<h2 class="title"><SPAN name="id2531105" name= "id2531105"></SPAN>Chapter X. Buildings and Laws and Customs of Babylon</h2>
<p class="title"><b>Abstract</b></p>
<p>Decline and Fall of Sumerian Kingdoms--Elamites and Semites
strive for Supremacy--Babylon's Walls, Gates, Streets, and
Canals--The Hanging Gardens--Merodach's Great Temple--The Legal
Code of Hammurabi--The Marriage Market--Position of
Women--Marriage brought Freedom--Vestal Virgins--Breach of
Promise and Divorce--Rights of Children--Female Publicans--The
Land Laws--Doctors legislated out of Existence--Folk
Cures--Spirits of Disease expelled by Magical Charms--The Legend
of the Worm--"Touch Iron"--Curative Water--Magical Origin of
Poetry and Music.</p>
<p><SPAN name="page.anchor.217" name="page.anchor.217"></SPAN> The rise
of Babylon inaugurated a new era in the history of Western Asia.
Coincidentally the political power of the Sumerians came to an
end. It had been paralysed by the Elamites, who, towards the
close of the Dynasty of Isin, successfully overran the southern
district and endeavoured to extend their sway over the whole
valley. Two Elamite kings, Warad-Sin and his brother Rim-Sin,
struggled with the rulers of Babylon for supremacy, and for a
time it appeared as if the intruders from the East were to
establish themselves permanently as a military aristocracy over
Sumer and Akkad. But the Semites were strongly reinforced by new
settlers of the same blended stock who swarmed from the land of
the Amorites. Once again Arabia was pouring into Syria vast
hordes of its surplus population, with the result that ethnic
disturbances were constant and widespread. This migration is
termed the Canaanitic or Amorite: it flowed into Mesopotamia and
across Assyria, while it supplied <SPAN name="page.anchor.218" name=
"page.anchor.218"></SPAN>the "driving power" which secured the
ascendancy of the Hammurabi Dynasty at Babylon. Indeed, the
ruling family which came into prominence there is believed to
have been of Canaanitic origin.</p>
<p>Once Babylon became the metropolis it retained its
pre-eminence until the end. Many political changes took place
during its long and chequered history, but no rival city in the
south ever attained to its splendour and greatness. Whether its
throne was occupied by Amorite or Kassite, Assyrian or Chaldean,
it was invariably found to be the most effective centre of
administration for the lower Tigro-Euphrates valley. Some of the
Kassite monarchs, however, showed a preference for Nippur.</p>
<p>Of its early history little is known. It was overshadowed in
turn by Kish and Umma, Lagash and Erech, and may have been little
better than a great village when Akkad rose into prominence.
Sargon I, the royal gardener, appears to have interested himself
in its development, for it was recorded that he cleared its
trenches and strengthened its fortifications. The city occupied a
strategic position, and probably assumed importance on that
account as well as a trading and industrial centre. Considerable
wealth had accumulated at Babylon when the Dynasty of Ur reached
the zenith of its power. It is recorded that King Dungi plundered
its famous "Temple of the High Head", E-sagila, which some
identify with the Tower of Babel, so as to secure treasure for
Ea's temple at Eridu, which he specially favoured. His
vandalistic raid, like that of the Gutium, or men of Kutu, was
remembered for long centuries afterwards, and the city god was
invoked at the time to cut short his days.</p>
<p>No doubt, Hammurabi's Babylon closely resembled the later city
so vividly described by Greek writers, although it was probably
not of such great dimensions. <SPAN name="page.anchor.219" name=
"page.anchor.219"></SPAN>According to Herodotus, it occupied an
exact square on the broad plain, and had a circumference of sixty
of our miles. "While such is its size," the historian wrote, "in
magnificence there is no other city that approaches to it." Its
walls were eighty-seven feet thick and three hundred and fifty
feet high, and each side of the square was fifteen miles in
length. The whole city was surrounded by a deep, broad canal or
moat, and the river Euphrates ran through it.</p>
<p>"Here", continued Herodotus, "I may not omit to tell the use
to which the mould dug out of the great moat was turned, nor the
manner in which the wall was wrought. As fast as they dug the
moat the soil which they got from the cutting was made into
bricks, and when a sufficient number were completed they baked
the bricks in kilns. Then they set to building, and began with
bricking the borders of the moat, after which they proceeded to
construct the wall itself, using throughout for their cement hot
bitumen, and interposing a layer of wattled reeds at every
thirtieth course of the bricks. On the top, along the edges of
the wall, they constructed buildings of a single chamber facing
one another, leaving between them room for a four-horse chariot
to turn. In the circuit of the wall are a hundred gates, all of
