READING HALLTHE DOORS OF WISDOM |
THE ASSYRIAN EMPIRE. TABLE OF CONTENTSCHAPTER V
ASHURBANIPAL AND THE FALL OF ASSYRIA
I.
THE WARS OF ASHURBANIPAL
THE high level of Assyrian culture in the time of
Ashurbanipal (669—626 B.C.), was due to the fact that Assyrian supremacy had
been successfully maintained for a century; nor did there seem in the early
years of his reign any likelihood that that supremacy would be successfully
attacked. These years were indeed full of important military undertakings,
conducted in many different parts of his borders, by the Assyrian king and his
generals, but the wars were all of the usual type, and rarely presented any difficult
problems. There are very many ‘editions’ of Ashurbanipal’s annals which contain
accounts of the campaigns consistent the one with the other save in one
respect. The desire of the compilers of the later editions to introduce some
literary form into the narrative led to their treating the campaigns in
geographical, not in chronological sequence, while using terms which would seem
to refer to chronology. Thus the two Egyptian campaigns are placed first, and
the account of Ashurbanipal’s relations to Egypt is carried down to the revolt
of Psammetichus, as if all these events took place in the first two years of
the king’s reign. The fault really lies in a certain clumsiness in dealing with the material: critics who consider this clumsiness
deliberate falsification exaggerate the importance of the matter. Nevertheless
this failure of the scribes to observe a strict time-sequence is much to be
regretted since, though the various accounts date the chief events, many minor
points of chronology remain obscure.
The first campaign, in 668, arose out of a border
affair of slight importance. The magistrate of the city of Kirbit in the
neighbourhood of the Kassites led his followers on several occasions into the
district of Yamutbal on plundering expeditions. In accordance with Assyrian
practice the disorderly ruler was the object of a punitive expedition. Probably
quite a small body of troops proved sufficient to besiege and capture the city;
the inhabitants were deported during the next campaign to Egypt, where hostilities
had commenced.
In Egypt the death of Esarhaddon had been greeted by
Tirhakah the Nubian as an opportunity to restore his rule. That monarch
accordingly marched north, entered Memphis, and stayed there, sending troops up
to the Delta to make a demonstration against the native princes and Assyrian
officers in whose hands Esarhaddon had left the government of the country. The
Delta princes made no attempt to resist, but apparently fled eastwards, hoping
for timely support from Assyria. The Assyrian army appeared in Egypt in 667,
after accomplishing a long forced march to save a situation rendered dangerous
by inefficiency and cowardice. The two armies engaged in battle at Karbaniti,
somewhere in the east of the Delta, with the usual result; Nubians and
Egyptians could not withstand the Assyrian assault, and retired in disorder.
Tirhakah, on hearing the news, immediately retreated from Memphis to Thebes, an
operation easily conducted owing to the delay of the Assyrian army, which
awaited reinforcements consisting of contingents sent by the twenty tributary
princes of Syria, Cyprus, Phoenicia and Palestine. The Assyrians finally
marched to Memphis, which fell after a few days into their hands, and
Ashurbanipal or his deputy then engaged in restoring the Egyptian princes who had
been driven out by Tirhakah.
This restoration of native rulers seems to show that
Ashurbanipal recognized the essential weakness of the Assyrian position in
Egypt. Unless the Assyrians could rely on native governors to serve them
faithfully, overlordship would not be established in this distant land. Recent
experience, however, showed that stronger Assyrian garrisons were required in
Egypt than Esarhaddon had thought necessary, and these were accordingly detailed
before the return to Nineveh. Even so the departure of the main army was the
signal for an attempt at revolt by the very princes recently restored to their
nomes. Necho of Memphis and Sai’s joined with Mantimankhi of Thebes and all the
other important princes in offering Tirhakah, now once again in Nubia,
allegiance, provided he would return to fight the invader. The Assyrian
officers were easily able to deal with this conspiracy in 666 and, by seizing
the chief plotters in good time, were able to maintain their hold on Egypt
without calling on the king for further support. Had Ashurbanipal thought it
possible, he would now doubtless have reduced Egypt to an Assyrian province,
but he recognized the impossibility of this, and did not deal with the captured
princes so severely as the governors in Egypt dealt
with the native soldiery. Necho was especially singled out as a recipient of
the royal favour, and on the death of Tirhakah, 664, he was already back in
Sais, while his son Psammetichus, called by the Assyrians Nabu-Shezibanni, had
been appointed governor of Athribis.
Ashurbanipal’s policy bore good fruit, at any rate for
a time. Tirhakah was succeeded by his nephew Tandamane (Tenot- [or Tanut-
Amon), who made a brave attempt to restore Nubian prestige. After possessing
himself of Thebes and Heliopolis, he marched towards the Delta, and besieged
the Assyrians in Memphis, believing perhaps that no reinforcements would be
sent. But the imperial army marched to Egypt in the early months of 663, and
Tandamane hastily retreated to Thebes, while the Assyrian king or his
representative was saluted as their liege lord by the tributary princes in
Memphis. The Nubian was even unwilling to stand a siege in Thebes, and
continued his flight southwards. Thebes fell into the hands of the Assyrian
army after a short resistance, and very considerable plunder was carried away
from that magnificent city. The Assyrians had finally defeated the attempt to
establish a Nubian supremacy in Egypt.
The death of Necho in 663 led to Psammetichus, who
succeeded to the governorship of Sais, occupying an unusually powerful position
among the tributary princes. For some years he remained loyal to the oaths he
had sworn to the Assyrian king; but he availed himself of opportunities
afforded him by foreign support to rebel, and between 658 and 651 succeeded in
clearing the Assyrian garrisons out of Egypt, with the aid of the Lydian
mercenaries sent to him by his ally Gyges. The ease with which this effort of
Psammetichus succeeded seems to show that the Assyrian king was indifferent to
the loss of Egypt. Possibly the expectations of enormous wealth to be won in
Egypt had been disappointed; perhaps the difficulty of holding the country
except with larger garrisons than could well be spared induced Ashurbanipal to
refrain from attempting any reconquest. The loss of Egypt was in reality no
loss to Assyria, and an offensive and defensive alliance was subsequently
arranged between the two powers.
The siege of Tyre, which Esarhaddon had been unable to
take, continued into Ashurbanipal’s accession year, when it was probably
concluded by a treaty between Ashurbanipal and Ba’alu of Tyre on more generous
terms than those offered by Esarhaddon. Tyrian princesses were sent to the
harem at Nineveh, and Iakhi-Milki, the son of Ba’alu, did obeisance to the
suzerain; he was not however detained as a hostage. Though Tyre assisted
Ashurbanipal in the Egyptian campaign of 667, Ba’alu would seem to have
retained considerable independence. A moderate policy brought further successes
in the north. Yakinlu of Arvad (who had not submitted to Esarhaddon), Mugallu
of Tabal, Sandasharme of Khilakku, all submitted as
vassals; and the reality of the submission is shown by the fact that the
Assyrian king nominated Yakinlu’s successor, Aziba’al. The underlying cause for
this willingness to accept the Assyrian supremacy, namely, the need for support
against the barbarians in the north, is made clear by the action of still
another prince, who ruled a land beyond the Assyrian border, Gyges of Lydia.
The wandering hordes of Cimmerians had reached the
border of Lydia, shortly after the accession of Gyges, about 687, and there was
imminent danger by 660 that the barbarians would overrun the country. The story
of Sargon’s battle with these hordes must have been known to Gyges; in any case
he judged correctly that the most useful ally he could have under the
circumstances was the Assyrian king, since the Assyrians alone were powerful
enough to attack the Cimmerians in the rear. He accordingly sent an embassy to
Ashurbanipal at Nineveh, with gifts for that monarch, and with orders to do
obeisance to him as a suzerain. This gratuitous acknowledgment of the Assyrian
power by an important prince far beyond his borders did not fail to flatter
Ashurbanipal’s pride; and the Lydian delegates were able to excite his interest
with a story well suited to Assyrian taste. Gyges, they said, had heard the
voice of his patron god in a dream, commanding him to pay homage to
Ashurbanipal, king of Assyria, and conquer his enemies in Ashurbanipal’s name.
The annals proceed to record that, after his ambassadors had saluted
Ashurbanipal, Gyges won a great victory over the Cimmerians, and sent two of
his prisoners to Nineveh, with some of the spoil. Modern critics have generally
concluded that Ashurbanipal did not in fact take any steps to help Gyges, whose
victory they assume to be entirely due to his own effort; their conclusion is
based on the fact that there is no mention of a campaign to aid Gyges against
the Cimmerians. That such a campaign would be a minor operation conducted by
the provincial governor of the northwestern district is sufficient explanation
of the fact that it is not mentioned; and Gyges’ action in sending tribute
after the victory is not easily intelligible if the Assyrians had not actually
assisted him. It is quite credible that the Assyrian forces in the northwest
actually engaged the Cimmerians in the rear, and so enabled the Lydian prince
to inflict a defeat on them.
The liberation of Egypt from the Assyrian rule by
Psammetichus caused Gyges to alter his policy, and he signalized his breach
with Assyria by sending troops to the Delta to assist the new Pharaoh. This
friendship for Psammetichus was doubtless due in part to commercial interest; perhaps
also to an undue confidence in the strength of his own position, which
subsequent events showed to be unjustified. The Cimmerians, aware of the breach
between Lydia and Assyria, and pushed on by other hordes to the north and east,
fell on Lydia in 652, and captured Sardes. Gyges fell in the same year that
Ashurbanipal undertook his first campaign against his brother, Shamash-Shum-Ukin
of Babylon
The success of this exploit emboldened Tugdamme (L[D]ygdamis), the leader of the Cimmerians, to return to
Cilicia, with the intention of forcing a passage into Syria. Unless indeed the
Cimmerians were themselves to succumb to the Treres, an Indo-European folk who
were driving into Asia Minor from the northwest, and to the Scythians, who
were gathering force in the east, a break through into the rich broad lands in
the south was Tugdamme’s only hope. Unfortunately we have no record of the last
great encounter of the Assyrians with the Cimmerians, and the date is quite
uncertain; but it was probably about the time of the Babylonian wars. So confused a horde indeed was met in Cilicia on this occasion that
the inscription which refers to it in brief terms applies to the enemy the
general term of Umman-manda, used elsewhere to describe the various savage folk
met in Media, Armenia and Asia Minor at this time. Once again the
Assyrians were successful, and Syria was saved. Such a victory, gained, as it
probably was, when the main forces of Assyria were involved in a life and death
struggle with Elam and Babylon, is a great tribute to
Assyrian arms; but the victory itself led to more and greater difficulties than
it had settled. The defeat seems to have led to a collapse of the Cimmerians,
now under Tugdamme’s son, Sandakhshatra, and they seem to have been dispersed
and absorbed, chiefly perhaps by the Scythians.
