READING HALLTHE DOORS OF WISDOM |
BIOGRAPHYCAL UNIVERSAL LIBRARY |
SARGON OF ASSYRIA
722-705 B. C.
ACCESSION
Sargon the Younger, the man who formed the central object of one of the
most brilliant periods of ancient Oriental history, might well boast himself a
self-made man, for in spite of his boasts of the three hundred and fifty kings
who ruled Assyria before him, and of his mention of the kings his fathers, it
is certain that he was not of the blood royal. What his real ancestry was we do
not know. He himself keeps a discreet silence on the subject. His son,
Sennacherib, secured a splendid ancestry, for he claimed descent from the old
mythical heroes, Gilgamish, Eabani,
Humbaba, and the like. This was evidently felt to be going too far, for
Esarhaddon already as crown prince gives the more modest genealogy which became
standard. According to this, Sargon was a scion of the old half mythical house
of Bel ibni, son of Adasi.
As we do not know his family, so we do not know his real name. On his
accession he assumed that of Sharrukin, better known
to us, from its Biblical form, as Sargon. The reason for this is clear. Two
thousand years before there had ruled in Agade a mighty monarch, Shargani by name, whose power and wealth were still
evidenced by the inscriptions in the temples he had erected. Originally the
name seems to have meant "A god has established him as king". A later
age had forgotten this meaning, and it had, by a process of folk etymology,
come to mean "The established king". It was in this latter sense that
the usurper assumed it, and by the plays upon it in his own records showed to
the world his well-established rule.
Shargani thus became a sort of patron saint to his name-sake. He did not, it is
true, claim descent from him. But we do see a sort of a Sargon renaissance, a
renewed interest in everything touching the older monarch. For instance, there
had come down a great astronomical treatise, the "Illumination of
Bel", which was ascribed to Shargani. This was
introduced into Assyria and frequently copied in this and succeeding reigns. To
the same influence must no doubt be ascribed the well-known archaism in art and
in religion, the care for Babylonia, perhaps even the foundation of a new Dur Sharrukin in imitation of the earlier one which had borne Shargani's name.
Perhaps the most artistic and interesting result was the production of the
Sargon legends, which, in all probability, had long floated about in popular
story and were now retouched for the glory of the usurper king. Of this
literature, two specimens have come down to us. One is an omen tablet which
reports the deeds done by Sargon or his son Naram Sin
under such and such a sign of the heavens, how three years were spent in the
land of the setting sun, how the sea of the setting sun was crossed and his
image erected, how Kastubilla of Kagala was defeated and the land of Surri, and how a great city
was built in his honor.
But if this is, after all, only a dry astrological text, the other is one
of the gems of Assyrian literature. The story has often been told of how his
father he did not know and his mother, a woman of low degree, bore him in secret,
how, like the little Moses, the infant was placed in an ark of rushes and entrusted to the water, how the water carried him to the
irrigator Akki who reared him and made him a gardener
until the goddess Ishtar came to love him and gave him rule over the
black-headed folk and granted him victories over Dilmun and Dur ilu.
Beautiful as all this is, it is so clearly legendary that we cannot wonder
that the earlier scholars were inclined to make him an entirely mythical
personage. Even though we now know that Shargani actually lived and was a great ruler, we have no more right to assume that
these legends tell the truth than we have to describe the policy of Theodoric
the Ostrogoth on the basis of the romantic adventures of Dietrich of Berne.
Knowing how legends grow up, we should be inclined to suspect the account even
if nearly contemporary. How much more so when it is separated from its subject
by perhaps as long an interval as that which separates us from Sargon himself.
The tablet of omens comes from the library of Ashurbanipal and bears his mark,
while the legend tablet dates from the eighth century. But still closer is the
internal evidence. Both Sargon the Younger and the hero of these legends are
alike in having no royal ancestors. Both warred in Elam, and in Syria, and at
Dur ilu, and conquered Tilmun.
Both crossed the sea of the setting sun and both erected a stele in Cyprus. The
legendary hero refers to "my successor" (arku),
and sure enough arku, "the
second", is so common a title of Sargon, that, in the form of Arkeanos, it has come down as his name in the
Greek-Babylonian list of Ptolemy. All this points clearly to our time as the
date of fabrication.
What was the character of the man who, on the death of Shalmaneser IV on
the 22d. of Tebet (December 28), 722 BC, came to the
throne? As compared with the characters in classical or in mediaeval Arabic
history, it is difficult to understand the personalities of the Assyrian
rulers. Yet the attempt may be made, for, in spite of the tendency to conform
every such ruler to a majestic, impersonal type of the Assyrian rule itself, we
can see a strong personality here. And certainly strength of character must
have been one of the most important facts in the man who could usurp the
throne, hold it so well, extend its boundaries, and develop it internally, and
then hand it on to such men as his successors. With strength we often associate
coarseness and ferocity. Judged by the standards of our own day, Sargon was
horribly cruel. Judged by those of his own, he was as far from the barbarity of Ashurnasirpal as he was from the comparative weakness
of Esarhaddon. And for his cruelty he had his excuse. The Assyrian empire was
still in a precarious condition; indeed, it never again was really safe, and
firmness was absolutely needful. If it was necessary for state reasons to flay
a man alive, Sargon probably had no compunctions. That he was not merely a
blood-thirsty tyrant there is plenty of evidence to show. After conquest he
organized territory. If the administrative system dates to Tiglath Pileser III
or even earlier, he at least carried out those designs, and so deserves the
credit for a fair amount of political sagacity.
Since he gained the throne by the aid of the religious party, we naturally
expect to see something of a religious type in his nature. This may have been
only affectation, but it more probably was genuine. The simple soldier who owed
his throne to priestly aid was certainly grateful. How great an influence the
priestly party gained in his reign may be surmised by the reaction against it
in the reign of his son Sennacherib. To how great an extent Sargon was really
cultivated we may only conjecture. There were great building enterprises, there
was sculpture of a high type, there was much literature produced. But all this
was merely to glorify the king, and we may doubt if the soldier cared much for
art for art's sake.
Thus, as we attempt to find individual characteristics, we have a sense of
failure. Even his sculptured portrait is of little value, for it gives us only
the conventional king.
The many conjectures previously made as to the way Sargon came to the
throne are now rendered useless by the discovery of a bit of clay. From this we
learn that Shalmaneser had committed the unheard-of sacrilege of laying tribute
on the old sacred city of Ashur, the cradle of Assyrian power. Harran, too, the
capital of that great Mesopotamian kingdom which was united with Assyria in a
sort of personal union, was in the same evil case. The god, Ashur, became
angry, overthrew Shalmaneser, and presented the crown to Sargon. Translated
into plain English, Sargon took advantage of the insult thus offered to the
pride and the pocket-book of the great cities, and, with the aid of the
priesthood, secured the throne. They had their reward. During the whole reign
the priestly party was high in power, and a wave of religious reaction swept
over at least the palace circle, while Ashur and Harran were once more given
their old privileges and governed directly by the crown.
Yet, in spite of his religious tendencies, Sargon was a great warrior, and
indeed the greater part of his recorded history consists of a series of wars.
No doubt there were pressing questions of home policy, perhaps even there were
revolts, though we hear of none. But, as is always clear to a usurper, the best
way of settling questions of legitimacy is by leading the nation to victory in
foreign wars. Nor was it mere lust of conquest or needs of home policy which
kept the armies of Sargon in the field year after year. During the half century
of Assyrian weakness new powers had come into being, and now Assyria was
surrounded by a ring of hostile states, any one of which was not an enemy to be
despised, while a union such as afterwards brought about the fall of the empire
was even now an imminent peril.
On the south border little was to be feared from the Babylonians, who had
been rendered unwarlike by their long civilization. But here as elsewhere there
had been a gradual inworking of Arab tribes of whom the Kaldu or Chaldaeans were the most important. Under
Babylonian influence they had gained a certain veneer of civilization. Their
leader was now a certain Merodach Baladan (Marduk aplu iddin), whose name shows his Babylonian leanings. Already,
in 731, he had come into contact with Tiglath Pileser and had been forced to
pay tribute. During the weaker reign of Shalmaneser he had extended his power
from his home land in Bit Iakin, in the marshes of
the Tigris and Euphrates, and had won the confidence of the Babylonians. When,
therefore, Sargon usurped the Assyrian throne, Merodach Baladan was in a position to grasp his opportunity.
Babylon surrendered, and soon after, on the New Year's Day (April 2), 721, he
"seized the hands of Bel", was recognized as the de jure king of the
South, and took the titles of "King of Babylon" and "King of Shumer and Akkad". The natives seem to have welcomed
him as a deliverer from the Assyrian yoke, at any rate there certainly was a
strong pro-Chaldaean party in the city.
Merodach Baladan was supported, not only by the various
Aramaean tribes but also by Humbanigash of Elam.
Alliance with Elam had long been a fundamental article in the policy of
Babylonia. In earlier times that country had had a long and important career, often
at the expense of Babylon. Of late it had been miuch weakened, the history becomes obscure, and even the succession of kings is
lost. A new era began with the accession of Humbanigash in 742 BC. The earlier years of his reign seem to have been spent in reducing
to order the feudal princes who so regularly weakened the country. There was
peace with Assyria, for a long line of Aramaic buffer states protected Elam
from her more powerful neighbor. But Tiglath Pileser conquered and incorporated
these states, while he also obtained personal rule in Babylon. This brought
Elam into great danger. The Chaldaean conquest of
Babylon must greatly weaken Assyria and protect a considerable stretch of Elamitish border from Assyrian attack. We can therefore see
why Humbanigash preferred to fight his battles for
Elam on the plains of Babylonia.
The situation in regard to Elam was further complicated by the Median
tribes which were gradually working their way in from the east, and, like the
Aramaeans, were warring against Elam and Assyria alike. As yet, the danger was
not serious. A force was constantly engaged on the borders and now and then we
hear of the conquest of some petty tribe. Already Iranian and Aramaean were
meeting at the Zab, as Hun and Saracen later met in Central Europe.
