READING HALL DOORS OF WISDOM |
SHAMSHI-ADAD I
1813– 1791 BC
SCARCELY thirty years ago the figure of Hammurabi, the unifier
of Babylonia, still stood out in striking isolation. In fact, at the time he
ascended the throne another centralized empire already occupied the whole of
northern Mesopotamia: it was the personal creation of Shamshi-Adad
I, to whom recent discoveries have made it possible to give his place in
history.
Whereas Hammurabi
had inherited a considerable territory from his father, Shamshi-Adad
had more modest beginnings. He belonged to one of the numerous nomad clans
which had infiltrated into Mesopotamia after the break-up of the Third Dynasty
of Ur. His father, Ila-kabkabu, ruled over a land
bordering on the kingdom of Mari, with which he had come into conflict. It is
not well known what happened next. According to one version, the authenticity
of which is not certain, Shamshi-Adad made his way
into Babylonia, while his brother succeeded to Ila-kabkabu.
Later on he seized Ekallatum; the capture of this
fortress, on the left bank of the Tigris, in the southern reaches of the lower
Zab, laid the gates of Assyria open to him.
The moment was
propitious, for Assyria had only lately regained her independence, having
previously had to submit to Naram-Sin of Eshnunna, who had advanced as far as the upper Khabur. But Naram-Sin’s conquests had been ephemeral: on his death,
Assyria had shaken off the yoke of Eshnunna, only to
fall beneath that of Shamshi-Adad. Once installed on
the throne of Ashur, the latter soon set about extending his dominion in the
direction of the West. Among the archives of the palace of Mari has been found
a letter from a prince of the 'High Country' seeking Iakhdunlim’s protection. He feels that the encroachments of Shamshi-Adad,
who has already taken several of his towns, are a threat to him; until then he
had victoriously resisted the attacks of his neighbours from the lands of Aleppo, Carchemish and Urshu.
But Iakhdunlim himself was to pass from the scene, assassinated
by his own servants, who perhaps acted on Shamshi-Adad’s
instigation. At all events, he turned the affair to account by occupying Mari,
while the heir to the throne, Zimrilim, took refuge
with the king of Aleppo. The annexation of Mari represented a considerable gain
in territory, for Iakhdunlim had controlled the
middle Euphrates valley at least as far as the mouth of the Balikh.
In possession,
from now onwards, of an empire which stretched from the Zagros hills to the
Euphrates, Shamshi-Adad shared his power with his two
sons. He installed the eldest, Ishme-Dagan, in Ekallatum, with the onerous task of keeping the warlike
inhabitants of the mountains in check and of mounting a vigilant guard against
the kingdom of Eshnunna, which was to remain his
chief enemy. In Mari he left his younger son, Iasmakh-Adad,
who would have to exert himself mostly against incursions of nomads from the
Syrian steppe.
The correspondence
between the king and his two sons recovered at Mari, along with a small
collection of archives coming from Tell Shemshara,
the centre of a district government in southern Kurdistan,
make it possible to determine the limits of Shamshi-Adad’s
authority. In the direction of Eshnunna the
frontier—if one may speak of frontier at this date—must have run more or less
along the Adhaim, at least along the Tigris valley,
since the eastern marches remained in dispute. Thus it was that Shamshi-Adad had to struggle with Dadusha,
the successor of Naram-Sin, for the possession of Qabra, in the district of Arbela, while the Turukkians made it impossible to retain Shusharra (Tell Shemshara). Here it was not only the almost
continuous hostility of Eshnunna which had to be
faced, but the turbulent inhabitants of the foot-hills of the Zagros as
well—the Gutians and Turukkians.
These last must have been particularly dangerous opponents. On the occasion of
a peace treaty Mut-Ashkur, the son and successor of Ishme-Dagan, married the daughter of a Turukkian chieftain called Zaziya, and even Hammurabi of
Babylonia did not disdain to seek this man’s alliance.
The whole of Upper
Mesopotamia proper was in Shamshi-Adad’s hands. The
Assyrian colonies in Cappadocia were showing renewed activity at that time, but
it is not known how far the new ruler’s real authority extended in the
direction of the Anatolian plateau. In the west it must have stopped at
the Euphrates, where began the kingdom of Iamkhad,
with its capital at Aleppo. When Shamshi-Adad boasts
of having erected triumphal stelae on the Mediterranean coast, in the Lebanon,
it can have been only upon one of those short-lived expeditions, more economic
than military, in the tradition established by Sargon of Agade years before.
However, Shamshi-Adad did not neglect to extend his
influence so as to neutralize Aleppo. He was in alliance with princes of Upper
Syria, notably the prince of Carchemish, and he sealed his good relations with Qatna by a marriage: his son Iasmakh-Adad
married the daughter of the king of that city, Ishkhi-Adad.
In the south, finally, he dominated the middle Euphrates valley almost to the
latitude of Eshnunna.
The empire which Shamshi-Adad had carved out for himself in this way was
vast and prosperous. Crossed by several great trade routes, it embraced the
prolific Assyrian plain, the humid belt bordering on the Anatolian plateau and
the fertile valleys of the Khabur and Euphrates. Naturally, it was coveted to
an equal degree by all his neighbours—the
half-starved plunderers of the mountains and steppes, and the ambitious
monarchs of Aleppo, Eshnunna and Babylon. Shamshi-Adad was to manoeuvre through these manifold dangers with clear-sightedness and skill, energy and
tenacity. We have seen that he gave his sons the duty of watching the two
flanks of his realm. On Ishme-Dagan, who was, like
himself, a forceful soldier not afraid to risk his own skin, he could rely
unhesitatingly. Nor did he omit to hold him up as an example to his second son,
who was far from following in his footsteps.
Feeble and
hesitant, Iasmakh-Adad more often deserved blame than
praise: 'Are you a child, not a man', his father reproached him, 'have you no
beard on your chin?' He tells him some blunt home-truths: 'While here your
brother is victorious, down there you lie about among the women ...' Ishme-Dagan too does not scruple to admonish his younger
brother: 'Why are you setting up a wail about this thing? That is not great
conduct'. Later, he suggests, either as a political manoeuvre or out of a genuine desire to help his brother, that he should not address
himself to the king, their father, directly, but use him as intermediary:
'Write me what you are intending to write to the king, so that, where possible,
I can advise you myself'. Elsewhere he exclaims: 'Show some sense'.
It is
understandable that Shamshi-Adad, whose commendable
intention was to school his son for exercising power, should give him advisers
who had his confidence and were kept informed of the instructions Iasmakh-Adad received from his father. At the same time,
the latter kept his hand on everything. His letters deal not only with
questions of high policy, with international relations or military operations,
but frequently concern themselves with matters of lesser importance, such as
the appointment of officials, caravans or messengers passing through, measures
to be taken with regard to fugitives, the watch to be
kept on nomads, the despatch of livestock
or provisions, boat-building, the projected movements of Iasmakh-Adad,
not to mention private matters concerning individuals.
If Shamshi-Adad kept a strict control over things, it was
still not his intention to take all initiative away from his sons or officials.
For instance, it was for Iasmakh-Adad himself to fill
the post of governor of Terqa, or of mayor of the
palace at Mari. It was often the matter of his father's complaints: 'How long
will you not rule in your own house? Do you not see your brother commanding
great armies?'.
On the other hand,
the whole running of affairs did not rest solely on the sovereign’s shoulders,
for the administrative service was organized on a sound basis at all levels.
Each district was entrusted to a governor assisted by other career-officials, all
carefully selected on the dual ground of competence and loyalty. Other high
officers were specialized, like the one concerned with the preparation of
censuses, who was attached to Iasmakh-Adad’s
headquarters. Chancellery and accounting services were organized with the same
concern for efficiency. Fast-moving couriers regularly passed through the land,
and Shamshi-Adad often emphasized the
urgency of messages which were to be passed. That is why he
sometimes dates his letters, a practice uncommon at that time, in certain cases
even going so far as to specify the time of day. The king and his sons were
always on the move, but the correspondence addressed to them nevertheless ended
by being sorted and catalogued in the archive rooms of the central administration.
There was the same strictness about the drafting and the keeping of financial
documents. Thus, Shamshi-Adad required that detailed
accounts should be produced concerning the cost of making silver statues.
Military affairs
were naturally organized with no less care than the civil administration.
Garrisons, no doubt small in numbers, were permanently stationed in the towns,
and troops were levied for each campaign, both from the fixed population and
the nomads; the Khanaeans, especially, provided
valued contingents. On their return, the men were demobilized. It sometimes
happened that they were sent to rest in their homes for a few days between two
engagements, and for the same reason, measures were taken to relieve fortress
garrisons periodically.
Before marching, a
list of the men taking part in the campaign was drawn up, and the distribution
of provisions was settled. Sometimes troops operated in considerable numbers:
for the siege of Nurrugum, the capture of which
represented, on the evidence of Shamshi-Adad himself,
one of the most important military events of his reign, the figure of 60,000
men is mentioned. Censuses, which involved at the same time purificatory rites
and the registering of inhabitants on the army muster-rolls, were instituted
sometimes at district level, sometimes throughout the kingdom. Although the
Mari texts make no mention of it, the army must have included some specialized
personnel in its ranks. It was perfectly equipped for siege-warfare, about
which previously our only information was derived from Assyrian sources. All
the methods which may be called classic were employed—the throwing-up of
encircling ramparts to strengthen the blockade of a besieged town, the
construction of assault-banks of compacted earth making it possible to reach
the top of fortifications, digging of galleries to undermine walls, and the use
of two kinds of siege-engines, the assault-tower and the battering-ram.
Preparations for conquests were made far in advance: recourse was had to spies,
and a propaganda campaign, carried out by natives who had been bought over,
opened the way for the military offensive. The aim was to get the populace to
come over to the invader's side of its own accord. Finally, the invading
columns were preceded by advance guards, whose duty it was to carry out
reconnaissance.
Whether it was to
lead his troops into battle in person, or to inspect them, to meet foreign
princes, or simply to make sure that his orders were carried out
intelligently and to keep in working-order the bureaucratic machine he had
created, Shamshi-Adad was continually on the move. It
cannot really be said that he had a capital. To judge from the letters that
have come down to us, he was not often at Ashur or at Nineveh, but preferred
living in a city on the upper Khabur, which we must probably look for at the
site of Chagar Bazar, where a repository of financial
archives has been found.
This city was
called Shubat-Enlil in honour of the god of Nippur, who pronounced the names of kings and delivered the sceptre to them. The ambition of Shamshi-Adad
was in proportion with his success, and he did not hesitate to proclaim himself
'king of all', a title borne of old by Sargon of Agade. In accordance with this
claim he invoked the patronage of Enlil, whose lieutenant he was pleased to
style himself, and built a new temple for that god at Ashur. It was probably in
the same line of conduct that he repaired the ruins of the temple of Ishtar,
built in former days at Nineveh by Manishtusu, and
that he dedicated a temple to Dagan in his town of Terqa,
for Dagan was the god who had once accepted the worship of Sargon, and granted
him in return sovereignty over the 'Upper Country'.
It is not yet
possible to write a history of Shamshi-Adad’s reign.
Thanks to the letters from Mari we know some of its outstanding events, but
they give us only momentary glimpses. They are not arranged chronologically,
and they cover, irregularly no doubt, only part of the reign, which is said to
have lasted thirty-three years in all. Texts were dated in two manners, the
Assyrian practice of appointing annual eponyms being much more widely used than
the Babylonian system of naming years after an event. Nevertheless, the
numerous references to military operations in the king’s correspondence
indicate that his reign was far from peaceful.
One of the
principal campaigns had the region of the Lesser Zab as its objective. This
ended with the capture of several important towns, notably Qabra, Arrapkha and Nurrugum. Many
operations, conducted with varying fortune against the Turukkians,
also took place in the mountainous region of the eastern marches. A most
carefully organized expedition was made in order to conquer the land of Zalmaqum, the name given to the region of Harran. Only a
few echoes reveal the hostilities with Eshnunna;
we know, from a year-name of Dadusha’s reign, that he
defeated an army commanded by Ishme-Dagan. A series
of letters deals with another defensive campaign waged against the armies of Eshnunna, but it is composed only of messages exchanged
between Iasmakh-Adad and his brother Ishme-Dagan. All the evidence suggests that these events
took place only after their father’s death.
Shamshi-Adad, in fact, must have
passed from the scene at the height of his career. In Eshnunna, Dadusha’s son and successor, Ibalpiel II, called the fifth year of his reign “the year of Shamshi-Adad’s
death”, which suggests that about this time he had become a dependant of the great king. This is confirmed by a letter in which Ishme-Dagan,
having ascended the throne, reassures his brother, saying in particular that he
has the Elamites on a leash as well as their ally, the king of Eshnunna. However, Iasmakh-Adad’s
fears were well-founded. Here the testimonies bear one another out. Several
letters recovered at Mari indicate the advance of the troops of Eshnunna; they had reached the Euphrates at Rapiqum, three days’ march above Sippar, and were moving
upstream. The names of the eighth and ninth years of Ibalpiel II, for their part, commemorate the destruction of Rapiqum and the defeat of the armies of Subartu and Khana, by
which we should understand Assyria and Mari. Ishme-Dagan
had not been able to come to his brother’s aid effectively. No doubt he was
engaged elsewhere against other adversaries, for the conqueror’s death had
certainly spurred all his enemies on to attack his dominions. As soon as he was
reduced to his own resources, Iasmakh-Adad, a colourless individual, was doomed to be lost from sight in
the storm. The precise circumstances accompanying his downfall are not known. A
passage in a letter implies that he was driven out of Mari after a defeat
inflicted on his elder brother.
The army of Eshnunna did not get as far as Mari, for Ibalpiel makes no reference to the city’s capture. But the
representative of the dynasty which had been dispossessed, Zimrilim,
took advantage of these events in order to regain the throne of his fathers. He
could count on the support of King Iarimlim of
Aleppo, who had made him welcome during his long years of exile and had given
him his daughter in marriage. Perhaps the defeat suffered by Ishme-Dagan was inflicted on him by troops from Aleppo, who
had then expelled Iasmakh-Adad in favour of Zimrilim. In a letter to his
father-in-law Zimrilim declares: “Truly it is my
father who has caused me to regain my throne”. It is nevertheless a fact that
the king of Eshnunna’s campaign had opened the way
for Zimrilim’s reconquest by invading Shamshi-Adad’s former empire from the south.
As for Ishme-Dagan, he succeeded in holding his own, but only in
Assyria, losing at one stroke the middle Euphrates and the greater part of
Upper Mesopotamia, which either regained its independence or passed under Zimrilim’s control. Even the region of the upper Khabur,
along with his father’s residence Shubat-Enlil,
passed out of his hands. He did indeed attempt several counter offensives in
this direction, but apparently without success, at least during Zimrilim’s reign. We do not know whether he succeeded in
regaining a foothold in this portion of his father’s heritage after Eshnunna and Mari had fallen under Hammurabi’s onslaughts:
from that moment our sources fall silent, leaving in obscurity the rest of the
reign of Ishme-Dagan, to whom the royal lists give
the high total of forty or even fifty years.
To judge from his
father’s letters Ishme-Dagan seemed nevertheless to
have the stature to carry on the work which had been begun. The fact was that
the empire Shamshi-Adad bequeathed him was difficult
to maintain. It was rich and populous, but lacking in cohesion, formed by a
juxtaposition of several quite distinct provinces. Besides, exposed along all
its frontiers, its geographical situation made it particularly vulnerable;
there was, for example, no direct communication between Mari and Ashur. Hemmed
in by powerful and ill-disposed neighbours, Aleppo
and Eshnunna, it could not survive the man who had
created it by his personal qualities alone, by his unflagging energy, his
military genius, and his abilities as an organizer.
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READING HALL DOORS OF WISDOM |