brass, with brazen lintels and side posts."<span class=
"sub">[<SPAN name="fnrex1264" href="#ftn.fnrex1264" id=
"fnrex1264">264</SPAN>]</span> These were the gates referred to by
Isaiah when God called Cyrus:</p>
<blockquote class="blockquote">
<tt>I will loose the loins of kings, to
open before him the two</tt>
<tt>leaved gates; and the gates shall not
be shut: I will go before</tt>
<tt>thee, and make the crooked places
straight; I will break in pieces</tt>
<tt>the gates of brass, and cut in sunder
the bars of iron.<span class="sub">[<SPAN name="fnrex1265" href=
"#ftn.fnrex1265" name="fnrex1265">265</SPAN>]</span></tt></blockquote><p>The outer wall was the main defence of the city, but there was
also an inner wall less thick but not much <SPAN id=
"page.anchor.220" name="page.anchor.220"></SPAN>inferior in
strength. In addition, a fortress stood in each division of the
city. The king's palace and the temple of Bel Merodach were
surrounded by walls.</p>
<p>All the main streets were perfectly straight, and each crossed
the city from gate to gate, a distance of fifteen miles, half of
them being interrupted by the river, which had to be ferried. As
there were twenty-five gates on each side of the outer wall, the
great thoroughfares numbered fifty in all, and there were six
hundred and seventy-six squares, each over two miles in
circumference. From Herodotus we gather that the houses were
three or four stories high, suggesting that the tenement system
was not unknown, and according to Q. Curtius, nearly half of the
area occupied by the city was taken up by gardens within the
squares.</p>
<p>In Greek times Babylon was famous for the hanging or terraced
gardens of the "new palace", which had been erected by
Nebuchadnezzar II. These occupied a square which was more than a
quarter of a mile in circumference. Great stone terraces, resting
on arches, rose up like a giant stairway to a height of about
three hundred and fifty feet, and the whole structure was
strengthened by a surrounding wall over twenty feet in thickness.
So deep were the layers of mould on each terrace that fruit trees
were grown amidst the plants of luxuriant foliage and the
brilliant Asian flowers. Water for irrigating the gardens was
raised from the river by a mechanical contrivance to a great
cistern situated on the highest terrace, and it was prevented
from leaking out of the soil by layers of reeds and bitumen and
sheets of lead. Spacious apartments, luxuriously furnished and
decorated, were constructed in the spaces between the arches and
were festooned by flowering creepers. A broad stairway ascended
from terrace to terrace.</p>
<p><SPAN name="page.anchor.221" name="page.anchor.221"></SPAN>The old
palace stood in a square nearly four miles in circumference, and
was strongly protected by three walls, which were decorated by
sculptures in low relief, representing battle scenes and scenes
of the chase and royal ceremonies. Winged bulls with human heads
guarded the main entrance.</p>
<p>Another architectural feature of the city was E-sagila, the
temple of Bel Merodach, known to the Greeks as "Jupiter-Belus".
The high wall which enclosed it had gates of solid brass. "In the
middle of the precinct", wrote Herodotus, "there was a tower of
solid masonry, a furlong in length and breadth, upon which was
raised a second tower, and on that a third, and so on up to
eight. The ascent to the top is on the outside, by a path which
winds round all the towers. When one is about halfway up, one
finds a resting-place and seats, where persons are wont to sit
some time on their way to the summit. On the topmost tower there
is a spacious temple, and inside the temple stands a couch of
unusual size, richly adorned, with a golden table by its side.
There is no statue of any kind set up in the place, nor is the
chamber occupied of nights by anyone but a single native woman,
who, as the Chaldaeans, the priests of this god, affirm, is
chosen for himself by the deity out of all the women of the
land."</p>
<p>A woman who was the "wife of Amon" also slept in that god's
temple at Thebes in Egypt. A similar custom was observed in
Lycia.</p>
<p>"Below, in the same precinct," continued Herodotus, "there is
a second temple, in which is a sitting figure of Jupiter, all of
gold. Before the figure stands a large golden table, and the
throne whereon it sits, and the base on which the throne is
placed, are likewise of pure gold.... Outside the temple are two
altars, one of solid gold, on which it is only lawful to offer
sucklings; <SPAN name="page.anchor.222" name="page.anchor.222"></SPAN>the
other, a common altar, but of great size, on which the full-grown
animals are sacrificed. It is also on the great altar that the
Chaldaeans burn the frankincense, which is offered to the amount
of a thousand talents' weight, every year, at the festival of the
god. In the time of Cyrus there was likewise in this temple a
figure of a man, twelve cubits high, entirely of solid gold....
