READING HALLTHE DOORS OF WISDOM |
BIOGRAPHYCAL UNIVERSAL LIBRARY |
SHALMANESER III(859-824 BC)
Assur-Nazir-Pal left to his successor an overflowing treasury, a valiant
army, a people proud of their progress and fully confident in their own
resources, and a kingdom which had recovered, during several years of peace,
from the strain of its previous conquests. Shalmaneser III drew largely on the
reserves of men and money which his father’s foresight had prepared, and his
busy reign of thirty-five years saw thirty-two campaigns, conducted almost
without a break, on every side of the empire in succession. A double task
awaited him, which he conscientiously and successfully fulfilled.
Assur-Nazir-Pal had thoroughly reorganized the empire and raised it to the
rank of a great power; he had confirmed his provinces and vassal states in
their allegiance, and had subsequently reduced to subjection, or, at any rate,
penetrated at various points, the little buffer principalities between Assyria
and the powerful kingdoms of Babylon, Damascus, and Urartu; but he had avoided
engaging any one of these three great states in a struggle of which the issue
seemed doubtful. Shalmaneser could not maintain this policy of forbearance
without loss of prestige in the eyes of the world: conduct which might seem
prudent and cautious in a victorious monarch like Assur-Nazir-Pal would in him
have argued timidity or weakness, and his rivals would soon have provoked a
quarrel if they thought him lacking in the courage or the means to attack them.
Immediately after his accession, therefore, he assumed the offensive, and
decided to measure his strength first against Urartu, which for some years past
had been showing signs of restlessness.
Few countries are more rugged or better adapted for defense than that in
which his armies were about to take the field. The volcanoes to which it owed
its configuration in geological times, had become extinct long before the
appearance of man, but the surface of the ground still bears evidence of their
former activity; layers of basaltic rock, beds of scorias and cinders, streams of half-disintegrated mud and lava, and more or less
perfect cones, meet the eye at every turn. Subterranean disturbances have not
entirely ceased even now, for certain craters—that of Tandurek,
for example—sometimes exhale acid fumes; while hot springs exist in the
neighborhood, from which steaming waters escape in cascades to the valley, and
earthquakes and strange subterranean noises are not unknown. The backbone of
these Armenian mountains joins towards the south the line of the Gordyaean range; it runs in a succession of zigzags from
south-east to northwest, meeting at length the mountains of Pontus and the last
spurs of the Caucasus.
Lofty snow-clad peaks, chiefly of volcanic origin,
rise here and there among them, the most important being Akhta-dagh, Tandurek, Ararat, Bingoel,
and Palandoeken. The two unequal pyramids which form
the summit of Ararat are covered with perpetual snow, the higher of them being
16,916 feet above the sea-level. The spurs which issue from the principal chain
cross each other in all directions, and make a network of rocky basins where in
former times water collected and formed lakes, nearly all of which are now dry
in consequence of the breaking down of one or other of their enclosing sides.
Two only of these mountain lakes still remain, entirely devoid of outlet, Lake
Van in the south, and Lake Urumiah further to the
south-east. The Assyrians called the former the Upper Sea of Nairi, and the latter the Lower Sea, and both
constituted a defense for Urartu against their attacks. To reach the centre of the kingdom of Urartu, the Assyrians had either
to cross the mountainous strip of land between the two lakes, or by making a
detour to the north-west, and descending the difficult slopes of the valley of
the Arzania, to approach the mountains of Armenia
lying to the north of Lake Van. The march was necessarily a slow and painful
one for both horses and men, along narrow winding valleys down which rushed
rapid streams, over raging torrents, through tangled forests where the path had
to be cut as they advanced, and over barren wind-swept plateaux where rain and mist chilled and demoralized soldiers accustomed to the warm and
sunny plains of the Euphrates.
The majority of the armies which invaded this region
never reached the goal of the expedition: they retired after a few engagements,
and withdrew as quickly as possible to more genial climes. The main part of the
Urartu remained almost always unsubdued behind its barrier of woods, rocks, and
lakes, which protected it from the attacks leveled against it, and no one can
say how far the kingdom extended in the direction of the Caucasus. It certainly
included the valley of the Araxes and possibly part of the valley of the Kur,
and the steppes sloping towards the Caspian Sea. It was a region full of
contrasts, at once favored and ill-treated by nature in its elevation and
aspect: rugged peaks, deep gorges, dense thickets, districts sterile from the
heat of subterranean fires, and sandy wastes barren for lack of moisture, were
interspersed with shady valleys, sunny vine-clad slopes, and wide stretches of
fertile land covered with rich layers of deep alluvial soil, where thick-standing
corn and meadow-lands, alternating with orchards, repaid the cultivator for the
slightest attempt at irrigation.
THE TRIBES AND CIVILIZATION OF URARTU.
History does not record who were the former
possessors of this land; but towards the middle of the ninth century it was
divided into several principalities, whose position and boundaries cannot be
precisely determined. It is thought that Urartu lay on either side of Mount
Ararat and on both banks of the Araxes, that Biainas lay around Lake Van, and that the Mannai occupied the
country to the north and east of Lake Urumiah (Urmia); the positions of the other tribes on the different tributaries of the
Euphrates or the slopes of the Armenian mountains are as yet uncertain.
The country was probably peopled by a very mixed race,
for its mountains have always afforded a safe asylum for refugees, and at each
migration, which altered the face of Western Asia, some fugitives from
neighboring nations drifted to the shelter of its fastnesses.
The principal element, the Khaldi,
were akin to that great family of tribes which extended across the range
of the Taurus, from the shores of the Mediterranean to the Euxine, and included
the Khalybes, the Mushku,
the Tabal, and the Khati.
The little preserved of their language resembles what we know of the idioms in
use among the people of Arzapi and Mitanni, and their
religion seems to have been somewhat analogous to the ancient worship of the
Hittites. The character of the ancient Armenians, as revealed to us by the
monuments, resembles in its main features that of the Armenians of the present
time. They appear as tall, strong, muscular, and determined, full of zest for
work and fighting, and proud of their independence. Some of them led a pastoral
life, wandering about with their flocks during the greater part of the year,
obliged to seek pasturage in valley, forest, or mountain height according to
the season, while in winter they remained frost-bound in semi-subterranean
dwellings similar to those in which descendants immure themselves at the present
day. Where the soil lent itself to agriculture, they proved excellent
husbandmen, and obtained abundant crops. Their ingenuity in irrigation was
remarkable, and enabled them to bring water by a system of trenches from
distant springs to supply their fields and gardens; besides which, they knew
how to terrace the steep hillsides so as to prevent the rapid draining away of
moisture. Industries were but little developed among them, except perhaps the
working of metals; for were they not akin to those Chalybes
of the Pontus, whose mines and forges already furnished iron to the Grecian
world? Fragments have been discovered in the ruined cities of Urartu of
statuettes, cups, and votive shields, either embossed or engraved,
and decorated with concentric bands of animals or men, treated in the Assyrian
manner, but displaying great beauty of style and remarkable finish of
execution.
Their towns were generally fortified or perched on heights, rendering them
easy of defence, as, for example, Van and Toprah-Kaleh. Even such towns as were royal residences were
small, and not to be compared with the cities of Assyria or Aram; their
ground-plan generally assumed the form of a rectangular oblong, not always
traced with equal exactitude. The walls were built of blocks of roughly hewn
stone, laid in regular courses, but without any kind of mortar or cement; they
were surmounted by battlements, and flanked at intervals by square towers, at
the foot of which were outworks to protect the points most open to attack. The
entrance was approached by narrow and dangerous pathways, which sometimes ran
on ledges across the precipitous face of the rock. The dwelling-houses were of very
simple construction, being merely square cabins of stone or brick, devoid of
any external ornament, and pierced by one low doorway, but sometimes surmounted
by an open colonnade supported by a row of small pillars; a flat roof with a
parapet crowned the whole, though this was often replaced by a gabled top,
which was better adapted to withstand the rains and snows of winter. The
palaces of the chiefs differed from the private houses in the size of their
apartments and the greater care bestowed upon their decoration. Their façades
were sometimes adorned with columns, and ornamented with bucklers or carved
discs of metal; slabs of stone covered with inscriptions lined the inner halls,
but we do not know whether the kings added to their dedications to the gods and
the recital of their victories, pictures of the battles they had fought and of
the fortresses they had destroyed. The furniture resembled that in the houses
of Nineveh, but was of simpler workmanship, and perhaps the most valuable
articles were imported from Assyria or were of Aramaean manufacture. The
temples seemed to have differed little from the palaces, at least in external
appearance. The masonry was more regular and more skillfully laid; the outer
court was filled with brazen lavers and statues; the interior was furnished
with altars, sacrificial stones, idols in human or animal shape, and bowls
identical with those in the sanctuaries on the Euphrates, but the nature and
details of the rites in which they were employed are unknown.