Reaching in a great arc from northeast to northwest were the provinces and
dependencies of the empire which, in the half century of Assyrian decline, had
become the most powerful in Western Asia. Coming down from the region of the
Caucasus, the Haldians had gradually forced their way
south until, in the reign of Ashurnasirpal, they had
come into touch with the Assyrians. For a time they were held in check, but as
Assyria began to decline, Haldia won and held the supremacy of the civilized
world under the vigorous rule of Menuash and Argishtish I. When the Assyrian power once more revived
under Tiglath Pileser III, Sardurish II, the
successor of Argishtish, held all of Armenia, Western
Mesopotamia, Western Asia Minor, and North Syria more or less completely under
his control.^ To be sure, all this extent of territory was rather imposing than
effective, for time enough had not been allowed for a real amalgamation, yet
the pro-Haldian party was strong and a severe
struggle was needed to drive Sardurish out of Syria.
Tiglath Pileser followed this up with an invasion of Haldia itself but,
although the capital, Tushpa, was taken and burned, Sardurish held out on the high isolated rock which forms
the citadel of Van, and the Assyrians were forced to retreat as winter came on.
When a new ruler, Rusash, son of Sardurish, or Ursa, as Sargon calls him, ascended the
throne, some time about 725, the imperial position of
Haldia had been largely lost. The new monarch, as events quickly showed, was
well adapted to restore the lost prestige of his people. His first care seems
to have been the restoration of the ruined city. The older town, Menuahina, founded by Menuash,
the greatest of the Haldian builders, had been
completely destroyed. Rusash rebuilt it, not on the
old site, but further north where we now have Toprak Kaleh, and called is Rusahina.
Since the water of Lake Van is not potable, he constructed, far to the east
among the barren and desert wastes, where his inscription has been found, an
immense reservoir, now known as Keshish Goll, or Priests' Sea. At Van and at Aluchalu,
on Lake Gokcha, temples were also erected to Teishbash, the storm and air god.
The accession of a new and more vigorous ruler naturally meant a more
vigorous foreign policy. Scanty as our sources are, we are still not left in
entire ignorance of con- ditions along the frontier.
At Aluchalu, on Lake Gokcha,
and therefore well within present Russian territory, we have an inscription.
Its very position shows a considerable ad- vance to
be probable. It also mentions twenty-four countries which had been conquered,
although the vagueness of our present geography gives us little clue to their
location, whose inhabitants were carried off to Haldia. On the east, a similar
advance seems to be demanded by the sovereignty of Muçaçir.
On the west, however, where the earlier kings had ruled as far as Melitene, the boundary had been drawn back, for at this
time that place was ruled by an independent prince. From the circumstances
presupposed by Sargon's frontier fortifications, we must assume that the
Euphrates was here the boundary. On the south was the greatest danger. Here the
line ran a perilously short distance south of the capital, which was thus
exposed to raiding. But in this matter of raiding the Haldians had the advantage, for it was easy for a band of the mountaineers to rush down
upon some undefended spot in Assyria, while the heavier armies of the latter
would be under considerable difficulties, if a return expedition was
undertaken. Regular military expeditions in this region were few and brief. The Haldians had only to retire to their fortresses and
allow the enemy to ravage as he pleased, then, when the early winter forced him
to retreat, they issued forth, blocked the passes, harrassed the rear, and often inflicted great damage.
The influence of Rusash must not be confined to
the region he ruled. With Merodach Baladan, with whom he may have been allied, he was the
cause of almost every war of the reign. Could these two be put out of the way,
the remaining conquests would not be difficult.
Back of the Haldians and no doubt already
exerting pressure on them, were other Iranian tribes. As yet, they seem to have
been unknown to the Assyrians. By the end of the reign they would be known only
too well. Had the Assyrians realized that in attacking and destroying the
neighboring states they were but putting out of the way buffer states whose
loss would expose themselves to attack, they might have hesitated. More
probably it would not have changed conditions.
On the northwest frontier there was little danger, but much inducement.
Only one object blocked the way. Carchemish, a fragment of the old
"Hittite" power, held the way to Syria and to Asia Minor and
dominated the trade route to the west. Mercantile as well as political reasons
were therefore demanding the removal of this eyesore to the Assyrian merchants.
Once Carchemish passed, there remained only petty Hittite states to conquer.
The way was open to a reconquest of those Asia Minor possessions held in the
earlier days of Assyrian greatness, to Pteria, the
great Hittite city, perhaps to the Black Sea itself. Of the power which, under
Midas of Phrygia, was rapidly conquering Asia Minor, the Assyrians seem as yet
to have known nothing.
Syria had been virtually brought under the control of Assyria by Tiglath
Pileser and a large addition to the immediate territory of Assyria had been
made when Shalmaneser captured Samaria and brought the Israelitish kingdom to
its end. But the revolution at home had for the moment weakened Assyrian
influence in this region. Affairs in Israel were still in a very unsettled
condition. In Hamath and in Gaza rulers of ability seemed about to unite Syria
against the Assyrians. In Judaea the young Hezekiah had but recently come to
the throne. His religious reformation looked very much like a protest against
the pro-Assyrian religious policy of his father Ahaz, and an embassy from Merodach Baladan had just come to
him urging revolt. Egypt was recovering herself under Ethiopic hegemony and had
already interfered in the Samaria aflfair. In Arabia
things were in a ferment as a result of the impending change from Minaean to Sabaean overlordship, while all along its
borders new swarms were pouring out and pressing upon the civilized nations.
Such were the circumstances of the Assyrian neighbors, and such were the
problems presented to Sargon. On all sides Assyria was hard pressed by nations
less civilized than herself. It was impossible for Assyria to hold her present
frontiers, for only in a few cases were these "scientific." Only by
constant advances could enemies be put out of the way, while each new advance
meant a longer frontier to guard, a larger mass of unassimilated peoples within
it, and a further depletion of the governing class. The task was too great for
so small a people and ultimate failure was certain. Yet it was a great thing
for civilization that the barbarian peoples were held back until they had more
or less come under the influence of the Assyro-Babylonian
culture, and that the empire endured so long as it did was due in no small
measure to the hard fighting qualities of Sargon.
BABYLONIA AND SYRIA
Sargon ascended the throne at the very end of 722. What he did during the
first year we do not know. In all probability he was engaged in settling
himself firmly on the throne and in arranging the changes he found necessary
from his point of view.
It was impossible for an Assyrian monarch to live in peace. Even if he
wished to do so, circumstances were against him. So far as we know, the first
collision with a foreign power took place in Babylonia some time in 720. Merodach Baladan, as soon as he
was safe in Babylon, had sent to Humbanigash for aid,
and now the Elamite was attempting to descend the Aft-ab valley to join his
ally. But Sargon still held Dur ilu, a strong
fortress which commanded that pass. When the Elamites reached the plain they
found an Assyrian army drawn up to meet them. A battle took place and the
Assyrians were driven from the field, although they still held Dur ilu. The Assyrians retreated to the north, though not so
rapidly but that they could take vengeance on the petty Aramaean tribes of the Mattisai and Tumuna, whose
pro-Assyrian sheikh had been bound and sent to Babylon. But now Merodach Baladan came up with his
army and united with Humbanigash, after which they
ravaged the nearby parts of Assyria.
A tactical victory had thus been won by the allies. The Aft-ab valley was
opened and free communications with Elam secured. For twelve years no Assyrian
army invaded Babylonia, and Merodach Baladan was left to his own devices. But one great mistake
was made. Dur ilu was left, perhaps because, after
all, the armies were too small, in the hands of the Assyrians. So long as they
held it, communications between the allies were always subject to interruption,
while it formed a good base for intrigues with the anti-Chaldaean party in Babylon or for actual military operations. So long as an advanced post
such as this was at the very doors of Babylon, the southern question could not
be considered settled.
In this same year, 720, Sargon was able to devote attention to the
threatening state of affairs in Syria, which seems to have been completely
neglected since the capture of Samaria by Shalmaneser in 723. Now all Syria was
again in revolt, the two centers being at Hamath under Iaubidi and at Gaza under Hanunu.
In earlier times Hamath had been of great importance as the most southerly
of the great Hittite cities. In the reign of Tiglath Pileser, it was definitely
brought under Assyrian control, though not yet made a province. The constant
presence of Assyrian troops in Syria during the last days of Shalmaneser must
have kept it quiet, and so it was probably in the usurpation of Sargon that Iaubidi saw the opportunity for a like usurpation of his
own. According to the testimony of his name, he was of the newer Aramaean stock
which was now supplanting the older Hittite; though that this gives a proof
that the Hebrew Yahweh was worshiped in Hamath is not certain. While Iaubidi was the nominal leader of the revolt, we must see
the real instigator no doubt in Rusash, the Haldian, whose influence in North Syria must still have
been strong. Of the other cities engaged, Arpad had but recently been the great
center of Haldian influence in Syria and had been
taken only after a three years' siege. Damascus had lost its independence only
fifteen years before, while Samaria had met the same fate but three years
before. Cimirra represented the Phoenician coast, and Tyre too seems to have taken part in this revolt.
There are also indications that Bar Rekab of Samal, a state near to Arpad, forgot his allegiance to
Assyria, perhaps his boasted love to Tiglath Pileser did not extend to the
supplanter of his dynasty, and joined the coalition.
The allies do not seem to have acted in concert, it would have been too
much to expect of a Syrian confederation, or perhaps Sargon was too quick for
them. Iaubidi took up his position at Qarqar, to the north of Hamath, to meet the advancing
Assyrians. Once before, 854, the Syrians had met Assyrians on this field and
had defeated them and saved Syria for the time. Now they were in turn defeated,
and Iaubidi fell into the hands of the victors. This
was the first success of the reign, and it needed to be emphasized. A horrible
punishment, only too common, was decreed for the unfortunate Iaubidi. He was carried to Assyria and flayed alive. Later,
a vivid bas-relief was set up on the walls of the new capital, a warning
against revolt to the petty princes who brought their tribute to Dur Sharrukin.
After the battle, Qarqar was taken and burned and
Hamath, which seems to have lain not far off, was also captured, its low-lying
position giving little opportunity for defense. Of its inhabitants many were
killed, others were made captive, while the flower of the troops, two hundred
charioteers and six hundred horsemen, was added to the standing army which
Sargon was now forming to take the place of the old feudal levy. The position
of Hamath on the great road from the north to Egypt was important, as its
relation to the modern railway shows. To secure it, a colony of six thousand
three hundred native Assyrians was settled here, and an Assyrian governor was
placed over them. The site of this city is now represented, no doubt, by the big
bare mound which stands in the center of the modern town, and here, if we
should excavate, we should probably find not only the relics of an earlier
Hittite people, but even cuneiform documents of the sort already found in the
mounds of Palestine.
The capture of Hamath seems to have ended the revolt in the north, and the
other cities submitted. Then he moved south to attack Hanunu of Gaza, around whom the revolt in the south centered. Gaza held one of the
most important positions in the ancient world. As the last Syrian city towards
Egypt on the great Syro-Egyptian trade route, and as
the seaport of the Arabian caravan road, its possession was no less valuable
from the commercial than from the military standpoint. This was thoroughly
understood in Egypt where the holding of advance lines on Syrian soil has
always been a fundamental part of the national policy. As soon as the Ethiopian
rulers began to secure Lower Egypt, it was felt that an advance on Syria was to
be part of the general program. Already, in the time of Tiglath Pileser, the
first attempt had been made and Hanunu had been won
over. The attempt failed, and Hanunu was forced to
flee to Egypt. During the weaker reign of Shalmaneser he returned, deposed the
Assyrian protege Idibi'il, and regained his throne.
In this he was helped by a certain Sibu who was enabled by his success in Gaza
to produce the rebellion of Hoshea of Israel.
Shalmaneser secured the fall of Samaria, but was put out of the way before
he could attack Gaza, and Sargon now took up his work. What happened when he
reached Gaza is not clear, but he seems to have fought a battle before its
gates. The city was captured and the allies fell back toward Egypt, perhaps
toward Rhinocolura, on the "Brook" of
Egypt, where a frontier post seems always to have been held. Sibu summoned his
tartan, or lieutenant, to come to his aid, and the two armies met at Rapihu (Raphia), where now the boundary between Egypt and
Syria is marked and where later Lagidae and Seleucidae (Ptolemy IV versus Antiochus III) contested the
control of Southern Syria. Sibu fled "as a shepherd deprived of his
flock", so Sargon boasts, and Syria knew his intrigues no more. Hanunu was less fortunate, but was captured and taken to
the city of Ashur with nearly ten thousand of his men. Rapihu,
probably at that time only a fortified camp, was destroyed, but Gaza, perhaps
as a reward for treachery, was spared. Under the direct control of the crown,
it lasted on and flourished through Assyrian, Babylonian, and Persian times
until Alexander, by his destruction of Tyre, showed
his hostility to Syrian commerce. Then first Gaza resisted the powers that be
and met its fate.
It is interesting to note that Sargon did not attempt to follow up his
advantages and attack Egypt or even Rhinocolura.
Perhaps his forces had already suffered severely, or perhaps he felt that the
conquest of Egypt was impossible, until he had secured a firmer hold in Syria.
For the next few years much attention was devoted to settlement of Syrian
affairs. Those cities which were not directly implicated in the revolts were
allowed to retain their autonomy under the local kings. Those which were, Samal Cimirra, Damascus, the
mainland Tyre, and Samaria, soon appear with Assyrian
governors, and it is probable that this took place at the present time.
Hamath, as already noted, was made an Assyrian colony.
In the case of one city, Samaria, the native records tell us a little more
of this process of settlement. The city itself had already been taken by
Shalmaneser, but all further arrangements seem to have been left to Sargon.
Twenty-seven thousand of the leading citizens of the
kingdom were deported and settled in Mesopotamia and Media, there to form a
nucleus for that community of Jews, who for a long time made the east the real
center of Jewish thought. But Samaria was not abandoned. The city was rebuilt
and the survivors made Assyrian citizens with the usual tribute to be paid to
the Assyrian governor.
The system of deportation was in common use at this time, the purpose being
to break up the local attachments and to make the new settlers, naturally on
bad terms with the original inhabitants of the land, feel that they owed
everything to the protection of the imperial power. Five cases are known at
least. In 720 the Aramaean tribes from near Dur ilu,
the Tumunu and the Mattisai,
were settled in Syria, probably at Hamath. In 717 the revolted Papa and Lallukua, two tribes of Hittite origin, were settled in
Damascus. In 715 Sargon claims to have settled tribes in Samaria from Arabia.
More probably this was merely an acknowledgment of the accomplished fact. As
the Syrian localities gradually became deserted owing to the constant civil
wars and the attacks of Assyria, the resistance to the constant pressure from
the desert weakened and the Arabs pushed in even as they have to this day, when
we still have Bedawin considerable distances west of the Jordan. If they only
paid tribute, the Assyrians could have no objections to their settlement, and
so to this cause perhaps as much as any other we owe the Aramaization of this region. Daiukku (Deioces)
of Media and Itti of Allabria were settled at Hamath.
These four desert tribes of the "distant Arabs" were the Tamudi, the Ibadidi, the Marsimani, and the Haiapa. Their
former location, if we can judge from the identification of the Haiapa with the Midianite clan Ephah, was on the Gulf of Aqabah and along the eastern shore of the Red Sea. It is
also in this region, at the ruins of Medain Calih, that we have localized the story of the Thamud, clearly
the Tamudi of our inscriptions. This Thamud,
according to the prophet Mohammed, was a great prehistoric tribe, the successor
of Ad. In the pride of their hearts they "made from the plains castles and
dug out the mountains into houses". At last there came unto them the
prophet Calih who preached to them the doctrine of
the Unity. Nevertheless, they would not accept the manifest sign of the she
camel, sprung from the rock in witness against them, but hardened their hearts
and hamstrung her. Then came the great earthquake, and in the morning they all
lay on their faces, dead in their houses. Such was the tale told by the prophet
to point the moral to those who would not accept his own teaching. In reality,
Thamud was a petty tribe in Assyrian times, and as a petty tribe it was still
known to the Roman geographers.
To the same year we have assigned the "tribute", the senders no
doubt considered it only a present from ruler to ruler, of Piru of Muçri (Pharaoh of Egypt), Samsi queen of the land of Aribbi, and of Itamra of Saba. Does this "tribute" of Pharaoh
mean a settlement by treaty of the Syrian question by the two powers
interested? The fact that there has been found at Kalhu,
where Sargon at this time resided, a bit of clay, evidently affixed to a
parchment or papyrus document, bearing the seals of Shabaka and of an unknown Assyrian ruler, seems to point in this direction.
Samsi, queen of Aribbi, is interesting to us as
representing the older matriarchal form of authority current in Arabia, the
classic example of which is found in the Queen of Sheba who visited Solomon. Samsi, who probably lived in the desert region immediately
south of the Euphrates rather than in Arabia proper, had already sent
"tribute" to Tiglath Pileser.
The mention of Itamra the Sabaean is of great
importance for our knowledge of Arabian history. Itamra must be one of the mukarrib (princes) or kings who
appear as Yatha- amar in
the Sabaean inscriptions, and thus a clue is secured for the chronology of
pre-Muslim Arabia. It also gives us a new conception of conditions in that
region. If this was not a tribute, but rather a present from equal to equal,
why was it sent? No doubt, it was felt that the two civilized powers ought to
unite against the more barbarous tribes between. Again, as the two countries
had no mutual boundaries to cause friction, so they had no commercial
rivalries, but rather they had goods each wished to exchange with the other.
Thus far, this trade had been in the hands of Syrians, but the merchants of
Assyria would be glad to import their goods themselves and by a less
round-about route. The most important reason, no doubt, was the wish of the
Sabaeans to displace the older power of Ma'in. To do
this a stroke directed at their commerce would accomplish most. Assyria now
held Gaza, the Mediterranean port of the Minaeans.
Assyria seems to have taken the side of Saba and thus accelerated the decay of Ma'in.
For about six years after the settlement of 720 Syria remained fairly
quiet. But, whatever the truth about a treaty with Egypt, that country
continued to intrigue with the Philistine coast. About 714 Azuri,
king of Ashdod, withheld tribute and instigated a revolt of his neighbors. This
was quickly quelled and his brother, Ahimiti, the
crown prince, elevated to the throne. His reign was short, for the
anti-Assyrian party was still in control, and as soon as the Assyrian army
retired to go into winter quarters he was overthrown and a mercenary Greek
soldier from Cyprus, called lIamani or "the
Ionian", was chosen in his place. The revolt spread rapidly, Gath, Judah,
Moab, and Edom taking part.
How important this outbreak was is shown by the haste with which Sargon
acted. Although it was still early in the year 713, too early for the feudal
levy to be called out, he did not hesitate, but sent his tartan, Ashur igka danin, with only the few
hundred in his own body guard. The Tigris and Euphrates were crossed at full
flood, and he suddenly appeared in Syria. Iamani had
made his preparations, had surrounded the low-lying city with a trench, secured
a water supply from outside the city, and called to his aid troops from other
parts of the country. In spite of all this, he lost his heart when the
Assyrians appeared so suddenly and fled to Egypt whence he was extradited and
handed over to Sargon.
The cities of the Philistine plain were thus left defenseless and at least
Ashdod with its port and Gath were taken. Their inhabitants, men and gods
alike, were carried off into captivity. But these towns were too important to
remain desolate long. They were therefore rebuilt and settled with loyal
colonists. Over them was probably placed that Mitinti we meet as king early in the reign of Sennacherib. The other revolted states
probably remained unconquered. If Sargon now held the cities of the Philistine
plain and controlled the great trade routes, he could afford to permit a
precarious liberty to the mountaineers of Judah, Moab, and Ammon.
This sudden punishment seems to have strongly impressed the imagination of
the Syrians and to have had a good effect in keeping Syria quiet. There are no
further accounts of revolts. For the twelve years which extend to the invasion
of Sennacherib in 701, there is absolutely not a single fact known in regard to
the history of Syria.
THE NORTHWEST FRONTIER
The second of the frontiers was that on the northwest which we have already
touched upon in mentioning Samal. Here the greatest
advance in the reign took place, although the region had already been conquered
by Shalmaneser I and Tiglath Pileser I. The half-century-long weakness of
Assyria had given Haldia control of this region. Tiglath Pileser III broke the
power of Sardurish and forced the states to pay
tribute. For some reason he did not attempt to inflict his provincial system on
them. Consequently, on his death, Haldia once more gained the ascendency.
Conditions were, however, changed, and Haldia found a new power which was, if a
rival, also an ally against Assyria. This new power was that of Mita of Muski, or, to give him
the name he more commonly is known by, Midas the Phrygian.
Some centuries earlier a number of Thracian tribes had invaded Asia Minor.
The most important of these were the Phrygians, who seem to have already worked
their way well to the east by the time of Tiglath Pileser. An opportunity for
decided advance was here presented. Sardurish was
weakened by defeats and Shalmaneser was weak in character. By the time when
Sargon came to the throne, all Asia Minor was Phrygian, or under Phrygian
influence. His actual frontier left the Mediterranean at Cilicia Trachaea and ran past Lake Tatta to the Halys river, the earlier Haldian boundary. Pteria itself, the old Hittite capital in this region, was
probably in his hands, and perhaps from this fact he gained the title of the Muskian. He thus had, it would seem, as large an immediate
kingdom as the later Lydians, while his influence beyond his borders to the
east was greater. It is rather startling to find Carchemish on the Euphrates
revolting at Phrygian instigation.
The first operations in this region took place in 718. In this year, Kiakki of Shinuhtu, a petty
chieftain of Tabal, a somewhat ill-defined term
applied to southern Cappadocia, refused to send tribute any longer, instigated,
it may be presumed, by Midas. An army was sent against him, probably that
commanded by the governor of eastern Cilicia or Que. Tarsus appears to have
been the base. From this the army followed the time-honored war route which led
through the Cilician Gates. In the rough Taurus country to the north the war
dragged on until finally Kiakki and his fighting men
were captured and deported.
Shinuhtu was not made a separate province, perhaps because it was too small and too
poor to be worth the trouble. A certain Matti of Tuna (Tyana)
offered to pay a higher tribute of horses and mules, of gold and silver, and so
the country was handed over to him in the hope, vain as it proved, that a
buffer state could here be made against Phrygia. In this way, too, an excuse
could be found for an attempted control of Tyana itself. That city, even then probably an important religious and political
center, commanded the great cross road which ran from Tarsus through the
Cilician Gates past Pteria and on to Sinope on the
Black Sea. When Matti no longer was faithful. Tuna came under the direct
control of the Assyrians.
The next year, 717, we find an expedition against Carchemish undertaken.
Why it had been so long spared by the Assyrians we can only surmise. Probably
it was, like the Phoenician cities, predominantly mercantile, perfectly willing
to pay tribute so long as it could trade, and careless as to the political
changes going on about it. During the period of Assyrian decline, it seems to
have been left in peace to its own devices and naturally resented the loss of
freedom and especially the tribute inflicted by Tiglath Pileser, since it
probably was forced to make up arrears. Pisiris, who
had held the throne since at least 740, was at last induced by Midas to throw
off completely the Assyrian yoke.
The loss of Carchemish was serious. It commanded the great high road to
Asia Minor and to Egypt, and its possession by a foreign power blocked the way
to the west for both caravans and armies. Furthermore, as an advanced post for
Midas it was dangerously near the old capital of Mesopotamia, Harran. Add to
this the fact that Carchemish was the great commercial rival of Kalhu, and it may be seen that the commercial classes of
Assyria would be bitterly opposed to passing over this revolt.
In spite of the evident importance of the site, neither Rusash nor Midas gave adequate support. A good fight was made, but the city was at
length captured, Pisiris dethroned, and the country
made a regularly organized Assyrian province. From this time on, so long as the
empire itself lasted, Assyria held the great western road.
As might be expected, the sack of so great a city, perhaps the most
important trading city of its time in the world, produced enormous booty.
According to the official accounts, perhaps not to be entirely trusted, the
value of the precious metals alone amounted to the huge sum of eleven talents
of gold and twenty-one hundred of silver. Among other
valuables carried off and laid up in Kalhu against
the day when they should adorn Dur Sharrukin were
bronze, ivory, and elephant hides. Carchemish, like other mercantile cities,
had her army, perhaps all mercenaries. These were taken over in a body and
added to the new standing army.
While the danger to Assyria from a free Carchemish was thus great and its
capture correspondingly important, the effect of its loss on the Hittite
peoples has been much exaggerated. No doubt, it was their greatest commercial
city and the transfer of commercial supremacy from an allied to a purely alien
race made a difference. But we must remember that the "Hittite
Empire", whatever it really was, had long been a thing of the past and
that there was no organic union between the petty Hittite states which had
taken its place. The allies had been, not these little states, but the greater
rulers. Some were brought under Assyrian control, others never were, but all
retained enough individuality to influence considerably the later peoples.
If Carchemish was actually destroyed after the siege, it did not long
remain in ruins, for it had too important a situation. Sargon himself rebuilt
portions, as we now know, while under his successors it became, as the relative
rank of its governors shows, one of the greatest cities in the empire. Even
though many of its inhabitants had been deported, it still retained a large
Hittite element, and this mixing with Mesopotamian and Aramaean elements,
produced a new race of which we should gladly know more. In many ways this new
race must have improved upon the old. In art, for example, if we can judge from
the exquisite stele of the mother goddess. We have here the same phenomenon
which we see later in Asiatic or Egyptian art of the Greco-Roman period, the
old religious conceptions preserved and reproduced, but with a temperance and a
skill of technique which show superior artistic ability. As a center of
commerce its influence was greatest. It is a significant proof of this, that,
throughout the entire period of the later Assyrian empire, the most important
commercial documents were reckoned according to the "mina of
Carchemish."
The fall of Carchemish put out of the way a dangerous enemy in the rear of
the governor of Cilicia. It was, therefore, possible for another advance to be
made here. The Tyana road was, for the time at least,
passed over. Instead, an attempt was to be made (716), directly on Iconium
where Midas himself seems to have had his capital. Midas called Rusash to his aid. A battle was fought near the sea-coast,
near the mouth of the Calycadnus, and Sargon claims
the victory. As a result, several towns long held by Midas were conquered and
added to the province. But the main object, the gaining of the road to Iconium,
was not secured. The inhabitants of Cilicia Trachaea have always been wild and difficult to conquer, and so the war dragged on until
at least 709.
In 714 Sargon definitely took up the question of advance in this region.
Once more, as in 718, the road through the Cilician Gates was taken. Matti of Tyana had recognized the real meaning of the Assyrian
policy and had gone over to Midas. He was now attacked and deposed.
Sargon moved on to the north and attacked the Tabal clan of Bit Buritash. Here a certain Hulli had ruled in the days of Tiglath Pileser. On his
death Sargon recognized his son, Ambaris, as his
successor and, to bind him more closely to his cause, gave him his daughter,
Ahata-bisha. He also granted to him Hilakku (Cilicia), which at this time was north of the
Taurus, about where the later strategeia of Cilicia
was situated, although it is quite possible that he simply gave him the
privilege of conquering it, if he could.
The royal lady seems to have been unable to keep her husband true. He, too,
went over to Midas and Rusash. But, as usual, they
proved broken reeds to lean upon, for Ambaris was
captured and carried off with all his father's house. One hundred chariots were
impressed into the royal army, the leading citizens were deported, and
prisoners from other quarters settled in their place. Then, after Tabal had been thoroughly ravaged, a governor was placed
over it, and the country was made an Assyrian province.
This campaign had opened up the Tarsus-Tyana-Mazaka road to the Halys River, which would thus form the
northern boundary of the province to be established. Along the west, Lake Tatta would serve as a boundary, but to the south of that
the ground would be debatable. To the east, the Euphrates would naturally be
taken, for Haldia had now withdrawn behind that river. Thus the new province
could be given, on nearly every side, a boundary which might be truly called
"scientific". It was to the securing of this frontier that the
operations of the next year were directed.
The greater part of this coveted territory was known as Kammanu.
Its name was derived, no doubt, from the old sacred city of Comana,
which was situated in the bare desert cleft in the western part of this region.
At present, the capital was Meliddu, which has always
been, both as the classical Melitene and the Malatia of modern times, the center of a great road-complex
and therefore a position of importance. Some time before this, a certain Gunzinanu had been deposed,
and Tarhunazi had taken his place. Sargon had
recognized, if not encouraged, the change, and had added some lands. When Ambaris revolted, Tarhunazi seems
to have followed his example, at least so far as to withhold his tribute. The
advance on Meliddu seems to have been made from Amida as a base. Kammanu was
devastated and the capital taken. Tarhunazi fled
westward to his strong fortress of Tulgarimmu, the
Biblical Togor-mah, where he was besieged and forced
to surrender. He was cast into chains, and, with wife, children, and five
thousand troops, carried off to Ashur, where the party was settled.
The required lines had now been secured, at least after a fashion, and the
subjugation of the less important interior might be left to time. The frontier
itself needed fortification. First Tulgarimmu was
rebuilt with Meliddu. Then three forts were erected
on the west against Midas, two on the north as protection against the
barbarians, and five along the Euphrates on the Haldian frontier. The space thus enclosed, a wedge thrust forward between Haldia and
Phrygia, was made a province under the usual forms of administration and
settled by captives from various parts of the empire, the last instalment of Sute not arriving until after the capture of Babylon (710).
The next year an opportunity came for securing the most important site in
the interior still unconquered. At Marqasi, the
modern Marash, the Hittite ruler, Tarhulara,
had been murdered by his anti-Assyrian son, Mutallu.
Sargon, however, took him prisoner, armies could easily be concentrated on him
from several sides, and carried him off with all the tribe of Bit Pa'alla and much booty. Gurgume,*
from which Tarhulara had come, was rebuilt, and an
Assyrian governor installed in Marqasi.
In the next years, probably 711-709, the final pacification of Que proper
was accomplished by its governor. In three expeditions the infantry penetrated
the Taurus, took two fortresses situated on hilltops and made twenty-four
hundred prisoners. Of these, nearly a thousand were carried the whole length of
the empire from Que to the king, as he lay encamped at Irma'mi in Elam. To take their place other Assyrian subjects were settled. But it now
began to be seen that a crossing of Cilicia Trachaea was impracticable, and the advance was stopped.
At about the same time or perhaps a little later, trouble broke out on the
extreme north, where Mutallu of Qummuh,
a land situated somewhat to the north of the later Commagene,
had abandoned friendly relations with Sargon and gone over to Argishtish, who had recently succeeded Rusash in Haldia. The governor of the new province invaded his country, took some of
his fortresses and much booty, and even some of his family. But Mutallu himself simply retired to the wild mountains
nearby. The lowland regions were settled by captives from Bit Iakin, to which place the Qummuh men were in their turn deported. This seems to be the high-water mark of
Assyrian influence in this region. Before the end of the reign the Iranians
began to come in and the frontier receded.
In connection with affairs on this frontier, we may note the Assyrian
relations with Cyprus. Here the Greeks had gradually been settling until by now
they seem to have gained control of the greater part of the island. They
naturally, as enemies of the Phoenicians in the island, were inclined to be
friendly with the Assyrians who had already secured control of the Phoenicians
on the mainland. No doubt, too, Midas had tried to conquer the Greeks along the
coast, as the Lydians tried later, and enmity to him would again make them
favorable to Sargon. On the other hand, the Assyrians had no fleet, and so
there was little danger of conquest from them. Furthermore, friendship with the
great empire would mean commercial privileges throughout the whole of its
provinces, and the Greeks would not forget this. We can therefore well
understand why, when Sargon was still in Babylon, probably after his return
from the extreme south (709), he received an embassy and presents, gold and silver,
(it is curious that we have no mention of the copper which received its name
from the island), ushu and ukarinu woods, from the land of Ia,
a region of Iatnana, as the Assyrians named Cyprus.
In return, Sargon sent to Cyprus the splendid "image of his majesty",
which is now in Berlin. The Greeks of Cyprus continued to keep in friendly
relation with succeeding kings, and once in a while sent presents. To the end,
however, they retained their independence and Assyria never really ruled the
island.
THE ARMENIAN WARS
As we have already seen, one of the antagonists most to be feared by
Assyria was Rusash of Haldia. His attempts to regain
the lost Haldian conquests west of the Euphrates have
been noted in the last chapter. In this, we shall see the efforts of Sargon to
bring the war directly home to him.
When Sargon turned his attention to affairs on this part of his frontier,
in 719, he found a good base for attack in the large and important tribe of the Mannai who lived to the southeast of Haldia. As next-door
neighbors to that power, they naturally threw in their lot with Assyria. At
this time their chief was Iranzu, who seems to have
been devoted to his Assyrian ally. To the south of the Mannai lay Zikirtu, whose chief, Mittatti,
just as naturally allied himself with Rusash against
the Mannai. While Sargon, or at least his armies,
were engaged elsewhere, Mittatti persuaded two of the Mannai towns, Shuandahuh and Durdukka, to revolt against Iranzu,
and sent a garrison to hold them. Iranzu appealed to
Sargon, and Sargon sent an army. So well garrisoned were they that a regular
siege with siege engines was needed to capture them. When taken, they were
burned and their inhabitants deported. At about the same time, the three
neighboring towns of Sukkia, Bala,
and Abitekna were captured and the people carried off
to Syria.
Again, in 717, there were disturbances in this region, as the Papa and Lallukna were ravaging the friendly land of Kakme. They were conquered and deported to Damascus.
About this time the Mannai themselves went over
to Haldia. Iranzu, the friend of Assyria, died, or to
use the more picturesque Assyrian expression, "his fate came upon
him". His son and successor, Aza, was also a "lover of the yoke of
Ashur." The "yoke of Ashur," however, was anything but light,
and Rusash, who had already made trouble for Assyria,
persuaded the commons to strike for liberty. Perhaps we may see in it a revolt
of the Aryans against the older race for the new ruler. Bagdatti of Uishdish bears an Iranian name, and was supported
by Mitatti of Zikirtu. Aza
was deposed and his dead body exposed on Mount Uaush.
His reign, too, was short, for the Assyrians took him alive, flayed him, and
exposed his bleeding form on this same Mount Uaush.
He was succeeded by Ullusunu, the brother of Aza,
who had thus a legitimate claim to the throne. Whether placed on the throne by
the Assyrians or not, he soon saw that Rusash was the
nearer and more dangerous foe. He therefore made his peace with Haldia and
handed over, probably not without compulsion, twenty-two towns as proof of his
good faith. As a result of his defection from Assyria, Ashur liu of Karalla, and Itti of AUabria followed his example.
All these events seem to have taken place in 717, if not earlier. Now, in
716, a new expedition was sent out, seemingly under the Nabuhashadua,
whose report on the affairs of Ashur liu and Ullusunu has come down to us. The expedition succeeded. Ullusunu took to the hills on their approach, but when he
saw the burning and plundering of his capital, Izirtu,
as well as some of his other cities, he came out and sued for peace. This was
granted with alacrity, showing either that his defection was considered due to
force or that the friendship of the Mannai was too
important for Sargon to risk it by severe measures.
The two chieftains who had followed his example did not come off so easily,
for an example was needed, and they were not important enough to make severe
treatment dangerous. Ashur liu was flayed alive and
his men deported to Hamath, where they were joined by Itti and his family. Karalla was made a province, while Allabria was granted to a certain Adar aplu iddin, whose name indicates his Assyrian leanings.
The next year, 715, the results were more or less unimportant. One
expedition was directed against a certain Daiukku, a Mannai governor, who had given his son to Rusash as a hostage. Rusash,
however, gave no help, and Daiukku was deported to
Hamath. The name of the man is more interesting than his personality. Daiukku is nothing but Deiokes, and
it is quite possible that the proto-type of the Median prince who founded,
according to Herodotus, the Median kingdom at this very time, is to be seen in
this underling. We should also note that the name is Iranian. Do we see here,
as in the case of Bagdatti, another reaction of the
Iranian element in the Mannai against the
non-Iranian?
Sargon next turned his attention to the twenty-two towns recently
"given" to Rusash and won them back. The
fact that they were restored to Ullusunu is another
proof that his defection was unwilling. Even when Sargon erected a stele in Izirtu, his capital, he remained true to Assyria.
Another interesting event was the receiving of tribute from the ianzu of Nairi at his
capital of Hubushkia. Nairi,
which here occurs for the last time, a comparatively restricted district, was
once applied to all the tribes of the northern frontier. Tribute was also
received from eight towns of the land of Tuaiadi,
which was ruled by Telusina the Andian,
and over four thousand men were deported from it.
The following year matters became more serious. To follow the Assyrian
account we should assume that a direct attack was made on Rusash,
that a great defeat was inflicted and that this defeat was so crushing that
"when Ursa of Urartu heard of the destruction of Muçaçir,
the capture of his god, Haldia, with his own hand, with the iron dagger of his
girdle, his life he ended". In several ways, nevertheless, the story does
not ring true, and even without documents from the Haldian side, its truth might be doubted. With the account of Rusash himself we can understand the general course of events.
The Mannai lay between Haldia and Muçaçir. Naturally, the two were united against them. As
the more powerful, Rusash controlled Muçaçir. As a perpetual reminder of this control, Rusash followed Assyrian precedents and erected a statue of
his national god Haldia in Muçaçir, while the native,
and probably Iranian, Bagabartu, was degraded to the
station of a consort.
Sargon took the field, probably in person, to aid the Mannai against this combination. After a preliminary expedition against Elli and Zikirtu, he found himself within the great mountain barrier
which now forms the boundary between Persia and Turkey, and within striking
distance of Muçaçir. Rusash hurried south, breaking through the Mannai, to come
to the help of his ally. As Sargon advanced, Rusash took up his position on Mount Uaush. A battle was
fought and Sargon was victorious, the body guard, two hundred and forty Haldians of the blood royal, being completely destroyed.
Then, after a stop at Hubushkia to receive again the
tribute of the ianzu of Nairi, he suddenly turned to the west and made a dash upon Muçaçir. The little mountain stronghold, confident in the
inaccessibility of the direct road from Arbela, was taken in the rear by this
dash through the Kelishin Pass, and captured. Urzana, its king, fled to Rusash and left his city to be plundered. The relief which Sargon erected to
commemorate the plunder of the great temple and the carrying of the gods,
Haldia and Bagabartu, into captivity, has been
preserved and merits study. On it we have the temple with its curiously Greek
pediment, its banded columns, its votive shields hung up in front, its great
bull-footed lavers in the forecourt, and its statue of a she wolf suckling her
young in front. Here, too, we have the Assyrian soldiers climbing to the top or
running along its sloping roof, while on a nearby tower an Assyrian officer
sits on a camp-stool and the scribes stand before him to reckon up the spoil.
And, indeed, they might reckon it in good earnest, for, if we could believe the
Assyrian scribes themselves, the spoil from this little mountain village was
greater than that taken from Carchemish, the great merchant city of the West!
Thus far we have followed the Assyrian account, and in general it has
seemed trustworthy enough. Here it suddenly breaks off, and we have no further
military information. Instead, we are told of the suicide of Rusash. It would be difficult to give a rational reason for
this suicide, for a single defeat in the enemy's country and the capture of a
god in a city a hundred miles away from his own capital is hardly enough.
Fortunately, we have his own account to guide us from this point.
The greater part of the year had evidently been taken up with these
operations. Winter was now coming on. With the scarcity of forage on these
mountain heights, to winter in Muçaçir was
impossible. Yet the direct road home through Arbela was impractical for an
army, even if there was no enemy to harass his retreat. The only thing to do
was to turn back and follow his old track. Rusash returned, re-established Urzana, and rebuilt the
temple. The next year Rusash took the offensive and
"went to battle to the Assyrian mountains''. probably by the Arbela road.
As no victories are claimed it may be presumed that none were gained. Rusash then erected a stele near Muçaçir detailing his version of the events. Later, perhaps in the year following, a
fresh expedition by the Assyrians again succeeded in reaching the place and
partially mutilated this record of their disgrace.
This is the last we hear of Rusash. His work was
done, and Assyria had learned that Haldia was not to be conquered. He died
about 711, and was succeeded by his son, Argishtish.
Under this new ruler new conditions arose which must be discussed in a later
chapter.
THE MEDIAN WARS
Judged rather by their results than by the details of their progress, the
wars with the Median tribes, begun under Shalmaneser II in 836 and carried on
by the later Assyrian kings with ever-decreasing hopes of success, deserve a
large part in general history. Drifting westward as petty unconnected tribes,
at war often with each other, they gradually drove in or conquered the more or
less Assyrianized tribes along the eastern frontier,
and then began to assail the empire itself. For a time the better trained
Assyrian soldiers succeeded in beating them off, but the task was never-ending
and the drain severe. The destruction of one clan meant only room for another
to expand in, while all the time they were learning from the enemy. At last
Assyria, now defended almost exclusively by mercenaries, themselves of Iranian
extraction in many cases, fell, and then the collapse of Babylon was merely a
question of time. Yet so thoroughly had they been transformed by the contact
with their more civilized neighbors that, when at last they had conquered what
was then the civilized world, they were found to stand for almost the same
ideas in government and social life as did those who had preceded them in the
way of empire. Here we have an interesting parallel in the evolution which led
our Germanic ancestors from the idea of the rude chief with his band of
personal attendants to the conception of the Holy Roman Empire. Interesting,
however, as a study of these general movements may be, the details of this
constant border warfare are dry to study and difficult to handle.
Thanks to the exertions of Tiglath Pileser III and to the provincial
organization he brought to so high a pitch of efficiency, Sargon was well
situated as regards these tribes. On the northeast and between Arbela and Muçaçir was the province of Kirruri which had been Assyrian territory since the ninth century. At this time the
governor was Shamash upahhir. To the south of this
was Parsuash, and again, to the south of this last,
between the Lower Zab and the Diyala, on the first
outliers of the eastern mountains, lay that of Arapha,
now governed by Ishtar Duri. To the east of this was Lullume, an ill-defined province in the Shehrizor highland, whose governor, Sharru emur ani, whose residence probably was at the modern Suleimania,
bore the brunt of the conflict.
We may now take up the operations in detail. First we have the operations
of the governor of Parsuash (717). A number of towns
of the land Niksama were plundered, and Sipu sharru, the ruler of Shurgardia, probably a revolted subject, was captured.
Lying as they did on the Parsuash frontier, they were
naturally added to that province.
The governor next advanced to Kishesim, the most
important town in the Parsuash region, and captured
and carried off the komarch Bel shar ugur, whose name reminds us of the Biblical Belshazzar. The
site of Kishesim seemed well adapted to be the seat
of a province. The name was accordingly changed to Kar Adar, the Ashur cult
introduced, and the usual stele erected. The new province whose capital Kar
Adar became, embraced the greater part of the Parsuash region.
Troubles in Harhar next engaged the attention of
the governor. Here the pro-Assyrian feelings of the komarch Kibaba had caused his expulsion, and Harhar was brought into close relation to Dalta of Elli. As that individual had not yet won the fame
of a "loyal vassal who loved my yoke", praise so gladly given when Dalta was dead and the strife of his sons gave so good an
opportunity for intervention, this was considered good ground for similar
action here. To be sure, poor Kibaba was not
reinstated. In fact, if we may accept one account, he was actually made captive
himself. The city of Harhar, defended, as one of the
reliefs shows, by an isolated rock citadel within the city, which itself was
surrounded by a good-sized stream, was taken and plundered, its men impaled,
and the usual procedure of setting up the stele, the introducing of the Ashur
cult, and the settling of foreigners, gone through, while the name of the the place was changed to Kar Sharrukin,
or Sargon's fortress. To the province thus formed were added the six small
"states" now plundered and taken. At about the same time the governor
in his new capital received the tribute from twenty-eight komarchs of the "mighty Medes"
In the next year, 716, the efforts to extend the province were continued.
Some of the towns conquered the last year were again forced to pay tribute,
while more new ones were visited. The details of some of these campaigns are
shown in the bas-rehefs which once adorned the palace
of Sargon. On one we see Kindau, a town with high
walls around a great central tower. It is situated in a swamp across which a
causeway leads to the town. On another we see Gauguhtu,
a city on a hill with double walls against which mining operations are being
carried on. A third shows us Kisheshlu with its
double wall around a rocky hill surrounded by water, with three battering rams
working against them. These cities, once taken, were given Assyrian names and
formed into Assyrian municipalities. Kar Sharrukin was again strengthened against the Medes, who still remained dangerous, even if
twenty-two chiefs did send presents.
Indeed, the operations continued the next year, 715. The Mannai and Elli were once more forced to pay tribute, as
well as certain princelets who had never done the
like to the kings, his fathers. The main event of the year, however, was the
defeat of Mitatti of Zikirtu,
who had twice conspired to raise a revolt among the Mannai.
At last, an attempt was made thoroughly to root out the Zikirtai.
Their three strong places, their twenty-four towns, even their capital, Parda, was taken, plundered, and burned. Mitatti was forced to flee, and "his place of abode
was not found". A few years later Zikirtai was
once more in revolt.
Thus far we seem to be dealing only with the unknown governor of Parsuash. In 714 we learn of the operations of Sharru emur ani, the governor of LuUume. As a result of the troubles of 717, Karalla had
been made part of the province. Under Amitashshi, the
brother of the unfortunate Ashur liu, the natives
rose and drove out their Assyrian oppressors. Sharru emur ani returned with an army, and a battle was fought on
the mountain called Ana. The people of Karalla were defeated and Amitashshi, bound hand and foot, was carried off to
Assyria, while two thousand of his troops were forced to take service in the
royal army. Bit Daiukku and the surrounding lands
were raided and plundered, and the whole of the newly-conquered region added to
the Lullume province.
At about the same time operations were carried on along the Elli frontier,
perhaps by Sharru emur ani,
more probably by Ishtur Duri,
the governor of Arapha.Dalta had now changed his
policy; for the revolt of five of his border districts, seemingly to the Elamitish ruler, had forced him to invite the Assyrians to
assist him. The Assyrians accepted gladly and secured the districts in
question, but there is no proof that they were ever returned to Dalta. Elli was now brought fairly within the Assyrian
sphere of influence, and only the death of Dalta was
needed to produce actual intervention.
In this connection we are told of tribute received by the governor of Parsuash. This was probably not all taken in one year. It
must rather represent the relations of that official with the tribes to the
east during the interval for which we have no other history. Certain it is that
we cannot see here actual expeditions in the field. Among the tribes which sent
presents were those of the Bikni or Demavend region,
clearly near the Caspian and as clearly in a region where no Assyrian army ever
penetrated. These were next neighbors to the somewhat mysterious Arabs of the
east and of the land of Nagira of the ''mighty" Mandai who had thrown off the yoke of Ashur and were
encamped on mountain and steppe. The tribute received from Ullusunu of Mannai and of Adar aplu iddin was more in the nature of the real thing. But, again,
in the tribute of several thousand horses and mules, sheep and cattle sent in
by forty-five chiefs of the "mighty" Medes, we have only the usual
presents.
Only once more does there seem to have been trouble along this frontier, and
then it was not serious. By 708 Dalta of Elli had
''gone the way of death," and his two sons, Nibe and Ishpabara, contested his throne. Nibe called in Shutruk nahunta, none the worse it would seem for his Assyrian
wars, while his brother summoned Sargon. Shutruk nahunta sent four thousand five hundred bowmen to garrison
Elli, but the seven generals of Sargon won the day. The capital, Marubishtu, situated on a high mountain, was captured and
rebuilt, Nibe made prisoner, and Ishpabara placed on the throne.
The revolt of Ishpabara only six years later is
only one indication among many of the untenable position the Assyrians held in
Media. The attempt to hold back the advancing Median hordes was an impossible
one, but Sargon did what he could and at least somewhat postponed the evil day.
THE ELAMITISH WARS AND THE CONQUEST OF BABYLON
The campaigns of Sargon, after the first Babylonian troubles, fall into a
definite series of movements. First came the settlement of Syrian affairs, then
the advances on the northwest frontier and the struggles with Rusash and Midas. After this there had been no great
movements, but constant wars along the Median and Asia Minor frontiers had
exercised the troops as well as extended the boundaries. At the same time an
opportunity was given for recuperation and for preparation for new wars.
The Median wars had already shown the influence of Shutur nahundi, who had ruled in Elam since 717. In Babylon,
too, it was Elamitish support which helped to keep Merodach Baladan on the throne, and
a movement to recover the old sacred city could not be better begun than by an
attempt to disable the usurper's ally. Shutur nahundi held the same place in the affairs of the southeast
as did Rusash in the north, Midas on the northwest,
and Egypt on the southwest. Around each all the disaffection of that section
centered and a conquest of each was essential to a lasting peace on that
frontier.
It was therefore as a preliminary to the conquest of Babylon that Elam was
invaded. Confused though the accounts are, we can yet, by the aid of the
topography, give a fairly correct account of the operations. One division moved
down southeast behind the Hamrin Hills, the first
important elevation beyond the Babylonian plain, and attacked Dur Athara, a Gambulu fort only sixty
miles from Susa itself and on the direct road between that city and Babylon.
This important post had already been fortified by Merodach Baladan and was now still more strengthened. Its
walls were raised, a canal from the Surappu river
drawn about it, and a force of four hundred infantry and six hundred cavalry
thrown in. In spite of all this preparation, the fort was quickly taken, before
nightfall, the scribes of Sargon boast, and the usual prisoners and booty of live stock carried off. If the plan of Sargon had been to
advance from here direct upon Susa, he was doomed to disappointment, for the
road, though short, was too rough for an army easily to traverse it even in
time of peace, while in the face of an enemy it was utterly impossible.
Something, however, had been accomplished. The direct road between Susa and
Babylon was held by Dur Athara which was made the
capital of a new province, while Dur ilu held the Susians back from a return attack on Assyria. With the new
capital as a base, further advances were made. One detachment, perhaps trying
to go around the south end of the Hamrin chain and so
attack Susa on the flank, invaded the Uknu region,
where, among their reed beds and swamps, the natives felt secure. Nevertheless,
their towns were taken and eight chiefs came forth from their retreat and paid
tribute in livestock. All the region thus far taken was made a new province,
that of Gambulu, with Dur Athara,
now called Dur Nabu, as its capital. The nomads were
ordered to settle, and a cash tribute added to a tax of one out of twenty from
their flocks. This province seems to have been well Assyrianized,
and Dur Nabu, unlike most of these re-christenings,
long retained that name. Years later, when Gambulian exiles are found settled near Harran, we find a Dur Nabu as one of their foundations.
Next came the attempt to extend the province to the south as well as to the
southeast, a movement of importance, as it brought the army close to the
ancestral home of Merodach Baladan.
Here was captured Qarad Nanni,
a town of Nabu ugalla, six
regions of the Gambulu, and four of their
strongholds. Then, moving northeast, he attacked some of the greater tribes of
the country, the Ru'a, the Puqudu,
the Iatburu, and the Hindaru.
From the two somewhat different accounts which the scribe has neglected to
amalgamated we learn that they fled by night and occupied the morasses of the Uknu. The Assyrian army first devastated their land and cut
down their main means of support, the date palms. Then they advanced into the swamp
where they found the Dupliash dammed and fortified by
two strongholds. An indecisive battle was fought, but surrender was finally
forced by starvation. Fourteen towns on the banks of the Uknu,
the names differ in the two versions, presented their tribute of livestock to
the governor in Dur Athara. Hostages were taken,
taxes assessed, and they, too, became part of the new province.
Parallel with all these operations of one corps were those of another,
which had its base at Dur ilu, and which directed its
attention to the country to the north of Elam proper, where Elamitish influence was still strong. Here again we have two conflicting versions. Two
important places, Sam'una and Bab duri,
were taken, though whether they were outposts which Shutur nahundi had fortified against Iatburu,
as one of the versions would have us believe, or whether these were towns of Iatburu and it was the towns of Ahilimmu and Pillutu that were Elamitish,
as the other asserts, we cannot pretend to know. The commanders of these cities, Sadunu and Sinlishshibu,
were forced to surrender, together with nearly twenty thousand soldiers, over a
third of whom were Elamitish. In addition, there was
taken much booty of wagons, horses, mules, asses, and camels. Samuna was rebuilt and named Bel ikisha.
While still in camp here, tribute was received from a number of Iatburu chiefs whose tribes were settled on the banks of
the Naditu. The operations came to an end with the
conquest of certain important towns in Rashi, Til Humba, Dunni Shamash, Bube, and Hamanu. The inhabitants retired to
Bit Imbi, which does not seem to have been taken,
while Shutur nahundi, the
instigator of all this resistance, retired to the mountains. That he should
have been engaged here while the Assyrians further south were striving to find
a road to his capital shows how safe he felt that to be behind its mountain
walls. How thorough all this conquest was is shown by the fact that Sargon's
own son, Sennacherib, informs us that some of it was already lost in the days
of his father.
While these two divisions had been conquering the country east of the
Tigris and thus driving a wedge between Elam and Babylonia, Sargon, with the
main army, was moving directly upon Babylon. Here, for twelve years, Merodach Baladan had held his own.
Even if not a native patriot, as the earlier scholars assumed, he was still
looked upon as a foreign deliverer by a large anti-Assyrian party, whose
property had been confiscated and who had been imprisoned during the last
period of foreign rule. The majority of our documents come from the priestly
class, who would naturally favor so pious a king as Sargon, but their version
should not make us forget that there must have been a large military class and
a still larger commercial one which was the natural enemy of Assyria.
In his inscriptions Sargon tells us that the Chaldaean usurper imprisoned the leading men of the land, although they had committed no
crime, and confiscated their property. No doubt this is all true enough. But
when Merodach Baladan did
all this he was, only inflicting on the pro-Assyrian party severities which
they themselves had employed on their rivals of the other party. In the royal
charter granting lands to Bel ahe erba,
we are told of lands torn from their rightful owners, of forgotten boundaries
and destroyed boundary stones, and all this took place in the days when the
Assyrian enemy devastated the land and "there was no king" in
Babylon. Peaceable people must indeed have suffered when the land was torn
between the two factions, and could have had as little love for one as the
other.
While, therefore, the accusations of the two enemies throw light on the
conduct of each other, Sargon is deliberately telling an untruth, when he
states that Merodach Baladan did not respect the gods, but removed them and allowed their sacrifices to fall
into neglect. If the Babylonian priesthood remained hostile to the Chaldaean, it was from no lack of effort on his part to win
them over. Like all other foreign conquerors of Babylon, he became a votary of
the gods of the land. Thus, in the above-mentioned inscription, we have the
same glorification of Marduk, Nabu and Ea, the same recognition of dependence on them,
as we meet in those of the native rulers. Nor was this homage confined to words
alone. He adorned and rebuilt the ancient temples, one of which was that of
Nana at Uruk, and provided for their maintenance and
their revenues. Special attention, too, was given to the ancient and revered
cities of Sippar, Nippur, and Babylon. It is therefore probable that the mass
of the people were well enough content with his rule. Otherwise, it is
difficult to understand why he so easily won back Babylon so soon after Sargon
died.
The settlement of Merodach Baladan at the gates of Assyria was a grave danger, for it was a constant incitement to
the other subject states to follow the example of a successful revolt. In
addition, there were sentimental reasons which would induce any Assyrian ruler,
much more one so religious and so interested in antiquity as Sargon, to attempt
the conquest. This constant desire to conquer the seemingly eternal city of
Babylon, "seize the hands of Bel", and thus become the vice gerent of Marduk on earth, has been well compared with the
equally constant desire of the Germanic kings to be crowned emperor at Rome. In
many ways the attitude of respectful mastership assumed by Rome in her dealings
with Greece would be a comparison more to the point. But neither is close
enough. We have here no foreign countries separated as much by barriers of
speech and custom as by sea or mountain. In its origin Assyria seems to have
been a Babylonian colony. In language there was less difference than between
Athens and Sparta. The only natural boundary was the line of the alluvium, and
that was no barrier. On the other hand, the two great navigable rivers, the
numberless canals, the roads with easy grades, all brought the two countries
into close relations with each other. The result was what might have been
expected. To the end Assyria was like Rome, the faithful copyist of Babylonia
in most that did not relate to war or government. In art, in literature, in
law, even in the trivial details of every-day life, Assyria leaned upon
Babylon. Above all, this was true of religion, although Assyria did indeed have
a national Ashur cult. But even this could not prevent the older gods of the
south from usurping to a considerable degree his place. The earlier Assyrian
kings could ascribe victory to Ashur. The later ones did not feel their world
empire sure until Bel Marduk of Babylon had allowed
them to seize his hands in the "city of the lord of gods."
Sargon seems to have collected his troops at Ashur, which he perhaps
inhabited at this time. He then would have moved down the west bank of the
Tigris and crossed the Euphrates, probably at Falujah,
where the last hills retreat from the river. From here he entered the country
of Bit Dakkuri, not perhaps without a battle, where
he found the ruined fort of Dur Ladina, about where
we now have the sacred city of Kerbela. As this was a good outpost against
Babylon, it was rebuilt and garrisoned. The position of Merodach Baladan had now become untenable. On the west, Dur Ladina, on the north Kutha were
in the hands of the Assyrians, and each was but a few miles from Babylon. On
the east the whole of the Elamitish foothills had
fallen into their hands, and a part of their troops was already working their
way through the swamps toward Dur lakin and
threatening his rear.
He was accordingly forced to retreat. At first he withdrew to Iatbur along the Tigris. From here he sent a
"tribute," as the Assyrian writer sarcastically calls his presents to Shutur nahundi, begging for Elamitish aid. The Assyrian insinuates that Shutur nahundi did not come,
because he did not wish to, and portrays with deep feeling the scene which took
place when Merodach Baladan learned the news, how he threw himself on the ground, tore his clothes, and
filled the air with his loud lamentations. As we have already seen, the Elamite
king was busy in the north at this time and perhaps did not know of the plight
of his ally. Besides, he had all the fighting he needed in this part of the
field.
As Merodach Baladan was
unable by himself to break through to Elam and as Shutur nahundi could not or would not come to his aid, he
was forced to fall back along the Tigris to Iqbi Bel,
perhaps the present Amara.
With the retreat of Merodach Baladan,
Babylon opened its gates. In long procession, the citizens of Babylon and Borsippa, magistrates, trade guilds, artisans, carried to
Sargon, as he lay encamped at Dur hadina, the
greeting of the great gods, Bel Marduk and Zarpanit, Nabu and Tashmit. The envoys were received graciously by the pious
monarch, who showed by his sacrifices his respect for the old order of things.
It was now late in the year, and New Year's Day was approaching. Sargon
resolved to "seize the hands of Bel" himself and thus assume personal
rule over Babylon. For the approaching ceremony the old canal of Borsippa was restored in order that it might be used as the
festival street along which Nabu might pass to greet Marduk on this auspicious day.
Sargon now went into winter quarters at Babylon where the tribute of some
of the Arimi, or Aramaeans, of the Bit Amukani, and of Bit Dakkuri, was
received. At the same time the conquest of North Babylonia was completed by the
subjugation of the Hamarana, one of the
"helper" tribes of Merodach Baladan. They had retreated across the Euphrates before the
Assyrian advance and established themselves in Sippar. The Babylonians
attempted to drive them out, but failed. An Assyrian force was detached from
the main body and sent under a governor against them. A wall of circumvallation
was thrown around Sippar and the Hamarana were forced
to surrender.
The great prize was now Sargon's. On New Year's Day he "seized the
hands of Bel" and became king of Babylon with all due pomp and ceremony. A
month was still needed for the settlement of Babylon, and then, in the month of
May, he set out for his final attack on Merodach Baladan. On his advance, the Chaldaean fell back to Dur Iakin in the marshes of the Mar Marrati, the swamps at the head of the Persian Gulf. Here
he prepared to make his last stand. The nomad troops were collected, the city
fortified, and a canal from the Euphrates brought around the place, the bridges
destroyed, and the whole country made a morass by the breaking down of the
dams. Outside the walls, earthworks were thrown up and troops posted in them.
"Like eagles" Sargon's troops crossed the streams and advanced to
the attack. The nomads were forced back and a hand-to-hand conflict took place
before the walls. Merodach Baladan was wounded in the arm and obliged to take refuge within the city. His troops,
nevertheless, Puqudu, Marsamai, Sute, resisted to the last and were slaughtered
before the gate. Rich booty was taken, including the king's furniture and
plate, in addition to captives and the various domestic animals. For three days
the city was given over to plunder. Then it was burned, its towers thrown down, its very foundations torn up, and the place given
over to utter ruin.
Yet the real object of the expedition was not accomplished. Merodach Baladan escaped, as one
of the versions is forced to admit. Other versions, indeed, give the history as
it should have been, with Merodach Baladan as a captive or as a pardoned rebel with his
tribute paid and his fortresses dismantled, but the course of later events
proves that he did indeed escape. He remained safe in the marshes of the
extreme south until Sargon died, when once more, for a short time, he held the
throne of Babylonia.
The remainder of the year was taken up with the settlement of affairs in
South Babylonia. The political prisoners from Babylon, Sippar, Nippur, and Borsippa, were freed from their confinement at Dur Iakin and restored to their homes and lands. Religion once
more became supreme. The gods were restored to the cities and new buildings
erected. The whole of the region along the Elamitish border, Dur Iakin included, was settled by captives
from Qummuh, hardly a wise proceeding for the change
from the cold bracing highlands along the upper Euphrates to the hot,
fever-laden swamps of this region must have soon proved fatal to the majority
of them. A strong fort was built against Elam at Sagbat by Nabu damiq ilani, who seems to be the governor of Gambulu mentioned immediately after. The control of this frontier was confided to him
and to the governor of Babylon.
At almost the same time Sargon's vanity was flattered by
"tribute" from two distant islands at the two extreme corners of the
known world. We have already seen the reason for his relations with Cyprus.
What led Uperi, king of Tilmun,
a half mythical island lying a sixty hours' journey down the gulf, "like a
fish in the sea", to open relations with Sargon is not so clear. Probably
it was for commercial reasons. If Tilmun was indeed
the present Bahrein, we may perhaps see in it a wish to secure a market for the
pearls which have made the island so famous in modern times.
Sargon remained for some time in Babylonia, receiving the submission of the
natives and attempting to put affairs in order. In 707 all seemed to be quiet,
or at least matters were becoming more serious to the north. The king returned
to Assyria, after having brought back the gods of the sea lands to their
ancestral seats, taking with him a body of captives to be settled there. But
these northern troubles seem once more to have aroused the south, and the
settlers placed in Dur Iakin were driven out in 706.
In 705 we have the news of a capture of Dur Iakin. By
this time it would seem as if South Babylonia was all in revolt. For a time
Sennacherib was able to hold Babylon and the North, but even this finally went
over to Merodach Baladan,
who once more for a short while held rule over all Babylonia.
THE LAST YEARS
With the accession of Argishtish II to the throne
of Haldia, about the year 711, the situation became once more as serious as it
had been under Rusash. As usual, the new king was
more anxious for war than his father, and hostilities, which seem to have been
intermitted for two or three years, broke out anew. The first year or two of
his reign seems to have been spent in building for himself a new city, Argishtihina, whose ruins are probably to be found at Arjish, and in constructing a reservoir for it.
In 710 the opportunity seemed to have come. Sargon was in Babylonia with
his best troops and engaged with powerful enemies who, if allied with Argishtish, as seems to have been the case, would no doubt
call upon him to make a diversion. For the events of these last few years we
depend, not on the edited documents intended to glorify the king, but on the
very letters which passed between the generals in the field and the king
himself or his son, Sennacherib, who was left in charge of the north with
head-quarters at Kalhu, while his father was at
Babylon. Thus, in spite of the difficulty of interpretation and of arrangement,
we are enabled to gain a far more correct and more vivid idea of the campaigns
than we can for any other part of the reign. Our first letters would seem to
come from the winter of 710-9, when Sargon was already in control of Babylon.
At this time Argishtish seems to have been collecting
his troops at his new city of Argishtihina, which lay
on the north side and might therefore be supposed to be out of sight from the
Assyrians. But Sargon had a good intelligence department, and rumors began to
reach him. Ashur rigua, for example, who so often
appears in these events, was ordered to send one of his spies to Turushpa, the older capital of Haldia, on the site of the
present Van, whence a raid might be expected. As a result, perhaps, of this
investigation, Ashur ri#ua next learned that Argishtish had now entered Turushpa and had there captured the second tartan, Urgine,
with his Assyrian army. The tartan, it would seem, had advanced incautiously,
thinking that the Haldian was still at Argistihina. Now his brother, Apli uknu, had gone off to see him, presumably under a
truce, and was about to investigate the cause of the capture. The near approach
of the Haldian army had quite naturally led to
disaffection among Sargon's soldiers, many of them captives who had seen their
homes destroyed and relatives killed by the men who now forced them to fight
their cause. Narage, a rab kiçir, plotted revolt, and was followed by twenty
of his men. Ashur riçua, however, detected it in time
and the plotters were sent back from the front. Another example of the
disaffection felt may be seen in a letter from Sha Ashur dubbu,
governor of Tushhan. Two officers and six men were
sent with warrants, seal in hand, the Assyrian says, for deserters in Penza on
the Haldian frontier. While on their way they fell
into an ambush set by a Shuprian whose brother had
just been treacherously eating with them to throw them off their guard.
Fortunately they escaped. The governor has ordered a guard, for he has cavalry
as well as infantry, to be stationed here and will carry on a full
investigation. Another letter of his gives further news of the Penza affair, it
would seem, as well as of conditions on the frontier. A messenger of Bagteshub has brought news from the front, but Bagteshub himself has not obeyed orders, and a copy of the
reprimand sent him is given.
Frontier conditions were certainly growing alarming. Akkul anu was cut off and besought the king for a reply. Another letter from Upahhir Bel, governor of Ameda,
reports that he is still in Harda and has sent a
scout to the frontier. The governor of an unknown city, perhaps Akku-lanu, has sent asking aid. Upahhir Bel replies by urging him to remain shut up close in his forts and he will
deliver him. But this must have been a boast which Upahhir Bel was unable to fulfill, for when we next hear of him he has been forced to
fall back, and Haldian officials are at Harda, his old quarters. From here to Turushpa,
where the king still was, they keep guard. There is no immediate danger of
attack, for a captured letter from Argishtish to the
governor of Harda forbids for the present further
advance. The Ituai, who seem to have been a sort of
military caste, have been called in. The palace Ituai who has come from the Euphrates has gone off with one or two "houses"
of the governor's sukalli. The Ituai who inspected beams at Eziat has been sent of with the rob ali, or mayor, to the front. An engagement has taken
place and the Assyrians have been worsted. The enemy lost only three wounded,
while the Assyrians suffered a loss of two killed and ten wounded, including
the lieutenant of the rab ali. Upahhir Bel is now at Shuruba and must have an army there by harvest time to
support him.
But still worse news was to come to Sennacherib, for while Argishtish was still at Turushpa sacrificing, and with all his governors around him, ready for an advance, the Mannai, whose traditional policy was to side with Assyria,
broke away and made a raid on Assyrian territory. Analu-qunu,
the governor of Muçaçir, and Tunnaun,
governor of Karsitu, hastened to the boundary, but
the Mannai had already retreated. Such was the news
of Ashur riçua. Gabbu ana
Ashur, who had arrived at his province of Kurban, in
Tammuz (July), sends in a report a month later, in Ab. On his arrival he sent
messengers to Nabu liu,
Ashur bel danan, and Ashur riçua,
who were at the forts immediately before the enemy. Now the messengers have
returned and report that Argishtish is still in Turushpa. From another letter we learn that there were ten
Assyrian generals operating in this region. About the same time must have taken
place the revolt of the Zikirtai.
The events of this year had been most favorable for Haldia. On the
northwest Mutallu of Qummuh had been drawn away. Then along the whole southern boundary of Haldia an
advance had been made and disaffection was spreading in the enemy's ranks. The
situation seemed black enough for Assyria, with even the Zikirtai and their faithful Mannai gone.
The operations of the next year, 708, were no more calculated to restore
confidence to Sargon. At the beginning of Nisan (April), Argishtish at last advanced, first to Qaniun and then to Eliggadu where he was met by the levy from all Armenia.
Meanwhile, Qaqqadanu, his tartan, had been sent on to Uesi with four other officers. After a long delay,
during which he received the tribute of the Zikirtai,
the king left Eliggadu and himself went to Uesi. His forces at this time were said to be few. By this
time it was already Elul (September). Here he seems to have remained until the
beginning of the next year. But while still in Uesi,
apparently before the winter closed in, he sent against Muçaçir a body of three thousand men with baggage camels under Setinu,
one of his governors. But Suna, the Assyrian general
in charge of the Ukkai country, who had already put
down a revolt at home, learned of this and hurried to Muçaçir to head him off. This he succeeded in doing, although not before the enemy had
crossed the Çalmat river. This was the first victory,
it would appear, of all the operations. An attempt was made to push the
advantage home. The commanders of Uesi and Ukkai, the latter Suna, of
course, came to Muçaçir, sacrificed in the famous
temple, and then advanced, the result being that Argishtish fell back to Uesi. This information was sent the king
by no less a person that Urzana, king of Muçaçir, the former friend of Rusash.
He now protests his loyalty and his wish to do whatever the king orders him.
This success of the Assyrians must have been followed by a reverse, for soon
after we find Urzana negotiating a treaty with Haldia
and his example followed by Hubushkia. Hardly,
however, had the spring campaign of 707 begun when Argishtish was suddenly drawn to the north by a terrible danger which now began to
threaten the civilized countries of Western Asia. Another branch of that
Iranian race which was already pressing so hard on the eastern frontier of
Assyria had poured across the Caucasus, carrying everything before it. Coming
out of their "Cimmerian darkness", these Gimirrai,
so soon as the late spring of the highlands allowed, began their operations.
They struck the Haldian frontier obliquely and
finally took up their position in Cappadocia, where many traces of their stay
lasted on in the later nomenclature of the region. Here they were able to
attack, as they might desire, Phrygia or the rising power of Lydia on the one
hand, or Assyria or Haldia on the other. The land of Haldia first felt the
presence of these barbarians and Argishtish decided
to attack them before they actually crossed his borders. At first he seems to
have had some success. Guriania, a region between Haldia
and Gamirra, was forced to pay tribute. As the Haldian advance must have been up the Tokhma Su past Melitene and Tulgarimmu, this whole country must have already been lost
to Assyria. It is therefore with no surprise that we see Sennacherib engaged once
more in reconquering this region.
The advantage did not long remain to Argishtish.
Soon after he entered the land of Gamir, the battle
with the Cimmerians took place. The result was a complete defeat. The king
himself escaped and retreated to Uazaun, but his
tartan, Qaqqadanu, was taken and most of his nobles
slain. The defeat was a terrible one. The wars with Assyria had already
weakened Haldia, and now this came. The country was permanently crippled and
never again became a serious menace to Assyria.
The news spread far and wide, and soon reports from the various frontier
officers began to come in to Sennacherib, who forwarded them to Sargon, who was
still delaying in Babylon. The news seems to have aroused him, for by the end
of the year 707 he was once more back in Assyria. The next year he himself took
the field in Tabal, though now an old man. For a time
there seems to have been no decisive battle, the Cimmerians probably being
weakened by their late contest, while Sargon would follow a more cautious
policy. But in the year 705 he was forced to give battle to the Cimmerians, who
seem now to have been led by Eshpai the Kulummite. The king fell in the ensuing conflict and his
camp was taken. Later his body was recovered and, after much opposition for some
unknown cause by the priests, his son buried it with all the necessary pomp. On
the twelfth of Ab (August) Sennacherib formally ascended the throne and a new
reign began.
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