Besides the ornaments which I have mentioned, there are a large
number of private offerings in this holy precinct."<span class=
"sub">[<SPAN name="fnrex1266" href="#ftn.fnrex1266" id=
"fnrex1266">266</SPAN>]</span></p>
<p>The city wall and river gates were closed every night, and
when Babylon was besieged the people were able to feed
themselves. The gardens and small farms were irrigated by canals,
and canals also controlled the flow of the river Euphrates. A
great dam had been formed above the town to store the surplus
water during inundation and increase the supply when the river
sank to its lowest.</p>
<p>In Hammurabi's time the river was crossed by ferry boats, but
long ere the Greeks visited the city a great bridge had been
constructed. So completely did the fierce Sennacherib destroy the
city, that most of the existing ruins date from the period of
Nebuchadnezzar II.<span class="sub">[<SPAN name="fnrex1267" href=
"#ftn.fnrex1267" name="fnrex1267">267</SPAN>]</span></p>
<p>Our knowledge of the social life of Babylon and the territory
under its control is derived chiefly from the Hammurabi Code of
laws, of which an almost complete copy was discovered at Susa,
towards the end of 1901, by the De Morgan expedition. The laws
were inscribed on a stele of black diorite 7 ft. 3 in. high, with
a circumference at the base of 6 ft. 2 in. and at the top of 5
ft. 4 in. This important relic of an ancient law-abiding people
had been broken in three pieces, but when these <SPAN id=
"page.anchor.223" name="page.anchor.223"></SPAN>were joined together
it was found that the text was not much impaired. On one side are
twenty-eight columns and on the other sixteen. Originally there
were in all nearly 4000 lines of inscriptions, but five columns,
comprising about 300 lines, had been erased to give space, it is
conjectured, for the name of the invader who carried the stele
away, but unfortunately the record was never made.</p>
<p>On the upper part of the stele, which is now one of the
treasures of the Louvre, Paris, King Hammurabi salutes, with his
right hand reverently upraised, the sun god Shamash, seated on
his throne, at the summit of E-sagila, by whom he is being
presented with the stylus with which to inscribe the legal code.
Both figures are heavily bearded, but have shaven lips and chins.
The god wears a conical headdress and a flounced robe suspended
from his left shoulder, while the king has assumed a round
dome-shaped hat and a flowing garment which almost sweeps the
ground.</p>
<p>It is gathered from the Code that there were three chief
social grades--the aristocracy, which included landowners, high
officials and administrators; the freemen, who might be wealthy
merchants or small landholders; and the slaves. The fines imposed
for a given offence upon wealthy men were much heavier than those
imposed upon the poor. Lawsuits were heard in courts. Witnesses
were required to tell the truth, "affirming before the god what
they knew", and perjurers were severely dealt with; a man who
gave false evidence in connection with a capital charge was put
to death. A strict watch was also kept over the judges, and if
one was found to have willingly convicted a prisoner on
insufficient evidence he was fined and degraded.</p>
<p>Theft was regarded as a heinous crime, and was invariably
<SPAN name="page.anchor.224" name="page.anchor.224"></SPAN>punished by
death. Thieves included those who made purchases from minors or
slaves without the sanction of elders or trustees. Sometimes the
accused was given the alternative of paying a fine, which might
exceed by ten or even thirty fold the value of the article or
animal he had appropriated. It was imperative that lost property
should be restored. If the owner of an article of which he had
been wrongfully deprived found it in possession of a man who
declared that he had purchased it from another, evidence was
taken in court. When it happened that the seller was proved to
have been the thief, the capital penalty was imposed. On the
other hand, the alleged purchaser was dealt with in like manner
if he failed to prove his case. Compensation for property stolen
by a brigand was paid by the temple, and the heirs of a man slain
by a brigand within the city had to be compensated by the local
authority.</p>
<SPAN name="id2531547" name="id2531547"></SPAN>
<p class="title"><b>Figure X.1. THE BABYLONIAN MARRIAGE
MARKET</b></p>
<blockquote class="blockquote">
<p><span class="emphasis"><em>From the Painting by Edwin Long,
R.d., in the Royal Holloway College</em></span></p>
</blockquote>
<ANTIMG alt="" src="img/22.jpg" />
<p>Of special interest are the laws which relate to the position
of women. In this connection reference may first be made to the
marriage-by-auction custom, which Herodotus described as follows:
"Once a year in each village the maidens of age to marry were
collected all together into one place, while the men stood round
them in a circle. Then a herald called up the damsels one by one,
and offered them for sale. He began with the most beautiful. When
she was sold for no small sum of money, he offered for sale the
one who came next to her in beauty. All of them were sold to be
wives. The richest of the Babylonians who wished to wed bid
against each other for the loveliest maidens, while the humbler
wife-seekers, who were indifferent about beauty, took the more
homely damsels with marriage portions. For the custom was that
when the herald had gone through the whole number of the
beautiful <SPAN name="page.anchor.225" name=
"page.anchor.225"></SPAN>damsels, he should then call up the
ugliest--a cripple, if there chanced to be one--and offer her to
the men, asking who would agree to take her with the smallest
marriage portion. And the man who offered to take the smallest
sum had her assigned to him. The marriage portions were furnished
by the money paid for the beautiful damsels, and thus the fairer
maidens portioned out the uglier. No one was allowed to give his
daughter in marriage to the man of his choice, nor might anyone
carry away the damsel whom he had purchased without finding bail
really and truly to make her his wife; if, however, it turned out
that they did not agree, the money might be paid back. All who
liked might come, even from distant villages, and bid for the
women."<span class="sub">[<SPAN name="fnrex1268" href=
"#ftn.fnrex1268" name="fnrex1268">268</SPAN>]</span></p>
<p>This custom is mentioned by other writers, but it is
impossible to ascertain at what period it became prevalent in
Babylonia and by whom it was introduced. Herodotus understood
that it obtained also in "the Illyrian tribe of the Eneti", which
was reputed to have entered Italy with Antenor after the fall of
Troy, and has been identified with the Venetians of later times.
But the ethnic clue thus afforded is exceedingly vague. There is
no direct reference to the custom in the Hammurabi Code, which
reveals a curious blending of the principles of "Father right"
and "Mother right". A girl was subject to her father's will; he
could dispose of her as he thought best, and she always remained
a member of his family; after marriage she was known as the
daughter of so and so rather than the wife of so and so. But
marriage brought her freedom and the rights of citizenship. The
power vested in her father was never transferred to her
husband.</p>
<p>A father had the right to select a suitable spouse for <SPAN id=
"page.anchor.226" name="page.anchor.226"></SPAN>his daughter, and
she could not marry without his consent. That this law did not
prevent "love matches" is made evident by the fact that provision
was made in the Code for the marriage of a free woman with a male
slave, part of whose estate in the event of his wife's death
could be claimed by his master.</p>
<p>When a betrothal was arranged, the father fixed the "bride
price", which was paid over before the contract could be
concluded, and he also provided a dowry. The amount of the "bride
price" might, however, be refunded to the young couple to give
them a start in life. If, during the interval between betrothal
and marriage, the man "looked upon another woman", and said to
his father-in-law, "I will not marry your daughter", he forfeited
the "bride price" for breach of promise of marriage.</p>
<p>A girl might also obtain a limited degree of freedom by taking
vows of celibacy and becoming one of the vestal virgins, or nuns,
who were attached to the temple of the sun god. She did not,
however, live a life of entire seclusion. If she received her due
proportion of her father's estate, she could make business
investments within certain limits. She was not, for instance,
allowed to own a wineshop, and if she even entered one she was
burned at the stake. Once she took these vows she had to observe
them until the end of her days. If she married, as she might do
to obtain the legal status of a married woman and enjoy the
privileges of that position, she denied her husband conjugal
rites, but provided him with a concubine who might bear him
children, as Sarah did to Abraham. These nuns must not be
confused with the unmoral women who were associated with the
temples of Ishtar and other love goddesses of shady repute.</p>
<p>The freedom secured by a married woman had its <SPAN id=
"page.anchor.227" name="page.anchor.227"></SPAN>legal limitations.
If she became a widow, for instance, she could not remarry
without the consent of a judge, to whom she was expected to show
good cause for the step she proposed to take. Punishments for
breaches of the marriage law were severe. Adultery was a capital
crime; the guilty parties were bound together and thrown into the
river. If it happened, however, that the wife of a prisoner went
to reside with another man on account of poverty, she was
acquitted and allowed to return to her husband after his release.
In cases where no plea of poverty could be urged the erring women
were drowned. The wife of a soldier who had been taken prisoner
by an enemy was entitled to a third part of her husband's estate
if her son was a minor, the remainder was held in trust. The
husband could enter into possession of all his property again if
he happened to return home.</p>
<p>Divorce was easily obtained. A husband might send his wife
away either because she was childless or because he fell in love
with another woman. Incompatibility of temperament was also
recognized as sufficient reason for separation. A woman might
hate her husband and wish to leave him. "If", the Code sets
forth, "she is careful and is without blame, and is neglected by
her husband who has deserted her", she can claim release from the
marriage contract. But if she is found to have another lover, and
is guilty of neglecting her duties, she is liable to be put to
death.</p>
<p>A married woman possessed her own property. Indeed, the value
of her marriage dowry was always vested in her. When, therefore,
she divorced her husband, or was divorced by him, she was
entitled to have her dowry refunded and to return to her father's
house. Apparently she could claim maintenance from her
father.</p>
<p><SPAN name="page.anchor.228" name="page.anchor.228"></SPAN>A woman
could have only one husband, but a man could have more than one
wife. He might marry a secondary wife, or concubine, because he
was without offspring, but "the concubine", the Code lays down,
"shall not rank with the wife". Another reason for second
marriage recognized by law was a wife's state of health. In such
circumstances a man could not divorce his sickly wife. He had to
support her in his house as long as she lived.</p>
<p>Children were the heirs of their parents, but if a man during
his lifetime gifted his property to his wife, and confirmed it on
"a sealed tablet", the children could have no claim, and the
widow was entitled to leave her estate to those of her children
she preferred; but she could not will any portion of it to her
brothers. In ordinary cases the children of a first marriage
shared equally the estate of a father with those of a second
marriage. If a slave bore children to her employer, their right
to inheritance depended on whether or not the father had
recognized them as his offspring during his lifetime. A father
might legally disown his son if the young man was guilty of
criminal practices.</p>
<p>The legal rights of a vestal virgin were set forth in detail.
If she had received no dowry from her father when she took vows
of celibacy, she could claim after his death one-third of the
portion of a son. She could will her estate to anyone she
favoured, but if she died intestate her brothers were her heirs.
When, however, her estate consisted of fields or gardens allotted
to her by her father, she could not disinherit her legal heirs.
