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THE SELEUCID EMPIRE. 358-251 BC. HOUSE OF SELEUCUS
CHAPTER 12
BABYLONIA
At a time beyond
the vision of history some members of the human family found the country about
the lower reaches of the rivers Euphrates and Tigris—then a swampy wilderness—
good to live in. They began to cast seed into the black earth and to dry lumps
of it in the sun for the building of houses. Presently they went on to improve
Nature’s distribution of the water, digging new channels which carried it from
the swamp, where there was too much of it, to the desert, where there was too
little. The area of serviceable land gradually extended. Here and there the
mud-brick houses clustered into villages. Then the villages became cities, with
great temples and palaces and towers for star-gazing. Society became more
complex; there were rich and poor; rich, who wanted a variety of things to make
their life easeful and beautiful; and poor, whose myriad hands were busied in
their manufacture. The communication of thought between man and man or between
one generation and another, which the complexity of society now required, was
made possible by the fixing of speech in written signs. All this process was
already accomplished by the time history becomes cognizant of human things. The
cities and their civilization were already there; not Babylon only—for Babylon
was but one of many sisters and not the first-born, though in time she eclipsed
them all—Ur, Eridu, Uruk, and many others stood once on an equal footing. Who
the people were, who first lived in these cities, what their affinities were
with other branches of the human race, history cannot say. The people who
possessed the land later on were Semites, cousins of the Jew and the Arab, but
these Semites, It is believed, were not the original inhabitants; they broke in
from the desert upon the older people and overwhelmed them, but became
themselves assimilated in manners and traditions to the conquered race, using
its old-world tongue as a sacred language alongside of their own living Semitic
Idiom.
This branch of the
Semitic peoples did not occupy the alluvial country about the lower Euphrates
only—the seat of that primeval civilization of which we have just spoken. Its
settlements were pushed up the Tigris to the point where it issues from the
Armenian highlands. At intervals on its banks cities arose whose language and
culture did not differ essentially from those of Babylon. In process of time
two great monarchical states shaped themselves: a northern one, whose center
was first at Asshur and then at Nineveh— what we know as the Assyrian
kingdom—and a more southern one, in the alluvial country about the lower
Euphrates, whose center was in Babylon. In the day of their greatness the
northern Semites, the Assyrians, were able to subjugate their cousins of the
south; but the yoke was impatiently borne. At last it was finally broken. About
607 B.C. the Assyrian kingdom succumbed to a combined attack of Babylonians
and Medes. Nineveh fell. Under Nabopolassar (625-605) and Nebuchadnezzar
(605-562) Babylon had a new period (brief enough) of independence and glory.
During all these
centuries the Semitic kingdoms on the Euphrates and Tigris had been the focus
of civilization in the East. They were to the peoples of mountain and desert
round about them what the Roman Empire was afterwards to the peoples of Central
Europe. There was no other area of cultivation in Western Asia so wide and
productive as Babylonia; there were no other cities so large and populous as those
on the banks of the two rivers; no centres of industry to compare with those
great hives of labor; no wisdom like the wisdom of the Chaldaeans; no king so
exalted as the “King of kings.” The influence of Babylon radiated as far as the
Mediterranean on the west and India on the east. From all parts of the world
there was a demand for its wares, especially for its embroideries and rich,
tissues, “goodly Babylonish garments.” The river, which created its fertility,
made at the same time a great highway through the desert, by which it communicated
with the lands to the north and west, with Syria and Asia Minor and Egypt; on
the east roads ran from it through Assyria or through Elam up to the Iranian
plateau. And by these routes Babylon not only exported its own products; it was
the central mart, through which the products of one end of the world found
their way to the other. In its bazaars merchants perhaps chaffered for wares of
India which were destined to be used by the peoples of the far-away Aegean.1 Babylon was thus the commercial capital of the world, the heart in which all
the arteries of traffic met. Its unit of weight, the manah, set the
standard for all nations; the Greeks measured by the mna, the Indians of
the Rigveda by the mana—a witness to the universal authority of Babylon.
It was not commerce
only which brought Babylon into contact with foreigners, but in a lesser degree
war as well. The Babylonians, being an industrial not a martial people, were
obliged to have most of their fighting done for them, like the Carthaginians.
Hard by on the east the lower slopes of the Iranian border range nourished a
people who made excellent soldiers, and could be hired for money, predecessors
of the modern Bakhtiaris. From how far afield they drew their mercenaries under
the second Babylonian Empire is shown by the case already mentioned of the
brother of the Lesbian poet Alcaeus.
Men from every
quarter were thus drawn to Babylon and the other great cities of the Euphrates
and Tigris, Phoenician merchantmen, nomads of the desert, and hardy fighting
men from the hills of Asia Minor and Iran. Before their eyes were displayed the
riches and glory, the handicraft and science of these settled kingdoms. It is
no wonder that many nations learnt in their infancy from Babylon, that traces
of Babylonian influence may be found in the primitive traditions of Canaan and
India and Iran.
In the sixth
century B.C. the long dominion of the Semites in Western Asia came to an end.
Kurush, whom we call Cyrus, the chief of a Persian clan, led his countrymen
forth from their mountains to seize, first the hegemony of the Iranian race,
and then the empire of the world. On the 3rd of Marheshwan (about October 20)
539 Cyrus entered Babylon as a conqueror. But Babylon did not thereby lose its
imperial dignity. Its greatness was too well based on its old renown, its
geographical position, its immense population, its commercial and industrial
supremacy. It could not but be still the capital of the world, the seat of the
“King of kings,” even though that title now belonged to a foreigner. During the
hot Babylonian summer indeed the Iranian monarch used to withdraw to his own
high country, to Persepolis or Ecbatana; but for the seven cooler months of the
year the Persian court resided at Babylon.
The Babylonians did
not think without regret of the days of Nebuchadnezzar. They were troubled with
memories of old empire. More than once they rose in revolt—in vain revolt. It
was this disposition which moved the Persian kings to break their spirit by a
series of rigorous measures. The Babylonians looked on ruined
temples, the evidence of their master’s vengeance, or saw their golden images
carried off to satisfy his greed. Xerxes, after one of their
revolts, forbade altogether the carrying of arms; let the Babylonians keep
themselves to their harps and flutes, the life of the brothel and the bazaar.
But although under unsympathetic rule, Babylon continued to be the greatest of
cities, not so much a city in dimensions as a nation.” The
population of Babylonia was the densest known, with elements drawn from every
nation under heaven. Agriculture, manufactures and trade, three unfailing
springs of wealth, made Babylonia the richest province of the Empire. As to the
first, it was a chief duty of the satrap to regulate that elaborate canal
system upon which Babylonian agriculture depended, and immense bodies of men
were employed upon the works. Herodotus tells us what Babylonia was like in the
middle of the fifth century, after a hundred years or so of Persian rule. He
saw its flat expanse, intersected by canals, stretching away in endless fields
of wheat and millet and sesame, dotted with clumps of palm. For corn, “the
fruit of Demeter,” he knew no land like it. Wheat crops yielded from two to
three hundredfold, and the size which millet and sesame attained, “I could say,
but I will not, because I know very well that even what I have already said
about its corn has gone far beyond the bounds of belief of such persons as have
not been to the land of Babylon”. The industries of Babylon were still busily
plied. Its many-coloured embroidery was as much in demand under the Persians as
centuries before in the time of Joshua, or centuries after under the Roman
emperors.
With regard to
trade, Babylon held its place as the great mart of Asia. Herodotus describes
the boats which regularly brought merchandize down the river and unloaded in
Babylon. In the hot summer nights merchants from cooler lands could be seen in
its crowded Mums, trying to secure a little relief by lying on skins filled
with water. The traffic with India naturally continued under an empire which
extended over all the intervening country.
There are
nevertheless indications that the conditions were not as favorable to trade
under Persian rule as they might have been. The important water-way of the
Tigris was blocked by “cataracts” which Alexander found it an easy matter to
level, and which the local tradition asserted to have been made by the King’s
order, on purpose to bar the way to hostile ships. The sea-route, again,
between the Persian Gulf and India seems to have been forgotten; one would
gather, from the accounts of Nearchus’ voyage, that it was of the nature of a
re-discovery, and this is all the more remarkable since these waters had been explored
for Darius Hystaspis by the Greek Scylax, and Herodotus expressly declares that
the sea-route was thereafter in use. One might conclude that a weak commercial
policy had marked the Persian government only in its declining days. We have an
incidental sign of its slipshod administration at the end of the dynasty in the
circumstance that a law which imposed a duty of 10 per cent on imports into
Babylon, although it had never been repealed, had fallen into general neglect
by the coming of Alexander.
Some estimate of
the relative importance of the Euphrates and Tigris regions to the Persian king
can be formed from the revenue table of Darius, as given by Herodotus. The
Empire is divided for purposes of revenue into twenty districts, of which
Babylonia and “the rest of Assyria” form one. When we deduct from the total
annual revenue of the King the tribute in gold-dust, 360 talents, from the
Indian district, we get a total of 7600 talents of silver (about 19,773,848
rupees) from the remaining nineteen districts. And of this the single district
of Babylonia and Assyria yields 1000 (about 2,864,980 rupees). Egypt alone
competes with it, yielding 700 talents. Besides this tribute in money, the
various provinces were required to make contributions in kind to the support of
the King and his army. The part taken in this by Babylonia exhibits its
importance in a more striking way still. “There being twelve months to the
year,” says Herodotus, “or four of them the land of Babylon supports him, and
for the other eight all the rest of Asia. Thus the Assyrian country is
according to its capacities a third part of Asia.” The governorship of this
province, he goes on to say, was the most lucrative appointment in the Empire.
One satrap, whom he mentions, drew from it a daily income of an artabe (a bushel and a half) of silver.
Closely associated
with Babylonia in past history was a land to the east of it, the torrid
river-country which intervenes between the ramparts of Iran and the Persian
Gulf, watered by the Choaspes (Kerkha), the Copratas (Dizful), and the Eulaeus
(Karfin). It is described today as “a malarious labyrinth of meandering rivers
and reedy swamps”. Once it was the seat of a unique civilization, of a people
as alien from the Semites of Babylonia as from the races of Aryan speech on the
farther table-land. According to one theory, they had come across from Africa.
For centuries their kings were the antagonists, sometimes the conquerors, of
the neighboring Semitic powers. They were known by many names, to the Semites
as Elam, to the Persians as Huzha, to the early Greeks (Herodotus, Aeschylus)
as Kissioi. When the Macedonians appeared in this part of the world, some of
the Huzha maintained themselves as a robber people among the hills, but the
Elamites of the lowland had probably forgotten the far-off days of their
independence and glory. For hundreds of years they had borne the yoke of the
stranger, Assyrian, Babylonian, Persian. So completely had they been
assimilated to their rulers that the Greeks could see no difference between
their manners and customs and those of the Persians. Their country became in
fact almost the central province of the Persian Empire. Its favorable position,
near the cradle of the ruling race, and yet enough removed to free the monarch from
the inconvenient aristocratic tradition of Iran and to overlook the western
half of the Empire, led the Persian kings to make Susa (“Shushan the palace”) a
chief residence of the court during the delicious Elamite spring and one of the
principal treasuries of the realm.
In the autumn of
331, two hundred and eight years after the triumphal entry of Cyrus Into
Babylon, the city witnessed another triumphal entry. This too registered a new
epoch in human history: after the Persian the man of Javan, the Hellene, the
progenitor of the modern world, had come to reign in the seats of the old
civilization. Alexander had two courses open to him after the victory of
Gaugamela, to pursue Darius into his native Iran, or, in the first place, to
seize Babylon. The latter was the course which Darius had rightly conjectured
he would take; to possess the capital of the Empire was the thing most
immediately essential; the rich cities of the plain, Babylon and Susa, were the
real “prize of the war.” Therefore Alexander pressed on south. Mazaeus,
the greatest of the western satraps, who united under his governorship Cilicia,
Syria and Mesopotamia, and to whom the disastrous battle of Gaugamela (Arbela)
had only brought fresh credit, had thrown himself into Babylon with the wreck
of his forces. But on Alexander’s approach he at once surrendered; no assault
had to be made upon the famous Babylonian wall. Mazaeus was rewarded by being
made satrap of Babylonia under the new Great King.
Babylon thus passed
under Greek rule, just ten years before Seleucus came to govern it. The change
did not make much difference in the appearance of things there. A Persian
grandee still held the place of satrap. It was rather as the restorer of the
old order than as an innovator that Alexander presented himself to the
Babylonians. He ordered the ruined temples to be rebuilt as in the days of
Nebuchadnezzar, and in thirty days was gone again for fresh conquests. Only
among the motley crowd of the bazaars one might now see here and there the
mailed figure of a Macedonian soldier; and behind the caparisoned Persian
satrap stood the real holders of power, Apollodorus of Amphipolis, the
commander of the military forces of the province; Agathon of Pydna, the
commandant of the citadel; Asclepiodorus, who was over the tribute.
Whether Alexander
intended Babylon to be ultimately capital of his Empire, or Alexandria in
Egypt, or Pella in Macedonia, we do not know—whether even he intended to make
one capital for the whole. Babylon, at any rate, seems to have been regarded as
the capital for Asia from its conquest to the time of his death. It was the
headquarters of Harpalus, chief treasurer of the Empire; and Alexander returned
there in 323 to plan a new scheme of enterprise, and to make a new organization
of the imperial army. Then Babylon, which had seen the glories of the oldest
conquerors remembered by man, saw the youngest conqueror die. In Babylon the
army and its chiefs made a new settlement for the Empire.
We proceed to
inquire how the conquering European race and this most ancient world acted upon
each other. Alexander, as we saw, presented himself here, as in Egypt, as the
restorer; the evidences of Persian tyranny, ruined and impoverished temples,
were to be no more seen. The gods of Babylon were to share in the impartial
liberality of the universal King. But his magnificent projects were slackly
prosecuted in his absence; the Babylonian priests enjoyed the temple revenues,
so long as the temples lay waste, and they felt a tenderer interest in their money-bags
than in the honor of their gods. Here, too, Alexander had time only
to adumbrate his policy.
The pupil of
Aristotle and the educated men who accompanied him looked with interest at the
physical character of the lands into which they came. In Babylonia they were
drawn to experiment in the acclimatizing of the plants of their native land. In
this they had been anticipated to some extent by the old Eastern kings, who
were zealous to collect the fauna and flora of remote countries in their
gardens.
Now under the
Macedonian supremacy the culture of the vine was attempted in Babylonia and the
land of Elam on a new method adapted to the peculiarity of the soil. Harpalus
vainly attempted to make ivy grow in the gardens of Babylon.
But in a much more
vital respect the aspirations of the old national kings were fulfilled in the
larger and more systematic designs of the man of the West. Nebuchadnezzar,
according to an account which perhaps emanates from Berosus, had shown interest
in the coast traffic of the Gulf. He had attempted to make solid harbors in the
swamp, and had built the town of Teredon towards the land of the Arabs.
The Persian
government, as we have seen, had cared little for such things. But now in the
mind of Alexander the idea of a mighty sea-traffic between Babylon and India
shaped itself. The expedition of Nearchus from the Indus to the Persian Gulf
subserved this policy. The latter months of Alexander’s life were almost
entirely taken up with examining the water-ways of lower Babylonia, regulating
the canal system, and framing a scheme for the exploration of Arabia. Near
Babylon itself he began to dig a gigantic basin capable of containing a
thousand vessels of war with the corresponding docks. New cities of Greek
speech even in this overpowering climate began to rise, one among the pools
west of the Euphrates, in which a number of Greek mercenaries and broken
veterans were planted, another to the east on the lagoons of the lower Eulaeus
(Karun)—an Alexandria populated partly with natives from an old “royal town”,
partly, like the other city, with broken soldiers.
Babylonia and the
land of Elam, called by the Greeks Susiana, from Susa, its capital, formed two
satrapies under Alexander.
In 321-320 Seleucus
becomes satrap of Babylonia, and Antigenes, who commands the Silver Shields,
satrap of Susiana. Till 316 Seleucus governs Babylonia. Of his administration
during those four years we know next to nothing. One thing had become clear: in
the dissensions of the Macedonian chiefs the native element was not a
negligible quantity. It was largely owing to the support of natives that
Docimus had overthrown Archon. To this fact Seleucus was no more blind than
Antigonus or Ptolemy or Pithon in the case of their respective provinces. The
one point told us as to his first period of rule is that “he bore himself
honorably towards all men, evoking the good-will of the people, and preparing
long beforehand partisans to help him, should he ever get an opportunity of
striking for power.”
Can we form any idea
of Babylon, as it appeared in the last days of its greatness, when Seleucus
reigned as satrap in the palace of Nebuchadnezzar?
Babylon had many
features in common with London—if we can think of London under an Oriental
sun—its size, its industrial ferment, its great brick wharves with a label of
foreign seamen. It lay on either side of a river, a flat city of brick (so much
more prosaic than a city of stone), with straight streets and houses three or
four stories tall. Unlike London, it was protected by a system of enormous
walls from an invader. The whole province of Babylonia in the first place was
shut off from Mesopotamia by the “Median Wall,” which ran across the neck of
land between the Euphrates and Tigris, 20 feet broad and 100 high, according to
Xenophon. Coming down the left bank of the Euphrates, one passed through it by
the “Babylonian Gates,” out of the Mesopotamian desert into the rich fields of
Babylonia. Dominant in this expanse, the mighty circumvallations and
towers of Babylon soon showed themselves. In the days of Nebuchadnezzar the
city had lain in a square tract enclosed by an outer and an inner wall, known
respectively as Nimitti-Bel (‘‘Foundation of Bel”) and Imgur-Bel (“May Bel
show mercy”). But under the Persians the outer wall had been breached and
suffered to fall into decay; Imgur-Bel was still standing when Mazaeus
delivered up the city to Alexander. Its compass is given by the Greeks as 360
stadia, or 38 miles; its height as 50 cubits, or about 75 feet, and its breadth
as 32 feet, so that two chariots of four horses could pass each other upon it.
All the space within this immense barricade of brick, over 90 square miles, was
not taken up by building. It embraced royal hunting grounds and pleasances, and
even tracts of corn-land, which might make the city independent, if need should
be, of external supplies.
The flatness of the
city had been redeemed under the Babylonian kings by artificial erections. The
Babylonian plain-dwellers delighted above all things in gigantic towers. Their
temples took this form; their citadels were not nature’s work, but piles of
brick; in the famous “Hanging Gardens” art had striven to reproduce by a series
of ascending terraces, supported on arches and covered above with mould, the
aspect of a mountain with all its romantic caverns and waving trees—the work of
one of the old kings, tradition asserted, whose queen had come from a land of
hills. Another great pile was the palace on the right bank of the river—a city
in itself, shut off from the common gaze by a wall of its own, and connected
with the tower-temple called E-sagila. This inner “Royal City” was doubtless
one of the two “citadels” which are spoken of in the days of Seleucus. Where
the other citadel is to be placed is more questionable. But there is a strong
presumption that, since we hear in the story of Alexander’s last days of two
“palaces,” the other citadel is the same as the other palace. And this is borne
out by the description of Diodorus, who says (following Ctesias) that the two
palaces were built in order that from them the sovereign might “overlook the
whole city, and hold the keys of its points of vantage”. Now the local relation
of the two palaces is fixed beyond mistake. They lay over against each other on
opposite banks of the Euphrates, joined, according to one account, by a tunnel
which ran under the river. Each of these palaces was fenced off from the city
of the people, one of them by as many as three walls. They rose, these walls,
the second above the first, and the inmost above the second, their faces of
brick variegated with hunting scenes in bright enamels, and above all the
copper roofs under a Babylonian sun crowned the Royal City with a crown of
fire. It was in one of these palaces that Alexander was stricken with his mortal
sickness; in the other he died.
Below these
palace-citadels the city of the common people spread on either side of the
river. Although the days were long past when the Babylonians had borne rule in
Asia, and history, concerned almost entirely with courts and wars, has little
to say about them, the Babylonian people and the Babylonian civilization
existed still. The cities which had been cities when Ecbatana and Persepolis,
when Athens and Pella were not, were still hives of busy life. In Babylon itself,
in Barsip (Greek Borsippa), Erech, Sippar, the old life went on and the old
industries were plied. All over the Mediterranean lands, in the temples and
houses of the new rulers of the world, might be seen splendid fabrics, covered
with strange beasts and fantastic branchwork, upon which brown hands in the
cities of the Euphrates had labored after an immemorial tradition. Borsippa
hummed with a multitude of looms which turned the flax of the Babylonian plains
into linen cloth for the merchantmen. The old formalities of law and business
were observed; those stamped clay tablets which record transactions done under
Macedonian kings are of the same type as those made under Nebuchadnezzar.
The old gods,
although they could no more give their people the lordship of the nations, had
not ceased to be served with sacrifice and prayer. The learned and priestly
caste— Chaldaeans the Greeks called them—continued to hand down the ancient
lore—theology, mythology, astrology, magic—and to write in the cuneiform
character. Schools of them seem to have been connected with some of the great
temples; we hear of such in Borsippa, Erech and Sippar. How far the Babylonian
(Semitic) language remained in popular use cannot be exactly known. It had, to
a large extent at any rate, been supplanted by Aramaic, the lingua franca of
Western Asia. For legal and priestly documents the old language and character
were employed as late as the last century before Christ.
Babylon had a bad
name for its moral atmosphere. There was all the vice inseparable from a great
city, made more rank by the absence of national or civic enthusiasms, by an
enervating climate, by an abundance of the means of luxury. There in the warm
nights, while eye and ear were allured by flame-lit colours and artful music,
sensuality put on its most seductive glamour. The lascivious city threatened to
engulf the northern soldiery of Alexander like an evil morass.
Seleucus reaped the
fruit in 312 which he had sown during his first administration. Babylon
received him back with open arms. As we saw, he had soon brought the
neighboring Susiana also under his authority, and after conquering the East was
satrap of Babylonia no longer, but King. From 312 for 175 years Babylonia and
Susiana were under the house of Seleucus. We still have only fragmentary
information of the Hellenic rule in this quarter.
Babylonia and
Susiana continued to be two satrapies.
The extent of
Babylonia is, so far as I know, quite uncertain. In the district between the
rivers it was, of course, divided from Mesopotamia by the desert, and the
actual frontier was perhaps the Median Wall. But on the east of the Tigris lay
a long strip of land from Susiana in the south to Armenia in the north—the
country of the Assyrians—and it is nowhere said in our authorities under what
government it was placed. From the fact, however, that Babylonia as a
geographical term is sometimes found to include this country, it may be
inferred as probable that the satrap of Babylonia had under him Assyria east of
the Tigris as well. This strip of land is sometimes called Parapotamia, and it
had perhaps by 218 a separate strategos from Babylonia.
To the south of
Babylonia the region next to the sea appears to have been detached before the
time of Antiochus III as a separate province, called after the “Bed Sea” (i.e. the
Persian Gulf). This seems to be identical with the region which we find later
called Mesene.
There was one
respect in which Seleucid rule left a conspicuous and lasting impress upon the
country — the destruction of Babylon. Sennacherib had razed it to the soil, and
it had risen again to new glory. Cyrus and Alexander had conquered it, and it
was still the capital of the world. But Seleucus Nicator brought its doom upon
Babylon at last. It had subsisted, we have seen, through all changes of empire
owing to a prerogative which was founded upon natural conditions. But the
prerogative belonged to the land rather than the particular city. It was a
natural necessity that there should be in this alluvial region a great center of
human life, and if Babylon were merely dispersed, as by Sennacherib, the human
swarm again gathered. There was only one way by which Babylon could really be
undone—by the creation of another center. This was what Seleucus did. Forty
miles north of Babylon, on the Tigris, about fifteen miles below Baghdad,
Seleucus marked the foundations of a new city, Seleucia-on-the-Tigris. It was a
favorable position for commanding the traffic of both rivers, for it was here
that the space between the rivers narrows to twenty-five miles. It was a better
“focus of continental trade” than a city on the Euphrates. From this moment
Babylon was doomed.
The legend of the
founding of Seleucia, as narrated by Appian, represents the wise men of Babylon
as being conscious of all that the marking out of the new walls meant for them.
When they were required by King Seleucus to fix the lucky day and hour for
beginning to build, they purposely gave him a wrong time. Only when the lucky
moment came, a sudden inspiration thrilled through the Greek and Macedonian
troops, so that with one accord and in disregard of the royal heralds they
flung themselves upon the work. Then the wise men saw the finger of God. “0
King, there is neither man nor city that can change the thing decreed. Even as
men, cities have their hour and their appointed end.”
Seleucia, chosen
for the capital of the eastern half of the Empire, grew apace. It was soon what
Babylon had been, one of the largest cities of the world. The estimate of its
free population, preserved in Pliny, made how soon after its founding we do
not know, is 600,000. Elements from all quarters must have entered into the
human mass which jostled in its streets. Its prevailing tone, no doubt, was
Greek; in later times, under barbarian rule, it prided itself on keeping the
Hellenic tradition. But the native population of old Babylon, no doubt, were
driven or drifted into the new city. In a way, therefore, what Seleucus did was
less to destroy Babylon than transfer it to another site. It was usual, as
Strabo observes, to describe a man of Seleucia as a “Babylonian.” Perhaps
no city has left so little memory of itself in proportion to its size and
consequence as Seleucia. Babylon and Baghdad are both familiar names to our
ears with great associations, but to how many people does Seleucia mean
anything? So little trace is left of those great multitudes, akin in
civilization to ourselves, who for centuries lived and worked beside the
Tigris.
