<h2 class="title"><SPAN name="id2514776" name= "id2514776"></SPAN>Chapter I. The Races and Early Civilization of Babylonia</h2>
<p class="title"><b>Abstract</b></p>
<p>Prehistoric Babylonia--The Confederacies of Sumer and
Akkad--Sumerian Racial Affinities--Theories of Mongolian and
Ural-Altaic Origins--Evidence of Russian Turkestan--Beginnings of
Agriculture--Remarkable Proofs from Prehistoric Egyptian
Graves--Sumerians and the Mediterranean Race--Present-day Types
in Western Asia--The Evidence of Crania--Origin of the
Akkadians--The Semitic Blend--Races in Ancient
Palestine--Southward Drift of Armenoid Peoples--The Rephaims of
the Bible--Akkadians attain Political Supremacy in Northern
Babylonia--Influence of Sumerian Culture--Beginnings of
Civilization--Progress in the Neolithic Age--Position of Women in
Early Communities--Their Legal Status in Ancient
Babylonia--Influence in Social and Religious Life--The "Woman's
Language"--Goddess who inspired Poets.</p>
<p><SPAN name="page.anchor.1" name="page.anchor.1"></SPAN> Before the
dawn of the historical period Ancient Babylonia was divided into
a number of independent city states similar to those which
existed in pre-Dynastic Egypt. Ultimately these were grouped into
loose confederacies. The northern cities were embraced in the
territory known as Akkad, and the southern in the land of Sumer,
or Shumer. This division had a racial as well as a geographical
significance. The Akkadians were<SPAN name="page.anchor.2" name=
"page.anchor.2"></SPAN> "late comers" who had achieved political
ascendency in the north when the area they occupied was called
Uri, or Kiuri, and Sumer was known as Kengi. They were a people
of Semitic speech with pronounced Semitic affinities. From the
earliest times the sculptors depicted them with abundant locks,
long full beards, and the prominent distinctive noses and full
lips, which we usually associate with the characteristic Jewish
type, and also attired in long, flounced robes, suspended from
their left shoulders, and reaching down to their ankles. In
contrast, the Sumerians had clean-shaven faces and scalps, and
noses of Egyptian and Grecian rather than Semitic type, while
they wore short, pleated kilts, and went about with the upper
part of their bodies quite bare like the Egyptian noblemen of the
Old Kingdom period. They spoke a non-Semitic language, and were
the oldest inhabitants of Babylonia of whom we have any
knowledge. Sumerian civilization was rooted in the agricultural
mode of life, and appears to have been well developed before the
Semites became numerous and influential in the land. Cities had
been built chiefly of sun-dried and fire-baked bricks;
distinctive pottery was manufactured with much skill; the people
were governed by humanitarian laws, which formed the nucleus of
the Hammurabi code, and had in use a system of cuneiform writing
which was still in process of development from earlier pictorial
characters. The distinctive feature of their agricultural methods
was the engineering skill which was displayed in extending the
cultivatable area by the construction of irrigating canals and
ditches. There are also indications that they possessed some
knowledge of navigation and traded on the Persian Gulf. According
to one of their own traditions Eridu, originally a seaport, was
their racial cradle. The Semitic Akkadians adopted the
distinctive culture of <SPAN name="page.anchor.3" name=
"page.anchor.3"></SPAN>these Sumerians after settlement, and
exercised an influence on its subsequent growth.</p>
<SPAN name="id2514897" name="id2514897"></SPAN>
<p class="title"><b>Figure I.1. EXAMPLES OF RACIAL TYPES</b></p>
<blockquote class="blockquote">
<p><span class="emphasis"><em>From a drawing by E.
Wallcousins</em></span></p>
</blockquote>
<ANTIMG alt="" src="img/2.jpg" />
<SPAN name="id2514914" name="id2514914"></SPAN>
<p class="title"><b>Figure I.2. STATUE OF A ROYAL PERSONAGE OR
OFFICIAL OF NON-SEMITIC ORIGIN</b></p>
<blockquote class="blockquote">
<p>(<span class="emphasis"><em>British Museum</em></span>)</p>
</blockquote>
<ANTIMG alt="" src="img/3.jpg" />
<p>Much controversy has been waged regarding the original home of
the Sumerians and the particular racial type which they
represented. One theory connects them with the lank-haired and
beardless Mongolians, and it is asserted on the evidence afforded
by early sculptural reliefs that they were similarly
oblique-eyed. As they also spoke an agglutinative language, it is
suggested that they were descended from the same parent stock as
the Chinese in an ancient Parthian homeland. If, however, the
oblique eye was not the result of faulty and primitive art, it is
evident that the Mongolian type, which is invariably found to be
remarkably persistent in racial blends, did not survive in the
Tigris and Euphrates valleys, for in the finer and more exact
sculpture work of the later Sumerian period the eyes of the
ruling classes are found to be similar to those of the Ancient
Egyptians and southern Europeans. Other facial characteristics
suggest that a Mongolian racial connection is highly improbable;
the prominent Sumerian nose, for instance, is quite unlike the
Chinese, which is diminutive. Nor can far-reaching conclusions be
drawn from the scanty linguistic evidence at our disposal.
Although the languages of the Sumerians and long-headed Chinese
are of the agglutinative variety, so are those also which are
spoken by the broad-headed Turks and Magyars of Hungary, the
broad-headed and long-headed, dark and fair Finns, and the brunet
and short-statured Basques with pear-shaped faces, who are
regarded as a variation of the Mediterranean race with
distinctive characteristics developed in isolation. Languages
afford no sure indication of racial origins or affinities.</p>
<p>Another theory connects the Sumerians with the<SPAN id=
"page.anchor.4" name="page.anchor.4"></SPAN> broad-headed peoples of
the Western Asian plains and plateaus, who are vaguely grouped as
Ural-Altaic stock and are represented by the present-day Turks
and the dark variety of Finns. It is assumed that they migrated
southward in remote times in consequence of tribal pressure
caused by changing climatic conditions, and abandoned a purely
pastoral for an agricultural life. The late Sumerian sculpture
work again presents difficulties in this connection, for the
faces and bulging occiputs suggest rather a long-headed than a
broad-headed type, and the theory no longer obtains that new
habits of life alter skull forms which are usually associated
with other distinctive traits in the structure of skeletons.
These broad-headed nomadic peoples of the Steppes are allied to
Tatar stock, and distinguished from the pure Mongols by their
abundance of wavy hair and beard. The fact that the Sumerians
shaved their scalps and faces is highly suggestive in this
connection. From the earliest times it has been the habit of most
peoples to emphasize their racial characteristics so as to be
able, one may suggest, to distinguish readily a friend from a
foeman. At any rate this fact is generally recognized by
ethnologists. The Basques, for instance, shave their pointed
chins and sometimes grow short side whiskers to increase the
distinctive pear-shape which is given to their faces by their
prominent temples. In contrast, their neighbours, the
Andalusians, grow chin whiskers to broaden their already rounded
chins, and to distinguish them markedly from the
Basques.<span class="sub">[<SPAN name="fnrex112" href=
"#ftn.fnrex112" name="fnrex112">12</SPAN>]</span> Another example of
similar character is afforded in Asia Minor, where the skulls of
the children of long-headed Kurds are narrowed, and those of the
children of broad-headed Armenians made flatter behind as a
result of systematic pressure applied by using cradle<SPAN id=
"page.anchor.5" name="page.anchor.5"></SPAN> boards. In this way
these rival peoples accentuate their contrasting head forms,
which at times may, no doubt, show a tendency towards variation
as a result of the crossment of types. When it is found,
therefore, that the Sumerians, like the Ancient Egyptians, were
in the habit of shaving, their ethnic affinities should be looked
for among a naturally glabrous rather than a heavily-bearded
people.</p>
<p>A Central Asiatic source for Sumerian culture has also been
urged of late with much circumstantial detail. It breaks quite
fresh and interesting ground. Recent scientific expeditions in
Russian and Chinese Turkestan have accumulated important
archaeological data which clearly establish that vast areas of
desert country were at a remote period most verdurous and
fruitful, and thickly populated by organized and apparently
progressive communities. From these ancient centres of
civilization wholesale migrations must have been impelled from
time to time in consequence of the gradual encroachment of
wind-distributed sand and the increasing shortage of water. At
Anau in Russian Turkestan, where excavations were conducted by
the Pumpelly expedition, abundant traces were found of an archaic
and forgotten civilization reaching back to the Late Stone Age.
The pottery is decorated with geometric designs, and resembles
somewhat other Neolithic specimens found as far apart as Susa,
the capital of ancient Elam, on the borders of Babylonia, Boghaz
Köi in Asia Minor, the seat of Hittite administration, round
the Black Sea to the north, and at points in the southern regions
of the Balkan Peninsula. It is suggested that these various finds
are scattered evidences of early racial drifts from the Central
Asian areas which were gradually being rendered uninhabitable.