The fields or gardens might be worked during her lifetime by her
brothers if they paid rent, or she might employ a manager on the
"share system".</p>
<p>Vestal virgins and married women were protected <SPAN id=
"page.anchor.229" name="page.anchor.229"></SPAN>against the
slanderer. Any man who "pointed the finger" against them
unjustifiably was charged with the offence before a judge, who
could sentence him to have his forehead branded. It was not
difficult, therefore, in ancient Babylonia to discover the men
who made malicious and unfounded statements regarding an innocent
woman. Assaults on women were punished according to the victim's
rank; even slaves were protected.</p>
<p>Women appear to have monopolized the drink traffic. At any
rate, there is no reference to male wine sellers. A female
publican had to conduct her business honestly, and was bound to
accept a legal tender. If she refused corn and demanded silver,
when the value of the silver by "grand weight" was below the
price of corn, she was prosecuted and punished by being thrown
into the water. Perhaps she was simply ducked. As much may be
inferred from the fact that when she was found guilty of allowing
rebels to meet in her house, she was put to death.</p>
<p>The land laws were strict and exacting. A tenant could be
penalized for not cultivating his holding properly. The rent paid
was a proportion of the crop, but the proportion could be fixed
according to the average yield of a district, so that a careless
or inefficient tenant had to bear the brunt of his neglect or
want of skill. The punishment for allowing a field to lie fallow
was to make a man hoe and sow it and then hand it over to his
landlord, and this applied even to a man who leased unreclaimed
land which he had contracted to cultivate. Damage done to fields
by floods after the rent was paid was borne by the cultivator;
but if it occurred before the corn was reaped the landlord's
share was calculated in proportion to the amount of the yield
which was recovered. Allowance was also made for poor harvests,
when the <SPAN name="page.anchor.230" name=
"page.anchor.230"></SPAN>shortage was not due to the neglect of the
tenant, but to other causes, and no interest was paid for
borrowed money even if the farm suffered from the depredations of
the tempest god; the moneylender had to share risks with
borrowers. Tenants who neglected their dykes, however, were not
exempted from their legal liabilities, and their whole estates
could be sold to reimburse their creditors.</p>
<p>The industrious were protected against the careless. Men who
were negligent about controlling the water supply, and caused
floods by opening irrigation ditches which damaged the crops of
their neighbours, had to pay for the losses sustained, the
damages being estimated according to the average yield of a
district. A tenant who allowed his sheep to stray on to a
neighbour's pasture had to pay a heavy fine in corn at the
harvest season, much in excess of the value of the grass cropped
by his sheep. Gardeners were similarly subject to strict laws.
All business contracts had to be conducted according to the
provisions of the Code, and in every case it was necessary that a
proper record should be made on clay tablets. As a rule a
dishonest tenant or trader had to pay sixfold the value of the
sum under dispute if the judge decided in court against his
claim.</p>
<p>The law of an eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth was
strictly observed in Babylonia. A freeman who destroyed an eye of
a freeman had one of his own destroyed; if he broke a bone, he
had a bone broken. Fines were imposed, however, when a slave was
injured. For striking a gentleman, a commoner received sixty
lashes, and the son who smote his father had his hands cut off. A
slave might have his ears cut off for assaulting his master's
son.</p>
<p>Doctors must have found their profession an extremely <SPAN id=
"page.anchor.231" name="page.anchor.231"></SPAN>risky one. No
allowance was made for what is nowadays known as a "professional
error". A doctor's hands were cut off if he opened a wound with a
metal knife and his patient afterwards died, or if a man lost his
eye as the result of an operation. A slave who died under a
doctor's hands had to be replaced by a slave, and if a slave lost
his eye, the doctor had to pay half the man's market value to the
owner. Professional fees were fixed according to a patient's
rank. Gentlemen had to pay five shekels of silver to a doctor who
set a bone or restored diseased flesh, commoners three shekels,
and masters for their slaves two shekels. There was also a scale
of fees for treating domesticated animals, and it was not
over-generous. An unfortunate surgeon who undertook to treat an
ox or ass suffering from a severe wound had to pay a quarter of
its price to its owner if it happened to die. A shrewd farmer who
was threatened with the loss of an animal must have been
extremely anxious to engage the services of a surgeon.</p>
<p>It is not surprising, after reviewing this part of the
Hammurabi Code, to find Herodotus stating bluntly that the
Babylonians had no physicians. "When a man is ill", he wrote,
"they lay him in the public square, and the passers-by come up to
him, and if they have ever had his disease themselves, or have
known anyone who has suffered from it, they give him advice,
recommending him to do whatever they found good in their own
case, or in the case known to them; and no one is allowed to pass
the sick man in silence without asking him what his ailment is."