As to the political
constitution of Seleucia, some people called Adeiganes are mentioned, who are
taken to be a magisterial body of some sort. If so, it is significant that
their title is not Greek. But Seleucia, as a royal capital, had its autonomy
openly curtailed by its being put under an epistates and watched by a
garrison. The strategos of the province (Babylonia) sometimes holds the
office of epistates of the city as well. Democrates the son of Byttacus
is strategos, epistates of the city, and commander of the
garrison all at once. But the inscription which mentions him proves at any rate
that Seleucia could, as a city, pass honorary decrees.
And while Seleucia
grew, the old Babylon decayed. The famous walls, slowly crumbling, enclosed
deserted, crumbling streets. Only in the midst of the desolation the huge temples
still rose, and societies of priests clustered about them, performing the
ancient rites and cultivating the traditional wisdom. The policy of Alexander
in honoring the gods of the nations was followed by Seleucus and his house. In
March 268 Antiochus laid the foundation for the rebuilding of the temple of
Nebo at Borsippa. His inscription proclaims: “I am Antiochus, the Great King,
the Mighty King, the King of the armies, the King of Babylon, the King of the
lands, the restorer of the E-sagila and E-zida, the princely son of Seleucus, the
Macedonian King, the King of Babylon.”
It was not Seleucia
only which displayed in this quarter the colonizing activity of the new rulers.
There were the Alexandrias founded by Alexander near the coast (i.e. in Mesene).
There was an Apamea also in Mesene. The Assyrian country east of the Tigris got
its complement of new foundations. Opposite Seleucia was Ctesiphon, under the
Seleueid kings apparently only a place of cantonments, but destined
to be refounded by the Arsacids as their chief city. Sittace is described by
Pliny as of Greek origin, but we hear of Sittace in Xenophon as a great city,
so that it was only a case of Hellenization. In the same region as Sittace
(Sittacene) was an Antioch and an Apamea, Apollonia, Artemita, and perhaps a
Laodicea. A Seleucia-on-Hedyphon, a Seleucia-on- the-Red-Sea, and a
Seleucia-on-the-Eulaeus are also mentioned.
The Greeks of
Babylonia seem to have contributed their proportion of great names to Hellenic
literature and science. Diogenes of Seleucia, called “the Babylonian” (about
243-155) listened to Chrysippus, and became in time head of the Stoic school.
Apollodorus of Artemita was in Strabo’s time the great authority for Parthian
history. But what is above all interesting is to see the ancient Babylonian
mind caught in the movement of new ideas and exercising itself in the field of
Hellenic culture. Berosus, the priest of Bel, aspires to the distinction of a
Greek historian, and writes the fables and the history of his race for these
Western people to read, encouraged by the grace of King Antiochus I. From the
work of Berosus almost all that was known of Babylonian history, till the
inscriptions were found and deciphered, was ultimately derived. There is
another figure of peculiar interest in this connection. A native of lower
Babylonia, of the region near the sea, he is drawn to the great centre of
Seleucia, takes the Macedonian name Seleucus, and goes deep into the
mathematical science of the Greeks. His writings were given to the world about
the middle of the second century B.C.; they were still known to Strabo and
Plutarch. They seem to have been indeed of a high scientific order. Not only
did he advance true views about tides, but he set about proving that the earth
and the planets really go about the sun. The Babylonian, quickened by contact
with Hellenism, anticipates Copernicus.
While the
Babylonians were drawn to the light of Hellenism, the Greeks on their part were
sensible of that fascination which the darkness of the ancient East has often
had for the children of light. Alexander paid attention to the counsels of
Babylonian magic; so did his successors. When Alexander fell ill, a number of
the Macedonian chiefs, among them Seleucus, consulted a Babylonian oracle.
Antigonus changes his mind at once on a warning from the “ Chaldaeans.”
Seleucus, as we saw, is represented by the legend as applying to the Babylonian
wise men to fix the lucky hour for his city’s foundation. Throughout the later
epoch of classical paganism the roving Babylonian enjoyed great prestige as a
diviner. Such men were found, no doubt, in all the great Greek cities,
muttering strange words and magical formulae under the patronage of rich women,
very much as the Indian gum may get a circle of curious listeners in the
drawing-rooms of Europe and America today.
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