One supreme deity, Khaldis, god of the sky, was,
as far as we can conjecture, the protector of the whole nation, and their name
was derived from his, as that of the Assyrians was from Assur, the Cossaeans from Kashshu, and the Khati from Khatu. This deity was
assisted in the government of the universe by Teisbas,
god of the air, and Ardinis the sun-god. Groups of
secondary deities were ranged around this sovereign triad—Auis,
the water; Ayas, the earth; Selardis,
the moon; Kharubainis, Irmusinis, Adarutas, and Arzi-melas:
one single inscription enumerates forty-six, but some of these were worshipped
in special localities only. It would appear as if no goddesses were included in
the native Pantheon. Saris, the only goddess known to us at present, is
probably merely a variant of the Ishtar of Nineveh or Arbela, borrowed from the
Assyrians at a later date.
THE FIRST CAMPAIGN OF SHALMASESER III AGAINST URARTU
Assur, the great
lord, king of all the great gods; Anu, king of the Igigi and Anunnaki, the lord
of lands; Enlil, the exalted, father of the gods, the creator; Ea, king of the Deep, who determines destiny; Sin, king of
the tiara, exalted in splendor; Adad, mighty, pre-eminent, lord of abundance;
Shamash, judge of heaven and earth, director of all; Marduk,
master of the gods, lord of law; Urta, valiant one of
the Igigi and the Anunnaki, the almighty god; Nergal, the ready, king of
battle; Nusku, bearer of the shining scepter, the god
who renders decisions; Ninlil, spouse of Bel, mother of the great gods; Ishtar,
first in heaven and on earth, who fills the measure of bravery; the great gods,
who ordain destinies, who have made great my kingdom, I invoke.
Shalmaneser, king of all peoples, lord, priest of
Assur, mighty king, king of all the four regions, Sun of all peoples, despot of
all lands; son of Assur-Nasir-Pal, the high priest, whose priesthood was
acceptable to the gods and who brought in submission at his feet the totality
of the countries; glorious offspring of Tukulti-Urta,
who slew all of his foes and overwhelmed them like a deluge
The first Assyrian conquerors looked upon these
northern regions as an integral part of Nairi, and
included them under that name. They knew of no single state in the district
whose power might successfully withstand their own, but were merely acquainted
with a group of hostile provinces whose internecine conflicts left them ever at
the mercy of a foreign foe. Two kingdoms had, however, risen to some importance
about the beginning of the ninth century—that of the Mannai in the east, and that of Urartu in the centre of the
country. Urartu comprised the district of Ararat proper, the province of Biaina, and the entire basin of the Arzania.
Arzashkun, one of its capitals, situated probably near the
sources of this river, was hidden, and protected against attack, by an extent
of dense forest almost impassable to a regular army. The power of this kingdom,
though as yet unorganized, had already begun to inspire the neighboring states
with uneasiness. Assur-Nazir-Pal speaks of it incidentally as lying on the
northern frontier of his empire, but the care he took to avoid arousing its
hostility shows the respect in which he held it.
He was, indeed, as much afraid of Urartu as of
Damascus, and though he approached quite close to its boundary in his second
campaign, he preferred to check his triumphant advance rather than risk
attacking it. It appears to have been at that time under the undisputed rule of
a certain Sharduris, son of Lutipri,
and subsequently, about the middle of Assur-Nazir-Pal’s reign, to have passed
into the hands of Arame, who styled himself King of Nairi,
and whose ambition may have caused those revolts which forced Assur-Nazir-Pal to
take up arms in the eighteenth year of his reign. On this occasion the
Assyrians again confined themselves to the chastisement of their own vassals,
and checked their advance as soon as they approached Urartu. Their success was
but temporary; hardly had they withdrawn from the neighborhood, when the
disturbances were renewed with even greater violence, very probably at the
instigation of Arame.
Shalmaneser III found matters in a very unsatisfactory
state both on the west and south of Lake Van: some of the peoples who had been
subject to his father—the Khubushkia, the pastoral
tribes of the Gordaean mountains, and the
Aramaeans of the Euphrates—had transferred their allegiance elsewhere. He
immediately took measures to recall them to a sense of their duty, and set out
from Calah only a few days after succeeding to the crown. He marched at first
in an easterly direction, and, crossing the pass of Simisi,
burnt the city of Aridu, thus proving that he was
fully prepared to treat rebels after the same fashion as his father. The lesson
had immediate effect. All the neighboring tribes, Khargeans, Simiseans, the people of Simira,
Sirisha, and Ulmania, hastened to pay him homage even
before he had struck his camp near Aridu. Hurrying
across country by the shortest route, which entailed the making of roads to
enable his chariots and cavalry to follow him, he fell upon Khubushkia,
and reduced a hundred towns to ashes, pursuing the king Kakia into the depths of the forest, and forcing him to an unconditional surrender.
Ascending thence to Shugunia,
a dependency of Arame’s, he laid the principality waste, in spite of the
desperate resistance made on their mountain slopes by the inhabitants; then
proceeding to Lake Van, he performed the ceremonial rites incumbent on an Assyrian
king whenever he stood for the first time on the shores of a new sea. He washed
his weapons in the waters, offered a sacrifice to the gods, casting some
portions of the victim into the lake, and before leaving carved his own image
on the surface of a commanding rock. On his homeward march he received tribute
from Gilzan. This expedition was but the prelude of
further successes. After a few weeks’ repose at Nineveh, he again set out to
make his authority felt in the western portions of his dominions.
Akhuni, chief of Bit-Adini, whose
position was the first to be menaced, had formed a league with the chiefs of
all the cities which had formerly bowed before Assur-Nazir-Pal’s victorious
arms, Gurgum, Samalla, Kui, the Patina, Carchemish, and the Khati.
Shalmaneser seized Lalati and Burmarana, two of Akhuni’s towns, drove him across the Euphrates, and
following close on his heels, collected as he passed the tribute of Gurgum, and fell upon Samalla.
Under the walls of Lutibu he
overthrew the combined forces of Adini, Samalla, and the Patina, and raised a trophy to commemorate
his victory at the sources of the Saluara; then
turning sharply to the south, he crossed the Orontes in pursuit of Shapalulme, King of the Patina.
Not far from Alizir he encountered a fresh army
raised by Akhuni and the King of Samalla,
with contingents from Carchemish, Kui, Cilicia, and Iasbuki: having routed it, he burnt the fortresses of Shapalulme, and after occupying himself by cutting down
cedars and cypress trees on the Amanos in the
province of Atalur, he left a triumphal stele
engraved on the mountain-side.
Next turning eastwards, he received the homage offered with alacrity by the
towns of Taia, Khazazu, Nulia, and Butamu, and, with a
final tribute from Agusi, he returned in triumph to
Nineveh. The motley train which accompanied, him showed by its variety the
immense extent of country he had traversed during this first campaign. Among
the prisoners were representatives of widely different races;—Khati with long robes and cumbrous head-dresses, following
naked mountaineers from Shugunia, who marched with
yokes on their necks, and wore those close-fitting helmets with short crests
which have such a strangely modern look on the Assyrian bas-reliefs. The actual
results of the campaign were, perhaps, hardly commensurate with the energy
expended. This expedition from east to west had certainly inflicted
considerable losses on the rebels against whom it had been directed; it had
cost them dearly in men and cattle, and booty of all kinds, and had extorted
from them a considerable amount of tribute, but they remained, notwithstanding,
still unsubdued. As soon as the Assyrian troops had quitted their neighborhood,
they flattered themselves they were safe from further attack. No doubt they thought
that a show of submission would satisfy the new invader, as it had satisfied
his father; but Shalmaneser was not disposed to rest content with this nominal
dependence. He intended to exercise effective control over all the states won
by his sword, and the proof of their subjection was to be the regular payment
of tribute and fulfillment of other obligations to their suzerain. Year by year
he unfailingly enforced his rights, till the subject states were obliged to
acknowledge their master and resign themselves to servitude.