One might imagine that Hammurabi had legislated the medical
profession out of existence, were it not that letters have been
found in the Assyrian library of Ashur-banipal which indicate
that skilled physicians were held in high repute. It is
improbable, however, <SPAN name="page.anchor.232" name=
"page.anchor.232"></SPAN>that they were numerous. The risks they ran
in Babylonia may account for their ultimate disappearance in that
country.</p>
<p>No doubt patients received some benefit from exposure in the
streets in the sunlight and fresh air, and perhaps, too, from
some of the old wives' remedies which were gratuitously
prescribed by passers-by. In Egypt, where certain of the folk
cures were recorded on papyri, quite effective treatment was
occasionally given, although the "medicines" were exceedingly
repugnant as a rule; ammonia, for instance, was taken with the
organic substances found in farmyards. Elsewhere some wonderful
instances of excellent folk cures have come to light, especially
among isolated peoples, who have received them interwoven in
their immemorial traditions. A medical man who has investigated
this interesting subject in the Scottish Highlands has shown that
"the simple observation of the people was the starting-point of
our fuller knowledge, however complete we may esteem it to be".
For dropsy and heart troubles, foxglove, broom tops, and juniper
berries, which have reputations "as old as the hills", are "the
most reliable medicines in our scientific armoury at the present
time". These discoveries of the ancient folks have been "merely
elaborated in later days". Ancient cures for indigestion are
still in use. "Tar water, which was a remedy for chest troubles,
especially for those of a consumptive nature, has endless
imitations in our day"; it was also "the favourite remedy for
skin diseases". No doubt the present inhabitants of Babylonia,
who utilize bitumen as a germicide, are perpetuating an ancient
folk custom.</p>
<p>This medical man who is being quoted adds: "The whole matter
may be summed up, that we owe infinitely more to the simple
nature study of our people in the <SPAN name="page.anchor.233" name=
"page.anchor.233"></SPAN>great affair of health than we owe to all
the later science."<span class="sub">[<SPAN name="fnrex1269" href=
"#ftn.fnrex1269" name="fnrex1269">269</SPAN>]</span></p>
<p>Herodotus, commenting on the custom of patients taking a
census of folk cures in the streets, said it was one of the
wisest institutions of the Babylonian people. It is to be
regretted that he did not enter into details regarding the
remedies which were in greatest favour in his day. His data would
have been useful for comparative purposes.</p>
<p>So far as can be gathered from the clay tablets, faith cures
were not unknown, and there was a good deal of quackery. If
surgery declined, as a result of the severe restrictions which
hampered progress in an honourable profession, magic flourished
like tropical fungi. Indeed, the worker of spells was held in
high repute, and his operations were in most cases allowed free
play. There are only two paragraphs in the Hammurabi Code which
deal with magical practices. It is set forth that if one man
cursed another and the curse could not be justified, the
perpetrator of it must suffer the death penalty. Provision was
also made for discovering whether a spell had been legally
imposed or not. The victim was expected to plunge himself in a
holy river. If the river carried him away it was held as proved
that he deserved his punishment, and "the layer of the spell" was
given possession of the victim's house. A man who could swim was
deemed to be innocent; he claimed the residence of "the layer of
the spell", who was promptly put to death. With this interesting
glimpse of ancient superstition the famous Code opens, and then
strikes a modern note by detailing the punishments for perjury
and the unjust administration of law in the courts.</p>
<p><SPAN name="page.anchor.234" name="page.anchor.234"></SPAN>The poor
sufferers who gathered at street corners in Babylon to make mute
appeal for cures believed that they were possessed by evil
spirits. Germs of disease were depicted by lively imaginations as
invisible demons, who derived nourishment from the human body.
When a patient was wasted with disease, growing thinner and
weaker and more bloodless day by day, it was believed that a
merciless vampire was sucking his veins and devouring his flesh.
It had therefore to be expelled by performing a magical ceremony
and repeating a magical formula. The demon was either driven or
enticed away.</p>
<p>A magician had to decide in the first place what particular
demon was working evil. He then compelled its attention and
obedience by detailing its attributes and methods of attack, and
perhaps by naming it. Thereafter he suggested how it should next
act by releasing a raven, so that it might soar towards the
clouds like that bird, or by offering up a sacrifice which it
received for nourishment and as compensation. Another popular
method was to fashion a waxen figure of the patient and prevail
upon the disease demon to enter it. The figure was then carried
away to be thrown in the river or burned in a fire.</p>
<p>Occasionally a quite effective cure was included in the
ceremony. As much is suggested by the magical treatment of
toothache. First of all the magician identified the toothache
demon as "the worm". Then he recited its history, which is as
follows: After Anu created the heavens, the heavens created the
earth, the earth created the rivers, the rivers created the
canals, the canals created the marshes, and last of all the
marshes created "the worm".</p>
<p>This display of knowledge compelled the worm to listen, and no
doubt the patient was able to indicate to <SPAN name="page.anchor.235"
name="page.anchor.235"></SPAN>what degree it gave evidence of its
agitated mind. The magician continued:</p>
<blockquote class="blockquote">
<tt>Came the worm and wept before
Shamash,</tt>
<tt>Before Ea came her tears:</tt>
<tt>"What wilt thou give me for my
food,</tt>
<tt>What wilt thou give me to
devour?"</tt></blockquote><p>One of the deities answered: "I will give thee dried bones and
scented ... wood"; but the hungry worm protested:</p>
<blockquote class="blockquote">
<tt>"Nay, what are these dried bones of
thine to me?</tt>
<tt>Let me drink among the
teeth;</tt>
<tt>And set me on the gums</tt>
<tt>That I may devour the blood of the
teeth,</tt>
<tt>And of their gums destroy their
strength--</tt>
<tt>Then shall I hold the bolt of the
door."</tt></blockquote><p>The magician provided food for "the worm", and the following
is his recipe: "Mix beer, the plant sa-kil-bir, and oil together;
put it on the tooth and repeat Incantation." No doubt this
mixture soothed the pain, and the sufferer must have smiled
gladly when the magician finished his incantation by
exclaiming:</p>
<blockquote class="blockquote">
<tt>"So must thou say this, O
Worm!</tt>
<tt>May Ea smite thee with the might of his
fist."<span class="sub">[<SPAN name="fnrex1270" href=
"#ftn.fnrex1270" name="fnrex1270">270</SPAN>]</span></tt></blockquote><p>Headaches were no doubt much relieved when damp cloths were
wrapped round a patient's head and scented wood was burned beside
him, while the magician, in whom so much faith was reposed,
droned out a mystical incantation. The curative water was drawn
from the confluence of two streams and was sprinkled with much
ceremony. In like manner the evil-eye curers, who still <SPAN id=
"page.anchor.236" name="page.anchor.236"></SPAN>operate in isolated
districts in these islands, draw water from under bridges "over
which the dead and the living pass",<span class="sub">[<SPAN name=
"fnrex1271" href="#ftn.fnrex1271" name="fnrex1271">271</SPAN>]</span>
and mutter charms and lustrate victims.</p>
<p>Headaches were much dreaded by the Babylonians. They were
usually the first symptoms of fevers, and the demons who caused
them were supposed to be bloodthirsty and exceedingly awesome.
According to the charms, these invisible enemies of man were of
the brood of Nergal. No house could be protected against them.
They entered through keyholes and chinks of doors and windows;
they crept like serpents and stank like mice; they had lolling
tongues like hungry dogs.</p>
<p>Magicians baffled the demons by providing a charm. If a
patient "touched iron"--meteoric iron, which was the "metal of
heaven"--relief could be obtained. Or, perhaps, the sacred water
would dispel the evil one; as the drops trickled from the
patient's face, so would the fever spirit trickle away. When a
pig was offered up in sacrifice as a substitute for a patient,
the wicked spirit was commanded to depart and allow a kindly
spirit to take its place--an indication that the Babylonians,
like the Germanic peoples, believed that they were guarded by
spirits who brought good luck.</p>
<p>The numerous incantations which were inscribed on clay tablets
and treasured in libraries, do not throw much light on the
progress of medical knowledge, for the genuine folk cures were
regarded as of secondary importance, and were not as a rule
recorded. But these metrical compositions are of special
interest, in so far as they indicate how poetry originated and
achieved widespread popularity among ancient peoples. Like the
religious dance, the earliest poems were used for magical
purposes. They were composed in the first place by men <SPAN id=
"page.anchor.237" name="page.anchor.237"></SPAN>and women who were
supposed to be inspired in the literal sense; that is, possessed
by spirits. Primitive man associated "spirit" with "breath",
which was the "air of life", and identical with wind. The
poetical magician drew in a "spirit", and thus received
inspiration, as he stood on some sacred spot on the mountain
summit, amidst forest solitudes, beside a' whispering stream, or
on the sounding shore. As Burns has sung:</p>
<blockquote class="blockquote">
<tt>The muse, nae poet ever fand
her,</tt>
<tt>Till by himsel' he learn'd to
wander,</tt>
<tt>Adown some trottin' burn's
meander,</tt>
<tt> An' no think lang:</tt>
<tt>O sweet to stray, an' pensive
ponder</tt>
<tt> A heart-felt sang!</tt></blockquote><p>Or, perhaps, the bard received inspiration by drinking magic
water from the fountain called Hippocrene, or the skaldic mead
which dripped from the moon.</p>
<p>The ancient poet did not sing for the mere love of singing: he
knew nothing about "Art for Art's sake". His object in singing
appears to have been intensely practical. The world was inhabited
by countless hordes of spirits, which were believed to be ever
exercising themselves to influence mankind. The spirits caused
suffering; they slew victims; they brought misfortune; they were
also the source of good or "luck". Man regarded spirits
emotionally; he conjured them with emotion; he warded off their
attacks with emotion; and his emotions were given rhythmical
expression by means of metrical magical charms.</p>
<p>Poetic imagery had originally a magical significance; if the
ocean was compared to a dragon, it was because it was supposed to
be inhabited by a storm-causing dragon; the wind whispered
because a spirit whispered in it. <SPAN name="page.anchor.238" name=
"page.anchor.238"></SPAN>Love lyrics were charms to compel the love
god to wound or possess a maiden's heart--to fill it, as an
Indian charm sets forth, with "the yearning of the Apsaras
(fairies)"; satires conjured up evil spirits to injure a victim;
and heroic narratives chanted at graves were statements made to
the god of battle, so that he might award the mighty dead by
transporting him to the Valhal of Odin or Swarga of Indra.</p>
<p>Similarly, music had magical origin as an imitation of the
voices of spirits--of the piping birds who were "Fates", of the
wind high and low, of the thunder roll, of the bellowing sea. So
the god Pan piped on his reed bird-like notes, Indra blew his
thunder horn, Thor used his hammer like a drumstick, Neptune
imitated on his "wreathed horn" the voice of the deep, the Celtic
oak god Dagda twanged his windy wooden harp, and Angus, the
Celtic god of spring and love, came through budding forest ways
with a silvern harp which had strings of gold, echoing the
tuneful birds, the purling streams, the whispering winds, and the
rustling of scented fir and blossoming thorn.</p>
<p>Modern-day poets and singers, who voice their moods and cast
the spell of their moods over readers and audiences, are the
representatives of ancient magicians who believed that moods were
caused by the spirits which possessed them--the rhythmical wind
spirits, those harpers of the forest and songsters of ocean.</p>
<p>The following quotations from Mr. R.C. Thompson's translations
of Babylonian charms will serve to illustrate their poetic
qualities:--</p>
<blockquote class="blockquote">
<tt> Fever like frost hath come upon the
land.</tt>
<tt> </tt>
<tt>Fever hath blown upon the man as the
wind blast,</tt>
<tt>It hath smitten the man and humbled his
pride.</tt>
<tt> </tt>
<tt><SPAN name="page.anchor.239" name=
"page.anchor.239"></SPAN>Headache lieth like the stars of heaven in
the desert and hath no praise;</tt>
<tt>Pain in the head and shivering like a
scudding cloud turn unto the form of man.</tt>
<tt> </tt>
<tt> Headache whose course like the
dread windstorm none knoweth.</tt>
<tt> </tt>
<tt> Headache roareth over the desert,
blowing like the wind,</tt>
<tt> Flashing like lightning, it is
loosed above and below,</tt>
<tt> It cutteth off him, who feareth not
his god, like a reed ...</tt>
<tt> From amid mountains it hath
descended upon the land.</tt>
<tt> </tt>
<tt> Headache ... a rushing
hag-demon,</tt>
<tt> Granting no rest, nor giving
kindly sleep ...</tt>
<tt> Whose shape is as the
whirlwind.</tt>
<tt> Its appearance is as the
darkening heavens,</tt>
<tt> And its face as the deep shadow
of the forest.</tt>
<tt> </tt>
<tt> Sickness ... breaking the fingers
as a rope of wind ...</tt>
<tt> Flashing like a heavenly star, it
cometh like the dew.</tt></blockquote><p>These early poets had no canons of Art, and there were no
critics to disturb their meditations. Many singers had to sing
and die ere a critic could find much to say. In ancient times,
therefore, poets had their Golden Age-- they were a law unto
themselves. Even the "minors" were influential members of
society.</p>
<br/>
<hr width="100" align="left" />
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex1264" href="#fnrex1264" id=
"ftn.fnrex1264">264</SPAN>]</span> <span class=
"emphasis"><em>Herodotus</em></span>, book i, 179 (Rawlinson's
translation).
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex1265" href="#fnrex1265" id=
"ftn.fnrex1265">265</SPAN>]</span> <span class=
"emphasis"><em>Isaiah</em></span>, xlv, 1, 2.
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex1266" href="#fnrex1266" id=
"ftn.fnrex1266">266</SPAN>]</span> <span class=
"emphasis"><em>Herodotus</em></span>, book i, 181-3 (Rawlinson's
translation).
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex1267" href="#fnrex1267" id=
"ftn.fnrex1267">267</SPAN>]</span> <span class=
"emphasis"><em>History of Sumer and Akkad</em></span>, L.W. King,
p. 37.
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex1268" href="#fnrex1268" id=
"ftn.fnrex1268">268</SPAN>]</span> <span class=
"emphasis"><em>Herodotus</em></span>, book i, 196 (Rawlinson's
translation).
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex1269" href="#fnrex1269" id=
"ftn.fnrex1269">269</SPAN>]</span> <span class="emphasis"><em>Home
Life of the Highlanders</em></span> (Dr. Cameron Gillies on
<span class="emphasis"><em>Medical Knowledge</em></span>,) pp. 85
<span class="emphasis"><em>et seq.</em></span> Glasgow,
1911.
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex1270" href="#fnrex1270" id=
"ftn.fnrex1270">270</SPAN>]</span> Translations by R.C. Thompson in
<span class="emphasis"><em>The Devils and Spirits of
Babylon</em></span>, vol. i, pp. lxiii <span class=
"emphasis"><em>et seq</em></span>.
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex1271" href="#fnrex1271" id=
"ftn.fnrex1271">271</SPAN>]</span> Bridges which lead to
graveyards.
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />