READING HALL DOORS OF WISDOM |
TIGLATH
PILESER I
(1114 –1076 BC)
OF the period when the first settlers of a Semitic
race entered Assyria nothing is known, but all things point to their coming
from Babylonia. The oldest traditions of the Semitic peoples connect the
Assyrians with the Babylonians, and the earliest titles of their rulers point
to dependence upon the previous civilization in the south. We are unable to
trace the political and social history of Assyria to any point at all
approaching the vast antiquity of Babylonia.
There is evidence, as already
seen, that the city of Nineveh was in existence at least three thousand years
before Christ, but of the men who built it and reigned in it we know absolutely
nothing. As in Babylonia, we are confronted in the beginnings of Assyrian
history only by a name here and there of some early ruler of whose deeds we
have only the simplest note, if indeed we have any at all. The first Assyrian
ruler bears the title of Ishakku,
which seems to mean priest-prince, and implies subjection to some other ruler
elsewhere. These early rulers must have been subject princes of the kings in
Babylonia, for there is no evidence yet found to connect them with any other
state, while their traditional connections are all with the southern kingdom.
The names of several of these Ishakku have
come down to us, but we are unhappily not able to arrange them in any definite
order of chronological sequence. Apparently the first of them are Ishme Dagan and his
son, Shamshi Adad I. The latter of these built a great temple in
the city of Asshur and dedicated it to the
gods Anu and Adad.
We have no certain indications of the date of these rulers, but we are probably
safe in the assertion that they ruled about 1830-1810 BC. After a short
interval, probably, there follow two other priest-princes, whose names
are Igur Kapkapu and Shamshi Adad II. The names of two other Ishakke have also come down
to us, Khallu and Irishum, but their date is
unknown.
These six names are all that
remain of the history of the early government of Assyria. At this period, about
1800 BC, the chief city was Asshur, then and
long after the residence of the ruler. There is no hint in these early texts of
hegemony over other cities; though Nineveh certainly, and other cities
probably, were then in existence. The population was probably small,
consisting, in its ruling classes at least, of colonists from Babylonia. There
may have been earlier settlers among whom the Semitic invaders found home, as
there were in Babylonia when the Semites first appeared in that land, but of
them we have no certainty. It is an indistinct picture which we get of these
times in the temperate northern land, but it is a picture of civilized men who
dwelt in cities, and built temples in which to worship their gods, and who
carried on some form of government in a tributary or other subject relation to
the great culture land which they had left in the south. The later Assyrian
people had but faint memory of these times, and to them, as to us, they were
ancient days.
At about 1700 BC the priest-prince
ruling in Asshur was Bel Kapkapu,
according to a statement of Adad Nirari III (811-783), a
later king of Assyria, while Esarhaddon would have us believe that he was
himself a direct descendant of a king, Belbani, and, though we may put no faith in such
genealogical researches, perhaps greater credence may be given the other
historical statement with which the name of Belbani is followed. According to the historiographers
of Esarhaddon, Belbani was
the first of Asshur who adopted the title
of king, having received the office of king from the god Marduk himself. If there be
any truth at all in these statements, we must see in Belbani the first king of Assyria, but the
fact is empty of real meaning, whether true or not, for we know nothing of the
king's personality or works.
After these names of shadowy
personalities there comes a great silent period of above two hundred years, in
which we hear no sound of any movements in Assyria, nor do we know the name of
even one ruler. At the very end of this period (about 1490 BC) all western Asia
was shaken to its foundations by an Egyptian invasion. Thutmosis III, freed at last from the restraint of Hatshepsowet his peace-loving sister or aunt,
had swept along the Mediterranean coast to Carmel and over the spur of the hill
to the plain of Esdraelon (Hatshepsowet, Thutmosis II, and Thutmosis III reigned together from about 1516 to 1449. It was in the twenty-second year
that the advance began upon Syria, Thutmosis III
being then sole ruler of Egypt). At Megiddo the allies met him in defense of
Syria, if not of all western Asia, and were crushingly defeated. The echo of
that victory resounded even in Assyria, and whoever it was who then reigned by
the Tigris made haste to send a "great stone of real lapis lazuli"
and other less valuable gifts in token of his submission. It was well for
Samaria that Thutmosis was satisfied with those
gifts, and led no army across the Euphrates.