THE CONQUEST OF BIT-ADINI AND OF NAIRI
The narrative of his reiterated efforts is a monotonous one. The king
advanced against Adini in the spring of 859 BC,
defeated Akhuni near Tul-Barsip,
transported his victorious regiments across the Euphrates on rafts of skins,
seized Surunu, Paripa, and Dabigu besides six fortresses and two hundred villages, and
then advanced into the territory of Carchemish, which he proceeded to treat
with such severity that the other Hittite chiefs hastened to avert a similar
fate by tendering their submission.
The very enumeration of their offerings proves not only their wealth, but
the terror inspired by the advancing Assyrian host: Shapalulme of the Patina, for instance, yielded up three talents of gold, a hundred
talents of silver, three hundred talents of copper, and three hundred of iron,
and paid in addition to this an annual tribute of one talent of silver, two
talents of purple, and two hundred great beams of cedar-wood. Samalla, Agusi, and Kummukh were each laid under tribute in proportion to their
resources, but their surrender did not necessarily lead to that of Adini. Akhuni realized that,
situated as he was on the very borders of Assyrian territory, there was no
longer a chance of his preserving his semi-independence, as was the case with
his kinsfolk beyond the Euphrates; proximity to the capital would involve a
stricter servitude, which would soon reduce him from the condition of a vassal
to that of a subject, and make him merely a governor where he had hitherto
reigned as king. Abandoned by the Khati, he sought
allies further north, and entered into a league with the tribes of Nairi and Urartu. When, in 858 BC, Shalmaneser
III forced an entrance into Tul-Barsip, and drove
back what was left of the garrison on the right bank of the Euphrates, a sudden
movement of Arame obliged him to let the prey escape from his grasp. Rapidly
fortifying Tul-Barsip, Nappigi, Aligu, Pitru, and Mutkinu, and garrisoning them with loyal troops to command
the fords of the river, as his ancestor Shalmaneser I had done six centuries
before, he then re-entered Nairi by way of
Bit-Zamani, devastated Inziti with fire and sword,
forced a road through to the banks of the Arzania,
pillaged Sukhmi and Dayaini,
and appeared under the walls of Arzashkun.
Arame withdrew to Mount Adduri and awaited his
attack in an almost impregnable position; he was nevertheless defeated: 3400 of
his soldiers fell on the field of battle; his camp, his treasures, his
chariots, and all his baggage passed into the hands of the conqueror, and he
himself barely escaped with his life. Shalmaneser ravaged the country “as a
savage bull ravages and tramples under his feet the fertile fields”; he burnt
the villages and the crops, destroyed Arzashkun, and
raised before its gates a pyramid of human heads, surrounded by a circle of
prisoners impaled on stakes. He climbed the mountain chain of Iritia, and laid waste Aramali and Zanziuna at his leisure, and descending for the
second time to the shores of Lake Van, renewed the rites he had performed there
in the first year of his reign, and engraved on a neighboring rock an
inscription recording his deeds of prowess.
He made his way back to Gilzan, where its king,
Shua, brought him a war-horse fully caparisoned, as a token of homage.
Shalmaneser graciously deigned to receive it, and further exacted from the king
the accustomed contributions of chariot-horses, sheep, and wine, together with
seven dromedaries, whose strange forms amused the gaping crowds of Nineveh.
After quitting Gilzan, Shalmaneser encountered the
people of Khubushkia, who ventured to bar his way;
but its king, Kakia, lost his city of Shilaia, and three thousand soldiers, besides bulls,
horses, and sheep innumerable. Having enforced submission in Khubushkia, Shalmaneser at length returned to Assur through
the defiles of Kirruri, and came to Calah to enjoy a
well-earned rest after the fatigues of his campaign.
But Akhuni had not yet lost heart. Though driven
back to the right bank of the Euphrates, he had taken advantage of the
diversion created by Arame in his favor, to assume a strong position among the
hills of Shitamrat with the river in his rear.
Shalmaneser attacked his lines in front, and broke through them after three
days’ preliminary skirmishing; then finding the enemy drawn up in battle array
before their last stronghold, the king charged without a moment's hesitation,
drove them back and forced them to surrender. Akhuni’s life was spared, but he was sent with the remainder of his army to colonize a
village in the neighborhood of Assur, and Adini became henceforth an integral part of Assyria.
The war on the western frontier was hardly brought to a close when another
broke out in the opposite direction. The king rapidly crossed the pass of Bunagishlu and fell upon Mazamua:
the natives, disconcerted by his impetuous onslaught, nevertheless hoped to
escape by putting out in their boats on the broad expanse of Lake Urumiah. Shalmaneser, however, constructed rafts of
inflated skins, on which his men ventured in pursuit right out into the open.
The natives were overpowered; the king “dyed the sea with their blood as if it
had been wool”, and did not withdraw until he had forced them to appeal for
mercy.
THE FIRST ATTACK ON DAMASCUS. THE BATTLE OF QARQAR.
In five years Shalmaneser had destroyed Adini,
laid low Urartu, and confirmed the tributary states of Syria in their
allegiance; but Damascus and Babylon were as yet untouched, and the moment was
at hand when he would have to choose between an arduous conflict with them, or
such a repression of the warlike zeal of his opening years, that, like his
father Assur-Nazir-Pal, he would have to repose on his laurels. Shalmaneser was
too deeply imbued with the desire for conquest to choose a peaceful policy: he
decided at once to assume the offensive against Damascus, being probably
influenced by the news of Ahab’s successes, and deeming that if the King of
Israel had gained the ascendency unaided, Assur, fully confident of its own
superiority, need have no fear as to the result of a conflict. The forces,
however, at the disposal of Benhadad II (Adadidri) were sufficient to cause the Assyrians some
uneasiness. The King of Damascus was not only lord of Coele-Syria and the Hauran, but he exercised a suzerainty more or less defined
over Hamath, Israel, Ammon, the Arabian and Idumean tribes, Arvad and the principalities of Northern Phoenicia, Usanata, Shianu, and Irkanata; in
all, twelve peoples or twelve kings owned his sway, and their forces, if united
to his, would provide at need an army of nearly
100,000 men: a few years might see these various elements merged in a united
empire, capable of withstanding the onset of any foreign foe.
Shalmaneser set out from Nineveh on the 14th day of the month Iyyar, 854 BC, and chastised on his way the
Aramaeans of the Balikh, whose sheikh Giammu had shown some inclination to assert his
independence. He crossed the Euphrates at Tul-Barsip,
and held a species of durbar at Pitru for his Syrian
subjects: Sangar of Carchemish, Kundashpi of Kummukh, Arame of Agusi, Lalli of Melitene, Khaiani of Samalla, Garparuda who had succeeded Shapalulme among the Patina, and a second Garparuda of Gurgum, rallied around him with their presents of welcome,
and probably also with their troops. This ceremony concluded, he hastened to Khalmaa and reduced it to submission, then plunged into the
hill-country between Khalman and the Orontes, and
swept over the whole territory of Hamath. A few easy victories at the outset
enabled him to exact ransom from, or burn to the ground, the cities of Adinnu, Mashga, Argana, and Qarqar, but just
beyond Qarqar he encountered the advance-guard of the
Syrian army.
Ben-Hadad had called together, to give him a
fitting reception, the whole of the forces at his disposal: 1200 chariots, 1200
horse, 20,000 foot-soldiers from Damascus alone; 700 chariots, 700 horse and
10,000 foot from Hamath; 2000 chariots and 10,000 foot belonging to Ahab, 500
soldiers from Kui, 1000 mountaineers from the Taurus,
10 chariots and 10,000 foot from Irk and 200 from Arvad,
200 from Usanata, 30 chariots and 10,000 foot from Shianu, 1000 camels from Gindibu the Arab, and 1000 Ammonites.
The battle was long and bloody, and the issue uncertain; Shalmaneser drove
back one wing of the confederate army to the Orontes, and forcing the other
wing and the centre to retire from Qarqar to Kirzau, claimed the
victory, though the losses on both sides were equally great. It would seem as
if the battle were indecisive—the Assyrians, at any rate, gained
nothing by it; they beat a retreat immediately after their pretended victory,
and returned to their own land without prisoners and almost without booty. On
the whole, this first conflict had not been unfavorable to Damascus: it had
demonstrated the power of that state in the eyes of the most incredulous, and
proved how easy resistance would be, if only the various princes of Syria would
lay aside their differences and all unite under the command of a single chief.
The effect of the battle in Northern Syria and among the recently annexed Aiamoan tribes was very great; they began to doubt the
omnipotence of Assyria, and their loyalty was shaken. Sangar of Carchemish and
the Khati refused to pay their tribute, and
the Emirs of Tul-Abni and Mount Kashiari broke out into open revolt. Shalmaneser spent a whole year in suppressing the
insurrection; complications, moreover, arose at Babylon which obliged him to
concentrate his attention and energy on Chaldean affairs. Nabu-Baliddin had always maintained peaceful and friendly relations with Assyria, but he had
been overthrown, or perhaps assassinated, and his son Marduk-Nadin-Shumu had succeeded him on the throne, to the dissatisfaction of a section of his
subjects. Another son of Nabu-Baliddin, Marduk-Belusate, claimed the sovereign power, and soon won
over so much of the country that Marduk-Nadin-Shumu had fears for the safety of Babylon itself. He then probably remembered the
pretensions to Kharduniash, which his Assyrian
neighbors had for a long time maintained, and applied to Shalmaneser to support
his tottering fortunes. The Assyrian monarch must have been disposed to lend a
favorable ear to a request which allowed him to intervene as suzerain in the
quarrels of the rival kingdom: he mobilized his forces, offered sacrifices in honour of Bamman at Zaban, and crossed the frontier in 853 BC.
THE WAR AGAINST BABYLON.
The war dragged on during the next two years. The scene of hostilities was
at the outset on the left bank of the Tigris, which for ten centuries had
served as the battle-field for the warriors of both countries. Shalmaneser, who
had invested Me-Turnat at the fords of the Lower Diyalah, at length captured that fortress, and after having
thus isolated the rebels of Babylonia proper, turned his steps towards Gananate.
Marduk-Belusate, “a vacillating king, incapable of directing his own affairs”, came out to
meet him, but although repulsed and driven within the town, he defended his
position with such spirit that Shalmaneser was at length obliged to draw off
his troops after having cut down all the young compelled the fruit trees,
disorganized the whole system of irrigation,—in short, after having effected
all the damage he could. He returned in the following spring by the most direct
route; Lakhiru fell into his hands, but Marduk-Belusate, having no heart to contend with him for
the possession of a district ravaged by the struggle of the preceding summer,
fell back on the mountains of Yasubi and concentrated
his forces round Arman.
Shalmaneser, having first wreaked his vengeance upon Gananate,
attacked his adversary in his self-chosen position; Annan fell after a
desperate defence, and Marduk-belusate either perished or disappeared in a last attempt at retaliation. Marduk-Nadin-Shumu, although rid of his rival, was not yet
master of the entire kingdom. The Aramæans of the
Marshes, or, as they called themselves, the Kalda,
had refused him their allegiance, and were ravaging the regions of the Lower
Euphrates by their repeated incursions. They constituted not so much a compact
state, as a confederation of little states, alternately involved in petty
internecine quarrels, or temporarily reconciled under the precarious authority
of a sole monarch. Each separate state bore the name of the head of the
family—real or mythical—from whom all its members prided themselves on being
descended,—Bit-Dakkuri, Bit-Adini,
Bit-Amukkani, Bit-Shalani,
Bit-Shalli, and finally Bit-Yakin, which in the end
asserted its predominance over all the rest.
In demanding Shalmaneser’s help, Marduk-Nadin-Shumu had virtually thrown on him the responsibility of bringing these turbulent
subjects to order, and the Assyrian monarch accepted the duties of his new
position without demur. He marched to Babylon, entered the city and went direct
to the temple of E-shaggil: the people beheld him
approach with reverence their deities Bel and Belit,
and visit all the sanctuaries of the local gods, to whom he made endless
propitiatory libations and pure offerings. He had worshipped Ninip in Kuta; he was careful not to forget Nabo of Borsippa, while on the
other hand he officiated in the temple of Ezida, and
consulted its ancient oracle, offering upon its altars the flesh of splendid
oxen and fat lambs. The inhabitants had their part in the festival as well as
the gods; Shalmaneser summoned them to a public banquet, at which he
distributed to them embroidered garments, and plied them with meats and wine;
then, after renewing his homage to the gods of Babylon, he recommenced his
campaign, and set out in the direction of the sea. Baqani,
the first of the Chaldean cities which lay on his route, belonged to Bit-Adini, one of the tribes of Bit-Dakkuri;
it appeared disposed to resist him, and was therefore promptly dismantled and
burnt—an example which did not fail to cool the warlike inclinations which had
begun to manifest themselves in other parts of Bît-Dakkuri.
He next crossed the Euphrates, and pillaged Enzudi,
the fate of which caused the remainder of Bit-Adini to lay down arms, and the submission of the latter brought about that of
Bit-Yakin and Bit-Amukkani. These were all rich
provinces, and they bought off the conqueror liberally: gold, silver, tin,
copper, iron, acacia-wood, ivory, elephants' skins, were all showered upon the
invader to secure his mercy. It must have been an intense satisfaction to the
pride of the Assyrians to be able to boast that their king had deigned to offer
sacrifices in the sacred cities of Accad, and that he had been borne by his
war-horses to the shores of the Salt Sea; these facts, of little moment to us
now, appeared to the people of those days of decisive importance. No king who
was not actually master of the country would have been tolerated within the
temple of the eponymous god, for the purpose of celebrating the rites which the
sovereign alone was empowered to perform. Marduk-Nadin-Shumu,
in recognising Shalmaneser’s right to act thus,
thereby acknowledged that he himself was not only the king's ally, but his
liegeman. This bond of supremacy doubtless did not weigh heavily upon him; as
soon as his suzerain had evacuated the country, the two kingdoms remained much
on the same footing as had been established by the treaties of the three
previous generations. Alliances were made between private families belonging to
both, peace existed between the two sovereigns, interchange of commerce and
amenities took place between the two peoples, but with one point of difference
which had not existed formerly: Assur protected Babel, and, by taking
precedence of Marduk, he became the real head of the
peoples of the Euphrates valley. Assured of the subordination, or at least of
the friendly neutrality of Babylon, Shalma-neser had
now a free hand to undertake a campaign in the remoter regions of Syria,
without being constantly haunted by the fear that his rival might suddenly
swoop down upon him in the rear by the valleys of the Badanu or the Zabs. He now ran no risks in withdrawing his
troops from the south-eastern frontier, and in marshalling his forces on the
slopes of the Armenian Alps or on the banks of the Orontes, leaving merely a
slender contingent in the heart of Assyria proper to act as the necessary
guardians of order in the capital.
Since the indecisive battle of Qarqar, the
western frontier of the empire had receded as far as the Euphrates, and
Shalmaneser had been obliged to forego the collection of the annual Syrian
tribute. It would have been an excellent opportunity for the Khati, while they enjoyed this accidental respite, to come
to an understanding with Damascus, for the purpose of acting conjointly against
a common enemy; but they let the right moment slip, and their isolation made
submission inevitable. The effort to subdue them cost Shalmaneser dear, both in
time and men; in the spring of each year he appeared at the fords of Tul-barsip and ravaged the environs of Carchemish, then
marched upon the Orontes to accomplish the systematic devastation of some fresh
district, or to inflict a defeat on such of his adversaries as dared to
encounter him in the open field. In 850 BC the first blow was
struck at the Khati; Agusi was the next to suffer, and its king, Arame, lost Arnie, his royal city, with
some hundred more townships and strongholds.
ALLIANCE BETWEEN ISRAEL AND JUDAH—DEATH OF AHAB.
In 849 BC it was the turn of Damascus. The league of which
Ben-Hadad had proclaimed himself the suzerain was
still in existence, but it had recently narrowly escaped dissolution, and a
revolt had almost deprived it of the adherence of Israel and the house of Omri—after Hamath, the most active of all its members. The
losses suffered at Qarqar had doubtless been severe
enough to shake Ahab’s faith in the strength of his master and ally. Besides
this, it would appear that the latter had not honorably fulfilled all the
conditions of the treaty of peace he had signed three years previously; he
still held the important fortress of Bamoth-Gilead, and he delayed handing it
over to Ahab in spite of his oath to restore it. Finding that he could not
regain possession of it by fair means, Ahab resolved to take it by force. A
great change in feeling and politics had taken place at Jerusalem. Jehoshaphat,
who occupied the throne, was, like his father Asa, a devout worshipper of
Jahveh, but his piety did not blind him to the secular needs of the moment. The
experience of his predecessors had shown that the union of the twelve tribes
under the rule of a scion of Judah was a thing of the past for ever; all
attempts to restore it had ended in failure and bloodshed, and the house of
David had again only lately been saved from ruin by the dearly bought
intervention of Ben-Hadad I and his Syrians.
Jehoshaphat from the outset clearly saw the necessity of avoiding these errors
of the past; he accepted the situation and sought the friendship of Israel. An
alliance between two princes so unequal in power could only result in a
disguised suzerainty for one of them and a state of vassalage for the other;
what Ben-Hadadis alliance was to Ahab, that of Ahab
was to Jehoshaphat, and it served his purpose in spite of the opposition of the
prophets. The strained relations between the two countries were relaxed, and
the severed tribes on both sides of the frontier set about repairing their
losses; while Hiel the Bethelite at length set about rebuilding Jericho on behalf of Samaria, Jehoshaphat was
collecting around him a large army, and strengthening himself on the west
against the Philistines and on the south against the Bedawin of the desert. The
marriage of his eldest son Jehoram with Athaliah
subsequently bound the two courts together by still closer ties; mutual-visits
were exchanged, and it was on the occasion of a stay made by Jehoshaphat at
Jezreel that the expedition against Ramoth was
finally resolved on.
It might well have appeared a more than foolhardy enterprise, and it was
told in Israel that Micaiah, a prophet, the son of Imlah,
had predicted its disastrous ending. “I saw”, exclaimed the prophet, “the Lord
sitting on His throne, and all the host of heaven standing on His right hand
and on His left. And the Lord said, Who shall entice Ahab that he may
go up and fall at Ramoth-Gilead? And one said on this
manner, and another said on that manner. And there came forth a spirit, and
stood before the Lord, and said, I will entice him. And the Lord said unto
him, Wherewith? And he said, I will go forth, and will be a lying spirit
in the mouth of all his prophets. And He said, Thou shalt entice him,
and shalt prevail also: go forth, and do so. Now therefore, behold, the Lord hafch put a lying spirit in the mouth of all these thy prophets;
and the Lord hath spoken evil concerning thee”.
The two kings thereupon invested Ramoth, and Ben-Hadad hastened to the defense of his fortress. Selecting
thirty-two of his bravest charioteers, he commanded them to single out Ahab
only for attack, and not fight with others until they had slain him. This
injunction happened in some way to come to the king's ears, and he therefore
disguised himself as a common soldier, while Jehoshaphat retained his ordinary
dress. Attracted by the richness of the latter’s armor, the Syrians fell upon
him, but on his raising his war-cry they perceived their mistake, and turning
from the King of Judah they renewed their quest of the Israelitish leader.
While they were vainly seeking him, an archer drew a bow “at a venture”, and
pierced him in the joints of his cuirass. “Wherefore he said to his charioteer,
Turn thine hand, and carry me out of the host; for I am sore wounded”.
Perceiving, however, that the battle was going against him, he revoked the
order, and remained on the field the whole day, supported by his armor-bearers.
He expired at sunset, and the news of his death having spread panic through the
ranks, a cry arose, “Every man to his city, and every man to his country!” The
king's followers bore his body to Samaria, and Israel again relapsed into the
position of a vassal, probably under the same conditions as before the revolt.
Ahaziah survived his father two years, and was succeeded by his brother Joram. When Shalmaneser, in 849 BC, reappeared
in the valley of the Orontes, Joram sent out against
him his prescribed contingent, and the conquered Israelites once more fought
for their conqueror.
DAMASCUS SUCCESSFULLY RESISTS THE ATTACKS OF ASSYRIA.
The Assyrians had, as usual, maltreated the Khati.
After having pillaged the towns of Carchemish and Agusi,
they advanced on the Amanos, held to ransom the
territory of the Patina enclosed within the bend of the Orontes, and descending
upon Hamath by way of the districts of Iaraku and Ashta-Maku, they came into conflict with the army of the
twelve kings, though on this occasion the contest was so bloody that they were
forced to withdraw immediately after their success. They had to content
themselves with sacking Apparazu, one of the citadels
of Arame, and with collecting the tribute of Garparuda of the Patina; which done, they skirted the Amanos and provided themselves with beams from its cedars. The two following years
were spent in harrying the people of Paqarakhbuni, on
the right bank of the Euphrates, in the dependencies of the ancient kingdom of Adini (848 BC), and in plundering the
inhabitants of Ishtarate in the country of Iaiti, near the sources of the Tigris (847 BC),
till in 846 they returned to try their fortune again in Syria. They transported
120,000 men across the Euphrates, hoping perhaps, by the mere mass of such a
force, to crush their enemy in a single battle; but Ben-Hadad was supported by his vassals, and their combined army must have been as
formidable numerically as that of the Assyrians. As usual, after the
engagement, Shalmaneser claimed the victory, but he did not succeed in
intimidating the allies or in wresting from them a single rood of territory.
Discouraged, doubtless, by so many fruitless attempts, he decided to
suspend hostilities, at all events for the present. In 845 BC he
visited Nairi, and caused an “image of his royal
Majesty” to be carved at the source of the Tigris close to the very spot where
the stream first rises. Pushing forward through the defiles of Tunibuni, he next invaded Urartu, and devastated it as far
as the sources of the Euphrates; on reaching these he purified his arms in the
virgin spring, and offered a sacrifice to the gods. On his return to the
frontier, the chief of Dayaini “embraced his feet”,
and presented him with some thoroughbred horses. In 844 BC he
crossed the Lower Zab and plunged into the heart of Namri;
this country had long been under Babylonian influence, and its princes bore
Semitic names. Marduk-Mudammiq, who was then its
ruler, betook himself to the mountains to preserve his life; but his treasures,
idols, and troops were carried off to Assyria, and he was superseded on the
throne by Ianzu, the son of Khamban,
a noble of Cossaean origin. As might be expected
after such severe exertions, Shalmaneser apparently felt that he deserved a
time of repose, for his chroniclers merely note the date of 843 BC as
that of an inspection, terminating in a felling of cedars in the Amanos. As a fact, there was nothing stirring on the
frontier. Chaldaa itself looked upon him as a
benefactor, almost as a suzerain, and by its position between Elam and Assyria,
protected the latter from any quarrel with Susa. The nations on the east
continued to pay their tribute without coercion, and Namri,
which alone entertained pretensions to independence, had just received a severe
lesson. Urartu had not acknowledged the supremacy of Assur, but it had suffered
in the last invasion, and Arame had shown no further sign of hostility. The
tribes of the Upper Tigris—Kummukh and Adini—accepted their position as subjects, and any trouble
arising in that quarter was treated as merely an ebullition of local
dissatisfaction, and was promptly crushed. The Khati were exhausted by the systematic destruction of their towns and their harvests.
Lastly, of the principalities of the Amanos, Gurgum, Samalla, and the Patina,
if some had occasionally taken part in the struggles for independence, the
others had always remained faithful in the performance of their duties as
vassals. Damascus alone held out, and the valor with which she had endured all
the attacks made on her showed no signs of abatement; unless any internal
disturbance arose to diminish her strength, she was likely to be able to resist
the growing power of Assyria for a long time to come.
It was at the very time when her supremacy appeared to be thus firmly
established that a revolution broke out, the effects of which soon undid the
work of the preceding two or three generations. Ben-Hadad,
disembarrassed of Shalmaneser, desired to profit by the respite thus gained to
make a final reckoning with the Israelites. It would appear that their fortune
had been on the wane ever since the heroic death of Ahab.
MOAB DELIVERED FROM ISRAEL—MESHA.
Immediately after the disaster at Ramoth, the
Moabites had risen against Ahaziah, and their king, Mesha,
son of Kamoshgad, had seized the territory north of
the Arnon which belonged to the tribe of Gad; he had
either killed or carried away the Jewish population in order to colonize the
district with Moabites, and he had then fortified most of the towns, beginning
with Dhibon, his capital. Owing to the shortness of
his reign, Ahaziah had been unable to take measures to hinder him; but Joram, as soon as he was firmly seated on the throne, made
every effort to regain possession of his province, and claimed the help of his
ally or vassal Jehoshaphat.
The latter had done his best to repair the losses caused by the war with
Syria. Being Lord of Edom, he had been tempted to follow the example of
Solomon, and the deputy who commanded in his name had constructed a vessel at Ezion-Geber “to go to Ophir for gold”; but the vessel was
wrecked before quitting the port, and the disaster was regarded by the king as
a punishment from Jahveh, for when Ahaziah suggested that the enterprise should
be renewed at their joint expense, he refused the offer. But the sudden
insurrection of Moab threatened him as much as it did Joram,
and he gladly acceded to the latter’s appeal for help.
Apparently the simplest way of approaching the enemy would have been from
the north, choosing Gilead as a base of operations; but the line of fortresses
constructed by Mesha at this vulnerable point of his
frontier was so formidable, that the allies resolved to attack from the south
after passing the lower extremity of the Dead Sea. They marched for seven days
in an arid desert, digging wells as they proceeded for the necessary supply of
water. Mesha awaited them with his hastily assembled
troops on the confines of the cultivated land; the allies routed him and
blockaded him within his city of Kir-Hareseth.
Closely beset, and despairing of any help from man, he had recourse to the last
resource which religion provided for his salvation; taking his firstborn son,
he offered him to Chemosh, and burnt him on the city
wall in sight of the besiegers. The Israelites knew what obligations this
sacrifice entailed upon the Moabite god, and the succor which he would be
constrained to give to his devotees in consequence. They therefore raised the
siege and disbanded in all directions. Mesha,
delivered at the very moment that his cause seemed hopeless, dedicated a stele
in the temple of Dhibon, on which he recorded his
victories and related what measures he had taken to protect his people.
He still feared a repetition of the invasion, but this misfortune was
spared him; Jehoshaphat was gathered to his fathers, and his Edomite subjects
revolted on receiving the news of his death. Jeho—his
son and successor, at once took up arms to bring them to a sense of their duty;
but they surrounded his camp, and it was with difficulty that he cut his way
through their ranks and escaped during the night.
The defection of the old Canaanite city of Libnah followed quickly on this reverse, and Jehoram was
powerless to avenge himself on it, the Philistines and the Bedawin having
threatened the western part of his territory and raided the country. In the
midst of these calamities Judah had no leisure to take further measures against Mesha, and Israel itself had suffered too severe a
blow to attempt retaliation. The advanced age of Ben-Hadad,
and the unsatisfactory result of the campaigns against Shalmaneser, had
furnished Joram with an occasion for a rupture with
Damascus. War dragged on for some time apparently, till the tide of fortune
turned against Joram, and, like his father Ahab in
similar circumstances, he shut himself within Samaria, where the false alarm of
an Egyptian or Hittite invasion produced a panic in the Syrian camp, and restored
the fortunes of the Israelitish king.
THE DEATH OF HADADEZER AND THE ACCESSION OF HAZAEL.
Ben-Hadad did not long survive the reverse he had
experienced; he returned sick and at the point of death to Damascus, where he
was assassinated by Hazael, one of his captains.
Hebrew tradition points to the influence of the prophets in all these events.
The aged Elijah had disappeared, so ran the story, caught up to heaven in a
chariot of fire, but his mantle had fallen on Elisha, and his power still
survived in his disciple. From far and near Elisha’s counsel was sought, alike
by Gentiles as by the followers of the true God; whether the suppliant was the
weeping Shunamite mourning for the loss of her only son, or Naaman the captain
of the Damascene chariotry, he granted their petitions, and raised the child
from its bed, and healed the soldier of his leprosy. During the siege of
Samaria, he had several times frustrated the enemy’s designs, and had predicted
to Joram not only the fact but the hour of
deliverance, and the circumstances which would accompany it. Ben-Hadad had sent Hazael to the
prophet to ask him if he should recover, and Elisha had wept on seeing the
envoy—“Because I know the evil that thou wilt do unto the children of Israel;
their strongholds wilt thou set on fire, and their young men wilt thou slay
with the sword, and wilt dash in pieces their little ones, and rip up their
women with child. And Hazael said, But what
is thy servant which is but a dog, that he should do this great thing? And
Elisha answered, The Lord hath showed me that thou shalt be king over
Syria”. On returning to Damascus Hazael gave the
results of his mission in a reassuring manner to Ben-Hadad,
but “on the morrow... he took the coverlet and dipped it in water, and spread
it on his face, so that he died”.
The deed which deprived it of its king seriously affected Damascus itself.
It was to Ben-Hadad that it owed most of its
prosperity; he it was who had humiliated Hamath and the princes of the coast of Arvad, and the nomads of the Arabian desert. He
had witnessed the rise of the most energetic of all the Israelite dynasties,
and he had curbed its ambition; Omri had been forced
to pay him tribute; Ahab, Ahaziah, and Joram had
continued it; and Ben-Hadad’s suzerainty, recognized
more or less by their vassals, had extended through Moab and Judah as
far as the Bed Sea. Not only had he skillfully built up this fabric of vassal
states which made him lord of two-thirds of Syria, but he had been able to
preserve it unshaken for a quarter of a century, in spite of rebellions in
several of his fiefs and reiterated attacks from Assyria; Shalmaneser, indeed,
had made an attack on his line, but without breaking through it, and had at
length left him master of the field. This superiority, however, which no
reverse could shake, lay in himself and in himself alone; no sooner
had he passed away than it suddenly ceased, and Hazael found himself restricted from the very outset to the territory of Damascus
proper. Hamath, Arvad, and the northern peoples deserted
the league, to return to it no more; Joram of Israel
called on his nephew Ahaziah, who had just succeeded to Jehoram of Judah, and both together marched to besiege Bamoth.
TEE FALL OF THE HOUSE OF OMRI—JEHU.
The Israelites were not successful in their methods of carrying on sieges; Joram, wounded in a skirmish, retired to his palace at
Jezreel, where Ahaziah joined him a few days later, on the pretext of inquiring
after his welfare. The prophets of both kingdoms and their followers had never
forgiven the family of Ahab their half-foreign extraction, nor their
eclecticism in the matter of religion. They had numerous partisans in both
armies, and a conspiracy was set on foot against the absent sovereigns; Elisha,
judging the occasion to be a propitious one, dispatched one of his disciples to
the camp with secret instructions. The generals were all present at a banquet,
when the messenger arrived; he took one of them, Jehu, the son of Nimshi, on one side, anointed him, and then escaped. Jehu
returned, and seated himself amongst his fellow-officers, who, unsuspicious of
what had happened, questioned him as to the errand. “Is all well?
Wherefore came this mad fellow to thee? And he said unto them, Ye know
the man and what his talk was. And they said, It is false; tell us
now. And he said, Thus and thus spake he to
me, saying, Thus saith the Lord, I have anointed thee king over Israel. Then
they hasted, and took every man his garment and put it under him on the top of
the stairs, and blew the trumpet, saying, Jehu is king”. He at once marched on
Jezreel, and the two kings, surprised at this movement, went out to meet him
with scarcely any escort. The two parties had hardly met when Joram asked, “Is it peace, Jehu?” to which Jehu replied,
“What peace, so long as the whoredoms of thy mother Jezebel and her witchcrafts
are so many?” Whereupon Joram turned rein, crying to
his nephew, “There is treachery, O Ahaziah”. But an arrow pierced him through
the heart, and he fell forward in his chariot. Ahaziah, wounded near Ibleam, managed, however, to take refuge in Megiddo, where
he died, his servants bringing the body back to Jerusalem. When
Jezebel heard the news, she guessed the fate which awaited her. She painted her
eyes and tired her head, and posted herself in one of the upper windows of the
palace. As Jehu entered the gates she reproached him with the words, “Is it
peace, thou Zimri—thy master's murderer? And he
lifted up his face to the window and said, Who is on my side—who? Two
or three eunuchs rose up behind the queen, and he called to them, Throw her
down. So they threw her down, and some of her blood was sprinkled on the
wall and on the horses; and he trode her under foot. And
when he was come in he did eat and drink; and he said, See now to this cursed
woman and bury her; for she is a king’s daughter”. But nothing was found of her
except her skull, hands, and feet, which they buried as best they could.