Among the Copper Age artifacts at Anau are clay votive<SPAN id=
"page.anchor.6" name="page.anchor.6"></SPAN> statuettes resembling
those which were used in Sumeria for religious purposes. These,
however, cannot be held to prove a racial connection, but they
are important in so far as they afford evidence of early trade
relations in a hitherto unsuspected direction, and the long
distances over which cultural influence extended before the dawn
of history. Further we cannot go. No inscriptions have yet been
discovered to render articulate this mysterious Central Asian
civilization, or to suggest the original source of early Sumerian
picture writing. Nor is it possible to confirm Mr. Pumpelly's
view that from the Anau district the Sumerians and Egyptians
first obtained barley and wheat, and some of their domesticated
animals. If, as Professor Elliot Smith believes, copper was first
used by the Ancient Egyptians, it may be, on the other hand, that
a knowledge of this metal reached Anau through Sumeria, and that
the elements of the earlier culture were derived from the same
quarter by an indirect route. The evidence obtainable in Egypt is
of interest in this connection. Large quantities of food have
been taken from the stomachs and intestines of sun-dried bodies
which have lain in their pre-Dynastic graves for over sixty
centuries. This material has been carefully examined, and has
yielded, among other things, husks of barley and millet, and
fragments of mammalian bones, including those, no doubt, of the
domesticated sheep and goats and cattle painted on the
pottery.<span class="sub">[<SPAN name="fnrex113" href=
"#ftn.fnrex113" name="fnrex113">13</SPAN>]</span> It is therefore
apparent that at an extremely remote period a knowledge of
agriculture extended throughout Egypt, and we have no reason for
supposing that it was not shared by the contemporary inhabitants
of Sumer.</p>
<p>The various theories which have been propounded regarding the
outside source of Sumerian culture are<SPAN name="page.anchor.7" name=
"page.anchor.7"></SPAN> based on the assumption that it commenced
abruptly and full grown. Its rude beginnings cannot be traced on
the banks of the Tigris and Euphrates, but although no specimens
of the earliest form of picture writing have been recovered from
the ruins of Sumerian and Akkadian cities, neither have any been
found elsewhere. The possibility remains, therefore, that early
Babylonian culture was indigenous. "A great deal of ingenuity has
been displayed by many scholars", says Professor Elliot Smith,
"with the object of bringing these Sumerians from somewhere else
as immigrants into Sumer; but no reasons have been advanced to
show that they had not been settled at the head of the Persian
Gulf for long generations before they first appeared on the stage
of history. The argument that no early remains have been found is
futile, not only because such a country as Sumer is no more
favourable to the preservation of such evidence than is the Delta
of the Nile, but also upon the more general grounds that negative
statements of this sort cannot be assigned a positive evidence
for an immigration."<span class="sub">[<SPAN name="fnrex114" href=
"#ftn.fnrex114" name="fnrex114">14</SPAN>]</span> This distinguished
ethnologist is frankly of opinion that the Sumerians were the
congeners of the pre-Dynastic Egyptians of the Mediterranean or
Brown race, the eastern branch of which reaches to India and the
western to the British Isles and Ireland. In the same ancient
family are included the Arabs, whose physical characteristics
distinguish them from the Semites of Jewish type.</p>
<p>Some light may be thrown on the Sumerian problem by giving
consideration to the present-day racial complexion of Western
Asia. The importance of evidence of this character has been
emphasized elsewhere. In Egypt, for instance, Dr. C.S. Myers has
ascertained that the modern peasants have skull forms which are
identical<SPAN name="page.anchor.8" name="page.anchor.8"></SPAN> with
those of their pre-Dynastic ancestors. Mr. Hawes has also
demonstrated that the ancient inhabitants of Crete are still
represented on that famous island. But even more remarkable is
the fact that the distinctive racial type which occupied the
Palaeolithic caves of the Dordogne valley in France continues to
survive in their vicinity after an interval of over twenty
thousand years.<span class="sub">[<SPAN name="fnrex115" href=
"#ftn.fnrex115" name="fnrex115">15</SPAN>]</span> It is noteworthy,
therefore, to find that in south-western Asia at the present day
one particular racial type predominates over all others.
Professor Ripley, who summarizes a considerable mass of data in
this connection, refers to it as the "Iranian", and says: "It
includes the Persians and Kurds, possibly the Ossetes in the
Caucasus, and farther to the east a large number of Asiatic
tribes, from the Afghans to the Hindus. These peoples are all
primarily long-headed and dark brunets. They incline to
slenderness of habit, although varying in stature according to
circumstances. In them we recognize at once undoubted congeners
of our Mediterranean race in Europe. The area of their extension
runs off into Africa, through the Egyptians, who are clearly of
the same race. Not only the modern peoples, but the Ancient
Egyptians and the Phoenicians also have been traced to the same
source. By far the largest portion of this part of Western Asia
is inhabited by this eastern branch of the Mediterranean race."
The broad-headed type "occurs sporadically among a few ethnic
remnants in Syria and Mesopotamia".<span class="sub">[<SPAN name=
"fnrex116" href="#ftn.fnrex116" name="fnrex116">16</SPAN>]</span> The
exhaustive study of thousands of ancient crania in London and
Cambridge collections has shown that Mediterranean peoples,
having alien traits, the result of early admixture, were
distributed between Egypt and the Punjab.<span class=
"sub">[<SPAN name="fnrex117" href="#ftn.fnrex117" id=
"fnrex117">17</SPAN>]</span> Where blending took place, the early
type,<SPAN name="page.anchor.9" name="page.anchor.9"></SPAN> apparently,
continued to predominate; and it appears to be reasserting itself
in our own time in Western Asia, as elsewhere. It seems doubtful,
therefore, that the ancient Sumerians differed racially from the
pre-Dynastic inhabitants of Egypt and the Pelasgians and Iberians
of Europe. Indeed, the statuettes from Tello, the site of the
Sumerian city of Lagash, display distinctively Mediterranean
skull forms and faces. Some of the plump figures of the later
period suggest, however, "the particular alien strain" which in
Egypt and elsewhere "is always associated with a tendency to the
development of fat", in contrast to "the lean and sinewy
appearance of most representatives of the Brown
race".<span class="sub">[<SPAN name="fnrex118" href="#ftn.fnrex118" id="fnrex118">18</SPAN>]</span> This change may be accounted for by
the presence of the Semites in northern Babylonia.</p>
<p>Whence, then, came these invading Semitic Akkadians of Jewish
type? It is generally agreed that they were closely associated
with one of the early outpourings of nomadic peoples from Arabia,
a country which is favourable for the production of a larger
population than it is able to maintain permanently, especially
when its natural resources are restricted by a succession of
abnormally dry years. In tracing the Akkadians from Arabia,
however, we are confronted at the outset with the difficulty that
its prehistoric, and many of its present-day, inhabitants are not
of the characteristic Semitic type. On the Ancient Egyptian
pottery and monuments the Arabs are depicted as men who closely
resembled the representatives of the Mediterranean race in the
Nile valley and elsewhere. They shaved neither scalps nor faces
as did the historic Sumerians and Egyptians, but grew the slight
moustache and chin-tuft beard like the Libyans on the north and
the majority of the men whose bodies<SPAN name="page.anchor.10" name=
"page.anchor.10"></SPAN> have been preserved in pre-Dynastic graves
in the Nile valley. "If", writes Professor Elliot Smith, "the
generally accepted view is true, that Arabia was the original
home of the Semites, the Arab must have undergone a profound
change in his physical characters after he left his homeland and
before he reached Babylonia." This authority is of opinion that
the Arabians first migrated into Palestine and northern Syria,
where they mingled with the southward-migrating Armenoid peoples
from Asia Minor. "This blend of Arabs, kinsmen of the
proto-Egyptians and Armenoids, would then form the big-nosed,
long-bearded Semites, so familiar not only on the ancient
Babylonian and Egyptian monuments, but also in the modern
Jews."<span class="sub">[<SPAN name="fnrex119" href="#ftn.fnrex119" id="fnrex119">19</SPAN>]</span> Such a view is in accord with Dr.
Hugo Winckler's contention that the flow of Arabian migrations
was northwards towards Syria ere it swept through Mesopotamia. It
can scarcely be supposed that these invasions of settled
districts did not result in the fusion and crossment of racial
types and the production of a sub-variety with medium skull form
and marked facial characteristics.</p>
<p>Of special interest in this connection is the evidence
afforded by Palestine and Egypt. The former country has ever been
subject to periodic ethnic disturbances and changes. Its racial
history has a remote beginning in the Pleistocene Age.
Palaeolithic flints of Chellean and other primitive types have
been found in large numbers, and a valuable collection of these
is being preserved in a French museum at Jerusalem. In a northern
cave fragments of rude pottery, belonging to an early period in
the Late Stone Age, have been discovered in association with the
bones of the woolly rhinoceros. To a later period belong the
series of Gezer cave dwellings, which, according to Professor
Macalister, the well-known Palestinian<SPAN name="page.anchor.11"
name="page.anchor.11"></SPAN> authority, "were occupied by a
non-Semitic people of low stature, with thick skulls and showing
evidence of the great muscular strength that is essential to
savage life".<span class="sub">[<SPAN name="fnrex120" href=
"#ftn.fnrex120" name="fnrex120">20</SPAN>]</span> These people are
generally supposed to be representatives of the Mediterranean
race, which Sergi has found to have been widely distributed
throughout Syria and a part of Asia Minor.<span class=
"sub">[<SPAN name="fnrex121" href="#ftn.fnrex121" id=
"fnrex121">21</SPAN>]</span> An interesting problem, however, is
raised by the fact that, in one of the caves, there are evidences
that the dead were cremated. This was not a Mediterranean custom,
nor does it appear to have prevailed outside the Gezer area. If,
however, it does not indicate that the kinsmen of the Ancient
Egyptians came into contact with the remnants of an earlier
people, it may be that the dead of a later people were burned
there. The possibility that unidentified types may have
contributed to the Semitic blend, however, remains. The
Mediterraneans mingled in Northern Syria and Asia Minor with the
broad-headed Armenoid peoples who are represented in Europe by
the Alpine race. With them they ultimately formed the great
Hittite confederacy. These Armenoids were moving southwards at
the very dawn of Egyptian history, and nothing is known of their
conquests and settlements. Their pioneers, who were probably
traders, appear to have begun to enter the Delta region before
the close of the Late Stone Age.<span class="sub">[<SPAN name=
"fnrex122" href="#ftn.fnrex122" name="fnrex122">22</SPAN>]</span> The
earliest outpourings of migrating Arabians may have been in
progress about the same time. This early southward drift of
Armenoids might account for the presence in southern Palestine,
early in the Copper Age, of the tall race referred to in the
Bible as the Rephaim or Anakim, "whose power was broken only by
the Hebrew<SPAN name="page.anchor.12" name="page.anchor.12"></SPAN>
invaders".<span class="sub">[<SPAN name="fnrex123" href=
"#ftn.fnrex123" name="fnrex123">23</SPAN>]</span> Joshua drove them
out of Hebron,<span class="sub">[<SPAN name="fnrex124" href=
"#ftn.fnrex124" name="fnrex124">24</SPAN>]</span> in the neighbourhood
of which Abraham had purchased a burial cave from Ephron, the
Hittite.<span class="sub">[<SPAN name="fnrex125" href=
"#ftn.fnrex125" name="fnrex125">25</SPAN>]</span> Apparently a system
of land laws prevailed in Palestine at this early period. It is
of special interest for us to note that in Abraham's day and
afterwards, the landed proprietors in the country of the Rephaim
were identified with the aliens from Asia Minor--the tall variety
in the Hittite confederacy.</p>
<p>Little doubt need remain that the Arabians during their
sojourn in Palestine and Syria met with distinctive types, and if
not with pure Armenoids, at any rate with peoples having Armenoid
traits. The consequent multiplication of tribes, and the gradual
pressure exercised by the constant stream of immigrants from
Arabia and Asia Minor, must have kept this part of Western Asia
in a constant state of unrest. Fresh migrations of the surplus
stock were evidently propelled towards Egypt in one direction,
and the valleys of the Tigris and Euphrates in another. The
Semites of Akkad were probably the conquerors of the more highly
civilized Sumerians, who must have previously occupied that area.
It is possible that they owed their success to the possession of
superior weapons. Professor Elliot Smith suggests in this
connection that the Arabians had become familiar with the use of
copper as a result of contact with the Egyptians in Sinai. There
is no evidence, however, that the Sumerians were attacked before
they had begun to make metal weapons. It is more probable that
the invading nomads had superior military organization and
considerable experience in waging war against detached tribal
units. They may have also found some of the northern Sumerian
city states at war with one another and taken<SPAN id=
"page.anchor.13" name="page.anchor.13"></SPAN> advantage of their
unpreparedness to resist a common enemy. The rough Dorians who
overran Greece and the fierce Goths who shattered the power of
Rome were similarly in a lower state of civilization than the
peoples whom they subdued.</p>
<p>The Sumerians, however, ultimately achieved an intellectual
conquest of their conquerors. Although the leaders of invasion
may have formed military aristocracies in the cities which they
occupied, it was necessary for the great majority of the nomads
to engage their activities in new directions after settlement.
The Semitic Akkadians, therefore, adopted Sumerian habits of life
which were best suited for the needs of the country, and they
consequently came under the spell of Sumerian modes of thought.
This is shown by the fact that the native speech of ancient Sumer
continued long after the dawn of history to be the language of
Babylonian religion and culture, like Latin in Europe during the
Middle Ages. For centuries the mingling peoples must have been
bilingual, as are many of the inhabitants of Ireland, Wales, and
the Scottish Highlands in the present age, but ultimately the
language of the Semites became the prevailing speech in Sumer and
Akkad. This change was the direct result of the conquests and the
political supremacy achieved by the northern people. A
considerable period elapsed, however, ere this consummation was
reached and Ancient Babylonia became completely Semitized. No
doubt its brilliant historical civilization owed much of its
vigour and stability to the organizing genius of the Semites, but
the basis on which it was established had been laid by the
ingenious and imaginative Sumerians who first made the desert to
blossom like the rose.</p>
<p>The culture of Sumer was a product of the Late Stone Age,
which should not be regarded as necessarily<SPAN name="page.anchor.14"
name="page.anchor.14"></SPAN> an age of barbarism. During its vast
periods there were great discoveries and great inventions in
various parts of Asia, Africa, and Europe. The Neoliths made
pottery and bricks; we know that they invented the art of
spinning, for spindle-whorls are found even in the Gezer caves to
which we have referred, while in Egypt the pre-Dynastic dead were
sometimes wrapped in finely woven linen: their deftly chipped
flint implements are eloquent of artistic and mechanical skill,
and undoubted mathematical ability must be credited to the makers
of smoothly polished stone hammers which are so perfectly
balanced that they revolve on a centre of gravity. In Egypt and
Babylonia the soil was tilled and its fertility increased by
irrigation. Wherever man waged a struggle with Nature he made
rapid progress, and consequently we find that the earliest great
civilizations were rooted in the little fields of the Neolithic
farmers. Their mode of life necessitated a knowledge of Nature's
laws; they had to take note of the seasons and measure time. So
Egypt gave us the Calendar, and Babylonia the system of dividing
the week into seven days, and the day into twelve double
hours.</p>
<p>The agricultural life permitted large communities to live in
river valleys, and these had to be governed by codes of laws;
settled communities required peace and order for their progress
and prosperity. All great civilizations have evolved from the
habits and experiences of settled communities. Law and religion
were closely associated, and the evidence afforded by the remains
of stone circles and temples suggests that in the organization
and division of labour the influence of religious teachers was
pre-eminent. Early rulers, indeed, were priest-kings
--incarnations of the deity who owned the land and measured out
the span of human life.</p>
<p><SPAN name="page.anchor.15" name="page.anchor.15"></SPAN>We need not
assume that Neolithic man led an idyllic existence; his triumphs
were achieved by slow and gradual steps; his legal codes were, no
doubt, written in blood and his institutions welded in the fires
of adversity. But, disciplined by laws, which fostered
humanitarian ideals, Neolithic man, especially of the
Mediterranean race, had reached a comparatively high state of
civilization long ages before the earliest traces of his
activities can be obtained. When this type of mankind is
portrayed in Ancient Sumeria, Ancient Egypt, and Ancient Crete we
find that the faces are refined and intellectual and often quite
modern in aspect. The skulls show that in the Late Stone Age the
human brain was fully developed and that the racial types were
fixed. In every country in Europe we still find the direct
descendants of the ancient Mediterranean race, as well as the
descendants of the less highly cultured conquerors who swept
westward out of Asia at the dawn of the Bronze Age; and
everywhere there are evidences of crossment of types in varying
degrees. Even the influence of Neolithic intellectual life still
remains. The comparative study of mythology and folk beliefs
reveals that we have inherited certain modes of thought from our
remote ancestors, who were the congeners of the Ancient Sumerians
and the Ancient Egyptians. In this connection it is of interest,
therefore, to refer to the social ideals of the early peoples who
met and mingled on the southern plains of the Tigris and
Euphrates, and especially the position occupied by women, which
is engaging so much attention at the present day.</p>
<p>It would appear that among the Semites and other nomadic
peoples woman was regarded as the helpmate rather than the
companion and equal of man. The birth of a son was hailed with
joy; it was "miserable to have<SPAN name="page.anchor.16" name=
"page.anchor.16"></SPAN> a daughter", as a Hindu sage reflected; in
various countries it was the custom to expose female children
after birth and leave them to die. A wife had no rights other
than those accorded to her by her husband, who exercised over her
the power of life and death. Sons inherited family possessions;
the daughters had no share allotted to them, and could be sold by
fathers and brothers. Among the peoples who observed "male
right", social life was reflected in the conception of
controlling male deities, accompanied by shadowy goddesses who
were often little else than figures of speech.</p>
<p>The Ancient Sumerians, on the other hand, like the
Mediterranean peoples of Egypt and Crete, reverenced and exalted
motherhood in social and religious life. Women were accorded a
legal status and marriage laws were promulgated by the State.
Wives could possess private property in their own right, as did
the Babylonian Sarah, wife of Abraham, who owned the Egyptian
slave Hagar.<span class="sub">[<SPAN name="fnrex126" href=
"#ftn.fnrex126" name="fnrex126">26</SPAN>]</span> A woman received
from her parents a marriage dowry, and in the event of separation
from her husband she could claim its full value. Some spinsters,
or wives, were accustomed to enter into business partnerships
with men or members of their own sex, and could sue and be sued
in courts of law. Brothers and sisters were joint heirs of the
family estate. Daughters might possess property over which their
fathers exercised no control: they could also enter into legal
agreements with their parents in business matters, when they had
attained to years of discretion. Young women who took vows of
celibacy and lived in religious institutions could yet make
business investments, as surviving records show. There is only
one instance of a Sumerian woman ascending the throne, like Queen
Hatshepsut of Egypt. Women, therefore,<SPAN name="page.anchor.17"
name="page.anchor.17"></SPAN> were not rigidly excluded from
official life. Dungi II, an early Sumerian king, appointed two of
his daughters as rulers of conquered cities in Syria and Elam.
Similarly Shishak, the Egyptian Pharaoh, handed over the city of
Gezer, which he had subdued, to his daughter, Solomon's
wife.<span class="sub">[<SPAN name="fnrex127" href="#ftn.fnrex127" id="fnrex127">27</SPAN>]</span> In the religious life of ancient
Sumeria the female population exercised an undoubted influence,
and in certain temples there were priestesses. The oldest hymns
give indication of the respect shown to women by making reference
to mixed assemblies as "females and males", just as present-day
orators address themselves to "ladies and gentlemen". In the
later Semitic adaptations of these productions, it is significant
to note, this conventional reference was altered to "male and
female". If influences, however, were at work to restrict the
position of women they did not meet with much success, because
when Hammurabi codified existing laws, the ancient rights of
women received marked recognition.</p>
<p>There were two dialects in ancient Sumeria, and the invocatory
hymns were composed in what was known as "the women's language".
It must not be inferred, however, that the ladies of Sumeria had
established a speech which differed from that used by men. The
reference would appear to be to a softer and homelier dialect,
perhaps the oldest of the two, in which poetic emotion found
fullest and most beautiful expression. In these ancient days, as
in our own, the ideal of womanhood was the poet's chief source of
inspiration, and among the hymns the highest reach of poetic art
was attained in the invocation of Ishtar, the Babylonian Venus.
The following hymn is addressed to that deity in her
Valkyrie-like character as a goddess of war, but her more
feminine traits are not obscured:--<SPAN name="page.anchor.18" name=
"page.anchor.18"></SPAN></p>
<blockquote class="blockquote">
<tt>HYMN TO ISHTAR</tt>
<tt> </tt>
<tt>To thee I cry, O lady of the
gods,</tt>
<tt>Lady of ladies, goddess without
peer,</tt>
<tt>Ishtar who shapes the lives of all
mankind,</tt>
<tt>Thou stately world queen, sovran of the
sky,</tt>
<tt>And lady ruler of the host of
heaven--</tt>
<tt>Illustrious is thy name.... O light
divine,</tt>
<tt>Gleaming in lofty splendour o'er the
earth--</tt>
<tt>Heroic daughter of the moon, oh!
hear;</tt>
<tt>Thou dost control our weapons and
award</tt>
<tt>In battles fierce the victory at
will--</tt>
<tt>crown'd majestic Fate. Ishtar most
high,</tt>
<tt>Who art exalted over all the
gods,</tt>
<tt>Thou bringest lamentation; thou dost
urge</tt>
<tt>With hostile hearts our brethren to the
fray;</tt>
<tt>The gift of strength is thine for thou
art strong;</tt>
<tt>Thy will is urgent, brooking no
delay;</tt>
<tt>Thy hand is violent, thou queen of
war</tt>
<tt>Girded with battle and enrobed with
fear...</tt>
<tt>Thou sovran wielder of the wand of
Doom,</tt>
<tt>The heavens and earth are under thy
control.</tt>
<tt> </tt>
<tt>Adored art thou in every sacred
place,</tt>
<tt>In temples, holy dwellings, and in
shrines,</tt>
<tt>Where is thy name not lauded? where thy
will</tt>
<tt>Unheeded, and thine images not
made?</tt>
<tt>Where are thy temples not upreared? O,
where</tt>
<tt>Art thou not mighty, peerless, and
supreme?</tt>
<tt> </tt>
<tt>Anu and Bel and Ea have thee
raised</tt>
<tt>To rank supreme, in majesty and
pow'r,</tt>
<tt>They have established thee above the
gods</tt>
<tt>And all the host of heaven... O stately
queen,</tt>
<tt>At thought of thee the world is filled
with fear,</tt>
<tt>The gods in heaven quake, and on the
earth</tt>
<tt>All spirits pause, and all mankind bow
down</tt>
<tt>With reverence for thy name.... O Lady
Judge,</tt>
<tt> </tt>
<tt>Thy ways are just and holy; thou dost
gaze<SPAN name="page.anchor.19" name="page.anchor.19"></SPAN></tt>
<tt>On sinners with compassion, and each
morn</tt>
<tt>Leadest the wayward to the rightful
path.</tt>
<tt> </tt>
<tt>Now linger not, but come! O goddess
fair,</tt>
<tt>O shepherdess of all, thou drawest
nigh</tt>
<tt>With feet unwearied... Thou dost break
the bonds</tt>
<tt>Of these thy handmaids... When thou
stoopest o'er</tt>
<tt>The dying with compassion, lo! they
live;</tt>
<tt>And when the sick behold thee they are
healed.</tt>
<tt> </tt>
<tt>Hear me, thy servant! hearken to my
pray'r,</tt>
<tt>For I am full of sorrow and I
sigh</tt>
<tt>In sore distress; weeping, on thee I
wait.</tt>
<tt>Be merciful, my lady, pity
take</tt>
<tt>And answer, "'Tis enough and be
appeased".</tt>
<tt> </tt>
<tt>How long must my heart sorrow and make
moan</tt>
<tt>And restless be? How long must my dark
home</tt>
<tt>Be filled with mourning and my soul
with grief?</tt>
<tt>O lioness of heaven, bring me
peace</tt>
<tt>And rest and comfort. Hearken to my
pray'r!</tt>
<tt>Is anger pity? May thine eyes look
down</tt>
<tt>With tenderness and blessings, and
behold</tt>
<tt>Thy servant. Oh! have mercy; hear my
cry</tt>
<tt>And unbewitch me from the evil
spells,</tt>
<tt>That I may see thy glory... Oh! how
long</tt>
<tt>Shall these my foes pursue me, working
ill,</tt>
<tt>And robbing me of joy?... Oh! how
long</tt>
<tt>Shall demons compass me about and
cause</tt>
<tt>Affliction without end?... I thee
adore--</tt>
<tt>The gift of strength is thine and thou
art strong--</tt>
<tt>The weakly are made strong, yet I am
weak...</tt>
<tt>O hear me! I am glutted with my
grief--</tt>
<tt>This flood of grief by evil winds
distressed;</tt>
<tt>My heart hath fled me like a bird on
wings,</tt>
<tt>And like the dove I moan. Tears from
mine eyes</tt>
<tt>Are falling as the rain from heaven
falls,</tt>
<tt>And I am destitute and full of
woe.</tt>
<tt> </tt>
<tt> * * * * *<SPAN id=
"page.anchor.20" name="page.anchor.20"></SPAN></tt>
<tt> </tt>
<tt>What have I done that thou hast turned
from me?</tt>
<tt>Have I neglected homage to my
god</tt>
<tt>And thee my goddess? O deliver
me</tt>
<tt>And all my sins forgive, that I may
share</tt>
<tt>Thy love and be watched over in thy
fold;</tt>
<tt>And may thy fold be wide, thy pen
secure.</tt>
<tt> </tt>
<tt> * * * * *</tt>
<tt> </tt>
<tt>How long wilt thou be angry? Hear my
cry,</tt>
<tt>And turn again to prosper all my
ways--</tt>
<tt>O may thy wrath be crumbled and
withdrawn</tt>
<tt>As by a crumbling stream. Then smite my
foes,</tt>
<tt>And take away their power to work me
ill,</tt>
<tt>That I may crush them. Hearken to my
pray'r!</tt>
<tt>And bless me so that all who me
behold</tt>
<tt>May laud thee and may magnify thy
name,</tt>
<tt>While I exalt thy power over
all--</tt>
<tt>Ishtar is highest! Ishtar is the
queen!</tt>
<tt>Ishtar the peerless daughter of the
moon!</tt></blockquote><br/>
<hr width="100" align="left" />
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex112" href="#fnrex112" name="ftn.fnrex112">12</SPAN>]</span>
<span class="emphasis"><em>The Races of Europe</em></span>, W.Z.
Ripley, p. 203.
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex113" href="#fnrex113" name="ftn.fnrex113">13</SPAN>]</span>
<span class="emphasis"><em>The Ancient Egyptians</em></span>, by
Elliot Smith, p. 41 <span class="emphasis"><em>et
seq</em></span>.
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex114" href="#fnrex114" name="ftn.fnrex114">14</SPAN>]</span>
<span class="emphasis"><em>The Ancient Egyptians</em></span>, p.
140.
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex115" href="#fnrex115" name="ftn.fnrex115">15</SPAN>]</span>
<span class="emphasis"><em>Crete the Forerunner of
Greece</em></span>, C. H. and H. B. Hawes, 1911, p. 23
<span class="emphasis"><em>et seq.</em></span>
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex116" href="#fnrex116" name="ftn.fnrex116">16</SPAN>]</span>
<span class="emphasis"><em>The Races of Europe</em></span>, W. Z.
Ripley, p. 443 <span class="emphasis"><em>et
seq</em></span>.
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex117" href="#fnrex117" name="ftn.fnrex117">17</SPAN>]</span>
<span class="emphasis"><em>The Ancient Egyptians</em></span>, pp.
144-5.
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex118" href="#fnrex118" name="ftn.fnrex118">18</SPAN>]</span>
<span class="emphasis"><em>The Ancient Egyptians</em></span>, p.
114.
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex119" href="#fnrex119" name="ftn.fnrex119">19</SPAN>]</span>
<span class="emphasis"><em>The Ancient Egyptians</em></span>, p.
136.
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex120" href="#fnrex120" name="ftn.fnrex120">20</SPAN>]</span>
<span class="emphasis"><em>A History of Palestine</em></span>,
R.A.S. Macalister, pp. 8-16.
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex121" href="#fnrex121" name="ftn.fnrex121">21</SPAN>]</span>
<span class="emphasis"><em>The Mediterranean Race</em></span>
(1901 trans.), G. Sergi, p. 146 <span class="emphasis"><em>et
seq</em></span>.
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex122" href="#fnrex122" name="ftn.fnrex122">22</SPAN>]</span>
<span class="emphasis"><em>The Ancient Egyptians</em></span>, p.
130.
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex123" href="#fnrex123" name="ftn.fnrex123">23</SPAN>]</span>
<span class="emphasis"><em>A History of Civilization in
Palestine, p. 20 et seq.</em></span>
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex124" href="#fnrex124" name="ftn.fnrex124">24</SPAN>]</span>
<span class="emphasis"><em>Joshua</em></span>, xi. 21.
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex125" href="#fnrex125" name="ftn.fnrex125">25</SPAN>]</span>
<span class="emphasis"><em>Genesis</em></span>, xxiii.
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex126" href="#fnrex126" name="ftn.fnrex126">26</SPAN>]</span>
<span class="emphasis"><em>Genesis</em></span>, xvi. 8, 9.
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex127" href="#fnrex127" name="ftn.fnrex127">27</SPAN>]</span>
<span class="emphasis"><em>1 Kings</em></span>, xvi. 16.
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />