculiar position in Assyria, even as in Greece, and it is clear that the
political effect must have been to give the aristocratic class, which alone
could hold the highest priestly offices, an indirect means of influencing
policy. Even a Sennacherib was not likely to disregard an unfavourable omen.
The institution had its use; without unduly restricting the initiative of the
leader on whom the country depended, it ensured his refraining from any
enterprise definitely disapproved of by a number of those competent to judge.
III.
ASSYRIAN SOCIETY
It is unfortunate that the only commercial and legal
documents from Assyria as yet known are concerned with members of the king’s
household. Yet even so the partial picture of Assyrian society in the Sargonid
period presented by these documents is of the greatest interest historically.
Nineveh, from the time of Sennacherib onwards, was the kind of capital such an
empire must inevitably have. Men from the far north-west jostled Medes and
Elamites in the gate of the palace; the royal scribes wrote down as best they
might in legal documents the queer words used by men of a strange tongue; and
the keepers of the royal records appended notes in Aramaic to facilitate
reference to the business documents. Indeed the policy of transplanting masses
of Aramaeans to Assyria, which Ashur-Nasir-Pal seems to have followed so
deliberately, bore remarkable fruit. An interesting letter in Aramaic
concerning political events in Babylonia found in the excavations of Kalat
Sherkat only serves as a culminating proof of the considerable extent to which
the Aramaean language was commonly employed. In such a cosmopolitan city as
Nineveh there must have been a brilliant social life concerning which it would
be idle to speculate.
It was pointed out (by C. H. W. Johns) that in all
probability the native Assyrians formed an actual minority of the inhabitants
of Nineveh; yet it is not to be doubted that many of foreign extraction were
reckoned Assyrian citizens and acquired rights as such. This may have been
secured by many means, such as intermarriage and adoption, but nothing is known
as to any law directly concerning naturalization. The great majority of the
foreigners were unquestionably slaves; but since slaves could acquire personal
property, many of them attained influential positions, as in imperial Rome. On
the other hand, Assyrians themselves must have had their heads shaved and their
ears pierced, the outward marks of slavery, for
families in reduced circumstances might sell children into slavery. The actual treatment
of slaves would appear to have been humane, but in law their position differed
in no respect from that of other chattels.
The freeman in Assyria, as in Babylonia, necessarily
belonged to one of three classes. These classes were termed the mar banuti, patricians; ummane, craftsmen; and khubshi, proletariat. The mar banuti, members of princely houses,
were the class from which the kings selected their governors, chief priests and
generals. Few in number, their privileges would yet seem to have been maintained
successfully throughout the Assyrian period. In order that this might be so,
recourse was had to more liberal measures than was usual in ancient society. It
has already been noted that ladies of the royal blood in times of great stress
occupied a ruling position in Assyria, Sammuramat, for example, and Nakia.
Similarly in the Sargonid period the king not infrequently appointed women of
the patrician class as governors. It must be remembered that the Assyrians were
not a prolific race; the average family numbered only two or three sons, even
in the lower classes, and amongst the mar
banuti the birth-rate may have been even lower. It is possible, though this
is uncertain, that the numbers of the patrician class were increased by the
king from time to time by the inclusion of successful administrators and
soldiers.
By far the greater number of the native Assyrians
belonged to the class of ummane. In this term were included all who
practised a definite profession; the banker (tamkaru) and the scribe (tupsharru)
were considered to belong to the same class as the potter (pakharu) or the carpenter (naggaru).
Difference in profession was, however, a matter of considerable importance, for
each trade had a guild organization, and quarters were set aside in every
‘royal city’ for the different professions. The organization of these guilds,
borrowed from the army, must have served several purposes. ‘The chief of ten,’
‘the chief of fifty,’ ‘the chief of a kisir’ (company or battalion), were not only responsible for the work of those under term
but were bound to see that the state dues were regularly paid. By the majority
of the ummane these dues were paid in
kind; military service, forced labour, and a payment of a portion of the
produce of their labour to the temples did not require cash payments, though
these were quite probably made by the richer among them in commutation for
personal service. The merchant who equipped and provided for a slave, whether
for military service or for labour, was himself exempt; and the city workers
must have found it simpler to pay the temple-dues in silver than in kind, but
of this we have no evidence. The complicated commercial traffic of Assyria was
very vital to the welfare of the country, and was always carefully fostered by
its kings. The caravan trade, diligently conducted by private enterprise, was
supported by the money advanced by bankers; the travelling traders, sukharu, who generally agreed to pay 25
per cent, interest on the capital borrowed, must have realized considerable
profits on their undertakings. The means of exchange in these commercial
undertakings was, in the Sargonid period, gold, silver and copper; the lead
once commonly employed had fallen into disuse for obvious reasons. The metal
(generally silver) was cast in half-shekel pieces (zuzu), as we know
from an inscription of Sennacherib, and was reckoned in two standards, that ‘of
the King’ or that ‘of Carchemish’, more commonly the latter. The fluctuations
in market prices were very considerable; successful campaigns would lead, for
instance, to a great fall in the price of slaves, horses, or camels, and a
proper investigation of economic cause and effect in these times may serve
greatly to increase our knowledge of the causes and motives of Assyrian policy.
The numbers of the craftsmen class were well
maintained by the natural method of a son succeeding his father; they were
further increased by the system of apprenticing. A lad, whether free or slave,
might be sent to a jeweller, for example, for a term of years, the jeweller
agreeing, for a certain sum, to keep him and teach him the trade during that
period. It will be seen that in many particulars the guild organization of the
Assyrian ummane corresponded to the
mediaeval craft guilds of western Europe. Unfortunately
the position of the agricultural workers of this class in Assyria is not
equally clear. Whether the majority of the farmers were in possession of their own land, or merely tenants of mar banuti, is not known. In the leases which are still extant the
terms imposed on the tenants seem hard, but Assyria was probably no less
fertile than Babylonia in Herodotus’ day, and labour was extremely cheap. It
may be assumed that there was a large and prosperous body belonging to the
class of ummane interested in
agriculture.
The political welfare of a state is dependent upon the
condition of the lowest class within its borders. The vigour of the Assyrian
state may well be adduced as evidence for the physical well-being of the
proletariat (khubshi). From this class
must have come by far the larger proportion of the Assyrian standing army, from
it too were drawn the Assyrian colonists who were scattered over the provinces.
There is little to be learnt about the situation of the khubshi from the documents still extant, but it is clear that they
had not inconsiderable rights which served to alleviate their extreme poverty.
An interesting, but fragmentary, Assyrian law, which belongs to the code drawn
up in the thirteenth or twelfth century, affords a signal example of this. It
reads:
“If a woman has been given in marriage, and the enemy capture her husband; if she have no father-in-law and
no son, she shall await her husband for two years. If during those two years
she has no sustenance, she shall go and declare it. If she be a palace-servant, her... shall provide for her, she shall work for him.
If she be... and of the plebs (khubshi)... she shall go and make the following declaration... the
judges shall accordingly ask the city magistrates that they go to a field in that
city. They shall hire the field and the house for two years, and give it to her
that she may dwell there, and they shall write a tablet for her. She shall
fulfil the two years, (then) she shall dwell with the husband she chooses. They
shall write a tablet for her, that she is a widow. If subsequently her lost
husband returns to the land, he shall take back his wife who has completed her
time of waiting (ki-i-ti), he shall not approach the sons whom she has borne to
her second husband, but the second husband shall take them”.
“The field and the house which have been given for her
sustenance for the time of waiting for a fixed sum (lit. a complete sum, i.e.
without interest), if he does not undertake forced labour for the king, he
shall pay for on the conditions they were given, and he shall take them (for
his possession). And if he does not return, but dies in another land, his field
and his house, where the king gave them, he shall give (back)”.
It is unlikely that the arrangement for the provision
for the sustenance of the poor was limited to this particular case; indeed, the
tenour of the law seems to point to a well-understood system, by which such
sustenance was a state-charge, since the king himself was the donor of the
field, and in case of the husband’s return was to be paid by forced labour or
by an agreed sum; if the husband did not return, only the relinquishment of the
house and field could be legally demanded. The local judges and magistrates
merely acted as representatives of the king’s authority. On the whole, it may
be assumed that the condition of the khubshi in Assyria was tolerable at all times, and in such prosperous times as those of
the Sargonid dynasty compared favourably with those of the lower classes in any
ancient state.
IV.
ASSYRIAN ARMY
Military success may be gained by a nation owing to
various accidents. The military genius of Alexander won the eastern world for
Greece. Sheer weight of numbers brought predominance for a century to the
Achaemenian dynasty of Persia. The religious enthusiasm of Islam won empires
east and west of Arabia. Superiority of equipment may well account for the
earlier victories of Egyptian Pharaohs in Palestine and Syria. Such explanations
cannot be given when military predominance is won by such a state as Assyria.
Not one king alone, but a series of kings asserted the superiority of the
Assyrian army over any brought to meet it. In many cases the weight of numbers
must have been opposed to the Assyrian arms; and though religious enthusiasm
and patriotic feeling doubtless played an important part in the efficiency of
the Assyrian army, another reason must be found for a predominance which lasted
so long. As to military equipment, there is abundant evidence that the
Babylonians, Syrians, Urartians and Elamites were as well armed as the
Assyrians. The secret of Assyrian, as of Roman, success in the battlefield is
to be found in the military organization of the state. In defeat, as in
victory, Assyrian military organization continued unimpaired. Long periods of
depression, in which the main sources of supply were cut off, such as that
between 1100 and 900, failed to deprive that organization of the power of
recovery; and the weakness of individual rulers, leading to civil strife, as in
the years immediately preceding the reign of Tiglath-Pileser III, did not
destroy its vitality.
During the Sargonid period it is clear that the king
had at his command two classes of soldiers; the first class consisted of men
undergoing a period of military service, the second formed the national militia.
It may be that every male was subject to a term of military service in theory:
in practice probably only those who could not afford to pay sums of money for
exemption, or supply a slave to serve for them, actually underwent the exertion
of continual training in the hunt or in military campaigns or in garrison duty.
The methods employed for prolonging service in the army are not known; but the
language employed in the letters seems to show that each governor had troops
which consisted of his personal adherents, and remained always with him. On
these troops the maintenance of the Assyrian empire depended, and if
reinforcements were needed the king sent them from his own retinue. The arms
employed by the Assyrians were chariotry, light cavalry, heavy and light
infantry, and sappers. These were organized into regular military formations
called kisri, but their exact size is
unknown; discipline was maintained by subdivisions into ‘fifties’ and ‘tens.’
There is abundant proof in the inscriptions and the reliefs that considerable
attention was paid to the science of warfare, and that in certain respects
strategy and tactics were better understood during the Assyrian period than at
any other time previous to the advent of Alexander. Campaigns were undertaken
from fortified camps, and these camps appear to have been as well contrived as
those of the Romans; in the field, the terrain to be invaded was always the
factor which determined the numbers and type of the force employed. It was
especially in siege-warfare that the Assyrians excelled. Rams for making
breaches, platforms on wheels with arrow proof defences from which to fight the
defenders, and mining methods were all freely employed; only the most cunningly
fortified cities, Jerusalem for example, or Van, could be expected to withstand
such an assault. When it is remembered that Herodotus states that the Persians
did not arrange their army according to arms but according to tribes, and that
the Greeks themselves until the third century B.C. were rarely successful in
siege-operations, the efficiency of the Assyrian standing army will be readily
appreciated.
Many campaigns fought in the Sargonid period required
the summoning of part or all of the national militia. Possibly every male
capable of bearing arms was liable to be called upon thus; in fact, it would
appear that only those who had actually served some period with the standing
army fought in these levies, since the embodiment of raw levies amongst trained
troops could only have led to confusion. For the purposes of the levy, so it
would seem, a military organization in posse existed in the craftsmen’s guilds
and amongst the officials engaged in the exaction of forced labour.
Nevertheless, some time was required to assemble the militia; and to keep it in
the field during certain months of the year was an
impossibility. As always, the disadvantages of such a system were very
considerable, yet the militia was constantly used. The rewards of military service
were probably not inconsiderable. Officers and troops were provided for by the
central government, and though we have copies of the usual complaints about
garrisons being left to starve, that provision was amply supplemented by
exactions in the immediate district. At the close of the campaign a share of
the spoil was divided among the troops, so that a single successful campaign
must often have brought greater profit to the individual than years of peace.
The efficiency of the army was backed by an
intelligence system of which we still have records. Assyrian provincial
governors and magistrates were all engaged in the important military duty of
gathering information, and not a few of the extant letters in the Kuyunjik
collection are specimens of their reports. In the home provinces the network of
defences built by a succession of kings was not neglected, and Assyria proper
was a series of well-fortified defences which would not fall into enemy hands
except after such a series of defeats as would break the military organization.
V.
ASSYRIAN LEARNING
The knowledge of the Assyrians was in every respect
based upon the knowledge of the Babylonians; there is, properly speaking, no
distinctively Assyrian ‘science’, only in some respects Assyrian developments
of Babylonian ‘science’. For general purposes it is none the less right to
speak of Assyrian ‘science’, for during the whole of the period 900—600 B.C.
the intellectual centre was the Assyrian capital, not the ancient cities of
Babylonia. During the long disastrous rule of the Kassite dynasty in the
southern land, culture had decayed; and in the welter of confusion caused by
the Aramaean and Chaldean influx the pursuit of literature, of astronomy, of
medicine, or of any of the pseudo-sciences was altogether neglected. Had it not
been for the lively search for Babylonian antiquities instituted by
Ashurbanipal, much of interest concerning the important earlier civilization of
Babylonia would still be unknown; had it not been for the work of his predecessors
in preserving and extending civilization as they knew it, the ‘science’ of the
Hammurabi period would have perished without becoming, to a large extent, the
common property of the ancient eastern world. The services of the Assyrians to
ancient culture may once again be compared with those of the Romans; accepting
in its entirety the civilization of a kindred people, they maintained it and
spread it in a manner the original creators were entirely incapable of, at a
time when a failure to do so would have considerably affected the course of
history.
In our present state of knowledge it is impossible to
define clearly the Assyrian developments, but the few details that are known
serve to show that such developments were rather due to the Assyrian gift for
arranging and systematizing than to a marked advance in thought. In astronomy,
the patient accumulation of observed phenomena was the chief task of a whole
class of officials who regularly reported direct to the king; and though the
facts thus observed were used for the pseudo-science of astrology, there can be
little doubt that much of this material was employed in the really scientific
treatises of Seleucid times. In medicine, the Assyrians possessed an extensive
vocabulary of physiological terms, studied the symptoms accompanying distinct
diseases, and had a considerable knowledge of the pharmacopoeia. The full
extent of their advance in this direction has not yet been duly recognized. In
chemistry, their interest does not seem to have carried them beyond the
practical processes commonly employed in their industries, especially in
tanning and in the making of enamels. The dyeing of cloth, certainly practised
by them, is not, to the writer’s knowledge, actually described. Some knowledge
of important first principles in the physical sciences, derived entirely from
practical experience, is implied by their engineering achievements.
Geology, as might be expected, was almost entirely
neglected; even today the inhabitants of western Asia are extremely careless of
the natural resources which lie hidden close to their hands. It is
extraordinary for instance that the Assyrian kings should have remained in
ignorance of the limestone that could be obtained at Balat until the time of
Sennacherib. Nevertheless there are extant lists which enumerate a great number
of different kinds of stone. In all these directions it will be noted that
there was a complete absence of any speculative or reasoning effort; the
developments merely arise from an accumulation of recorded experience. It was
the distinctive gift of the Greeks for abstract reasoning which converted man’s
knowledge of facts into apprehension of causes and effects. Nevertheless, the
Assyrians, faithfully following Babylonian methods, performed a useful task,
and unquestionably improved the material civilization of the lands over which
they ruled.
Abstract problems cannot well be avoided, but they can
be dealt with in a practical manner, and a curious example of such methods may
be found in the way the Assyrians dealt with language. Linguistic attainments
among the scribes probably varied considerably, yet even those who confined
themselves to writing the business documents and so-called ‘letters’ must have
received some instruction in the ancient Sumerian language, as well as a
thorough grounding in their own; no one could read or write cuneiform
otherwise. In addition to this, their work demanded a considerable knowledge
of dialects of Semitic other than their own. Those who were occupied in copying
or writing literary or scientific texts needed of course considerable linguistic
training; and a whole class of texts show how this was
obtained. From copying out personal names, the pupil proceeded to writing out
phrases, first in Sumerian, then in Akkadian (Assyrian); and the method of
arrangement, for instance in the school-book of legal phrases called ana ittishu, implies that the
distinction of the various parts of speech was recognized, though no
terminology seems to have been invented. The instruction was continued in long
continuous texts, in which the Sumerian version was translated into Akkadian
line by line. The translations are very often far from literal; their intention
is to render the sense well enough for practical purposes. ‘Scholarly accuracy’
was not inculcated. So the problem was surmounted in the case of Sumerian, with
considerable success; for the perpetuation of this ancient and dead language in
the literary texts found in Assyria was due to this practical method of
instruction. The study of other Semitic dialects did not require the same
discipline; for these the careful collection of synonyms was sufficient, and
long classified lists of these afford the modern philologist much help.
Curiously enough the nature of cuneiform writing, besides giving rise to these
studies, also led in some sort to a pseudo-science of philology; for it would
seem that many of the interpretations of divine names offered by the scribes
are purely fanciful interpretations of the signs in their ideographic meanings.
Important was the Assyrian contribution to
civilization in perpetuating and spreading Babylonian literature, the service
rendered in extending the use of cuneiform script was no less considerable. It
is probable that the Hittites learnt cuneiform from men who bore Assyrian names
at the beginning of the second millennium B.C.; it is certain that in later
times the simplified script was carried into Media and Urartu by them, there
to.be adopted for the native languages. The simplification of the cuneiform script
is very typical of the Assyrian genius. From about 2000 B.C. onwards there is
constant progress in the Assyrian inscriptions in reducing the number of wedges
used in a sign, and in rendering the writing more square in appearance. The
final result, the calligraphy of the library scribes, deserves to be reckoned
as an art.
VI.
ASSYRIAN LAW
It has long been recognized by scholars, on the
evidence of the legal documents of the Sargonid period, that Assyrian law was in no way derived from the Babylonian codes. The formulae and
technical terms are entirely different, the penalties mentioned quite distinct.
The famous Hammurabi Code was never in force in Assyria, though it was
carefully studied there in the thirteenth century B.C., and possibly earlier.
Its terms indeed were far too mild for a country inhabited by a vigorous race
in continual contact with men of hill-districts, whose lawlessness is even now
a byword. The fortunate discovery of fragments of an Assyrian code dating from
the thirteenth or twelfth century B.C. at Kalat Sherkat has thrown light on a
question which is further illuminated by the discovery of Hittite laws among
the archives from Boghaz Keui. Careful study of these codes will, in future
years, greatly advance the study of early law and our knowledge of the
civilization of the Near East. Until full discussion of them has led to a
consensus of opinion as to the conclusions to be derived from them, all but the
bare statement of the facts must be considered an expression of individual opinion,
and liable to errors due to prejudice or ignorance. The following summary of
our knowledge of Assyrian law cannot claim to be exempt from this disadvantage.
The Assyrian laws extant are written on three large
tablets; there are also fragments, which possibly belong to different editions.
The largest and most important of these tablets contains sixty paragraphs, all
dealing with the law relating to women. Another, in a bad state of
preservation, contains thirty-one laws relating to land. The third tablet, of
which whole paragraphs are lost, once consisted of a series of laws dealing
with breach of confidence. The first two tablets are of special interest
linguistically, since they show that the Assyrian dialect of Semitic had forms
distinct from those in use in Akkadian, and that many peculiarities found in
the letters of the Sargonid period are really characteristic of that dialect.
In content also they show a complete absence of Babylonian influence; and the
interesting question arises, as to whether this Assyrian code was first
promulgated in the thirteenth century, or whether it is derived from a still
earlier code. All analogy would lead to the supposition that this thirteenth
century code was copied from laws already in existence, just as the Hammurabi
Code was copied from Sumerian and Akkadian laws long current in Babylonia.
Unfortunately, there is at present no evidence on the subject—although the
language is a strong argument for an early date—and the question must remain
unanswered. Another interesting question also occurs: may not the Assyrian code
of the thirteenth or twelfth century have derived certain features from Mitanni
or Hanigalbat, lands which had exercised suzerainty over Assyria in the middle
of the second millennium? Again, the question must remain unanswered, though it
would seem extremely probable that such influences are to be found in the laws.
Little is known of Mitanni and Hanigalbat at present, yet it is not to be
doubted that the ihabitants of those lands had reached the same level of
civilization as the Hittites; Assyria could not fail to be affected, especially
by the commercial law of these peoples, since they commanded all the
caravan-routes which were the arteries of the Assyrian commonwealth. Considered
as a whole, however, the Assyrian code is essentially Assyrian; the social
conditions dealt with are in certain cases peculiarly Assyrian, the severe
punishments inflicted accord with the national temperament, and the legal
administration depended on the authority of an Assyrian king.
Though the term ‘Assyrian code’ has been used above of
these laws for convenience, it is by no means clear that the documents really
represent a true ‘code.’ The style in which the ‘laws’ are worded differs
widely from that in which the Hammurabi laws are drafted; instead of a terse
phrase describing some general type of delinquency, followed by the punishment
to be awarded, the Assyrian ‘laws’ often detail a specific and highly peculiar
case, elaborate possibly variations in details, and may be rather an ordered
series of actual judgments given in court than a unified code promulgated as a
consecutive whole. P. Koschaker, after examining the texts from the standpoint
of an historian of ancient law, has come to the conclusion that the Assyrian
‘code’ is really a jurist’s commentary on the common law administered in the
courts, and has detailed a series of passages which he considers ‘glosses.’ The
circumstances of Assyrian society were in any case infinitely more complicated
than in Babylonia in the Hammurabi period. A striking proof of this may be
found in the two completely different types of marriage allowed for in the
‘laws’; in the one, resembling the Babylonian, the bride joins the household of
her husband, and belongs to his family, while in the other the bride remains in
her father’s house, where she is visited by her husband. It is well known that the
actual practice of the Babylonian courts in the Hammurabi period differs
somewhat from the code; it may well be that the Assyrian ‘code,’ while less
strictly logical in construction, was more closely in accord with the practice
of the time in Assyria. On these points only further evidence can throw light;
for the present the term ‘Assyrian code’ may conveniently be kept if Koschaker’s
arguments are borne in mind.
The most interesting laws are unquestionably those
concerning the status of women, because they are the fullest ancient laws
dealing with this subject. The various classes of crime are dealt with in
detail. Thus theft of various kinds by women, attacks on men by women or vice
versa, improper conduct and adultery, abortion, voluntary desertion by the
wife, are all the subject of separate ordinances. It is interesting to find
calumny of a wife by false witnesses included among such subjects. Involving
wives in commercial dealings without the knowledge of the husband is also
enumerated in the list of offences. The regulations concerning the bridal
gifts, maintenance and divorce of the wife, are reasonable, judged by ancient
standards, and seem to allow of some latitude of interpretation; a good
instance of this may be found in the law dealing with the rights of a man who
has arranged that a girl should be married to his son.
“If a man has either poured oil on (a girl’s) head or
brought bridal gifts (i.e. performed
the regular betrothal ceremonies) and the son for whom they intended her as a
wife either dies or runs away, he shall give her to any one of his sons he
pleases, from his eldest to his youngest, who (must be) 10 years old. If the
father dies, and the son for whom they intended her as wife is dead, a grandson
of the deceased who is ten years old, shall marry her: if after waiting ten
years the sons of the son are minors, the father of the girl shall give his
girl (in marriage) if he pleases, or, if he pleases, mutual recompense shall be
made. If there be no son (of the deceased) (the girl’s father) shall return all
that they have received, precious stones and everything save food, up to the
total sum, but he shall not return food”.
Many other laws might be cited at length to show the
wisdom with which various cases are provided for. Those who drew up the
Assyrian code were not inferior in ability to Hammurabi himself.
Some adverse criticism of the code has, however, been
expressed on other grounds. In general the punishments are severe; the slitting
of ears and noses, the imposition of 20 to 100 lashes, castration, public
exhibition as well as heavy fines and forced labour are mentioned as penalties.
Then in certain instances the individual is allowed to take the law into his
own hands; thus the husband who kills the adulterer when found with his wife is
not guilty of murder. Finally the large number of paragraphs
devoted to unnatural and illegal sexual intercourse have been thought to
point to a more immoral society than that provided for in the Hammurabi Code.
These grounds do not seem sufficient to the present writer to justify the
conclusion that Assyrian society was less settled and more immoral than
Babylonian. The absence of laws against unnatural vice amongst savage tribes in
central Africa cannot be held to prove that they are innocent of such vice; the
public flagellation practised in public schools until quite recently does not
really imply that England was less civilized than lands in which such a
punishment was unknown. The most severe law in the whole Assyrian code is the
following: “If a woman of her own free will causes a miscarriage, they shall
examine her and confront her with evidence. They shall impale her on stakes,
and refrain from burying her. If she dies of her miscarriage, they shall impale
her on stakes, they shall refrain from burying her...”
Intentional abortion is here recognized as a crime against the state and
against morality; the fact that it was so recognized points to a highly
civilized social and moral standard. The objection that laws which allow of
summary punishment by the person or persons injured are no laws is more
serious, and the Assyrian legal system must be judged imperfect in this respect.
Such summary justice, however, will always be found in certain countries under
given conditions, and it is unlikely that the necessity for it will ever
disappear entirely.
Two interesting features of the Assyrian laws are the
importance attached to the veiling of women and to the ordeal by water. Married
women were to be veiled, but unmarried priestesses, prostitutes and slaves were
forbidden to walk the streets veiled; and severe penalties, including the
slitting of the ear, fifty strokes, and a month’s forced labour, were imposed
on men who knowingly allowed prostitutes and slaves to go veiled. The ordeal by
water, inflicted for instance on the slanderer of a man’s wife, or on one who
involved a wife in commercial dealings, without her husband’s knowledge, was of
two kinds. The accused was taken down to the river bank, and in the one case
bound in fetters, in the other case not so bound; he was then thrown into the
river. In some cases undoubtedly the result must have been death, while in others
the accused was thrown back by the river: even then he was not always allowed
to go free, but was liable to further penalties. The ordeal by water also
appears in the Hammurabi Code, but recourse to it is not so frequent as in the Assyrian laws.
The punishments invoked in the business documents of
the Sargonid period for breaches of contract and so forth seem to be of quite a
different character to those prescribed in the laws. Though later in date, the
prohibitory clauses in the Sargonid documents represent an earlier stage in the
development of law than the thirteenth century code. The penalties mentioned in
them are all of a religious character, and so date from a time when the
sanction of law was derived from religious belief; whereas that stage had been
outgrown even in Hammurabi’s time, when crime was punished as a civil offence.
The clauses in question detail the penalties to be imposed on
anyone who, having completed a transaction, received payment, and sealed a
tablet, brings a legal process to recover possession. The penalties are
very various: the delinquent is to pay a sum of money, generally ten times the
agreed price, into the treasury of a specified deity; to yoke ‘two white horses
at the feet of’ a certain god (that is, supply the horses to draw the divine
chariot in the great processions); and ‘dedicate a bow to Ninurta, who dwells
in Kalakh.’ Other provisions are that he is to drink some obviously poisonous
concoction, and that the eldest son or the eldest daughter is to be burnt
before a god—an isolated reminder of the bloody cults of the western Semites
with whom the Assyrians had in the earliest periods been in close contact. It
is not to be thought that these penalties were actually executed in the
Sargonid period. They remain as fossilized formulae in the documents, the only
witness to an earlier stage of Assyrian civilization than any we yet know. In
the civil law of the later time any such process as these penalties are invoked
to prevent was simply non-suited.
The Assyrian provinces probably benefited considerably
if the Assyrian legal system was applied to their government; and it seems most
probable from the documents as yet obtained that it was applied. Not only was
the central authority sufficiently strong to enforce the law—a difficult matter
in the Upper Euphrates valley—but the fact that the Assyrian code was
recognized throughout Mesopotamia, Syria and Palestine would have been greatly
to the advantage not only of the trader, but of the poor. In this respect again
there may possibly be found a curious similarity between the Assyrian and the
Roman rule in western Asia; for so far as is known these were the only periods
in which a uniform legal practice can have obtained.
VII.
ASSYRIAN ARTS AND LITERATURE
Sculpture and architecture have been briefly dealt
with under the reigns of various kings. In the reign of Ashurbanipal both arts
reached a level of perfection beyond which development would seem impossible
without a complete change of style. The poor remains of Ashurbanipal’s palace
in the mound of Kuyunjik long since acquainted English excavators with the
ability of the Assyrian architect. The reliefs taken from that palace remain
the finest artistic work recovered in the river valleys. The spacious treatment
first noticeable on the Sargon reliefs, combined with the composition and
pictorial sense to be found in the Sennacherib slabs, are present in the art of
the Ashurbanipal reliefs; but there is in them yet one further merit. The
masons no longer cut figure after figure, whether human or animal, in the same
attitude, with the same expression, in monotonous succession. The attempt to
differentiate, to give each figure an individual interest, renders the Frieze
of the Lion-Hunt the most interesting of all the Assyrian sculptures; and a
careful examination of the battle-scenes will show a more sustained effort of
the same kind in a crowded field. Above all, there is a fertility of invention
and an exquisite delicacy of carving, both illustrated in the scene which shows
Ashurbanipal and his queen feasting; a rare combination of qualities which had
previously been lacking in work of this type.
The only other art worthily represented in modern
museums is that of the seal-engraver. Great numbers of Assyrian seals are of
course artistically worthless, as objects produced in such quantities are
likely to be. There are, however, some very fine specimens of Assyrian work in
this kind both on cylinder seals and on the equally popular cone seals, which
leave no doubt that the jewel engraver of the Achaemenian period deliberately
copied Assyrian subjects and methods rather than Babylonian. Yet even the best
Assyrian seals are inferior to the early Sumerian examples, and their real
interest is to be found in the light they throw on Assyrian religion.
As to the minor arts, though a little information can
be gained from written documents, so very little remains that it is impossible
to speak with any certainty. Weaving of the most ornate kind was commonly
practised; furniture was embellished with metal decorations; and metal was also
extensively worn for personal adornment. Curiously enough, the potter seems to
have made no great effort to improve his wares; the Assyrian of Ashurbanipal’s
time was as content with the rough pots and platters of plain buff ware as had
been his forefathers in ruder times. But no trace of the coloured glazed
pottery found by Andrae at Ashur in strata belonging to the fifteenth to
twelfth centuries has been found in Sargonid palaces. Indeed, though Assyria
must be reckoned a wealthy country at this time, the people had not lost the
Spartan simplicity once enforced by necessity, and only a few essential
articles of furniture were customarily used.
Recent excavations in Assyria have proved that the
diligent copying and editing of the great literary works of Babylonia practised
in the time of Ashurbanipal commenced in Assyria at least six centuries
earlier; it is indeed a curious anomaly that the two most important extant
works of Babylonian literature, the Gilgamesh epic and the ‘Seven Tablets’ of
the Creation story, would be almost unknown were it not for the Assyrian
editions found at Ashur and Nineveh. Unfortunately there is at present not
sufficient evidence to show whether the borrowing was all on the Assyrian side.
Indeed, the problem of literary sources has been rather complicated by the
discovery of fragments of important literary texts in the ‘Akkadian’ language
side by side with texts in other, non-Semitic, languages at Boghaz Keui and el-Amarna.
Few are likely to question the fact that the legends and epics known were
originally written down in their present form at Babylon, and that the Assyrian
versions, with their compressions and alterations, are merely later editions of
the Babylonian works; yet the question whether certain forms of the literature,
such as the animal fables, may not have arisen elsewhere than in Babylon, can
by no means be summarily dismissed. It is much to be hoped that excavations of
sites in Syria and along the middle Euphrates may throw light on the question
of the literary origins and development of cuneiform texts now known, so that
the different elements may be to some extent distinguished. The generally
accepted hypothesis that all the classes of literature represented in
Ashurbanipal’s library were immediately derived from the south in any case
needs substantiation. The main fact, however, that there was no independent
Assyrian literature, save in two respects, may be confidently affirmed.
The political importance of the oracle in Assyria has
already been mentioned; that such oracles also influenced literary development
will be readily understood. Oracular utterances are of two kinds; they may be
terse and precise in meaning, as ‘I, Ishtar of Arbela, march before
Ashurbanipal, the king whom my hands created,’ or general in import and ambiguous
in interpretation, as “Fear not, Esarhaddon. It is I, Bel, who speak to
thee.... The 60 great gods are with me... Sin is on thy right hand, Shamash on
thy left, the 60 great gods stand at thy side. They stand firm at their post.
Put no trust in men. Direct thy eyes to me. Regard me”. Of the various tricks
associated with oracular utterances, for instance in Greece, the Assyrian
priests doubtless made repeated use. The play with numbers, the use of the
anagram and so forth were well known to the Assyrians, and the influence of the
oracles in introducing a high-flown and slightly bombastic style may be seen in
the historical inscriptions, which develop from simple statements of events
into highly-coloured and imaginative literary documents; an interesting example
may be found in the account of Ashurbanipal’s narrative of his relations with
Gyges. In this regard Nabonidus seems to have been following Assyrian rather
than Babylonian models in the curious accounts of his dreams.
The most important development in Assyrian literature
is to be found in the royal inscriptions. These were modelled on the old
Babylonian building inscription, which was stereotyped. The form almost invariably
commenced with a dedication to a god, who is praised in some specific aspect,
and with the name and titles of the king; then the nature of the building or
other object dedicated is specified, sometimes with a reference to the
historical circumstances of the dedication; finally come the curses on whoever
injures the dedication and the inscription, and sometimes a prayer for those
who restore and repair them. From this fixed form the Assyrians developed the
long historical inscriptions on which our knowledge of the ancient history of
Mesopotamia is largely based. By elaborating the titles of the king, and giving
a more discursive account of the circumstances of the dedication, the scribes
were able to give general accounts of the principal events of their time. But
in Assyria first came the vital change which converted the building inscription
into a historical record, namely the partial suppression of the dedication.
Thus arose the general account of a king’s exploits.
The next step was to arrange the events in their chronological sequence, either
under the year of the king’s reign or according to the number of campaigns, the
events being baldly stated. This form arose in the fourteenth century, or earlier.
Finally came the development which characterized the
Sargonid period, when each year or each campaign was elaborately and separately
described, and then a complete history of the reign up to the time of
composition recorded on clay or stone with all the literary art of which the
writer was capable. The inscriptions on the prisms of Sennacherib and
Ashurbanipal are instances of a literary form borrowed from Babylonia, yet so
expanded as to be distinctively Assyrian. The building inscription remains, the
annalistic element is entirely new. Once again it is probable that another
influence has combined with the Babylonian to produce the Assyrian type as it
is known to us; the long historical preambles of the Hittite treaties found at
Boghaz Keui may serve to show whence that influence came. In any case the
annals of the Assyrian kings from Sargon onwards deserve to be classed with the
most important literary works in cuneiform.
CHAPTER VASHURBANIPAL AND THE FALL OF ASSYRIA |
CAMBRIDGE ANCIENT HISTORY. EDITED BY J. B. BURY - S. A. COOK - F. E. ADCOCK : VOLUME III |