Soon after the invasion of Thutmosis III we again learn the name of an Assyrian king,
for about 1450 BC we find the Kassite king
of Babylonia, Karaindash, making a treaty with the
king of Assyria, whose name is given as Asshur-bel-nisheshu. This latter is the first king of Assyria
of whom we may consider that we know anything. He claims a certain territory in
Mesopotamia, and makes good his claim to it. Assyria now is clearly
acknowledged by the king of Babylonia as an independent kingdom. The
independence of the northern kingdom was probably achieved during the two
hundred years preceding, through the weakness of the kingdom of Babylonia. It
must be remembered that it was in this very period that Babylonia was torn with
internal dissension and fell an easy prey to the Kassites.
While the Kassites were busy with the
establishment of their rule over the newly conquered land the time was
auspicious for the firm settling of a new kingdom in Assyria.
Shortly after, though perhaps not
immediately, his successor, Puzur Asshur, came to the throne (about 1420 BC). Like his
predecessor, he also had dealings with the Babylonians concerning the boundary
line; and beyond this fact noted by the Assyrian synchronistic tablet, we know
nothing of him.
After Puzur Ashur came Asshur-na-dinakhe (it
is Asshur who giveth brothers),
a contemporary of Amenophis IV,
the heretic king of Egypt, with whom he had correspondence. A later king also
records the fact that he built, or rather perhaps restored, a palace in Asshur. His reign was an era of peace, as these two facts
apparently would prove, namely, the correspondence with the far distant land of
Egypt, indicating a high state of civilization, and the restoration of a
palace, and not, as heretofore, a temple.
He was succeeded by his son, Asshur Uballit (Asshur has given life), about 1370 BC, and in his
reign there were stirring times. His daughter, Muballitat Sherua, was married to Kara Khardash, the king of Babylon.
Herein we meet for the first time, in real form, the Assyrian efforts to gain
control in Babylonia. The son of this union, Kitdashman Kbarbe I, was soon upon the throne. The
Babylonian people must have suspected intrigue, for they rebelled and killed
the king. This was a good excuse for Assyrian intervention, for the rebels had
killed the grandson of the king of Assyria. The Assyrians invaded the land, and
the Babylonians were conquered, and another grandson of Asshur Uballit was
placed upon the throne, under the title of Kurigalzu. This act made Babylonia at least
partially subject to Assyria, but many long years must elapse before any such
subjection would be really acknowledged by the proud Babylonians. They were
already subject to a foreign people, the Kassites,
who had indeed become Babylonians in all respects, but it would be a greater
humiliation to acknowledge their own colonists, the Assyrians, a bloodthirsty
people, as their masters. Asshur-Uballit also
made a campaign against the Shubari,
a people dwelling east of the Tigris and apparently near the borders of Elam.
Friendly relations between Assyria
and Egypt were continued during his reign, and a letter of his to the Egyptian
king Amenophis IV
has been preserved, in which occur the following sentences: To Napkhuriya ... king of
Egypt my brother: Asshur Uballit, king of Assyria, the
great king thy brother. To thyself, to thy house, and to thy country let there
be peace. When I saw thy ambassadors I rejoiced greatly ... A chariot ... and
two white horses, ... a chariot without harness, and one seal of blue stone I
have sent thee as a present. These are presents for the great king." The
letter then proceeds to ask very frankly for specific and very large gifts in
return, and tells very clearly of the present state of the road between Egypt
and Assyria. In the reign of Asshur Uballit Assyria made a
distinct advance in power and dignity, and this development continued during
the reign of Asshur Uballit's son and successor, Bel Nirari (Bel-is-myhelp)—about
1380 BC. Of him two facts have come down to us, the mutual relations of which
seem to be as follows: Kurigalzu II
had been seated on the Babylonian throne by the Assyrians and therefore owed
them much gratitude, but to assure the stability of his throne he must needs
take the Babylonian rather than the Assyrian side of controversies and
difficulties between the peoples. The grandson of Bel Nirari boasts concerning
him that he conquered the Kassites and
increased the territory of Assyria. By this he must mean not the Kassite rulers of Babylonia, but rather the people
from whom they had come—that is, the inhabitants of the neighboring Elamite foothills. This conquest simply carried a
little further the acquisition of territory toward the east and south which had
been begun by Asshur-Uballit's conquest
of Shubari. But these
Assyrian conquests led to Babylonian jealousy and then to a conflict
between Kurigalzu II
and Bel Nirari, in which the latter was victorious, and
this, in turn, brought about a rearrangement of the boundary line by which the
two kings divided between them the disputed territory, though it does not
appear which was the gainer.
Again the succession to the throne
passed from father to son, and Pudi Ilu
(about 1360 BC) reigned in Asshur. He has left
us only brief inscriptions, in which he boasts of building at the temple of
Shamash, probably that at the capital city. From his son we learn that he was a
warrior of no mean achievements, though our geographical knowledge is not
sufficient to enable us to follow his movements closely. He is represented as
overrunning the lands Turuki and Nigimkhi, and conquering the
princes of the land of Gutium. Beside these
conquests to the north of the city of Asshur he
also extended his borders toward the southwest by the conquest of the nomad
people the Sutu. From reign to reign we see the little kingdom of Asshur grow. These conquests were probably not much
more than raids, nor is it likely that at so early a period a serious effort
was made by the Assyrians to govern the territory overrun. It was preparatory
work; the peoples round about Asshur were
gradually being brought to know something of its growing power. They would soon
come to regard it as a mistress and consolidation would be easy. It was in
similar fashion that the empire of Babylonia had grown to its position of
influence.
Pudi Ilu was succeeded by his son, Adad Nirari I
(about 1345 BC), who has left us two records, the one a bronze sword inscribed
with his name and titles, the other a considerable inscription, carefully dated
by the eponym name, the oldest dated Assyrian inscription yet found. The latter
is largely devoted to an account of the enlargement of the temple of Asshur in the capital, his wars being but slightly
mentioned. In the enumeration of the lands conquered by him the countries
already overrun by his predecessors are repeated—Shubari, the Kassite country,
and Guti, to which he
adds the land of the Lulumi.
The fact that these lands needed so soon to be conquered again shows that the
first conquest was little more than a raid. But this time a distinct advance
was made; Adad Nirari does more than conquer. He expressly
states that he rebuilt cities in this conquered territory which had been
devastated by the previous conquests. Here is evidence of rule rather than of
ruin, and in this incident we may find the real beginnings of the great empire
of Assyria. Again there were difficulties with Babylonia, and Adad Nirari fought
with Kurigalzu II
and with his successor, Nazi Maruttash (about
1345 BC), both of whom he conquered, according to Assyrian accounts; though the
Babylonian Chronicle would give the victory to the Babylonian king, in the
first case at least. In the inscription of the bronze sword Adad Nirari calls
himself king of Kishshati,
a title which is found earlier in an inscription of Asshur Uballit. He does not call
himself king of Asshur at all, though this
title is given by him to his father and grandfather. Apparently he seems to
claim for himself a greater dignity than that of ruler merely over Asshur, else would he certainly have called himself king
of Asshur, as did his predecessors. But his own
description gives us no means of determining the location or the bounds of the
territory which he had conquered or over which he claimed rule. When his reign
closed he left Assyria and its dependencies far stronger than when he took the
government in his own hands.
His son, Shalmaneser I,
was his worthy successor. From his own historiographers very little has come
down to us—only two broken tablets, from which it is difficult to make out any
connected story, but the fame of his great deeds called forth more than one
mention from later kings, and these will enable us to reconstruct the main
portion of his achievements. The general direction of his conquests was toward
the northwest. This would seem to imply that the policy of his father had been
successful, and that the territory toward the northeast and the southeast was
peacefully subject to Assyria. He pushed rather into the great territory of the
valley between the Tigris and the Euphrates, and therein established colonies
as a bulwark of defense against the nomadic populations of the farther north.
Still farther westward the land of Musri was
also subjected. This land lay north of Syria, close to Mount Amanus, and hence very near to the great Mediterranean
Sea. To reach it Shalmaneser must cross
the Euphrates—the first time that Assyrian power had crossed the great river.
Subsequent events show that the more westerly parts of the land which he
conquered were not really added to the Assyrian state. As in the case of Shubari, so also in this, other
invasions would be necessary. But this at least had been gained, the rapidly
growing kingdom was firmly established as far as the Balikh, and perhaps even to the Euphrates beyond.
Small wonder is it that a
conqueror of such prowess and an organizer of such ability should deem it
necessary to build a new capital worthy of so great a kingdom. The city
of Asshur was old, and its location was
far south, too near the old Babylonian border. A kingdom that was growing
northward and westward needed a capital more nearly central in location. Shalmaneser I determined to erect his new capital at
Calah, and so pitched upon a site which remained the capital of his country for
centuries, and later became the southern portion of Nineveh itself. In peace as
in war a man of foresight and skill, like his father, he left Assyria the
greater for his living and ruling.
In the reign of his son and
successor, Tukulti Ninib (about 1290 BC), the
irresistible progress of the Assyrian arms reached a glorious climax. There had
once more arisen trouble between the two states of Assyria and Babylonia.
Perhaps it was the old and vexed boundary question, which would not down; perhaps
the never-forgotten restless ambition of the Assyrians to rule at Babylon.
Whatever the cause or excuse Tukulti Ninib invaded Babylonia
with force sufficient to overwhelm its defenders and the imperial capital was
taken. After an unexampled career of power and of civilization Babylon had
fallen and the Assyrian plunderer was among her ruins. Tukulti Ninib laid low a part of the city wall, even
then massive, killed some of the defenders, and plundered the temple, carrying
away into Assyria the image of the great god Marduk. This was no mere raid, but a genuine
conquest of the city, which was now governed from Calah. Assyrian officers were
stationed both in the north and in the south of the country. Tukulti Ninib adopts the title of king of Sumer and
Accad in addition to his former, titles, king of Kishshati and king of Asshur. In his person were now united the latest Assyrian
title and one of the most ancient titles in the world. The old and coveted land
of Sumer and Accad, the conquest of which by Hammurabi had been the very making
of his empire, was now ruled from the far north. A curious evidence of the rule
of Tukulti Ninib in Babylon itself was
found by Sennacherib, probably during the second attack upon the city (689
BC). Tukulti Ninib had sent to Babylon a
seal inscribed with his name, and this was taken to Assyria. For seven years
only was this rule over Babylonia maintained. The Babylonians rebelled, drove
out the Assyrian conqueror, and set up once more a Babylonian, Adad Shum Usur (about 1268-1239 BC), as king over them.
When Tukulti Ninib returned to Assyria
after his unsuccessful effort to maintain his authority in the south he found
even his own people in rebellion under the leadership of his son. In the civil
war that followed he lost his life, and the most brilliant reign in Assyrian
history up to that time was closed.
Up to this point the progress of
the Assyrians had been steady and rapid. The few Semitic colonists from
Babylonia had so completely overwhelmed the original inhabitants of their land
that the latter made no impression on Assyrian life or history, and in this
alone they had achieved more than the Babylonians, after a much longer history
and with greater opportunities. We have seen how the Babylonians were
influenced by the Sumerian civilization and by the Sumerian people. Afterward
they were first conquered by the Kassites and
then so completely amalgamated with them that they ceased to be a pure Semitic
race. Thus the influences of Semitism could not be perpetuated and disseminated
by the Babylonians, while, on the other hand, the Assyrians suffered no
intermixture. The latter had already so gained control of the fine territory
which they first invaded as to be absolute masters of it. Under them the land
of Assyria had become Semitic. More than this, they had gained sufficient
influence by conquest over the older Arameans peoples
toward the southeast, between them and the Kassites and
the Babylonians, as to take from the Babylonians the Semitic leadership. Their
colonies in the upper Mesopotamian valley were centers of Semitic influence and
stood as a great bulwark against the non-Semitic influences on the north. By
crossing the Euphrates and conquering the land of Musri they had also threatened the older
Semitic civilizations in Syria and Palestine. Would they be able to wrest the
power from them, as they had from the eastern Aramaeans and
from the Babylonians? If this could be done, the Assyrians would hold in their
hands the destinies of the Semitic race. It seemed as though they were to
accomplish even this, when they were suddenly checked by the successful
rebellion of the Babylonians, by civil war, and by the death of their great
leader. This reverse might mean their permanent overthrow if the Babylonian
people still had in their veins the courage, the dash, and the rugged
independence of the desert Semite. If, however, the intermixture of Sumerian
and Kassite blood, not to mention lesser
strains, had weakened the Semitic powers of the Babylonians, the check to
Assyria might be only temporary. It is a critical day in the history of the
race. The severity of the blow to Assyria is evidenced not only by the results
in Babylonia, but no less by the fragmentary character of Assyrian annals for a
long time. It is, indeed, for a time difficult not only to learn the course of
events in Assyria, but even the names and order of the kings. The Babylonian
Chronicle mentions an Assyrian king, Tukulti Asshur Bel, in close connection with the history of Tukulti Ninib, but in words so obscure that his relation to
the history is difficult to understand. It is altogether probable that he
reigned as regent in Assyria during the seven years in which his father was
engaged in the reducing and ruling of Babylon, but of his deeds in these years
we have no knowledge.
The successor of Tukulti Ninib on the throne of Assyria was his
son, Asshur Nazirpal I, who had led the rebellion against
him. In his reign the ruin of Assyrian fortunes which began in his father's
defeat and death went rapidly on. The Babylonian king, Adad-Shum-Usur,
felt himself strong enough to follow up the advantage already gained by the
restoration of his family to power, and actually attacked Assyria, from which
he was only with difficulty repulsed.
The next Assyrian kings were Asshur Narara and Nabu Daian (about 1250 BC), of whose reigns we know
nothing, although we are able to infer from the sequel that the Assyrian power
continued to wane, while the Babylonian increased. The reigns were short, and
were soon succeeded by Bel Kudur Usur and Ninib Apal Esharra, in whose day the
Babylonians under the leadership of Meli Shipak and Marduk Apal Iddina invaded
Assyria and stripped the once powerful kingdom of all its southern and part at
least of its northern and western conquered territory. Apparently all was lost
that the Assyrian kings of the earlier day had won, and the end of Assyrian
leadership had come, but the motive force of the Assyrians was not destroyed.
The successor of Ninib Apal Esharra was Asshur Dan (about 1210 BC), and with him begins the
rehabilitation of Assyrian power. He crossed the river Zab, and invading the territory which had been for some
time considered Babylonian, restored a small section of it to Assyria. We know
little else of his reign, but this is sufficient to mark the turning point and
explain what follows. His great-grandson, Tiglath Pileser, boasts of him that he reached a great age. In his
reign the rugged virtues of the Assyrians were preparing for the reawakening
which was soon to come. Of the following reign of his son, Mutakkil Nusku (about 1150 BC), we
have no information, though we are probably safe in the supposition that his
father's work was continued, for we find in Babylonian history, as has been
seen, no evidence of any weakening of Assyria, but rather the contrary.
The gain in the Assyrian progress
is shown more clearly by the reign of his son, Asshur Risk Ishi (about 1140 BC), who is introduced to us very
fittingly as "the powerful king, the conqueror of hostile lands, the subduer of all the evil." The beginning of his
conquests was made by a successful campaign against the Lulumi and the Kuti, who have found mention
more than once before. They must have either become independent, during the
period of Assyria's decline, or perhaps have been added to the restored
Babylonian empire. Having thus made sure of the territory on the south and
east, Asshur Risk Ishi was ready to meet the great and hereditary foe
of Babylon. Nebuchadrezzar I
was now king in Babylon, and, flushed with recent victory over a portion of
Elam, was a dangerous antagonist. The issue between the kings seems to have
been joined not in the old land of Babylonia south of Assyria, but in
Mesopotamia, and the Assyrians were victorious. Of the other deeds of Asshur Rich Ishi we
know nothing save that he restored again the temple of Ishtar in Calah.Asshur Rish Ishi was
succeeded by his son, Tiglath Pileser I (Tukulti Pal Esharra, "My help is the
son of Esharra"—that
is, "My help is the god Ninib").
There was therefore no break in the succession and no new dynasty begins.
Nevertheless, a new period of Assyrian history really commences with the next
king. With Asshur Risk Ishi ends the first period of growth and decay and of
renaissance. To his son he left a kingdom almost as great as Assyria had yet
possessed. Tiglath Pileser begins
to reign with the titles of king of Kishshati and king of Asshur; the only title belonging to his ancestors which he
did not possess was king of Sumer and Accad. With him we enter upon a wonderful
period in the career of the Assyrian people.
TIGLATHPILESER I AND HIS SONS
TIGLATH PILESER I (about 1120 BC)
was the grand monarch of western Asia in his day, and the glory of his
achievements was held in memory in Assyria for ages after. It is fitting that
one who wrought such marvels in peace and war should have caused his deeds to
be written down with care and preserved in more than one copy. To his gods he
ascribed the credit of his works. Their names, a formidable number, stand at
the very head of the chief written memorials of his reign.
Here are Asshur,
the ancient patron deity of his land, "the great lord, the director of the
hosts of the gods," and Bel also, and
Sin, the moon god; Shamash, the sun god; Adad,
the god of the air, of storms, of thunder, and rain; Ninib, "the hero"; and, last of all, the
goddess Ishtar, "the firstborn of the gods", whose name was ever to
resound and be hallowed in the later history of Nineveh. With so great a
pantheon had the people of Assyria already enriched themselves.
The annals of the king show that
he planned his campaigns well and had a definite aim in each struggle against
his enemies. When he ascended the throne Babylonia was too weak to interfere
with his labor of building up anew the Assyrian empire, and no immediate
campaign southward was therefore necessary. On the other hand, there was a
threatening situation in the north and west. The nomadic tribes, established in
the hill country above the Mesopotamian valley, northward of Harran, had never
been really subdued, and some fresh effort had to be made to hold them in check
or the integrity of the kingdom might be endangered. The tribe that was now
most threatening was the Mushke.
This people was settled in the territory north of Milid, the modern Malatiyeh, on both sides of the upper waters of the
Euphrates. In later times they became famous as the Moschi of the Greeks, and the Meshech of the Old
Testament, being in both cases associated with the Tubal or Tibareni, who at this period
lived toward the south and west, inhabiting a portion of the territory later
known as Cappadocia. The Mushke had
crossed the Euphrates southward and possessed themselves of the districts
of Alzi and Purukhumzi about fifty
years before, in the period of Assyria's weakness. The Assyrians had once
overrun this very territory and claimed presents for the god Asshur from its inhabitants, but it was now fully in
the control of the Mushke,
and had for these fifty years been paying tribute to them, and not to the
Assyrians. Feeling their strength, and unopposed by any other king, the Mushke, to the number of about
twenty thousand, in five bands, invaded the land of Kummukh. Here was indeed a dangerous situation for
Assyria, for if these people were unchecked, they would not long be satisfied
with the possession of this northern part of Kummukh, but would seize it all, and perhaps invade
the land of Assyria itself. Trusting in Asshur,
his lord, Tiglath Pileser hastily
assembled an army and marched against them. He must cross the rough and wild
Mount Masius and descend upon his enemies among the head waters of the Tigris.
How large a force of men he led in this venture we do not know, but his victory
was overwhelming. Of the twenty thousand men who opposed him but six thousand
remained alive to surrender and accept Assyrian rule. The others were savagely
butchered, their heads cut off, and their blood scattered over the
"ditches and heights of the mountains". This savagery, so clearly met
here for the first time, blackens the whole record of Assyrian history to the
end. It was usual in far less degree among the Babylonians, so that the
ascendancy of Assyria over Babylonia is, in this light, the triumph of brute
force over civilization.
Having thus overwhelmed the
advance guard of the Mushke, Tiglath Pileser returns
to reestablish, by conquest, the Assyrian supremacy over the southern portions
of the land of Kummukh.
This country was also quickly subdued and its cities wasted with fire, perhaps
as centers of possible rebellion. The fleeing inhabitants crossed an arm of the
Tigris toward the west and made a stand in the city of Sherishé, which they fortified for defense. The
Assyrian king pursued across mountain and river, and carried by assault their
stronghold, butchering the fighting men as before. The men of Kummukh had some forces
from the land of Qurkhe as
allies, but these profited little, and the united forces were overwhelmed.
Again the Tigris was crossed and the stronghold of Urrakhinash laid waste. Rightly appreciating
the terrible danger that threatened them, the inhabitants gathered together
their possessions, together with their gods, and fled "like birds"
into the mountain fastnesses that surrounded them. Their king realizing the
hopelessness of his state, came forth to meet his conqueror and to seek some
mercy at his hand. Tiglath Pileser took the members of his family as hostages,
and received a rich gift of bronze plates, copper bowls, and trays, and a
hundred and twenty slaves, with oxen and sheep. Strangely enough he spared his
life, adding complacently to the record the words: "I had compassion on
him, (and) granted his life", which hereafter was to be lived under
Assyrian suzerainty. By these movements the "broad land of Kummukh" was conquered, and
the Assyrian ruled at least as far as, if not beyond, Mount Masius. Great
achievements these for the first year of a reign, and the next year was equally
successful. It began with an invasion of the land of Shubari, which had been conquered before by Adad Nirari I,
and had again rebelled, thence the king marched into the countries of Alzi and Purukhunizi, of which we heard
in his first campaign, in order to lay upon them anew the old annual tribute so
long unpaid to Assyria. The cities of Shubari surrendered without battle on the
appearance of Tiglath Pileser,
and the district north of Mount Masius was all a tribute-paying land. On the
return from this campaign the land of Kummukh is again devastated. The exaggeration
of the king's annals appears strongly here, for if, in the campaign of the
first year, Kummukh had
been so thoroughly wasted as the king's words declare, there would certainly
have been little left to destroy in the next year. This time there is added at
the conclusion one sentence which did not appear before. "The land
of Kummukh, in its
whole extent, I subjugated and added to the territory of my
land". Well may such a conqueror continue in the words which
immediately follow: "Tiglath Pileser, the powerful king, overwhelmer of the disobedient, he who
overcomes the opposition of the wicked". The control of the great
Mesopotamian valley in its northern portion between the Tigris and the
Euphrates is safely lodged in Assyrian hands.