Seventy princes, the entire family of Ahab, were slain, and their heads piled
up on either side of the gate. The priests and worshippers of Baal remained to
be dealt with. Jehu summoned them to Samaria on the pretext of a sacrifice, and
massacred them before the altars of their god. According to a doubtful
tradition, the brothers and relatives of Ahaziah, ignorant of what had
happened, came to salute Joram, and perished in the
confusion of the slaughter, and the line of David narrowly escaped extinction
with the house of Omri.
Athaliah assumed the regency, broke the tie of vassalage which bound Judah
to Israel, and by a singular irony of fate, Jerusalem offered an asylum to the
last of the children of Ahab. The treachery of Jehu, in addition to his
inexpiable cruelty, terrified the faithful, even while it served their ends. Dynastic
crimes were common in those days, but the tragedy of Jezreel eclipsed in horror
all others that had preceded it; it was at length felt that such avenging of
Jahveh was in His eyes too ruthless, and a century later the Prophet Hosea saw
in the misery of his people the divine chastisement of the house of Jehu for
the bloodshed at his accession.
THE DEFEAT OF HAZAEL AND THE HOMAGE OF JEHU.
The report of these events, reaching Calah, awoke the ambition of
Shalmaneser. Would Damascus, mistrusting its usurper, deprived of its northern
allies, and ill-treated by the Hebrews, prove itself as invulnerable as in the
past? At all events, in 842 BC, Shalmaneser once more crossed the
Euphrates, marched along the Orontes, probably receiving the homage of Hamath
and Arvad by the way. Restricted solely to the
resources of Damascus, Hazael did not venture to
advance into Coele-Syria as Ben-Hadad had always
done; he barricaded the defiles of Anti-Lebanon, and, entrenched on Mount Shenir with the flower of his troops, prepared to await the
attack. It proved the most bloody battle that the Assyrians had up to
that period ever fought. Hazael lost 16,000 foot-soldiers,
470 horsemen, 1121 chariots, and yet succeeded in falling back on Damascus in
good order. Shalmaneser, finding it impossible to force the city, devastated
the surrounding country, burnt numberless villages and farms, and felled all
the fruit trees in the Hauran up to the margin of the
desert. This district had never, since the foundation of the kingdom by Bezon a century before, suffered at the hands of an enemy's
army, and its population, enriched as much by peaceful labor as by the spoil of
its successful wars, offered a prize of incalculable value. On his return march
Shalmaneser raided the Bekaa, entered Phoenicia, and
carved a triumphal stele on one of the rocks of Baalirasi.
The Kings of Tyre and Sidon hastened to offer him
numerous gifts, and Jehu, who owed to his presence temporary immunity from a
Syrian invasion, sent his envoys to greet him, accompanied by offerings of gold
and silver in bars, vessels of gold of various forms, situlae,
salvers, cups, drinking-vessels, tin, sceptres, and
wands of precious woods. Shalmaneser’s pride was flattered by this homage, and
he carved on one of his monuments the representation of this first official
connection of Assyria with Israel.
The chief of the embassage is shown prostrating himself and kissing the
dust before the king, while the rest advance in single file, some with vessels
in their hands, some carrying scepters, or with metal bowls supported on their
heads. The prestige of the house of Omri was still a
living influence, or else the Ninevite scribes were imperfectly informed of the
internal changes which had taken place in Israel, for the inscription
accompanying this bas-relief calls Jehu the son of Omri,
and grafts the regicide upon the genealogical tree of his victims.
Shalmaneser’s victory had been so dearly bought, that the following year the
Assyrians merely attempted an expedition for tree-felling in the Amanos (841 BC). Their next move was to push
forward into Kui, in the direction of the Pyramos and Saros (840 BC). In the summer of
839 they once more ventured southwards, but this time Hazael changed his tactics: pitched battles and massed movements, in which the fate of
a campaign was decided by one cast of the dice, were now avoided, and
ambuscades, guerilla warfare, and long and tedious sieges became the order of
the day. By the time that four towns had been taken, Shalmaneser’s patience was
worn out: he drew off his troops and fell back on Phoenicia, laying Tyre, Sidon, and Byblos under tribute before returning into
Mesopotamia. Hazael had shown himself possessed of no
less energy than Ben-Hadad; and Damascus, isolated,
had proved as formidable a foe as Damascus surrounded by its vassals;
Shalmaneser therefore preferred to leave matters as they were, and accept the
situation. Indeed the results obtained were of sufficient importance to warrant
his feeling some satisfaction. He had ruthlessly dispelled the dream of Syrian
hegemony which had buoyed up Ben-Hadad, he had forced
Damascus to withdraw the suzerainty it had exercised in the south, and he had
conquered Northern Syria and the lower basin of the Orontes. Before running any
further risks, he judged it prudent to strengthen his recently acquired
authority over these latter countries, and to accustom the inhabitants to their
new position as subjects of Nineveh.
WARS IN CILICIA AND NAMRl.
He showed considerable wisdom by choosing the tribes of the Taurus and of
the Cappadocian marches as the first objects of attack. In regions so difficult
of access, war could only be carried on with considerable hardship and severe
loss. The country was seamed by torrents and densely covered with undergrowth,
while the towns and villages, which clung to the steep sides of the valleys,
had no need of walls to become effective fortresses, for the houses rose abruptly
one above another, and formed so many redoubts which the enemy would be forced
to attack and take one by one. Few pitched battles could be fought in a
district of this description; the Assyrians wore themselves out in incessant
skirmishes and endless petty sieges, and were barely compensated by the meager
spoil which such warfare yielded.
In 838 BC Shalmaneser swept over the country of Tabal and reduced twenty-four of its princes to a state of
subjection; proceeding thence, he visited the mountains of Turat,
celebrated from this period downwards for their silver mines and quarries of
valuable marbles.
In 837 he seized the stronghold of Uetash in Melitene, and laid Tabal under a
fresh contribution; this constituted a sort of advance post for-Assyria in the
sight of those warlike and continually fluctuating races situated between the
sources of the Halys and the desert border of Asia Minor. Secure on this side,
he was about to bring matters to a close in Cilicia, when the defection of Ianzu recalled him to the opposite extremity of the empire.
He penetrated into Namri by the defiles of Khashmur, made a hasty march through Sik-hisatakh,
Bit-Tamul, Bit-Shakki, and
Bit-Shedi, surprised the rebels and drove them into
the forests; he then bore down on Parsua and
plundered twenty-seven petty kings consecutively.
Skirting Misi, Amadai, Araziash, and Kharkhar, and most
of the districts lying on the middle heights of the table-land of Iran, he at
length came up with Ianzu, whom he seized and brought
back prisoner to Assyria, together with his family and his idols.
It was at this juncture, perhaps, that he received from the people of Muzri the gift of an elephant and some large monkeys,
representations of which he has left us on one of his bas-reliefs. Elephants were
becoming rare, and it was not now possible to kill them by the hundred, as
formerly, in Syria: this particular animal, therefore, excited the wonder of
the Ninevites, and the possession of it flattered the vanity of the conqueror.
This was, however, an interlude of short duration, and the turbulent tribes of
the Taurus recalled him to the west as soon as spring set in.
He laid waste Kui in 836 BC,
destroyed Timur, its capital, and on his return march revenged himself on Arame
of Agusi, whose spirit was still unbroken by his
former misfortunes.
Tanakun and Tarsus fell into his hands 835 BC; Shalmaneser replaced
Kati, the King of Kui, by his brother Kirri, and made
of his dominions a kind of buffer state between his own territory and that of
Pamphylia and Lycaonia. He had now occupied the throne for a quarter of a
century, not a year of which had elapsed without seeing the monarch gird on his
armor and lead his soldiers in person towards one or other points of the
horizon. He was at length weary of such perpetual warfare, and advancing age
perchance prevented him from leading his troops with that dash and vigor which
are necessary to success; however this might be, on his return from Cilicia he
laid aside his armor once for all, and devoted himself to peaceful occupations.