Lydia recovered somewhat from the disaster of 652
under Gyges’ son, Ardys, but suffered another severe blow about 646, when the
Treres marched into Sardes, and Ardys was compelled to offer a desperate
resistance from his citadel. Possibly it was the dire straits to which Ardys
was reduced at this time that induced him to imitate the conduct of his father.
Ashurbanipal, at the height of his power after his conquests in Elam, once
again received ambassadors from distant Lydia, and accepted their homage.
Finally Ardys recovered, and gradually cleared his kingdom of enemies. It is
once again possible that the activities of the Assyrian governors in the
north-west assisted Lydia, for though not a word of fighting in these districts
occurs in the inscriptions, the situation of affairs in Asia Minor renders it
certain that throughout this period the Assyrian garrisons were engaged in
incessant hostilities.
The annals are silent as to events in Urartu and the
north; only two embassies of greeting sent by Rusas II (about 680—645) and
Sarduris III (IV) (about 645—620) are mentioned, that from Rusas belonging to
the year 654, and that from Sarduris some time after 639. Such peaceful
relations between the two states of Urartu and Assyria arouse surprise in view
of previous history and can only be accounted for by the assumption that their
borders were no longer contiguous. The irruption of the Scythians in the time
of Sennacherib and Esarhaddon had curtailed the Urartian territories very
considerably, and Assyrian influence in the Nairi country had quite
disappeared. Probably the friendly relations Esarhaddon had established with
the Scythians were maintained by his son, who accordingly seems to have
considered the Tur ‘Abdin his boundary in the north. This is illustrated by
events in 658; for in that year Andaria the governor of Lubdi, a former
Urartian province, attacked the Assyrian districts Uppumu and Kullimmeri. It is
certain, from enquiries put to the oracle of Shamash with regard to this event,
that the attacking force was not Urartian, but a mixed barbarian force. Andaria
was most probably a Scythian leader, acting independently, in contravention of
the general understanding between his people and the Assyrians. The Assyrian
garrison in Kullimmeri defeated and slew Andaria, and sent his head to their
king in Nineveh. This is the only occasion during the first half of the reign
in which Assyrian troops came into conflict with the Scythians, who observed a
friendly and correct attitude in more debatable territory to the south. The
kingdom of the Mannai, always troublesome, had become increasingly daring owing
to the support Akhsheri, their king, received from certain independent Median
princes. The necessity of dealing with this incipient danger led to the
dispatch of the general Nabu-Shar-Usur against Akhsheri in 659. Plundering and
burning as they marched, the Assyrian troops hunted Akhsheri from his capital,
Izirtu, to the fortress of Ishtatti. There an oracle of Ishtar was fulfilled.
Akhsheri and his family fell at the hands of his own people. His surviving son,
Ualli, immediately surrendered to the Assyrian suzerain, and gave hostages for
his good behaviour. The borders of Mannai were withdrawn considerably, so that
several important townships now fell under the rule of Assyrian governors.
The intervention of the Medes in the affairs of Mannai
led to a punitive campaign against certain of their princelings in the same
year, 659. The Assyrians attacked and defeated Biriskhadri, Sarati and
Parikhia, and captured seventy-five townships. This is the only occasion in the
early years of Ashurbanipal when the Medes were met in the field. The summary account
of the campaign leaves much to be desired, but it would seem that at this time
there was still no semblance of unity amongst the various tribes immediately in
contact with Assyria. This point, however, cannot be pressed; it may well be
that already the tribes farther east recognized one
king of Media, to whom the tribes farther west were shortly to submit.
The peaceful relations of Assyria with Elam
established by Esarhaddon were welcomed and continued by Ashurbanipal. The
supplies of food sent to relieve the famine which at that time afflicted the
Elamite districts on the Babylonian border, first sent by Esarhaddon, were
continued in the next reign; and the Assyrian king may well have felt that
Urtaku, the king of Elam, would prove, if not an ally, at least a well-disposed
neutral in any trouble that might arise on his southern border. The position of
affairs in his own country would seem to have prevented Urtaku following so
wise a policy. Elam had suffered much since the days when Merodach-Baladan had
induced the eastern kingdom once again to interfere in the affairs of
Babylonia. The wars with Assyria had necessarily proved a drain on the army;
and it seems likely that the eastern provinces had been considerably curtailed
by incoming tribes of Indo-European race. By the time of Ashurbanipal there is
every sign of a tendency to disruption in Elam. The prince of Khidalu, for
instance, occupied a semiindependent position. District governors joined in
the family feuds which continually threatened the reigning sovereign, and even
those who were not of the royal blood aimed at the supreme power. Above all,
the people of the border, unable to appreciate the risks they incurred,
persisted in the practice of raiding Babylonia, though it was unlikely that the
Elamites would be able to face the Assyrians with success on the field of
battle.
Urtaku was driven into dispatching a raiding
expedition across the Tigris while the Assyrian army was engaging Tirhakah in
Egypt. Doubtless the Chaldeans were engaged in this enterprise to some extent,
but this energetic people was at the time handicapped in that the different
tribes recognized no common leader, and the assistance of the Aramaeans, always
readily given, was of slight military importance. The Elamites, after a preliminary
success due to surprise, were defeated and driven back by a force consisting of
troops drawn from the Assyrian garrisons in Babylonia. The principal interest
of this campaign lies in the fact that it shows the Assyrians had established a
complete supremacy in the southern kingdom, and that they were able to defend
it even though the main imperial army was engaged in a different arena. This
supremacy was unquestionably due in part to the curious form of diarchy
actually in force in Babylonia owing to the dispositions of Esarhaddon.
II.
THE BABYLONIAN WAR
Ashurbanipal had actually installed his brother,
according to Esarhaddon’s arrangement, as king in Babylon, in 668, and it would
appear most probable that Shamash-Shum-Ukin was recognized as the legal king
throughout the country. The local governors were however appointed by
Ashurbanipal, and recognized themselves as directly responsible, especially in
military matters, to him. Now, over a long course of years, such a system would
clearly result in constant friction. The legal and religious administration at
Babylon would continually find that orders were neglected or thwarted by the
Assyrian governors in pursuance of a policy directed from Nineveh. At first,
however, such friction did not arise, and while Babylon and Nineveh were still
in harmony the occasion arose for Ashurbanipal to deal Elam a blow from which
that kingdom did not recover.
Urtaku died shortly after the return of the
unsuccessful expedition, perhaps by the hand of an assassin. He was succeeded
by a younger brother, Teumman, about 664—663, who had presumably plotted
Urtaku’s death. The principal remaining members of the royal family immediately
fled from Elam to avoid the fate always liable to befall possible rivals of a
usurper, and made their way to Nineveh, sure apparently of finding safety with
the only monarch powerful enough to protect them. These refugees became the
subject of correspondence between Teumman and Ashurbanipal, and the Elamite,
when his demand for their surrender was refused, provoked a war by his insults.
Teumman was able to count on the usual allies: Shumai, of the princely house of
Bit Yakin, was active on his behalf, Dananu of Gambulu brought no
inconsiderable forces to his aid, and Ishtar-Nandi, the independent prince of
Khidalu in Elam, also joined in the war. Nevertheless the advance of the
Assyrians in caused Teumman’s immediate retirement towards Susa, to cover which
city he occupied a position along the river Ulai. The Assyrians won a signal
victory in this battle, of which the dramatic incidents are depicted on the
frieze recovered from Ashurbanipal’s palace. Both Teumman and his son were
killed, and the Elamite resistance completely broken. The Assyrians entered
Madaktu and Susa, the two ‘royal’ cities, and stayed there till Ummanigash, one
of the sons of Urtaku who had fled to Nineveh, had been duly installed on the
throne. Another son of Urtaku was appointed prince of Khidalu in place of the
dead Ishtar-Nandi. Elam was thus practically reduced to a dependent state.
Shamash-Shum-Ukin accepted his brother’s overlordship
in Babylonia quite loyally for many years; but the constant friction which must
have arisen from the diarchy proved too severe a test of his good faith. It
must also be remembered that the Chaldeans, the only vigorous people in
Babylonia at this period, had gradually become a majority even in the cities of
northern Babylonia, and that the only way to become
truly king in Babylonia was to secure their adherence by a steadfast opposition
to Assyria. Furthermore, a general movement towards rebellion throughout the
Assyrian provinces had assumed proportions which necessitated an immediate
decision on the part of Shamash-Shum-Ukin. If he remained true to his brother,
he would certainly lose his throne in Babylon, at any rate for a time, and
would only regain it by his brother’s help, then to occupy a more subordinate
position than ever; or if he broke faith with Assyria, the military experience
and ability of his own immediate adherents might be sufficient to turn the
scale for the rebels against his own people, in which case he would occupy a
position not to be challenged by any prince in western Asia. It is not
surprising that Shamash-Shum-Ukin secretly allied himself, about 654—653, with
Ummanigash of Elam, Nabu-Bel-Shumati of Bit Yakin, Ea-Zer-Ikisha of Bit
Amukkani, Mannu-ki-Babili of Bit Dakkuri, the Aramaeans, the Aribi, several
princes of Palestine, and Necho of Egypt.
The war which Shamash-Shum-Ukin was now pledged to
undertake may be regarded in two ways. The alliance which had been formed was
not novel: Merodach-Baladan in the time of Sargon and Sennacherib had shown the
importance of forming these combinations, and it would seem at first that this
war, too, was simply a rising of tributary nations against the imperial power,
that in character it was not distinguishable from former wars of the kind. This
is of course true, but is not the whole truth. It is clear that this so-called
‘brothers’ war’ was fought on the Babylonian side with a determination and
courage quite unusual in the history of that country’s many encounters with
Assyria. Further, the prolonged resistance which Nabu-Bel-Shumati and his Chaldean
tribesmen were able to offer on the Elamite border shows that the same
influence was at work amongst the southern peoples also; the tribal levies were
turned into armies. It seems a fairly safe inference, therefore, that the new
factor which was to make the ‘brothers’ war’ the most severe and prolonged
struggle on which the Assyrian army had engaged for many decades, lay in the
military preparations and skill in leadership of Shamash-Shum-Ukin himself and
his Assyrian supporters. To this extent the war may be regarded as a civil war.
The Assyrian army was met for the first time by leaders trained in its own school.
The outbreak of Shamash-Shum-Ukin’s rebellion in 652 B.C.
was marked by great military activity on the part of the rebels. Ummanigash of
Elam sent a very considerable army to northern Babylonia under the command of
one of Teumann’s sons, Undashu, to whom apparently the role of covering the
border was assigned while Shamash-Shum-Ukin attacked those Assyrian governors
who remained faithful to Ashurbanipal. Neither Shamash-Shum-Ukin nor Undashu
was in the end successful. The former moved against Ur and Uruk, but was able
to do no more than threaten danger to those well-fortified cities; while
Undashu was defeated by the main Assyrian army. This defeat was followed by
mutiny in the Elamite army, led by Tammaritu, a cousin of Ummanigash. The army
returned to Susa, and in the civil war which ensued in 651, Ummanigash lost his
life. Tammaritu then seized the Elamite throne, and himself undertook the
command against Assyria. This affair in Elam must have weakened Shamash-Shum-Ukin’s
position very considerably, since the Elamite army did not share in the early
part of the campaign of 651. The advance of the Assyrians, who captured Babsame
and Sippar, at once cut direct communication between Elam and Babylon, and
threatened the capital city itself. In the south Ashurbanipal’s energetic
officers made the Sea-land untenable for Nabu-Bel-Shumati, who was forced to
take refuge in the hills of Elam; but carried off with him a number of important,
hostages, to recover whom became a point of honour for the Assyrians. The
attack on the combined forces of Nabu-Bel-Shumati and Tammaritu on the border
proved unsuccessful, but this reverse does not seem to have improved the
position of Shamash-Shum-Ukin, for he contemplated flight from Babylonia in the
autumn of 651, and narrowly escaped capture in the attempt to execute his
plan.
The campaign of 650 opened with the Assyrians in a
very strong position. Ashurbanipal’s officers had cleared southern Babylonia of
the rebel forces; Bel-Ibni, the Assyrian governor of the Sea-land, was holding
Nabu-Bel-Shumati and the Elamites in check, and Babylon and Borsippa were
invested in the north. If the position was to be saved for Shamash-Shum-Ukin it
was imperative that the Aribi, hitherto engaged in pursuing their own interests
on the borders of Palestine, should engage the Assyrian besiegers. Uaite’ I
accordingly sent an army into Akkad under Abi-Iate’ and Aimu, with the
intention of breaking the investing forces, but the effort failed. The Aribi
were defeated in the field, and the main body was forced to take refuge in
Babylon. Since famine had already commenced to weaken the defending troops in
that city, Shamash-Shum-Ukin’s difficulties were sensibly increased by this
addition to the number of mouths he had to feed, and it may be that it was at
his instigation that the Aribi made a desperate effort to break through. In
this attempt they suffered severely, and Abi-Iate’ himself, cut off from the
desert, fled straight to Nineveh, there to be pardoned by Ashurbanipal. The
efforts of the Aribi were no more successful in the west. Ammu- Iadin, a prince
of Kedar, who led the attacks on the Assyrian garrisons on the Palestinian
border, was defeated and captured by Kamash-khalta, king of Moab, to whom Adia,
the wife of Uaite’, also fell a prisoner.
Babylon and Borsippa still held out, but events in
Elam in 649 rendered Shamash-Shum-Ukin’s cause hopeless. That land of discord
was once again plunged into civil war, the result of which was that Indabigash,
an official, drove Tammaritu to flee from Susa into southern Babylonia, and
assumed the royal title himself. Tammaritu and his adherents fell into the
hands of the Assyrian general Marduk-Shar-Usur, who sent them at Bel-Ibni’s
command to Nineveh. There Tammaritu was subjected to a humiliating ceremony of
submission, and then treated with the same favour that had been accorded to
Abi-Iate’; and a similar intention may be assigned to Ashurbanipal in each
case. At this time, too, Shuma, the nephew of Tammaritu, fled to the nomad
tribe of the Takhkha’, and allied himself with the Assyrians. The position of
Indabigash in Elam was so weak that he attempted to treat with Ashurbanipal,
and as a first step towards establishing friendly relations released the
hostages carried off to Elam by Nabu-Bel-Shumati. Ashurbanipal proceeded to
demand the surrender of Nabu-Bel-Shumati himself, and would doubtless have
received satisfaction in this matter also, had not a new turn of affairs in
Elam brought about the fall of Indabigash. The anti-Assyrian party was now led
by Ummanaldash, who succeeded in defeating and slaying Indabigash early in 648,
and ascended the throne in Susa as Ummanaldash III. This meant a renewal of war
with Assyria.
Elam, torn by faction, was now powerless to aid
Shamash-Shum-Ukin effectively, and he himself was no longer able to defend
Babylon. That city had now been besieged for nearly two years. For the first
and only time in history the famous city had been defended in a manner worthy
of the strength of the fortifications; it was not to the Assyrian assault that
the troops of Shamash-Shum-Ykin succumbed, but to famine. The king of Babylon
himself did not submit to defeat, but threw himself into a fire intended to
consume his palace, in the way attributed by legend to Sardanapalus. In the
end, the Assyrian army had little to do but march into
an already devastated town, which they did in 648; but Shamash-Shum-Ukin’s
legal reign really ceased in 650 B.C. according to the reckoning of some. Thus
legal documents found at Ur were dated in ‘the 19th year of Ashurbanipa’.
Babylon was not sacked by the Assyrians; booty was of course taken from
Shamash-Shum-Ukin’s palace, and the leaders of the anti-Assyrian party in Babylon
were slain as an offering to the manes of Sennacherib, but Ashurbanipal’s
attention was immediately devoted to cleansing and restoring the capital. He
himself seems to have occupied the throne in Babylon only for the year 648; he
then reverted to the arrangement which had proved convenient for the greater
part of his reign. A titular king named Kandalanu (the Kineladan of the
Ptolemaic canon) was installed in Babylon in 647, there to reign for twenty
years under the same conditions as previously applied to Shamash-Shum-Ukin.
Ashurbanipal was to have no further trouble in Babylonia proper.
The rebellion of Shamash-Shum-Ukin was over, but
Arabia and Elam still remained to be dealt with before the war was finished.
The Aribi were not in a position to offer serious resistance. Uaite’ I was
driven out by his people, exasperated by his ill-success in the war and by an
outbreak of famine. He fled for safety to Natnu of Nabaite1, and attempted to
induce that important monarch to declare war on Assyria. Natnu was not misled;
he voluntarily paid homage to Ashurbanipal, sent an embassy with tribute to
Nineveh, and perhaps surrendered the former king of the Aribi to his overlord.
These events probably all belong to the year 648. The tribes of the desert were
now subjected to a stricter government than any that had yet been imposed upon
them, though unfortunately nothing is known as to the measures the government
took. The leaders of the tribes at this time were Abi-Iate’, who owed his
authority in Kedar to Ashurbanipal, and Uaite’ II, son of Bir-Dadda, who
succeeded his cousin, Uaite’ I, son of Hazailu. These two determined after a
short time to rid themselves of the Assyrian yoke; Natnu of Nabaite allied
himself with them. The first attack of the combined tribes was, as usual,
delivered on the western frontier. A strong Assyrian army, dispatched to the
west between 641 and 638, was engaged in a series of battles which seem to have
centred about Damascene. The tribes Isamme’ and Nabaite were defeated between
Iarki and Azalia, the men of Kedar and ‘the bands of Atarsamain’ at Kurasiti,
while the forces of Abi-Iate’ and Aimu were dispersed at Khukkurina, the two
leaders being captured. Uaite’ II seems to have avoided an engagement, but
famine and pestilence aided the Assyrians. Uaite’ was driven out by his own
people, and probably fled to Natnu in distant Nabaite, whither the Assyrians
did not follow him. Ashurbanipal had amply punished the Aribi for their
alliance with Shamash-Shum-Ukin. A punitive raid on Ushu (Palaetyrus) and Akku
(‘Akko, Acre) concluded the campaign.
The last struggles of Elam were a more desperate
affair than might have been expected in a country exhausted by rebellions and a
long and unsuccessful war. On the accession of Umman-Aldash, Ashurbanipal
renewed his demand for the surrender of Nabu-Bel-Shumati, which was refused.
The Assyrian army accordingly marched to Susa in 646, and set Tammaritu II once
again upon the throne. The Assyrian nominee was, however, not disposed to act
as a puppet king, and actually attacked the troops which had driven his rival
Umman-Aldash from Susa. His attempt at independence speedily ended in his
defeat and capture. During this campaign the Assyrians secured the principal
fortresses on the border, thus obtaining great advantages in any campaign they
might subsequently have to wage. The attempt of Umbakhabua to establish himself
in southern Elam was also defeated; but finally the retirement of the Assyrians
from Susa gave Umman-Aldash the opportunity to return to his capital. He was,
however, no longer strong enough to assert his authority even in those
districts in which there were no Assyrian garrisons, for a certain Pa’e ruled
some cities while he himself reigned at Susa. This position of affairs
continued, and was probably only brought to an end by the activities of Nabu-Bel-Shumati
on the border of the Sealand. This restless prince retained sufficient
influence with his Chaldean tribesmen to cause the Assyrian governors considerable
anxiety, and it was, no doubt, the refusal of Umman-Aldash to surrender him
which led to the last campaign against Elam. This campaign consisted of a
series of military successes on the part of the Assyrians in all the habitable
parts of Elam, ending in the capture of Susa. On this occasion the city was
very thoroughly sacked; large quantities of Babylonian treasure, captured in
war or received as bribes, were returned to Babylon, and all the striking
artistic monuments were carried off to Nineveh. Even the bones of dead kings
were removed from the grave and sent to Ashurbanipal to signalize this final
victory over Assyria’s most important rival. It is impossible exactly to date
this campaign, which marks the end of the native kingdom of Elam, but it must
belong to the period 642—639.
Successful as the campaign had been, Umman-Aldash
himself had not been captured, but had retired to inaccessible hills. On the
return of the Assyrian army to Nineveh, he came down from the hills to Madaktu,
since Susa was now uninhabitable. He was now little more than the prince of a
single city, and was bound to obey Ashurbanipal in every particular. His own
people, under the leadership of one Umman-Igash, drove him out of Madaktu,
whence he fled northward, only to fall into the hands of Assyrian troops some
time in 639. With that event our information as to the history of Elam ceases;
when the same lands once again play an important part in history, some eighty
years later, in the time of Cyrus, prince of Anshan, a new ruling people, the
Persians, are established in Susa, among the remnants of the ancient people,
and circumstances have changed in a manner as yet unknown. Ashurbanipal’s wars
in Elam were the prelude to the most important event in the history of the late
seventh and early sixth century, the rise of Persia, and it would be
interesting to know if and how the forces of the old empire came into contact
with that which was to arise within a century.
III.
THE FALL OF ASSYRIA
With the year 639 B.C. the sources for the reign of
Ashurbanipal close, though the king reigned till 626. For thirty years,
therefore, of the forty-two during which he sat on the Assyrian throne, he
ruled the empire successfully. Egypt was lost, it is true, but subsequent
events show that the loss was finally a gain to Assyria, since a willing ally
was thereby won; peace and good order were established in Palestine, Phoenicia
and Syria, and an important friend had been secured in Lydia. The king was on
good terms with the Scythians in the north, and with his own nominee on the throne
of Babylonia. Elam was crushed to rise no more; the
Medes could make no headway against the imperial troops. In all the important
cities of the empire, Assyrians, some of them members of the royal family, were
engaged in maintaining efficiency and securing order. Ashur-Etil-Shame-Irsiti-Uballitsu,
the king’s youngest brother, was the high-priest of Sin at Harran; Sin-Balatsu-Ikbi,
the governor of the Sea-land, rebuilt a shrine in the temple of the moon-god at
Ur. Well might Ashurbanipal boast of the peace of his empire, and the good
order established in his cities—and then suddenly, we know not how, both king
and kingdom fell on evil days. In a striking passage Ashurbanipal speaks of his
last unhappy years:
“The rules for making offerings to the dead and
libations to the ghosts of the kings my ancestors, which had not been
practised, I reintroduced. I did well unto god and man, to dead and living. Why
have sickness, ill-health, misery and misfortune befallen me? I cannot away
with the strife in my country and the dissensions in my family. Disturbing
scandals oppress me always. Misery of mind and of flesh bow me down; with cries of woe I bring my days to an end. On the day of the
city-god, the day of the festival, I am wretched; death is seizing hold on me
and bears me down. With lamentation and mourning I wail day and night, I groan,
‘O god, grant even to one who is impious that he may see thy light. How long, O
god, wilt thou deal thus with me? Even as one who hath not feared god and
goddess am I reckoned”.
What the physical complaints that befell the now aged
king may have been we do not know; but the reference to disturbance and strife
in his family and kingdom are clear enough.
Troubles concerning the succession had arisen, and
when Ashurbanipal died, Ashur-Etil-Ilani, his chosen son, had to fight an usurper before he succeeded to the throne, and was then
only successful owing to the support of an official named Sin-Shum-Lishir. The
struggle was presumably a long and strenuous one, for the Assyrian empire
suffered considerably under the strain. Southern Babylonia, controlled by
Kandalanu until Ashurbanipal’s death in 626, broke away from Ashur-Etil-Ilani
under Nabopolassar, the chosen leader of the Chaldeans, who commenced
hostilities immediately on his accession in 625. Palestine broke away from its
bondage about the same time, and Phoenicia ceased to obey the Assyrian writs.
Media, now united under a single monarch, was lost, once for all, to the
empire. It is indeed surprising that during the short reign of Ashur-Etil-Ilani,
from 626 to 621—619 (?), more provinces were not lost to Assyria, for it will
be seen that the west and north remained true to the government at Nineveh.
Ashur-Etil-Ilani’s reign ended in disorder as it had
begun. Sin-Shum-Lishir seized the throne for a few months on his master’s
death, but was driven out by another son of Ashurbanipal, Sin-Shar-Ishkun.
These events took place some time in the years 621—619 (?), during the
prolonged struggle with Nabopolassar, king of Babylon, and Cyaxares of Media,
who were now allied for the purpose of destroying Assyria. Sin-Shar-Ishkun was
an able monarch, and in more fortunate circumstances would doubtless have been
able to face even this alliance with success, for though many of the former
contingents to the Assyrian army could not now be levied, he had powerful
allies; Psammetichus of Egypt and the Scythians were prepared to support him,
and even the Mannai, hereditary enemies of the Assyrians, sent contingents to
his help. The civil wars of the preceding years, however, seem to have
seriously affected the fighting strength of the Assyrian army, and the
Babylonians and Medes were now fighting under generals not inferior in ability
to those of the Assyrians.
The plan of the allies was sound; gradually the
fighting forces of Assyria were hemmed into the fortified quadrilateral which
comprised the home-land of Assyria, from Kalat Sherkat to Karkuk, thence up to
Irbil, and back to Khorsabad. In 616 Nabopolassar was able to march up the
Euphrates through the territories of the Sukhu and Khindanu without opposition,
and signally defeated the Assyrian army which faced him at Kablinu; he was even
able to send a flying column up to the river Balikh, but Egyptian troops
arrived to help the Assyrians, and Nabopolassar was forced to retire hastily on
Babylon. The Babylonian troops met with greater success in Arrapkha (the
district near Karkuk), where an Assyrian column was routed and thrown back
across the Zab. Possibly the division of the Assyrian troops was responsible
for this defeat at one corner of the home defences, for when Nabopolassar
attempted to attack Ashur in 615 he was defeated and forced to retreat to Takrit,
where he successfully defended the fortress, owing to a diversion caused by an
attack on Arrapkha by Cyaxares. This intervention of the Medes placed a greater
strain on the defensive resources of Assyria than Sin-Shar-Ishkun could
withstand, probably owing to failing manpower. In 614 Cyaxares marched almost
up to Nineveh itself, took Tarbis (Sharif-Khan), and then turned south against
Ashur to make sure of effecting a junction with Nabopolassar. Then, for the
first time so far as is known in the history of Assyria, the ancient capital
fell, to be sacked with a savagery revealed by modern excavations.
Nabopolassar—a typical Babylonian general on this occasion—arrived too late for
the battle, but the opportunity served to cement his alliance with Cyaxares.
The two might well view the future with complacency.
Though affairs were in a well-nigh desperate state in
Assyria proper, the empire had not fallen to pieces; it had been too well and
wisely administered for a century to do that. If the Greek accounts be correct,
Sin-Shar-Ishkun in 613 implored help from the Scythians, who were to engage the
Medes while he himself faced the Babylonians. On the Euphrates the Sukhu, now
fearful of Nabopolassar’s intentions, came openly into the field on behalf of
the Assyrians, and though the Babylonians met with some initial successes, the
Assyrian army drove Nabopolassar away from ‘Anah, if not in rout, at least in
retreat. Everything now depended for Sin-Shar-Ishkun on the faithfulness of the
Scythians, and they betrayed him. Possibly by the promise of rich plunder in
Assyria and Syria Cyaxares induced the barbarian hordes to unite with him, for
in 612 the leader of the Scythians joined Cyaxares and Nabopolassar in the
final assault on Nineveh itself. Between Siwan and Ab (May to July), the allies
delivered three unsuccessful assaults on the city which was a proverb for
riches and power throughout the nearer East; but in the end it fell before a
coalition of powers which had been trained in siegewarfare by Assyrian kings.
The brief words of the Babylonian chronicle, ‘a great havoc of the people and
the nobles took place ... they carried off the booty of the city, a quantity
beyond reckoning, they turned the city into ruined mounds,’ are the counterpart
of the picturesque description of Assyria’s downfall by the Israelite prophet
Nahum. Sin-Shar-Ishkun himself perished, perhaps, as the Greeks reported, by
throwing himself into the fire he himself had kindled, as Shamash-Shum-Ukin
perished before him; but it was the end of a soldier and an Assyrian king, not
of the Sybarite the Greeks pictured as Sardanapalus. The fall of Nineveh closes
the history of Assyria proper; the land which had been compelled to fight for
centuries, first to exist and then to win an empire, fell irrevocably when at
last no part of the homeland was defensible.
Yet even so the few Assyrians who managed to escape
from Nineveh struggled on. Driven westwards by force of circumstances, they
took refuge in Harran, the fortress from which they had dominated Syria almost
continuously since the time of Ashur-Nasir-Pal. While Nabopolassar was engaged
in subduing Nisibis and the immediately adjoining districts, and Cyaxares and
the Scythians turned home with their booty, Ashur-Uballit, perhaps that brother
of Ashurbanipal who had been made high-priest of Sin,
was appointed king of Assyria in Harran. Unable to prevent the ravaging of the
old home provinces which was continued throughout 611, Ashur-Uballit could but
await attack in Harran, hoping that the Egyptians might be in time to help him
to withstand the enemy. Nabopolassar did not underestimate the task before him;
not until the Medes and Scythians joined him in 610 did he march against
Harran. Desirous of keeping his army in the field, Ashur-uballit left his city,
which fell into the hands of an enemy who devastated it as the cities of
Assyria had been devastated. At last the troops of Necho arrived, and effected a junction with Ashur-Uballit; the Babylonian army
was besieged in Harran, but timely aid arrived from Babylonia, and Ashur-Uballit
and his Egyptian allies were defeated in the field. Presumably the weary
struggle lasted on until 605, when Necho’s defeat at the hands of
Nebuchadrezzar at Carchemish settled for a time the question of the ascendancy
in Syria. The Assyrian nation, as such, passed away in Syria.
The disappearance of the Assyrian people will always
remain an unique and striking phenomenon in ancient
history. Other, similar, kingdoms and empires have indeed passed away, but the
people have lived on. Recent discoveries have, it is true, shown that poverty-stricken
communities perpetuated the old Assyrian names at various places, for instance
on the ruined site of Ashur, for many centuries, but the essential truth
remains the same. A nation which had existed two thousand years and had ruled a
wide area, lost its independent character. To account
for this two considerations may be urged. First, even
in lands where, as Gibbon has remarked, the people are of a libidinous
complexion, the Assyrians seem to have been unduly devoted to practices which
can only end in racial suicide; the last years of their history can only be
explained by a loss of man-power not entirely accounted for by civil wars.
Secondly, it is certain that the Medes carried off into their own country large
numbers of the ummane, the craftsmen who worked in metal and stone. Many of the
glories of Persepolis and Ecbatana were wrought by workmen trained by the
guilds of Nineveh; the art of seal-cutting was taught to their masters by
Assyrian slaves. No other land seems to have been sacked and pillaged so completely as was Assyria; no other people, unless it be
Israel, was ever so completely enslaved.
In another way the fall of Assyria is unique, in that
after centuries of military domination in Mesopotamia, and after decades of
imperial power, it is almost impossible for the modern historian surely to
trace any lasting Assyrian influence on the history of succeeding ages. Yet it
must not be too hastily assumed that this impossibility is due to anything but
ignorance; if we had some knowledge of the history of the Medes, a fuller
acquaintance with the development of Persia, a more precise account of the
origins of Zoroastrianism, it is conceivable that the continuity of history
could be proved decisively. Politically, it may even now be affirmed, the
Assyrian empire lived on in the greater Persian empire that succeeded it, and was the original of the abiding type of polity known as
‘the Oriental Monarchy’. Fuller information may yet show that Assyrian
civilization left a more decided impress on Syria and other provinces than has
yet been realized; of Sargonid rulers especially it would probably be
inaccurate to say ‘they make a solitude and they call it peace’. In Harran for
instance there subsisted until the time of the Abbasid Caliphate a form of
heathendom which in some of its principal features closely resembled Assyrian
religion. But above all the justification for the existence of the Assyrian
empire is to be found in the fact that the might of Assyrian arms enabled
Babylonian civilization to survive during centuries when Babylon was no longer
a cultural centre, until at last the Chaldean dynasty which wrought the fall of
Nineveh was able to take on the task of preserving civilization in one of its
earliest cradles.
CHAPTER VITHE HITTITES OF SYRIA |
CAMBRIDGE ANCIENT HISTORY. EDITED BY J. B. BURY - S. A. COOK - F. E. ADCOCK : VOLUME III |