The third year of the reign
of Tiglath Pileser contained
no less than three campaigns. The first, against Kharia and Qurkhi, we cannot follow in its
geographical details, and are therefore unable fully to realize its meaning and
importance. It was a mountain campaign, full of toilsome ascents, and carried
on with the usual savage accompaniments. In quite a different direction lay the
course of the second campaign of this year. Instead of the north, it was the
south that now claimed attention. The king crosses the Lower Zab River, which discharges its waters into the
Tigris not far south of the ancient capital, Asshur,
and conquers an inaccessible region amid the mountains of its upper courses. A
third campaign again carries him to the north against Sugi, in Qurkhi, and results also in a victory, from which
no less than twenty-five gods were brought back to Assyria in triumphal
subjection to Anu, Adad,
and Ishtar.
The great undertaking of the
fourth year of the king's reign was a campaign into the lands of the Nairi. By this the annals
of Tiglath Pileser clearly
mean the lands about the sources of the Tigris and Euphrates, lying north,
west, and south of Lake Van. In this territory there was as yet no Chaldian kingdom, but no
less than twenty-three native kings or princes united their forces to oppose
the Assyrian. There was more mountain climbing to reach them, and then they
were severely punished. The kings were taken alive, and after swearing oaths of
fealty to the gods of Assyria were liberated. Chariots and troops of horses,
with much treasure of every kind, were taken, and a yearly tribute of twelve
hundred horses and two thousand oxen was put upon the inhabitants, who were not
removed from their land. One only of these twenty-three kings - Sini, the king of Daiyaöni - refusing to surrender as the
others, resisted to the last. He was therefore carried in chains to Assyria,
where he probably saw reasons for submission, for he was suffered to depart
alive. This episode in the king's conquests is concluded with the claim that
the whole of the lands of Nairi were
subdued, but later history shows clearly that further conquest was necessary.
It was a great move forward in Assyria's growth into a world power to have
accomplished this much. As a part of the same campaign tribute was collected
from the territory about Milid,
and another year of activity was ended.
By comparison with the previous
four years the fifth seems a year of less result. Aramean peoples
inhabiting the Syrian wastes, west of the upper waters of the Euphrates and
south of the city of Carchemish, had crossed the river into Mesopotamia. Tiglath Pileser expelled
them, and so again strengthened Assyrian supremacy in northern Mesopotamia as
far as Carchemish. Following up his easily won victory, the king crossed the
Euphrates in pursuit and laid waste six Arameans cities
at the foot of Mount Bishri.
The campaign of the next year was
directed against the land of Musri,
which had already felt the arm of Assyria in the reign of Shalmaneser I. The people of Musri were aided by allies from the land
of Qumani, and both
lands were subjugated and a yearly tribute put upon them, after they had
suffered all the horrors of the savage Assyrian method of warfare. In the
language of the annals, their heads were cut off "like sheep."
The king thus records the results
of his five years of campaigns: "In all, forty-two centuries and their
kings from beyond the Lower Zab (and) the
border of the distant mountains to beyond the Euphrates, to the land of the
Hittites and the Upper Sea of the setting sun, from the beginning of my
sovereignty until my fifth year my hand has conquered. Of one mind I made them
all; their hostages I took; tribute and taxes I imposed upon them." With
this notice in the annals of Tiglath Pileser ends all account of his campaigns. No other
word concerning any further raids or ravages is spoken. Were it not for the
Synchronistic History we should know nothing more of his prowess. The
information which thus comes to us is not so full as are the notes which we
have already passed in review, but it supplies what was needful to round out
the circle of his marching and conquering. It was improbable that a king who
had conquered north, west, and east should not also find cause for attacking
the coveted land of Babylonia. From the Synchronistic History we learn that he
twice invaded the territory of Marduk Nadin Akhe and marched even to Babylon itself, where
he was styled king of the Four Quarters of the World. So ends the story of the
wars of Tiglath Pileser I.
He had not only restored the kingdom of Assyria to the position which it held
in the days of Shalmaneser and Tukulti Ninib; he had made it still more great. Never had
so many peoples paid tribute to the
Assyrians, and never was so large a territory actually ruled from the Assyrian
capital.
But Tiglath Pileser was no less great in peace than in war. He
brought back the capital of Assyria from Calah to Asshur and
almost rebuilt the city, which had thus again become important. The temples of
Ishtar, Adad, and Bel were
rebuilt. The palaces which had fallen into ruin during the absence of the court
were again restored and beautified. And then into this city thus renewed, and
into this land enlarged by conquest, the king brought the wealth of the world
as he had gathered it. Goats, fallow deer, and wild sheep were herded into the
land. Horses in large numbers taken from conquered lands or received in yearly
tribute were added to the peaceful service of agriculture. But not even here
did the king rest. He caused trees also to be brought from great distances and
planted in the land he loved. It is a marvelous story of peaceful achievement,
worthy of a place by the side of his overpowering success in war.
In addition to the serious work of
war and peace the king found time to cultivate the wiles of a sportsman, and
great are his boasts of the birds and the cattle and even the lions which he
slew. This passion for sport is commemorated long afterward in an inscription
of Asshur Nazirpal, in which we are told that Tiglath Pileser sailed
in ships of Arvad upon
the Mediterranean. It follows from this that after the six campaigns,
enumerated above, the king must have made another which carried him out to the
Phoenician coast, where his successors were later to fight great battles and
win great triumphs.
Of the conclusion of the reign
of Tiglath Pileser we
know nothing. He probably died in peace, for he was succeeded by his son, Asshur Bel Kala
(about 1090 BC), and the latter was followed after a short reign by another son
of Tiglath Pileser, Shamshi Adad I (about 1080 B.C.). So easy and unbroken a
succession makes it a fair presumption that the times were peaceful. The sons
were not able to hear the burden which came to them, so that there is speedily
a falling off in the power and dignity of the kingdom. When we look back on the
reign of Tiglath Pileser and
ask what of permanent value for Assyria was achieved by all his wars the answer
is disappointing. He might boast that he had conquered from east to west, from
the Lower Zab to the Mediterranean, and
from the south to the north, from Babylonia to Lake Van, but what were these
conquests, for the most part, but raids of intimidation and of plunder? He did
not really extend the government of Assyria to such limits, even though in Kummukh he actually
appointed Assyrian governors. Over this great territory, however, he made the
name of Assyria feared, so that the lesser peoples surrendered at times without
striking a blow for freedom, while the greater peoples dared not think of invading
Assyrian territory. This insurance against invasion was the great gain which he
brought to his country. By carrying savage war to other nations he secured for
his own a peace which gave opportunity for progress in the arts. These great
temples and palaces required time for their erection and time for the training
of men who were skilled in the making of bricks and the working of wood. The
very inscription from which we have learned the facts of his reign, a beautiful
clay prism with eight hundred and nine lines of writing, bears impressive
witness to a high state of civilization and an era of peace.
Of the reigns of the two sons we
know almost nothing. Asshur Bel kala maintained
terms of peace with Marduk Shapik Zer Mati (about
1094-1083 BC), king of Babylonia, who thereby seemed to be considered an
independent monarch and not subject to the Assyrians, as his predecessor had
been. In this reign the capital appears to have been transferred to Nineveh,
and a word in the only inscription of the king which has come down to us hints
at the king's control in the west. After a short reign Asshur Bel Kala was
succeeded by his brother, Shamshi Adad, whose only work known to us was the rebuilding of
the temple of Ishtar in Nineveh—another proof that the capital was now located
at this city and not at Asshur.
After this reign there is another long period of silence in Assyrian history, of which we have no native monumental witnesses; a period of immense importance in the history of mankind, for it was a time not only of silence but of actual decay in the Assyrian commonwealth. As the fortunes of Assyria were at so low an ebb, the time was favorable for the growth and development of peoples elsewhere who were for a time free from the threatening of Assyrian arms. When once more we come upon a period of historical writing and of great deeds in Assyria we shall find the Assyrian conquerors confronting a changed condition of affairs in the world. To the growth of new conditions elsewhere we must now address our thought for a better understanding of Assyrian movements after the silent period.
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