But he did not on that account renounce all attempts at conquest.
Conducting his campaigns by proxy delegated the command of his army to his
Tartan Dayan-Assur, and the northern tribes were the first on whom this general
gave proof of his prowess. Urartu had passed into the hands of another
sovereign since its defeat in 845 BC, and a second Sharduris had taken the place of the Arame who had ruled at the beginning of
Shalmaneser’s reign.
THE LAST CAMPAIGNS OF SHALMANESER III.
It would appear that the accession of this prince, who was probably young
and active, was the signal for a disturbance among the people of the Upper
Tigris and the Masios—a race always impatient of the
yoke, and ready to make common cause with any fresh enemy of Assyria. An
insurrection broke out in Bit-Zamani and the neighbouring districts. Dayan-Assur quelled it offhand; then, quitting the basin of the
Tigris by the défiles of Armash,
he crossed the Arzania, and entered Urartu. Sharduris came out to meet him, and was defeated, if we may
give credence to the official record of the campaign. Even if the account be an
authentic one, the victory was of no advantage to the Assyrians, for they were
obliged to retreat before they had subjugated the enemy, and an insurrection
among the Patina prevented them from returning to the attack in the following
year. With obligations to their foreign master on one hand and to their own
subjects on the other, the princes of the Syrian states had no easy life. If
they failed to fulfill their duties as vassals, then an Assyrian invasion would
pour in to their country, and sooner or later their ruin would be assured; they
would have before them the prospect of death by impaling or under the knife of
the flayer, or, if they escaped this, captivity and exile in a far-off land.
Prudence therefore dictated a scrupulous fidelity to their suzerain. On the
other hand, if they resigned themselves to their dependent condition, the
people of their towns would chafe at the payment of tribute, or some ambitious
relative would take advantage of the popular discontent to hatch a plot and
foment a revolution, and the prince thus threatened would escape from an
Assyrian reprisal only to lose his throne or fall by the blow of an assassin.
In circumstances such as these the people of the Patina murdered their king, Lubarna II, and proclaimed in his room a certain Sum, who
had no right to the crown, but who doubtless undertook to liberate them from
the foreigner. Dayan-Assur defeated the rebels and blockaded the remains of
their army in Kinalua. They defended themselves at
first energetically, but on the death of Surri from
some illness, their courage failed them and they offered to deliver over the
sons of their chief if their own lives might be spared. Dayan-Assur had the
poor wretches impaled, laid the inhabitants under a heavy contribution, and
appointed a certain Sasi, son of Uzza, to be their
king. The remainder of Syria gave no further trouble—a fortunate circumstance,
for the countries on the Armenian border revolted in 832 BC, and
the whole year was occupied in establishing order among the herdsmen of Kirkhi. In 831 BC, Dayan-Assur pushed forward
into Khubushkia, and traversed it from end to end
without encountering any resistance. He next attacked the Mannai.
Their prince, Ualki, quailed before his onslaught; he
deserted his royal city Zirtu, and took refuge in the
mountains. Dayan-Assur pursued him thither in vain, but he was able to collect
considerable booty, and turning in a south-easterly direction, he fought his
way along the base of the Gordysean mountains till
he reached Parsua, which he laid under tribute. In
830 BC it was the turn of Muzazir,
which hitherto had escaped invasion, to receive a visit from the Tartan. Zapparia, the capital, and fifty-six other towns were given
over to the flames. From thence, Dayan-Assur passed into Urartu proper; after
having plundered it, he fell back on the southern provinces, collecting by the
way the tribute of Guzan, of the Mannai, of Andiu, and Parsua; he then pushed
on into the heart of Namri, and having razed to the
ground two hundred and fifty of its towns, returned with his troops to Assyria
by the defiles of Shimishi and through Khalman.
This was perhaps the last foreign campaign of Shalmaneser III’s reign; it
is at all events the last of which we possess any history. The record of his
exploits ends, as it had begun more than thirty years previously, with a
victory in Namri.
The aged king had, indeed, well earned the right to end his allotted days
in peace. Devoted to Calah, like his predecessor, he had there accumulated the
spoils of his campaigns, and had made it the wealthiest city of his empire. He
continued to occupy the palace of Assur-Nazir-Pal, which he had enlarged.
Wherever he turned within its walls, his eyes fell upon some trophy of his wars
or panegyric of his virtues, whether recorded on mural tiles covered with
inscriptions and bas-reliefs, or celebrated by statues, altars, and triumphal
stelae. The most curious among all these is a square-based block terminating in
three receding stages, one above the other, like the stump of an Egyptian
obelisk surmounted by a stepped pyramid. Five rows of bas-reliefs on it
represent scenes most flattering to Assyrian pride;—the reception of tribute from Gilzan, Muzri, the Patina,
the Israelitish Jehu, and Marduk-Abal-Uzur, King of
the land of Sukhi. The latter knew his suzerain's
love of the chase, and he provided him with animals for his preserves,
including lions, and rare species of deer.
The inscription on the monument briefly relates the events which had
occurred between the first and the thirty-first years of Shalmaneser’s
reign;—the defeat of Damascus, of Babylon and Urartu, the conquest of Northern
Syria, of Cilicia, and of the countries bordering on the Zagros. When the king
left Calah for some country residence in its neighborhood, similar records and
carvings would meet his eye. At Imgur-Bel, one of the
gates of the palace was covered with plates of bronze, on which the skilful artist had embossed and engraved with the chisel
episodes from the campaigns on the Euphrates and the Tigris, the crossing of
mountains and rivers, the assault and burning of cities, the long lines of
captives, the mêlée with the enemy and the pursuit of the
chariots. All the cities of Assyria, Nineveh, Arbela, Assur, even to the more
distant towns of Harran and Tushkhan,—vied with each
other in exhibiting proofs of his zeal for their gods and his affection for
their inhabitants; but his predilection for Calah filled them with jealousy,
and Assur particularly could ill brook the growing aversion with which the
Assyrian kings regarded her. It was of no avail that she continued to be the
administrative and religious capital of the empire, the storehouse of the spoil
and annual tribute of other nations, and was continually embellishing herself
with fresh monuments: a spirit of discontent was daily increasing, and
merely awaited some favorable occasion to break out into open revolt.
Shalmaneser enjoyed the dignity of limmu for the second time
after thirty years, and had celebrated this jubilee of his inauguration by a
solemn festival in honor of Assur and Ramman. It is
possible that he may have thought this a favorable moment for presenting to the
people the son whom he had chosen from among his children to succeed him.
THE REVOLT OF ASSUR-DAIN-PAL.
At any rate, Assur-Dain-Pal, fearing that one of his brothers might be
preferred before him, “proclaimed himself king”, and nearly the whole of
Assyria gathered around his standard. Assur and twenty-six more of the most
important cities revolted in his favor—Nineveh, Imgur-Bel, Sibaniba, Dur-Balat,
Arbela, Zaban in the Chaldean marches, Arrapkha in the valley of the Upper Zab, and most of the
colonies, both of ancient and recent foundation—Amidi on the Tigris, Khindanu near the mouths of the Khabur
and Tul-Abni on the southern slopes of the Masios. The aged king remained in possession only of Calah
and its immediate environs—Nisibis, Harran, Tushkhan,
and the most recently subdued provinces on the banks of the Euphrates and the
Orontes. It is probable, however, that the army remained faithful to him, and
the support which these well-tried troops afforded him enabled the king to act
with promptitude. The weight of years did not permit him to command in person;
he therefore entrusted the conduct of operations to his son Shamshi-Adad,
but he did not live to see the end of the struggle. It embittered his last
days, and was not terminated till 822 BC, at which date Shalmaneser
had been dead two years. This prolonged crisis had shaken the kingdom to its
foundations; the Syrians, the Medes, the Babylonians, and the peoples of the
Armenian and Aramean marches were rent from it, and though Shamshi-Adad
V waged continuous warfare during the twelve years that he governed, he could
only partially succeed in regaining the territory which had been thus lost.
|