<h2 class="title"><SPAN name="id2533567" name= "id2533567"></SPAN>Chapter XII. Rise of the Hittites, Mitannians, Kassites, Hyksos, and Assyrians</h2>
<p class="title"><b>Abstract</b></p>
<p>The War God of Mountaineers--Antiquity of Hittite
Civilization--Prehistoric Movements of "Broad Heads"--Evidence of
Babylon and Egypt--Hittites and Mongolians--Biblical References
to Hittites in Canaan--Jacob's Mother and her
Daughters-in-law--Great Father and Great Mother Cults--History in
Mythology--The Kingdom of Mitanni--Its Aryan Aristocracy--The
Hyksos Problem--The Horse in Warfare--Hittites and
Mitannians--Kassites and Mitannians--Hyksos Empire in
Asia--Kassites overthrow Sealand Dynasty--Egyptian Campaigns in
Syria--Assyria in the Making--Ethnics of Genesis--Nimrod as
Merodach--Early Conquerors of Assyria--Mitannian
Overlords--Tell-el-Amarna Letters--Fall of Mitanni--Rise of
Hittite and Assyrian Empires--Egypt in Eclipse--Assyrian and
Babylonian Rivalries.</p>
<p><SPAN name="page.anchor.260" name="page.anchor.260"></SPAN> When the
Hammurabi Dynasty, like the Twelfth Dynasty of Egypt, is found to
be suffering languid decline, the gaps in the dulled historical
records are filled with the echoes of the thunder god, whose
hammer beating resounds among the northern mountains. As this
deity comes each year in Western Asia when vegetation has
withered and after fruits have dropped from trees, bringing
tempests and black rainclouds to issue in a new season of growth
and fresh activity, so he descended from the hills in the second
millennium before the Christian era as the battle lord of
invaders and the stormy herald of a new age which was to dawn
upon the ancient world.</p>
<p>He was the war god of the Hittites as well as of the <SPAN id=
"page.anchor.261" name="page.anchor.261"></SPAN>northern Amorites,
the Mitannians, and the Kassites; and he led the Aryans from the
Iranian steppes towards the verdurous valley of the Punjab. His
worshippers engraved his image with grateful hands on the
beetling cliffs of Cappadocian chasms in Asia Minor, where his
sway was steadfast and pre-eminent for long centuries. In one
locality he appears mounted on a bull wearing a fringed and
belted tunic with short sleeves, a conical helmet, and upturned
shoes, while he grasps in one hand the lightning symbol, and in
the other a triangular bow resting on his right shoulder. In
another locality he is the bringer of grapes and barley sheaves.
But his most familiar form is the bearded and thick-set
mountaineer, armed with a ponderous thunder hammer, a flashing
trident, and a long two-edged sword with a hemispherical knob on
the hilt, which dangles from his belt, while an antelope or goat
wearing a pointed tiara prances beside him. This deity is
identical with bluff, impetuous Thor of northern Europe, Indra of
the Himalayas, Tarku of Phrygia, and Teshup or Teshub of Armenia
and northern Mesopotamia, Sandan, the Hercules of Cilicia, Adad
or Hadad of Amurru and Assyria, and Ramman, who at an early
period penetrated Akkad and Sumer in various forms. His Hittite
name is uncertain, but in the time of Rameses II he was
identified with Sutekh (Set). He passed into southern Europe as
Zeus, and became "the lord" of the deities of the Aegean and
Crete.</p>
<p>The Hittites who entered Babylon about 1800 B.C., and
overthrew the last king of the Hammurabi Dynasty, may have been
plundering raiders, like the European Gauls of a later age, or a
well-organized force of a strong, consolidated power, which
endured for a period of uncertain duration. They were probably
the latter, for although they carried off Merodach and
Zerpanitu<span class='phonetic'>m</span>, these <SPAN id=
"page.anchor.262" name="page.anchor.262"></SPAN>idols were not
thrust into the melting pot, but retained apparently for
political reasons.</p>
<p>These early Hittites are "a people of the mist". More than
once in ancient history casual reference is made to them; but on
most of these occasions they soon vanish suddenly behind their
northern mountains. The explanation appears to be that at various
periods great leaders arose who were able to weld together the
various tribes, and make their presence felt in Western Asia. But
when once the organization broke down, either on account of
internal rivalries or the influence of an outside power, they
lapsed back again into a state of political insignificance in the
affairs of the ancient world. It is possible that about 1800 B.C.
the Hittite confederacy was controlled by an ambitious king who
had dreams of a great empire, and was accordingly pursuing a
career of conquest.</p>
<p>Judging from what we know of the northern worshippers of the
hammer god in later times, it would appear that when they were
referred to as the Hatti or Khatti, the tribe of that name was
the dominating power in Asia Minor and north Syria. The Hatti are
usually identified with the broad-headed mountaineers of Alpine
or Armenoid type--the ancestors of the modern Armenians. Their
ancient capital was at Boghaz-Köi, the site of Pteria, which
was destroyed, according to the Greeks, by Croesus, the last King
of Lydia, in the sixth century B.C. It was strongly situated in
an excellent pastoral district on the high, breezy plateau of
Cappadocia, surrounded by high mountains, and approached through
narrow river gorges, which in winter were blocked with snow.</p>
<p>Hittite civilization was of great antiquity. Excavations which
have been conducted at an undisturbed artificial <SPAN id=
"page.anchor.263" name="page.anchor.263"></SPAN>mound at Sakje-Geuzi
have revealed evidences of a continuous culture which began to
flourish before 3000 B.C.<span class="sub">[<SPAN name="fnrex1282"
href="#ftn.fnrex1282" name="fnrex1282">282</SPAN>]</span> In one of
the lower layers occurred that particular type of Neolithic
yellow-painted pottery, with black geometric designs, which
resembles other specimens of painted fabrics found in Turkestan
by the Pumpelly expedition; in Susa, the capital of Elam, and its
vicinity, by De Morgan; in the Balkan peninsula by Schliemann; in
a First Dynasty tomb at Abydos in Egypt by Petrie; and in the
late Neolithic and early Bronze Age (Minoan) strata of Crete by
Evans. It may be that these interesting relics were connected
with the prehistoric drift westward of the broad-headed pastoral
peoples who ultimately formed the Hittite military
aristocracy.</p>
<p>According to Professor Elliot Smith, broad-headed aliens from
Asia Minor first reached Egypt at the dawn of history. There they
blended with the indigenous tribes of the Mediterranean or Brown
Race. A mesocephalic skull then became common. It is referred to
as the Giza type, and has been traced by Professor Elliot Smith
from Egypt to the Punjab, but not farther into India.<span class=
"sub">[<SPAN name="fnrex1283" href="#ftn.fnrex1283" id=
"fnrex1283">283</SPAN>]</span></p>
<p>During the early dynasties this skull with alien traits was
confined chiefly to the Delta region and the vicinity of Memphis,
the city of the pyramid builders. It is not improbable that the
Memphite god Ptah may have been introduced into Egypt by the
invading broad heads. This deity is a world artisan like Indra,
and is similarly associated with dwarfish artisans; he hammers
out the copper sky, and therefore links with the various thunder
gods--Tarku, Teshup, Adad, Ramman, &c, of the Asian
mountaineers. Thunderstorms were of too rare occurrence in Egypt
to be connected with the food supply, <SPAN name="page.anchor.264"
name="page.anchor.264"></SPAN>which has always depended on the river
Nile. Ptah's purely Egyptian characteristics appear to have been
acquired after fusion with Osiris-Seb, the Nilotic gods of
inundation, earth, and vegetation. The ancient god Set (Sutekh),
who became a demon, and was ultimately re-exalted as a great
deity during the Nineteenth Dynasty, may also have had some
connection with the prehistoric Hatti.</p>
<p>Professor Elliot Smith, who has found alien traits in the
mummies of the Rameses kings, is convinced that the broad-headed
folks who entered Europe by way of Asia Minor, and Egypt through
the Delta, at the close of the Neolithic Age, represent "two
streams of the same Asiatic folk".<span class="sub">[<SPAN name=
"fnrex1284" href="#ftn.fnrex1284" name="fnrex1284">284</SPAN>]</span>
The opinion of such an authority cannot be lightly set aside.</p>
<p>The earliest Egyptian reference to the Kheta, as the Hittites
were called, was made in the reign of the first Amenemhet of the
Twelfth Dynasty, who began to reign about 2000 B.C. Some
authorities, including Maspero,<span class="sub">[<SPAN name=
"fnrex1285" href="#ftn.fnrex1285" name="fnrex1285">285</SPAN>]</span>
are of opinion that the allusion to the Hatti which is found in
the Babylonian <span class="emphasis"><em>Book of
Omens</em></span> belongs to the earlier age of Sargon of Akkad
and Naram-Sin, but Sayce favours the age of Hammurabi. Others
would connect the Gutium, or men of Kutu, with the Kheta or
Hatti. Sayce has expressed the opinion that the Biblical Tidal,
identified with Tudkhul or Tudhula, "king of nations", the ally
of Arioch, Amraphel, and Chedor-laomer, was a Hittite king, the
"nations" being the confederacy of Asia Minor tribes controlled
by the Hatti. "In the fragments of the Babylonian story of
Chedor-laomer published by Dr. Pinches", says Professor Sayce,
"the name of Tid^{c}al is written Tudkhul, and he is described as
King of the <span class="emphasis"><em>Umman Manda</em></span>,
or Nations of the North, <SPAN name="page.anchor.265" name=
"page.anchor.265"></SPAN>of which the Hebrew <span class=
"emphasis"><em>Goyyim</em></span> is a literal translation. Now
the name is Hittite. In the account of the campaign of Rameses II
against the Hittites it appears as Tid^{c}al, and one of the
Hittite kings of Boghaz-Köi bears the same name, which is
written as Dud-khaliya in cuneiform.<span class="sub">[<SPAN name=
"fnrex1286" href="#ftn.fnrex1286" id=
"fnrex1286">286</SPAN>]</span></p>
<p>One of the racial types among the Hittites wore pigtails.
These head adornments appear on figures in certain Cappadocian
sculptures and on Hittite warriors in the pictorial records of a
north Syrian campaign of Rameses II at Thebes. It is suggestive,
therefore, to find that on the stele of Naram-Sin of Akkad, the
mountaineers who are conquered by that battle lord wear pigtails
also. Their split robes are unlike the short fringed tunics of
the Hittite gods, but resemble the long split mantles worn over
their tunics by high dignitaries like King Tarku-dimme, who
figures on a famous silver boss of an ancient Hittite dagger.
Naram-Sin inherited the Empire of Sargon of Akkad, which extended
to the Mediterranean Sea. If his enemies were not natives of
Cappadocia, they may have been the congeners of the Hittite
pigtailed type in another wooded and mountainous country.</p>
<p>It has been suggested that these wearers of pigtails were
Mongolians. But although high cheek bones and oblique eyes
occurred in ancient times, and still occur, in parts of Asia
Minor, suggesting occasional Mongolian admixture with Ural-Altaic
broad heads, the Hittite pigtailed warriors must not be confused
with the true small-nosed Mongols of north-eastern Asia. The
Egyptian sculptors depicted them with long and prominent noses,
which emphasize their strong Armenoid affinities.</p>
<p>Other tribes in the Hittite confederacy included the <SPAN id=
"page.anchor.266" name="page.anchor.266"></SPAN>representatives of
the earliest settlers from North Africa of Mediterranean racial
stock. These have been identified with the Canaanites, and
especially the agriculturists among them, for the Palestinian
Hittites are also referred to as Canaanites in the Bible, and in
one particular connection under circumstances which afford an
interesting glimpse of domestic life in those far-off times. When
Esau, Isaac's eldest son, was forty years of age, "he took to
wife Judith the daughter of Beeri the Hittite, and Bashemath the
daughter of Elon the Hittite"<span class="sub">[<SPAN name=
"fnrex1287" href="#ftn.fnrex1287" name="fnrex1287">287</SPAN>]</span>.
Apparently the Hittite ladies considered themselves to be of
higher caste than the indigenous peoples and the settlers from
other countries, for when Ezekiel declared that the mother of
Jerusalem was a Hittite he said: "Thou art thy mother's daughter,
that lotheth her husband and her children."<span class=
"sub">[<SPAN name="fnrex1288" href="#ftn.fnrex1288" id=
"fnrex1288">288</SPAN>]</span> Esau's marriage was "a grief of mind
unto Isaac and to Rebekah".<span class="sub">[<SPAN href=
"#ftn.fnrex1287">287</SPAN>]</span> The Hebrew mother seems to have
entertained fears that her favourite son Jacob would fall a
victim to the allurements of other representatives of the same
stock as her superior and troublesome daughters-in-law, for she
said to Isaac: "I am weary of my life because of the daughters of
Heth; if Jacob take a wife of the daughters of Heth, such as
these which are of the daughters of the land, what good shall my
life do me?"<span class="sub">[<SPAN name="fnrex1289" href=
"#ftn.fnrex1289" name="fnrex1289">289</SPAN>]</span> Isaac sent for
Jacob, "and charged him, and said unto him, Thou shalt not take a
wife of the daughters of Canaan. Arise, go to Padan-aram, to the
house of Bethuel, thy mother's father; and take thee a wife from
thence of the daughters of Laban, thy mother's
brother."<span class="sub">[<SPAN name="fnrex1290" href=
"#ftn.fnrex1290" name="fnrex1290">290</SPAN>]</span> From these
quotations two obvious deductions may be drawn: the Hebrews
regarded the Hittites "of the land" as one with the Canaanites,
the stocks having probably <SPAN name="page.anchor.267" name=
"page.anchor.267"></SPAN>been so well fused, and the worried Rebekah
had the choosing of Jacob's wife or wives from among her own
relations in Mesopotamia who were of Sumerian stock and kindred
of Abraham.<span class="sub">[<SPAN name="fnrex1291" href=
"#ftn.fnrex1291" name="fnrex1291">291</SPAN>]</span> It is not
surprising to find traces of Sumerian pride among the descendants
of the evicted citizens of ancient Ur, especially when brought
into association with the pretentious Hittites.</p>
<p>Evidence of racial blending in Asia Minor is also afforded by
Hittite mythology. In the fertile agricultural valleys and round
the shores of that great Eur-Asian "land bridge" the indigenous
stock was also of the Mediterranean race, as Sergi and other
ethnologists have demonstrated. The Great Mother goddess was
worshipped from the earliest times, and she bore various local
names. At Comana in Pontus she was known to the Greeks as Ma, a
name which may have been as old as that of the Sumerian Mama (the
creatrix), or Mamitu<span class='phonetic'>m</span> (goddess of
destiny); in Armenia she was Anaitis; in Cilicia she was Ate
('Atheh of Tarsus); while in Phrygia she was best known as
Cybele, mother of Attis, who links with Ishtar as mother and wife
of Tammuz, Aphrodite as mother and wife of Adonis, and Isis as
mother and wife of Osiris. The Great Mother was in Phoenicia
called Astarte; she was a form of Ishtar, and identical with the
Biblical Ashtoreth. In the Syrian city of Hierapolis she bore the
name of Atargatis, which Meyer, with whom Frazer agrees,
considers to be the Greek rendering of the Aramaic
'Athar-'Atheh--the god 'Athar and the goddess 'Atheh. Like the
"bearded Aphrodite", Atargatis may have been regarded as a
bisexual deity. Some of the specialized mother goddesses, whose
outstanding attributes reflected the history and politics of the
states they represented, were imported into Egypt--the land of
<SPAN name="page.anchor.268" name="page.anchor.268"></SPAN>ancient mother
deities--during the Empire period, by the half-foreign Rameses
kings; these included the voluptuous Kadesh and the warlike
Anthat. In every district colonized by the early representatives
of the Mediterranean race, the goddess cult came into prominence,
and the gods and the people were reputed to be descendants of the
great Creatrix. This rule obtained as far distant as Ireland,
where the Danann folk and the Danann gods were the children of
the goddess Danu.</p>
<p>Among the Hatti proper--that is, the broad-headed military
aristocracy--the chief deity of the pantheon was the Great
Father, the creator, "the lord of Heaven", the Baal. As Sutekh,
Tarku, Adad, or Ramman, he was the god of thunder, rain,
fertility, and war, and he ultimately acquired solar attributes.
A famous rock sculpture at Boghaz-Köi depicts a mythological
scene which is believed to represent the Spring marriage of the
Great Father and the Great Mother, suggesting a local fusion of
beliefs which resulted from the union of tribes of the god cult
with tribes of the goddess cult. So long as the Hatti tribe
remained the predominant partner in the Hittite confederacy, the
supremacy was assured of the Great Father who symbolized their
sway. But when, in the process of time, the power of the Hatti
declined, their chief god "fell... from his predominant place in
the religion of the interior", writes Dr. Garstang. "But the
Great Mother lived on, being the goddess of the
land."<span class="sub">[<SPAN name="fnrex1292" href=
"#ftn.fnrex1292" name="fnrex1292">292</SPAN>]</span></p>
<p>In addition to the Hittite confederacy of Asia Minor and North
Syria, another great power arose in northern Mesopotamia. This
was the Mitanni Kingdom. Little is known regarding it, except
what is derived from indirect sources. Winckler believes that it
was first established <SPAN name="page.anchor.269" name=
"page.anchor.269"></SPAN>by early "waves" of Hatti people who
migrated from the east.</p>
<p>The Hittite connection is based chiefly on the following
evidence. One of the gods of the Mitanni rulers was Teshup, who
is identical with Tarku, the Thor of Asia Minor. The raiders who
in 1800 B.C. entered Babylon, set fire to E-sagila, and carried
off Merodach and his consort Zerpanitu<span class=
'phonetic'>m</span>, were called the Hatti. The images of these
deities were afterwards obtained from Khani (Mitanni).</p>
<p>At a later period, when we come to know more about Mitanni
from the letters of one of its kings to two Egyptian Pharaohs,
and the Winckler tablets from Bog-haz-Köi, it is found that
its military aristocracy spoke an Indo-European language, as is
shown by the names of their kings--Saushatar, Artatama, Sutarna,
Artashshumara, Tushratta, and Mattiuza. They worshipped the
following deities:</p>
<blockquote class="blockquote">
<tt>Mi-it-ra, Uru-w-na, In-da-ra, and
Na-sa-at-ti-ia--</tt></blockquote><p>Mitra, Varuna, Indra, and Nasatyau (the "Twin Aswins" = Castor
and Pollux)--whose names have been deciphered by Winckler. These
gods were also imported into India by the Vedic Aryans. The
Mitanni tribe (the military aristocracy probably) was called
"Kharri", and some philologists are of opinion that it is
identical with "Arya", which was "the normal designation in Vedic
literature from the Rigveda onwards of an Aryan of the three
upper classes".<span class="sub">[<SPAN name="fnrex1293" href=
"#ftn.fnrex1293" name="fnrex1293">293</SPAN>]</span> Mitanni signifies
"the river lands", and the descendants of its inhabitants, who
lived in Cappadocia, were called by the Greeks "Mattienoi". "They
are possibly", says Dr. Haddon, "the ancestors <SPAN id=
"page.anchor.270" name="page.anchor.270"></SPAN>of the modern
Kurds",<span class="sub">[<SPAN name="fnrex1294" href=
"#ftn.fnrex1294" name="fnrex1294">294</SPAN>]</span> a conspicuously
long-headed people, proverbial, like the ancient Aryo-Indians and
the Gauls, for their hospitality and their raiding
propensities.</p>
<p>It would appear that the Mitannian invasion of northern
Mesopotamia and the Aryan invasion of India represented two
streams of diverging migrations from a common cultural centre,
and that the separate groups of wanderers mingled with other
stocks with whom they came into contact. Tribes of Aryan speech
were associated with the Kassite invaders of Babylon, who took
possession of northern Babylonia soon after the disastrous
Hittite raid. It is believed that they came from the east through
the highlands of Elam.</p>
<p>For a period, the dating of which is uncertain, the Mitannians
were overlords of part of Assyria, including Nineveh and even
Asshur, as well as the district called "Musri" by the Assyrians,
and part of Cappadocia. They also occupied the cities of Harran
and Kadesh. Probably they owed their great military successes to
their cavalry. The horse became common in Babylon during the
Kassite Dynasty, which followed the Hammurabi, and was there
called "the ass of the east", a name which suggests whence the
Kassites and Mitannians came.</p>
<p>The westward movement of the Mitannians in the second
millennium B.C. may have been in progress prior to the Kassite
conquest of Babylon and the Hyksos invasion of Egypt. Their
relations in Mesopotamia and Syria with the Hittites and the
Amorites are obscure. Perhaps they were for a time the overlords
of the Hittites. At any rate it is of interest to note that when
Thothmes III struck at the last Hyksos stronghold during his long
Syrian campaign of about twenty years' duration, his <SPAN id=
"page.anchor.271" name="page.anchor.271"></SPAN>operations were
directly against Kadesh on the Orontes, which was then held by
his fierce enemies the Mitannians of Naharina.<span class=
"sub">[<SPAN name="fnrex1295" href="#ftn.fnrex1295" id=
"fnrex1295">295</SPAN>]</span></p>
<p>During the Hyksos Age the horse was introduced into Egypt.
Indeed the Hyksos conquest was probably due to the use of the
horse, which was domesticated, as the Pumpelly expedition has
ascertained, at a remote period in Turkestan, whence it may have
been obtained by the horse-sacrificing Aryo-Indians and the
horse-sacrificing ancestors of the Siberian Buriats.</p>
<p>If the Mitanni rulers were not overlords of the Hittites about
1800 B.C., the two peoples may have been military allies of the
Kassites. Some writers suggest, indeed, that the Kassites came
from Mitanni. Another view is that the Mitannians were the Aryan
allies of the Kassites who entered Babylon from the Elamite
highlands, and that they afterwards conquered Mesopotamia and
part of Cappadocia prior to the Hyksos conquest of Egypt. A third
solution of the problem is that the Aryan rulers of the Mitannian
Hittites were the overlords of northern Babylonia, which they
included in their Mesopotamian empire for a century before the
Kassites achieved political supremacy in the Tigro-Euphrates
valley, and that they were also the leaders of the Hyksos
invasion of Egypt, which they accomplished with the assistance of
their Hittite and Amoritic allies.</p>
<p>The first Kassite king of Babylonia of whom we have knowledge
was Gandash. He adopted the old Akkadian title, "king of the four
quarters", as well as the title "king of Sumer and Akkad", first
used by the rulers of the Dynasty of Ur. Nippur appears to have
been selected by Gandash as his capital, which suggests that his
war and storm god, Shuqamuna, was identified with Bel Enlil, who
<SPAN name="page.anchor.272" name="page.anchor.272"></SPAN>as a "world
giant" has much in common with the northern hammer gods. After
reigning for sixteen years, Gandash was succeeded by his son,
Agum the Great, who sat on the throne for twenty-two years. The
great-grandson of Agum the Great was Agum II, and not until his
reign were the statues of Merodach and his consort
Zerpanitu<span class='phonetic'>m</span> brought back to the city
of Babylon. This monarch recorded that, in response to the oracle
of Shamash, the sun god, he sent to the distant land of Khani
(Mitanni) for the great deity and his consort. Babylon would
therefore appear to have been deprived of Merodach for about two
centuries. The Hittite-Mitanni raid is dated about 1800 B.C., and
the rise of Gandash, the Kassite, about 1700 B.C. At least a
century elapsed between the reigns of Gandash and Agum II. These
calculations do not coincide, it will be noted, with the
statement in a Babylonian hymn, that Merodach remained in the
land of the Hatti for twenty-four years, which, however, may be
either a priestly fiction or a reference to a later conquest. The
period which followed the fall of the Hammurabi Dynasty of
Babylonia is as obscure as the Hyksos Age of Egypt.</p>
<p>Agum II, the Kassite king, does not state whether or not he
waged war against Mitanni to recover Babylon's god Merodach. If,
however, he was an ally of the Mitanni ruler, the transference of
the deity may have been an ordinary diplomatic transaction. The
possibility may also be suggested that the Hittites of Mitanni
were not displaced by the Aryan military aristocracy until after
the Kassites were firmly established in northern Babylonia
between 1700 B.C. and 1600 B.C. This may account for the
statements that Merodach was carried off by the Hatti and
returned from the land of Khani.</p>
<p>The evidence afforded by Egypt is suggestive in this <SPAN id=
"page.anchor.273" name="page.anchor.273"></SPAN>connection. There
was a second Hyksos Dynasty in that country. The later rulers
became "Egyptianized" as the Kassites became "Babylonianized",
but they were all referred to by the exclusive and
sullen-Egyptians as "barbarians" and "Asiatics". They recognized
the sun god of Heliopolis, but were also concerned in promoting
the worship of Sutekh, a deity of sky and thunder, with solar
attributes, whom Rameses II identified with the "Baal" of the
Hittites. The Mitannians, as has been stated, recognized a Baal
called Teshup, who was identical with Tarku of the Western
Hittites and with their own tribal Indra also. One of the Hyksos
kings, named Ian or Khian, the Ianias of Manetho, was either an
overlord or the ally of an overlord, who swayed a great empire in
Asia. His name has been deciphered on relics found as far apart
as Knossos in Crete and Baghdad on the Tigris, which at the time
was situated within the area of Kassite control. Apparently
peaceful conditions prevailed during his reign over a wide extent
of Asia and trade was brisk between far-distant centres of
civilization. The very term Hyksos is suggestive in this
connection. According to Breasted it signifies "rulers of
countries", which compares with the Biblical "Tidal king of
nations", whom Sayce, as has been indicated, regards as a Hittite
monarch. When the Hittite hieroglyphics have been read and
Mesopotamia thoroughly explored, light may be thrown on the
relations of the Mitannians, the Hittites, the Hyksos, and the
Kassites between 1800 B.C. and 1500 B.C. It is evident that a
fascinating volume of ancient history has yet to be written.</p>
<p>The Kassites formed the military aristocracy of Babylonia,
which was called Karduniash, for nearly six centuries. Agum II
was the first of their kings who became thoroughly
Babylonianized, and although he still gave <SPAN id=
"page.anchor.274" name="page.anchor.274"></SPAN>recognition to
Shuqamuna, the Kassite god of battle, he re-exalted Merodach,
whose statue he had taken back from "Khani", and decorated
E-sagila with gifts of gold, jewels, rare woods, frescoes, and
pictorial tiles; he also re-endowed the priesthood. During the
reign of his successor, Burnaburiash I, the Dynasty of Sealand
came to an end.</p>
<p>Little is known regarding the relations between Elam and
Babylonia during the Kassite period. If the Kassite invaders
crossed the Tigris soon after the raid of the Mitannian Hittites
they must have previously overrun a great part of Elam, but
strongly situated Susa may have for a time withstood their
attacks. At first the Kassites held northern Babylonia only,
while the ancient Sumerian area was dominated by the Sealand
power, which had gradually regained strength during the closing
years of the Hammurabi Dynasty. No doubt many northern Babylonian
refugees reinforced its army.</p>
<p>The Elamites, or perhaps the Kassites of Elam, appear to have
made frequent attacks on southern Babylonia. At length Ea-gamil,
king of Sealand, invaded Elam with purpose, no doubt, to shatter
the power of his restless enemies. He was either met there,
however, by an army from Babylon, or his country was invaded
during his absence. Prince Ulamburiash, son of Burnaburiash I,
defeated Ea-gamil and brought to an end the Sealand Dynasty which
had been founded by Ilu-ma-ilu, the contemporary and enemy of
Samsu-la-ilu, son of Hammurabi. Ulamburiash is referred to on a
mace-head which was discovered at Babylon as "king of Sealand",
and he probably succeeded his father at the capital. The whole of
Babylonia thus came under Kassite sway.</p>
<p>Agum III, a grandson of Ulamburiash, found it necessary,
however, to invade Sealand, which must <SPAN name="page.anchor.275"
name="page.anchor.275"></SPAN>therefore have revolted. It was
probably a centre of discontent during the whole period of
Kassite ascendancy.</p>
<p>After a long obscure interval we reach the period when the
Hyksos power was broken in Egypt, that is, after 1580 B.C. The
great Western Asiatic kingdoms at the time were the Hittite, the
Mitannian, the Assyrian, and the Babylonian (Kassite). Between
1557 B.C. and 1501 B.C. Thothmes I of Egypt was asserting his
sway over part of Syria. Many years elapsed, however, before
Thothmes III, who died in 1447 B.C., established firmly, after
waging a long war of conquest, the supremacy of Egypt between the
Euphrates and the Mediterranean coast as far north as the borders
of Asia Minor.</p>
<p>"At this period", as Professor Flinders Petrie emphasizes,
"the civilization of Syria was equal or superior to that of
Egypt." Not only was there in the cities "luxury beyond that of
the Egyptians", but also "technical work which could teach them".
The Syrian soldiers had suits of scale armour, which afterwards
were manufactured in Egypt, and they had chariots adorned with
gold and silver and highly decorated, which were greatly prized
by the Egyptians when they captured them, and reserved for
royalty. "In the rich wealth of gold and silver vases", obtained
from captured cities by the Nilotic warriors, "we see also", adds
Petrie, "the sign of a people who were their (the Egyptians')
equals, if not their superiors in taste and skill."<span class=
"sub">[<SPAN name="fnrex1296" href="#ftn.fnrex1296" id=
"fnrex1296">296</SPAN>]</span> It is not to be wondered at,
therefore, when the Pharaohs received tribute from Syria that
they preferred it to be carried into Egypt by skilled workmen.
"The keenness with which the Egyptians record all the beautiful
and luxurious products of the Syrians shows that the workmen
would <SPAN name="page.anchor.276" name="page.anchor.276"></SPAN>probably
be more in demand than other kinds or slave tribute."<span class=
"sub">[<SPAN name="fnrex1297" href="#ftn.fnrex1297" id=
"fnrex1297">297</SPAN>]</span></p>
<p>One of the monarchs with whom Thothmes III corresponded was
the king of Assyria. The enemies of Egypt in northern Mesopotamia
were the Hittites and Mitannians, and their allies, and these
were also the enemies of Assyria. But to enable us to deal with
the new situation which was created by Egypt in Mesopotamia, it
is necessary in the first place to trace the rise of Assyria,
which was destined to become for a period the dominating power in
Western Asia, and ultimately in the Nile valley also.</p>
<p>The Assyrian group of cities grew up on the banks of the
Tigris to the north of Babylonia, the mother country. The
following Biblical references regarding the origins of the two
states are of special interest:--</p>
<blockquote class="blockquote">
<p>Now these are the generations of the sons of Noah: Shem, Ham,
and Japheth.... The sons of Ham: Cush, and Mizraim, and Phut, and
Canaan.... And Cush begat Nimrod; he began to be a mighty one in
the earth. He was a mighty hunter before the Lord; wherefore it
is said, Even as Nimrod the mighty hunter before the Lord. And
the beginning of his kingdom was Babel, and Erech, and Accad, and
Calneh, in the land of Shinar. Out of that land went forth Asshur
and builded Nineveh, and the city Rehoboth, and Calah, and Resen
between Nineveh and Calah: the same is a great city. The children
of Shem: Elam and Asshur ... (<span class=
"emphasis"><em>Genesis</em></span>, x, 1-22). The land of Assyria
... and the land of Nimrod in the entrances thereof (<span class=
"emphasis"><em>Micah</em></span>, v, 6).</p>
</blockquote><p>It will be observed that the Sumero-Babylonians are Cushites
or Hamites, and therefore regarded as racially akin to the
proto-Egyptians of the Mediterranean race--an interesting
confirmation of recent ethnological conclusions.</p>
<p><SPAN name="page.anchor.277" name="page.anchor.277"></SPAN>Nimrod, the
king of Babel (Babylon), in Shinar (Sumer), was, it would appear,
a deified monarch who became ultimately identified with the
national god of Babylonia. Professor Pinches has
shown<span class="sub">[<SPAN name="fnrex1298" href="#ftn.fnrex1298" id="fnrex1298">298</SPAN>]</span> that his name is a rendering of
that of Merodach. In Sumerian Merodach was called Amaruduk or
Amarudu, and in the Assyro-Babylonian language Marduk. By a
process familiar to philologists the suffix "uk" was dropped and
the rendering became Marad. The Hebrews added "ni" = "ni-marad",
assimilating the name "to a certain extent to the 'niphal forms'
of the Hebrew verbs and making a change", says Pinches, "in
conformity with the genius of the Hebrew language".</p>
<p>Asshur, who went out of Nimrod's country to build Nineveh, was
a son of Shem--a Semite, and so far as is known it was after the
Semites achieved political supremacy in Akkad that the Assyrian
colonies were formed. Asshur may have been a subject ruler who
was deified and became the god of the city of Asshur, which
probably gave its name to Assyria.</p>
<p>According to Herodotus, Nineveh was founded by King Ninus and
Queen Semiramis. This lady was reputed to be the daughter of
Derceto, the fish goddess, whom Pliny identified with Atargatis.
Semiramis was actually an Assyrian queen of revered memory. She
was deified and took the place of a goddess, apparently Nina, the
prototype of Derceto. This Nina, perhaps a form of Damkina, wife
of Ea, was the great mother of the Sumerian city of Nina, and
there, and also at Lagash, received offerings of fish. She was
one of the many goddesses of maternity absorbed by Ishtar. The
Greek Ninus is regarded as a male form of her name; like <SPAN id=
"page.anchor.278" name="page.anchor.278"></SPAN>Atargatis, she may
have become a bisexual deity, if she was not always accompanied
by a shadowy male form. Nineveh (Ninua) was probably founded or
conquered by colonists from Nina or Lagash, and called after the
fish goddess.</p>
<p>All the deities of Assyria were imported from Babylonia
except, as some hold, Ashur, the national god.<span class=
"sub">[<SPAN name="fnrex1299" href="#ftn.fnrex1299" id=
"fnrex1299">299</SPAN>]</span> The theory that Ashur was identical
with the Aryo-Indian Asura and the Persian Ahura is not generally
accepted. One theory is that he was an eponymous hero who became
the city god of Asshur, although the early form of his name,
Ashir, presents a difficulty in this connection. Asshur was the
first capital of Assyria. Its city god may have become the
national god on that account.</p>
<p>At an early period, perhaps a thousand years before Thothmes
III battled with the Mitannians in northern Syria, an early wave
of one of the peoples of Aryan speech may have occupied the
Assyrian cities. Mr. Johns points out in this connection that the
names of Ushpia, Kikia, and Adasi, who, according to Assyrian
records, were early rulers in Asshur, "are neither Semitic nor
Sumerian". An ancient name of the goddess of Nineveh was
Shaushka, which compares with Shaushkash, the consort of Teshup,
the Hittite-Mitanni hammer god. As many of the Mitannian names
"are", according to Mr. Johns, "really Elamitic", he suggests an
ethnic connection between the early conquerors of Assyria and the
people of Elam.<span class="sub">[<SPAN name="fnrex1300" href=
"#ftn.fnrex1300" name="fnrex1300">300</SPAN>]</span> Were the
pre-Semitic Elamites originally speakers of an agglutinative
language, like the Sumerians and present-day Basques, who were
conquered in prehistoric times by a people of Aryan speech?</p>
<p><SPAN name="page.anchor.279" name="page.anchor.279"></SPAN>The
possibility is urged by Mr. Johns's suggestion that Assyria may
have been dominated in pre-Semitic times by the congeners of the
Aryan military aristocracy of Mitanni. As has been shown, it was
Semitized by the Amoritic migration which, about 2000 B.C.,
brought into prominence the Hammurabi Dynasty of Babylon.</p>
<p>A long list of kings with Semitic names held sway in the
Assyrian cities during and after the Hammurabi Age. But not until
well on in the Kassite period did any of them attain prominence
in Western Asia. Then Ashur-bel-nish-eshu, King of Asshur, was
strong enough to deal on equal terms with the Kassite ruler
Kara-indash I, with whom he arranged a boundary treaty. He was a
contemporary of Thothmes III of Egypt.</p>
<p>After Thothmes III had secured the predominance of Egypt in
Syria and Palestine he recognized Assyria as an independent
power, and supplied its king with Egyptian gold to assist him, no
doubt, in strengthening his territory against their common enemy.
Gifts were also sent from Assyria to Egypt to fan the flame of
cordial relations.</p>
<p>The situation was full of peril for Saushatar, king of
Mitanni. Deprived by Egypt of tribute-paying cities in Syria, his
exchequer must have been sadly depleted. A standing army had to
be maintained, for although Egypt made no attempt to encroach
further on his territory, the Hittites were ever hovering on his
north-western frontier, ready when opportunity offered to win
back Cappadocia. Eastward, Assyria was threatening to become a
dangerous rival. He had himself to pay tribute to Egypt, and
Egypt was subsidizing his enemy. It was imperative on his part,
therefore, to take action without delay. The power of Assyria had
to be crippled; its revenues were required for the Mitannian
exchequer. So <SPAN name="page.anchor.280" name=
"page.anchor.280"></SPAN>Saushatar raided Assyria during the closing
years of the reign of Thothmes III, or soon after his successor,
Amenhotep II, ascended the Egyptian throne.</p>
<p>Nothing is known from contemporary records regarding this
campaign; but it can be gathered from the references of a later
period that the city of Asshur was captured and plundered; its
king, Ashur-nadin-akhe, ceased corresponding and exchanging gifts
with Egypt. That Nineveh also fell is made clear by the fact that
a descendant of Saushatar (Tushratta) was able to send to a
descendant of Thothmes III at Thebes (Amenhotep III) the image of
Ishtar (Shaushka) of Nineveh. Apparently five successive
Mitannian kings were overlords of Assyria during a period which
cannot be estimated at much less than a hundred years.</p>
<p>Our knowledge regarding these events is derived chiefly from
the Tell-el-Amarna letters, and the tablets found by Professor
Hugo Winckler at Boghaz-Köi in Cappadocia, Asia Minor.</p>
<p>The Tell-el-Amarna letters were discovered among the ruins of
the palace of the famous Egyptian Pharaoh, Akhenaton, of the
Eighteenth Dynasty, who died about 1358 B.C. During the winter of
1887-8 an Egyptian woman was excavating soil for her garden, when
she happened upon the cellar of Akhenaton's foreign office in
which the official correspondence had been stored. The "letters"
were baked clay tablets inscribed with cuneiform alphabetical
signs in the Babylonian-Assyrian language, which, like French in
modern times, was the language of international diplomacy for
many centuries in Western Asia after the Hyksos period.</p>
<SPAN name="id2534935" name="id2534935"></SPAN>
<p class="title"><b>Figure XII.1. LETTER FROM TUSHRATTA, KING OF
MITANNI, TO AMENHOTEP III, KING OF EGYPT</b></p>
<blockquote class="blockquote">
<p><span class="emphasis"><em>One of the Tell-el-Amarna tablets,
now in the British Museum. (See pages <SPAN href=
"#page.anchor.280">280</SPAN>-<SPAN href=
"#page.anchor.282">282</SPAN>)</em></span></p>
</blockquote>
<ANTIMG alt="" src="img/25.jpg" />
<SPAN name="id2534970" name="id2534970"></SPAN>
<p class="title"><b>Figure XII.2. THE GOD NINIP AND ANOTHER
DEITY</b></p>
<blockquote class="blockquote">
<p><span class="emphasis"><em>Marble slab from Kouyunjik
(Nineveh): now in the British Museum</em></span></p>
</blockquote>
<ANTIMG alt="" src="img/26.jpg" />
<p>The Egyptian natives, ever so eager to sell antiquities so as
to make a fortune and retire for life, offered some specimens of
the tablets for sale. One or two were sent <SPAN id=
"page.anchor.281" name="page.anchor.281"></SPAN>to Paris, where they
were promptly declared to be forgeries, with the result that for
a time the inscribed bricks were not a marketable commodity. Ere
their value was discovered, the natives had packed them into
sacks, with the result that many were damaged and some completely
destroyed. At length, however, the majority of them reached the
British Museum and the Berlin Museum, while others drifted into
the museums at Cairo, St. Petersburg, and Paris. When they were
deciphered, Mitanni was discovered, and a flood of light thrown
on the internal affairs of Egypt and its relations with various
kingdoms in Asia, while glimpses were also afforded of the life
and manners of the times.</p>
<p>The letters covered the reigns of Amenhotep III, the
great-grandson of Thothmes III, and of his son Akhenaton, "the
dreamer king", and included communications from the kings of
Babylonia, Assyria, Mitanni, Cyprus, the Hittites, and the
princes of Phoenicia and Canaan. The copies of two letters from
Amenhotep III to Kallima-Sin, King of Babylonia, had also been
preserved. One deals with statements made by Babylonian
ambassadors, whom the Pharaoh stigmatizes as liars. Kallima-Sin
had sent his daughter to the royal harem of Egypt, and desired to
know if she was alive and well. He also asked for "much gold" to
enable him to carry on the work of extending his temple. When
twenty minas of gold was sent to him, he complained in due course
that the quantity received was not only short but that the gold
was not pure; it had been melted in the furnace, and less than
five minas came out. In return he sent to Akhenaton two minas of
enamel, and some jewels for his daughter, who was in the Egyptian
royal harem.</p>
<p>Ashur-uballit, king of Ashur, once wrote intimating to
Akhenaton that he was gifting him horses and chariots <SPAN id=
"page.anchor.282" name="page.anchor.282"></SPAN>and a jewel seal. He
asked for gold to assist in building his palace. "In your
country", he added, "gold is as plentiful as dust." He also made
an illuminating statement to the effect that no ambassador had
gone from Assyria to Egypt since the days of his ancestor
Ashur-nadin-akhe. It would therefore appear that Ashur-uballit
had freed part of Assyria from the yoke of Mitanni.</p>
<p>The contemporary king of Mitanni was Tushratta. He
corresponded both with his cousin Amenhotep III and his
son-in-law Akhenaton. In his correspondence with Amenhotep III
Tushratta tells that his kingdom had been invaded by the
Hittites, but his god Teshup had delivered them into his hand,
and he destroyed them; "not one of them", he declared, "returned
to his own country". Out of the booty captured he sent Amenhotep
several chariots and horses, and a boy and a girl. To his sister
Gilu-khipa, who was one of the Egyptian Pharaoh's wives, he
gifted golden ornaments and a jar of oil. In another letter
Tushratta asked for a large quantity of gold "without measure".
He complained that he did not receive enough on previous
occasions, and hinted that some of the Egyptian gold looked as if
it were alloyed with copper. Like the Assyrian king, he hinted
that gold was as plentiful as dust in Egypt. His own presents to
the Pharaoh included precious stones, gold ornaments, chariots
and horses, and women (probably slaves). This may have been
tribute. It was during the third Amenhotep's illness that
Tushratta forwarded the Nineveh image of Ishtar to Egypt, and he
made reference to its having been previously sent thither by his
father, Sutarna.</p>
<p>When Akhenaton came to the throne Tushratta wrote to him,
desiring to continue the friendship which had existed for two or
three generations between the kings of Mitanni and Egypt, and
made complimentary references <SPAN name="page.anchor.283" name=
"page.anchor.283"></SPAN>to "the distinguished Queen Tiy",
Akhenaton's mother, who evidently exercised considerable
influence in shaping Egypt's foreign policy. In the course of his
long correspondence with the Pharaohs, Tushratta made those
statements regarding his ancestors which have provided so much
important data for modern historians of his kingdom.</p>
<p>During the early part of the Tell-el-Amarna period, Mitanni
was the most powerful kingdom in Western Asia. It was chiefly on
that account that the daughters of its rulers were selected to be
the wives and mothers of great Egyptian Pharaohs. But its
numerous enemies were ever plotting to accomplish its downfall.
Among these the foremost and most dangerous were the Hittites and
the Assyrians.</p>
<p>The ascendancy of the Hittites was achieved in northern Syria
with dramatic suddenness. There arose in Asia Minor a great
conqueror, named Subbi-luliuma, the successor of Hattusil I, who
established a strong Hittite empire which endured for about two
centuries. His capital was at Boghaz-Köi. Sweeping through
Cappadocia, at the head of a finely organized army, remarkable
for its mobility, he attacked the buffer states which owed
allegiance to Mitanni and Egypt. City after city fell before him,
until at length he invaded Mitanni; but it is uncertain whether
or not Tushratta met him in battle. Large numbers of the
Mitannians were, however, evicted and transferred to the land of
the Hittites, where the Greeks subsequently found them, and where
they are believed to be represented by the modern Kurds, the
hereditary enemies of the Armenians.</p>
<p>In the confusion which ensued, Tushratta was murdered by
Sutarna II, who was recognized by Subbi-luliuma. The crown
prince, Mattiuza, fled to Babylon, <SPAN name="page.anchor.284" name=
"page.anchor.284"></SPAN>where he found protection, but was unable
to receive any assistance. Ultimately, when the Hittite emperor
had secured his sway over northern Syria, he deposed Sutarna II
and set Mattiuza as his vassal on the throne of the shrunken
Mitanni kingdom.</p>
<p>Meanwhile the Egyptian empire in Asia had gone to pieces. When
Akhenaton, the dreamer king, died in his palace at
Tell-el-Amarna, the Khabiri were conquering the Canaanite cities
which had paid him tribute, and the Hittite ruler was the
acknowledged overlord of the Amorites.</p>
<p>The star of Assyria was also in the ascendant. Its king,
Ashur-uballit, who had corresponded with Akhenaton, was, like the
Hittite king, Subbi-luliuma, a distinguished statesman and
general, and similarly laid the foundations of a great empire.
Before or after Subbi-luliuma invaded Tushratta's domains, he
drove the Mitannians out of Nineveh, and afterwards overcame the
Shubari tribes of Mitanni on the north-west, with the result that
he added a wide extent of territory to his growing empire.</p>
<p>He had previously thrust southward the Assyro-Babylonian
frontier. In fact, he had become so formidable an opponent of
Babylonia that his daughter had been accepted as the wife of
Karakhardash, the Kassite king of that country. In time his
grandson, Kadashman-Kharbe, ascended the Babylonian throne. This
young monarch co-operated with his grandfather in suppressing the
Suti, who infested the trade routes towards the west, and
plundered the caravans of merchants and the messengers of great
monarchs with persistent impunity.</p>
<p>A reference to these bandits appears in one of the
Tell-el-Amarna letters. Writing to Akhenaton, Ashur-uballit said:
"The lands (of Assyria and Egypt) are <SPAN name="page.anchor.285"
name="page.anchor.285"></SPAN>remote, therefore let our messengers
come and go. That your messengers were late in reaching you, (the
reason is that) if the Suti had waylaid them, they would have
been dead men. For if I had sent them, the Suti would have sent
bands to waylay them; therefore I have retained them. My
messengers (however), may they not (for this reason) be
delayed."<span class="sub">[<SPAN name="fnrex1301" href=
"#ftn.fnrex1301" name="fnrex1301">301</SPAN>]</span></p>
<p>Ashur-uballit's grandson extended his Babylonian frontier into
Amurru, where he dug wells and erected forts to protect traders.
The Kassite aristocracy, however, appear to have entertained
towards him a strong dislike, perhaps because he was so closely
associated with their hereditary enemies the Assyrians. He had
not reigned for long when the embers of rebellion burst into
flame and he was murdered in his palace. The Kassites then
selected as their king a man of humble origin, named Nazibugash,
who was afterwards referred to as "the son of nobody".
Ashur-uballit deemed the occasion a fitting one to interfere in
the affairs of Babylonia. He suddenly appeared at the capital
with a strong army, overawed the Kassites, and seized and slew
Nazibugash. Then he set on the throne his great grandson the
infant Kurigalzu II, who lived to reign for fifty-five years.</p>
<p>Ashur-uballit appears to have died soon after this event. He
was succeeded by his son Bel-nirari, who carried on the policy of
strengthening and extending the Assyrian empire. For many years
he maintained excellent relations with his kinsman Kurigalzu II,
but ultimately they came into conflict apparently over disputed
territory. A sanguinary battle was fought, in which the
Babylonians suffered heavily and were put to rout. A treaty of
peace was afterwards arranged, which secured for the Assyrians a
further extension of their frontier "from <SPAN name="page.anchor.286"
name="page.anchor.286"></SPAN>the borders of Mitanni as far as
Babylonia". The struggle of the future was to be for the
possession of Mesopotamia, so as to secure control over the trade
routes.</p>
<p>Thus Assyria rose from a petty state in a comparatively brief
period to become the rival of Babylonia, at a time when Egypt at
the beginning of its Nineteenth Dynasty was endeavouring to win
back its lost empire in Syria, and the Hittite empire was being
consolidated in the north.</p>
<br/>
<hr width="100" align="left" />
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex1282" href="#fnrex1282" id=
"ftn.fnrex1282">282</SPAN>]</span> <span class="emphasis"><em>The
Land of the Hittites</em></span>, John Garstang, pp. 312
<span class="emphasis"><em>et seq</em></span>. and 315
<span class="emphasis"><em>et seq.</em></span>
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex1283" href="#fnrex1283" id=
"ftn.fnrex1283">283</SPAN>]</span> <span class="emphasis"><em>The
Ancient Egyptian</em></span>, pp. 106 <span class=
"emphasis"><em>et seq</em></span>.
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex1284" href="#fnrex1284" id=
"ftn.fnrex1284">284</SPAN>]</span> <span class="emphasis"><em>The
Ancient Egyptians</em></span>, p. 130.
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex1285" href="#fnrex1285" id=
"ftn.fnrex1285">285</SPAN>]</span> <span class=
"emphasis"><em>Struggle of the Nations</em></span> (1896), p.
19.
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex1286" href="#fnrex1286" id=
"ftn.fnrex1286">286</SPAN>]</span> Note contributed to <span class=
"emphasis"><em>The Land of the Hittites</em></span>, J. Garstang,
p. 324.
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex1287" href="#fnrex1287" id=
"ftn.fnrex1287">287</SPAN>]</span> <span class=
"emphasis"><em>Genesis</em></span>, xxvi, 34, 35.
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex1288" href="#fnrex1288" id=
"ftn.fnrex1288">288</SPAN>]</span> <span class=
"emphasis"><em>Ezekiel</em></span>, xvi, 45.
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex1289" href="#fnrex1289" id=
"ftn.fnrex1289">289</SPAN>]</span> <span class=
"emphasis"><em>Genesis</em></span>, xxvii, 46.
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex1290" href="#fnrex1290" id=
"ftn.fnrex1290">290</SPAN>]</span> <span class=
"emphasis"><em>Genesis</em></span>, xxviii, 1, 2.
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex1291" href="#fnrex1291" id=
"ftn.fnrex1291">291</SPAN>]</span> <span class=
"emphasis"><em>Genesis</em></span>, xxiv.
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex1292" href="#fnrex1292" id=
"ftn.fnrex1292">292</SPAN>]</span> <span class="emphasis"><em>The
Syrian Goddess</em></span>, John Garstang (London, 1913), pp.
17-8.
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex1293" href="#fnrex1293" id=
"ftn.fnrex1293">293</SPAN>]</span> <span class="emphasis"><em>Vedic
Index of Names and Subjects</em></span>, Macdonald & Keith,
vol. i, pp. 64-5 (London, 1912).
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex1294" href="#fnrex1294" id=
"ftn.fnrex1294">294</SPAN>]</span> <span class="emphasis"><em>The
Wanderings of Peoples</em></span>, p. 21.
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex1295" href="#fnrex1295" id=
"ftn.fnrex1295">295</SPAN>]</span> Breasted's <span class=
"emphasis"><em>History of Egypt</em></span>, pp. 219-20.
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex1296" href="#fnrex1296" id=
"ftn.fnrex1296">296</SPAN>]</span> <span class="emphasis"><em>A
History of Egypt</em></span>, W.M. Flinders Petrie, vol. ii, p.
146 <span class="emphasis"><em>et seq.</em></span> (1904
ed.).
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex1297" href="#fnrex1297" id=
"ftn.fnrex1297">297</SPAN>]</span> <span class="emphasis"><em>A
History of Egypt</em></span>, W.M. Flinders Petrie, vol. ii, p.
147 (1904 ed.).
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex1298" href="#fnrex1298" id=
"ftn.fnrex1298">298</SPAN>]</span> <span class="emphasis"><em>The
Old Testament in the Light of the Historical Records and Legends
of Assyria and Babylonia,</em></span> pp. 126 <span class=
"emphasis"><em>et seq</em></span>.
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex1299" href="#fnrex1299" id=
"ftn.fnrex1299">299</SPAN>]</span> His connection with Anu is
discussed in chapter xiv.
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex1300" href="#fnrex1300" id=
"ftn.fnrex1300">300</SPAN>]</span> <span class=
"emphasis"><em>Ancient Assyria</em></span>, C.H.W. Johns, p. 11
(London, 1912).
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex1301" href="#fnrex1301" id=
"ftn.fnrex1301">301</SPAN>]</span> <span class="emphasis"><em>The
Tell-el-Amarna Letters</em></span>, Hugo Winckler, p. 31.
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />