<h2 class="title"><SPAN name="id2540528" name= "id2540528"></SPAN>Chapter XV. Conflicts for Trade and Supremacy</h2>
<p class="title"><b>Abstract</b></p>
<p>Modern Babylonia--History repeating itself--Babylonian Trade
Route in Mesopotamia--Egyptian Supremacy in Syria--Mitanni and
Babylonia--Bandits who plundered Caravans--Arabian Desert Trade
Route opened--Assyrian and Elamite Struggles with
Babylonia--Rapid Extension of Assyrian Empire--Hittites control
Western Trade Routes--Egypt's Nineteenth Dynasty
Conquests--Campaigns of Rameses II--Egyptians and Hittites become
Allies--Babylonian Fears of Assyria--Shalmaneser's
Triumphs--Assyria Supreme in Mesopotamia--Conquest of
Babylonia--Fall of a Great King--Civil War in Assyria--Its Empire
goes to pieces--Babylonian Wars with Elam--Revival of Babylonian
Power--Invasions of Assyrians and Elamites--End of the Kassite
Dynasty--Babylonia contrasted with Assyria.</p>
<p><SPAN name="page.anchor.356" name="page.anchor.356"></SPAN> It is
possible that during the present century Babylonia may once again
become one of the great wheat-producing countries of the world. A
scheme of land reclamation has already been inaugurated by the
construction of a great dam to control the distribution of the
waters of the Euphrates, and, if it is energetically promoted on
a generous scale in the years to come, the ancient canals, which
are used at present as caravan roads, may yet be utilized to make
the whole country as fertile and prosperous as it was in ancient
days. When that happy consummation is reached, new cities may
grow up and flourish beside the ruins of the old centres of
Babylonian culture.</p>
<p>With the revival of agriculture will come the revival of
commerce. Ancient trade routes will then be reopened, and the
slow-travelling caravans supplanted by <SPAN name="page.anchor.357"
name="page.anchor.357"></SPAN>speedy trains. A beginning has already
been made in this direction. The first modern commercial highway
which is crossing the threshold of Babylonia's new Age is the
German railway through Asia Minor, North Syria, and Mesopotamia
to Baghdad.<span class="sub">[<SPAN name="fnrex1407" href=
"#ftn.fnrex1407" name="fnrex1407">407</SPAN>]</span> It brings the
land of Hammurabi into close touch with Europe, and will solve
problems which engaged the attention of many rival monarchs for
long centuries before the world knew aught of "the glory that was
Greece and the grandeur that was Rome".</p>
<p>These sudden and dramatic changes are causing history to
repeat itself. Once again the great World Powers are evincing
much concern regarding their respective "spheres of influence" in
Western Asia, and pressing together around the ancient land of
Babylon. On the east, where the aggressive Elamites and Kassites
were followed by the triumphant Persians and Medes, Russia and
Britain have asserted themselves as protectors of Persian
territory, and the influence of Britain is supreme in the Persian
Gulf. Turkey controls the land of the Hittites, while Russia
looms like a giant across the Armenian highlands; Turkey is also
the governing power in Syria and Mesopotamia, which are being
crossed by Germany's Baghdad railway. France is constructing
railways in Syria, and will control the ancient "way of the
Philistines". Britain occupies Cyprus on the Mediterranean coast,
and presides over the destinies of the ancient land of Egypt,
which, during the brilliant Eighteenth Dynasty, extended its
sphere of influence to the borders of Asia Minor. Once again,
after the lapse of many centuries, international <SPAN id=
"page.anchor.358" name="page.anchor.358"></SPAN>politics is being
strongly influenced by the problems connected with the
development of trade in Babylonia and its vicinity.</p>
<p>The history of the ancient rival States, which is being pieced
together by modern excavators, is, in view of present-day
political developments, invested with special interest to us. We
have seen Assyria rising into prominence. It began to be a great
Power when Egypt was supreme in the "Western Land" (the land of
the Amorites) as far north as the frontiers of Cappadocia. Under
the Kassite regime Babylonia's political influence had declined
in Mesopotamia, but its cultural influence remained, for its
language and script continued in use among traders and
diplomatists.</p>
<p>At the beginning of the Pharaoh Akhenaton period, the supreme
power in Mesopotamia was Mitanni. As the ally of Egypt it
constituted a buffer state on the borders of North Syria, which
prevented the southern expansion from Asia Minor of the Hittite
confederacy and the western expansion of aggressive Assyria,
while it also held in check the ambitions of Babylonia, which
still claimed the "land of the Amorites". So long as Mitanni was
maintained as a powerful kingdom the Syrian possessions of Egypt
were easily held in control, and the Egyptian merchants enjoyed
preferential treatment compared with those of Babylonia. But when
Mitanni was overcome, and its territories were divided between
the Assyrians and the Hittites, the North Syrian Empire of Egypt
went to pieces. A great struggle then ensued between the nations
of western Asia for political supremacy in the "land of the
Amorites".</p>
<p>Babylonia had been seriously handicapped by losing control of
its western caravan road. Prior to the Kassite period its
influence was supreme in Mesopotamia and <SPAN name="page.anchor.359"
name="page.anchor.359"></SPAN>middle Syria; from the days of Sargon
of Akkad and of Naram-Sin until the close of the Hammurabi Age
its merchants had naught to fear from bandits or petty kings
between the banks of the Euphrates and the Mediterranean coast.
The city of Babylon had grown rich and powerful as the commercial
metropolis of Western Asia.</p>
<p>Separated from the Delta frontier by the broad and perilous
wastes of the Arabian desert, Babylonia traded with Egypt by an
indirect route. Its caravan road ran northward along the west
bank of the Euphrates towards Haran, and then southward through
Palestine. This was a long detour, but it was the only possible
way.</p>
<p>During the early Kassite Age the caravans from Babylon had to
pass through the area controlled by Mitanni, which was therefore
able to impose heavy duties and fill its coffers with Babylonian
gold. Nor did the situation improve when the influence of Mitanni
suffered decline in southern Mesopotamia. Indeed the difficulties
under which traders operated were then still further increased,
for the caravan roads were infested by plundering bands of
"Suti", to whom references are made in the Tell-el-Amarna
letters. These bandits defied all the great powers, and became so
powerful that even the messengers sent from one king to another
were liable to be robbed and murdered without discrimination.
When war broke out between powerful States they harried live
stock and sacked towns in those areas which were left
unprotected.</p>
<p>The "Suti" were Arabians of Aramaean stock. What is known as
the "Third Semitic Migration" was in progress during this period.
The nomads gave trouble to Babylonia and Assyria, and,
penetrating Mesopotamia and Syria, sapped the power of Mitanni,
until it was unable to resist the onslaughts of the Assyrians and
the Hittites.</p>
<p>The Aramaean tribes are referred to, at various periods <SPAN id=
"page.anchor.360" name="page.anchor.360"></SPAN>and by various
peoples, not only as the "Suti", but also as the "Achlame", the
"Arimi", and the "Khabiri". Ultimately they were designated
simply as "Syrians", and under that name became the hereditary
enemies of the Hebrews, although Jacob was regarded as being of
their stock: "A Syrian ready to perish", runs a Biblical
reference, "was my father (ancestor), and he went down into Egypt
and sojourned there with a few, and became there a nation, great,
mighty, and populous".<span class="sub">[<SPAN name="fnrex1408"
href="#ftn.fnrex1408" name="fnrex1408">408</SPAN>]</span></p>
<p>An heroic attempt was made by one of the Kassite kings of
Babylonia to afford protection to traders by stamping out
brigandage between Arabia and Mesopotamia, and opening up a new
and direct caravan road to Egypt across the Arabian desert. The
monarch in question was Kadashman-Kharbe, the grandson of
Ashur-uballit of Assyria. As we have seen, he combined forces
with his distinguished and powerful kinsman, and laid a heavy
hand on the "Suti". Then he dug wells and erected a chain of
fortifications, like "block-houses", so that caravans might come
and go without interruption, and merchants be freed from the
imposts of petty kings whose territory they had to penetrate when
travelling by the Haran route.</p>
<p>This bold scheme, however, was foredoomed to failure. It was
shown scant favour by the Babylonian Kassites. No record survives
to indicate the character of the agreement between
Kadashman-Kharbe and Ashur-uballit, but there can be little doubt
that it involved the abandonment by Babylonia of its historic
claim upon Mesopotamia, or part of it, and the recognition of an
Assyrian sphere of influence in that region. It was probably on
account of his pronounced pro-Assyrian tendencies that the
Kassites murdered Kadashman-Kharbe, <SPAN name="page.anchor.361" name=
"page.anchor.361"></SPAN>and set the pretender, known as "the son of
nobody", on the throne for a brief period.</p>
<p>Kadashman-Kharbe's immediate successors recognized in Assyria
a dangerous and unscrupulous rival, and resumed the struggle for
the possession of Mesopotamia. The trade route across the Arabian
desert had to be abandoned. Probably it required too great a
force to keep it open. Then almost every fresh conquest achieved
by Assyria involved it in war with Babylonia, which appears to
have been ever waiting for a suitable opportunity to cripple its
northern rival.</p>
<p>But Assyria was not the only power which Babylonia had to
guard itself against. On its eastern frontier Elam was also
panting for expansion. Its chief caravan roads ran from Susa
through Assyria towards Asia Minor, and through Babylonia towards
the Phoenician coast. It was probably because its commerce was
hampered by the growth of Assyrian power in the north, as
Servia's commerce in our own day has been hampered by Austria,
that it cherished dreams of conquering Babylonia. In fact, as
Kassite influence suffered decline, one of the great problems of
international politics was whether Elam or Assyria would enter
into possession of the ancient lands of Sumer and Akkad.</p>
<p>Ashur-uballit's vigorous policy of Assyrian expansion was
continued, as has been shown, by his son Bel-nirari. His
grandson, Arik-den-ilu, conducted several successful campaigns,
and penetrated westward as far as Haran, thus crossing the
Babylonian caravan road. He captured great herds of cattle and
flocks of sheep, which were transported to Asshur, and on one
occasion carried away 250,000 prisoners.</p>
<p>Meanwhile Babylonia waged war with Elam. It is related that
Khur-batila, King of Elam, sent a challenge <SPAN id=
"page.anchor.362" name="page.anchor.362"></SPAN>to Kurigalzu III, a
descendant of Kadashman-Kharbe, saying: "Come hither; I will
fight with thee". The Babylonian monarch accepted the challenge,
invaded the territory of his rival, and won a great victory.
Deserted by his troops, the Elamite king was taken prisoner, and
did not secure release until he had ceded a portion of his
territory and consented to pay annual tribute to Babylonia.</p>
<p>Flushed with his success, the Kassite king invaded Assyria
when Adad-nirari I died and his son Arik-den-ilu came to the
throne. He found, however, that the Assyrians were more powerful
than the Elamites, and suffered defeat. His son,
Na´zi-mar-ut´tash<span class="sub">[<SPAN name=
"fnrex1409" href="#ftn.fnrex1409" name="fnrex1409">409</SPAN>]</span>,
also made an unsuccessful attempt to curb the growing power of
the northern Power.</p>
<p>These recurring conflicts were intimately associated with the
Mesopotamian question. Assyria was gradually expanding westward
and shattering the dreams of the Babylonian statesmen and traders
who hoped to recover control of the caravan routes and restore
the prestige of their nation in the west.</p>
<p>Like his father, Adad-nirari I of Assyria had attacked the
Aramaean "Suti" who were settling about Haran. He also acquired a
further portion of the ancient kingdom of Mitanni, with the
result that he exercised sway over part of northern Mesopotamia.
After defeating Na´zi-mar-ut´tash, he fixed the
boundaries of the Assyrian and Babylonian spheres of influence
much to the advantage of his own country.</p>
<p>At home Adad-nirari conducted a vigorous policy. He developed
the resources of the city state of Asshur by constructing a great
dam and quay wall, while he contributed to the prosperity of the
priesthood and the <SPAN name="page.anchor.363" name=
"page.anchor.363"></SPAN>growth of Assyrian culture by extending the
temple of the god Ashur. Ere he died, he assumed the proud title
of "Shar Kishshate", "king of the world", which was also used by
his son Shalmaneser I. His reign extended over a period of thirty
years and terminated about 1300 B.C.</p>
<p>Soon after Shalmaneser came to the throne his country suffered
greatly from an earthquake, which threw down Ishtar's temple at
Nineveh and Ashur's temple at Asshur. Fire broke out in the
latter building and destroyed it completely.</p>
<p>These disasters did not dismay the young monarch. Indeed, they
appear to have stimulated him to set out on a career of conquest,
to secure treasure and slaves, so as to carry out the work of
reconstructing the temples without delay. He became as great a
builder, and as tireless a campaigner as Thothmes III of Egypt,
and under his guidance Assyria became the most powerful nation in
Western Asia. Ere he died his armies were so greatly dreaded that
the Egyptians and Assyrians drew their long struggle for
supremacy in Syria to a close, and formed an alliance for mutual
protection against their common enemy.</p>
<p>It is necessary at this point to review briefly the history of
Palestine and north Syria after the period of Hittite expansion
under King Subbi-luliuma and the decline of Egyptian power under
Akhenaton. The western part of Mitanni and the most of northern
Syria had been colonized by the Hittites.<span class=
"sub">[<SPAN name="fnrex1410" href="#ftn.fnrex1410" id=
"fnrex1410">410</SPAN>]</span> Farther south, their allies, the
Amorites, formed a buffer State on the borders of Egypt's limited
sphere of influence in southern Palestine, and of Babylonia's
sphere in southern Mesopotamia. Mitanni <SPAN name="page.anchor.364"
name="page.anchor.364"></SPAN>was governed by a subject king who was
expected to prevent the acquisition by Assyria of territory in
the north-west.</p>
<p>Subbi-luliuma was succeeded on the Hittite throne by his son,
King Mursil, who was known to the Egyptians as "Meraser", or
"Maurasar". The greater part of this monarch's reign appears to
have been peaceful and prosperous. His allies protected his
frontiers, and he was able to devote himself to the work of
consolidating his empire in Asia Minor and North Syria. He
erected a great palace at Boghaz Köi, and appears to have
had dreams of imitating the splendours of the royal Courts of
Egypt, Assyria, and Babylon.</p>
<p>At this period the Hittite Empire was approaching the zenith
of its power. It controlled the caravan roads of Babylonia and
Egypt, and its rulers appear not only to have had intimate
diplomatic relations with both these countries, but even to have
concerned themselves regarding their internal affairs. When
Rameses I came to the Egyptian throne, at the beginning of the
Nineteenth Dynasty, he sealed an agreement with the Hittites, and
at a later date the Hittite ambassador at Babylon, who
represented Hattusil II, the second son of King Mursil, actually
intervened in a dispute regarding the selection of a successor to
the throne.</p>
<p>The closing years of King Mursil's reign were disturbed by the
military conquests of Egypt, which had renewed its strength under
Rameses I. Seti I, the son of Rameses I, and the third Pharaoh of
the powerful Nineteenth Dynasty, took advantage of the inactivity
of the Hittite ruler by invading southern Syria. He had first to
grapple with the Amorites, whom he successfully defeated. Then he
pressed northward as far as Tunip, and won a decisive victory
over a Hittite army, which <SPAN name="page.anchor.365" name=
"page.anchor.365"></SPAN>secured to Egypt for a period the control
of Palestine as far north as Phoenicia.</p>
<p>When Mursil died he was succeeded on the Hittite throne by his
son Mutallu, whom the Egyptians referred to as "Metella" or
"Mautinel". He was a vigorous and aggressive monarch, and appears
to have lost no time in compelling the Amorites to throw off
their allegiance to Egypt and recognize him as their overlord. As
a result, when Rameses II ascended the Egyptian throne he had to
undertake the task of winning back the Asiatic possessions of his
father.</p>
<p>The preliminary operations conducted by Rameses on the
Palestinian coast were attended with much success. Then, in his
fifth year, he marched northward with a great army, with purpose,
it would appear, to emulate the achievements of Thothmes III and
win fame as a mighty conqueror. But he underestimated the
strength of his rival and narrowly escaped disaster. Advancing
impetuously, with but two of his four divisions, he suddenly
found himself surrounded by the army of the wily Hittite, King
Mutallu, in the vicinity of the city of Kadesh, on the Orontes.
His first division remained intact, but his second was put to
flight by an intervening force of the enemy. From this perilous
position Rameses extricated himself by leading a daring charge
against the Hittite lines on the river bank, which proved
successful. Thrown into confusion, his enemies sought refuge in
the city, but the Pharaoh refrained from attacking them
there.</p>
<p>Although Rameses boasted on his return home of having achieved
a great victory, there is nothing more certain than that this
campaign proved a dismal failure. He was unable to win back for
Egypt the northern territories which had acknowledged the
suzerainty of Egypt during the Eighteenth Dynasty. Subsequently
he was <SPAN name="page.anchor.366" name="page.anchor.366"></SPAN>kept
fully engaged in maintaining his prestige in northern Palestine
and the vicinity of Phoenicia. Then his Asiatic military
operations, which extended altogether over a period of about
twenty years, were brought to a close in a dramatic and
unexpected manner. The Hittite king Mutallu had died in battle,
or by the hand of an assassin, and was succeeded by his brother
Hattusil II (Khetasar), who sealed a treaty of peace with the
great Rameses.</p>
<p>An Egyptian copy of this interesting document can still be
read on the walls of a Theban temple, but it is lacking in
certain details which interest present-day historians. No
reference, for instance, is made to the boundaries of the
Egyptian Empire in Syria, so that it is impossible to estimate
the degree of success which attended the campaigns of Rameses. An
interesting light, however, is thrown on the purport of the
treaty by a tablet letter which has been discovered by Professor
Hugo Winckler at Boghaz Köi. It is a copy of a communication
addressed by Hattusil II to the King of Babylonia, who had made
an enquiry regarding it. "I will inform my brother," wrote the
Hittite monarch; "the King of Egypt and I have made an alliance,
and made ourselves brothers. Brothers we are and will [unite
against] a common foe, and with friends in common."<span class=
"sub">[<SPAN name="fnrex1411" href="#ftn.fnrex1411" id=
"fnrex1411">411</SPAN>]</span> The common foe could have been no
other than Assyria, and the Hittite king's letter appears to
convey a hint to Kadashman-turgu of Babylon that he should make
common cause with Rameses II and Hattusil.</p>
<p>Shalmaneser I of Assyria was pursuing a determined policy of
western and northern expansion. He struck boldly at the eastern
Hittite States and conquered Malatia, where he secured great
treasure for the god Ashur. He even founded colonies within the
Hittite sphere of influence <SPAN name="page.anchor.367" name=
"page.anchor.367"></SPAN>on the borders of Armenia. Shalmaneser's
second campaign was conducted against the portion of ancient
Mitanni which was under Hittite control. The vassal king,
Sattuari, apparently a descendant of Tushratta's, endeavoured to
resist the Assyrians with the aid of Hittites and Aramaeans, but
his army of allies was put to flight. The victorious Shalmaneser
was afterwards able to penetrate as far westward as Carchemish on
the Euphrates.</p>
<p>Having thus secured the whole of Mitanni, the Assyrian
conqueror attacked the Aramaean hordes which were keeping the
territory round Haran in a continuous state of unrest, and forced
them to recognize him as their overlord.</p>
<p>Shalmaneser thus, it would appear, gained control of northern
Mesopotamia and consequently of the Babylonian caravan route to
Haran. As a result Hittite prestige must have suffered decline in
Babylon. For a generation the Hittites had had the Babylonian
merchants at their mercy, and apparently compelled them to pay
heavy duties. Winckler has found among the Boghaz Köi
tablets several letters from the king of Babylon, who made
complaints regarding robberies committed by Amoritic bandits, and
requested that they should be punished and kept in control. Such
a communication is a clear indication that he was entitled, in
lieu of payment, to have an existing agreement fulfilled.</p>
<p>Shalmaneser found that Asshur, the ancient capital, was
unsuitable for the administration of his extended empire, so he
built a great city at Kalkhi (Nimrud), the Biblical Calah, which
was strategically situated amidst fertile meadows on the angle of
land formed by the Tigris and the Upper Zab. Thither to a new
palace he transferred his brilliant Court.</p>
<p><SPAN name="page.anchor.368" name="page.anchor.368"></SPAN>He was
succeeded by his son, Tukulti-Ninip I, who was the most powerful
of the Assyrian monarchs of the Old Empire. He made great
conquests in the north and east, extended and strengthened
Assyrian influence in Mesopotamia, and penetrated into Hittite
territory, bringing into subjection no fewer than forty kings,
whom he compelled to pay annual tribute. It was inevitable that
he should be drawn into conflict with the Babylonian king, who
was plotting with the Hittites against him. One of the tablet
letters found by Winckler at Boghaz Köi is of special
interest in this connection. Hattusil advises the young monarch
of Babylonia to "go and plunder the land of the foe". Apparently
he sought to be freed from the harassing attention of the
Assyrian conqueror by prevailing on his Babylonian royal friend
to act as a "cat's paw".</p>
<p>It is uncertain whether or not Kashtiliash II of Babylonia
invaded Assyria with purpose to cripple his rival. At any rate
war broke out between the two countries, and Tukulti-Ninip proved
irresistible in battle. He marched into Babylonia, and not only
defeated Kashtiliash, but captured him and carried him off to
Asshur, where he was presented in chains to the god Ashur.</p>
<p>The city of Babylon was captured, its wall was demolished, and
many of its inhabitants were put to the sword. Tukulti-Ninip was
evidently waging a war of conquest, for he pillaged E-sagila,
"the temple of the high head", and removed the golden statue of
the god Merodach to Assyria, where it remained for about sixteen
years. He subdued the whole of Babylonia as far south as the
Persian Gulf, and ruled it through viceroys.</p>
<p>Tukulti-Ninip, however, was not a popular emperor even in his
own country. He offended national susceptibilities by showing
preference for Babylonia, and founding <SPAN name="page.anchor.369"
name="page.anchor.369"></SPAN>a new city which has not been located.
There he built a great palace and a temple for Ashur and his
pantheon. He called the city after himself,
Kar-Tukulti-Ninip<span class="sub">[<SPAN name="fnrex1412" href=
"#ftn.fnrex1412" name="fnrex1412">412</SPAN>]</span>.</p>
<p>Seven years after the conquest of Babylonia revolts broke out
against the emperor in Assyria and Babylonia, and he was murdered
in his palace, which had been besieged and captured by an army
headed by his own son, Ashur-natsir-pal I, who succeeded him. The
Babylonian nobles meantime drove the Assyrian garrisons from
their cities, and set on the throne the Kassite prince
Adad-shum-utsur.</p>
<p>Thus in a brief space went to pieces the old Assyrian Empire,
which, at the close of Tukulti-Ninip's thirty years' reign,
embraced the whole Tigro-Euphrates valley from the borders of
Armenia to the Persian Gulf. An obscure century followed, during
which Assyria was raided by its enemies and broken up into petty
States.</p>
<p>The Elamites were not slow to take advantage of the state of
anarchy which prevailed in Babylonia during the closing years of
Assyrian rule. They overran a part of ancient Sumer, and captured
Nippur, where they slew a large number of inhabitants and
captured many prisoners. On a subsequent occasion they pillaged
Isin. When, however, the Babylonian king had cleared his country
of the Assyrians, he attacked the Elamites and drove them across
the frontier.</p>
<p>Nothing is known regarding the reign of the parricide
Ashur-natsir-pal I of Assyria. He was succeeded by
Ninip-Tukulti-Ashur and Adad-shum-lishir, who either reigned
concurrently or were father and son. After a brief period these
were displaced by another two rulers, Ashur-nirari III and
Nabu-dan.</p>
<p>It is not clear why Ninip-Tukulti-Ashur was deposed. <SPAN id=
"page.anchor.370" name="page.anchor.370"></SPAN>Perhaps he was an
ally of Adad-shum-utsur, the Babylonian king, and was unpopular
on that account. He journeyed to Babylon on one occasion,
carrying with him the statue of Merodach, but did not return.
Perhaps he fled from the rebels. At any rate Adad-shum-utsur was
asked to send him back, by an Assyrian dignitary who was probably
Ashur-nirari III. The king of Babylon refused this request, nor
would he give official recognition to the new ruler or
rulers.</p>
<p>Soon afterwards another usurper, Bel-kudur-utsur, led an
Assyrian army against the Babylonians, but was slain in battle.
He was succeeded by Ninip-apil-esharia, who led his forces back
to Asshur, followed by Adad-shum-utsur. The city was besieged but
not captured by the Babylonian army.</p>
<p>Under Adad-shum-utsur, who reigned for thirty years, Babylonia
recovered much of its ancient splendour. It held Elam in check
and laid a heavy hand on Assyria, which had been paralysed by
civil war. Once again it possessed Mesopotamia and controlled its
caravan road to Haran and Phoenicia, and apparently its relations
with the Hittites and Syrians were of a cordial character. The
next king, Meli-shipak, assumed the Assyrian title "Shar
Kishshati", "king of the world", and had a prosperous reign of
fifteen years. He was succeeded by Marduk-aplu-iddin I, who
presided over the destinies of Babylonia for about thirteen
years. Thereafter the glory of the Kassite Dynasty passed away.
King Zamama-shum-iddin followed with a twelvemonth's reign,
during which his kingdom was successfully invaded from the north
by the Assyrians under King Ashur-dan I, and from the east by the
Elamites under a king whose name has not been traced. Several
towns were captured and pillaged, and rich booty was carried off
to Asshur and Susa.</p>
<p><SPAN name="page.anchor.371" name=
"page.anchor.371"></SPAN>Bel-shum-iddin succeeded Zamama-shum-iddin,
but three years afterwards he was deposed by a king of Isin. So
ended the Kassite Dynasty of Babylonia, which had endured for a
period of 576 years and nine months.</p>
<p>Babylonia was called Karduniash during the Kassite Dynasty.
This name was originally applied to the district at the river
mouths, where the alien rulers appear to have first achieved
ascendancy. Apparently they were strongly supported by the
non-Semitic elements in the population, and represented a popular
revolt against the political supremacy of the city of Babylon and
its god Merodach. It is significant to find in this connection
that the early Kassite kings showed a preference for Nippur as
their capital and promoted the worship of Enlil, the elder Bel,
who was probably identified with their own god of fertility and
battle. Their sun god, Sachi, appears to have been merged in
Shamash. In time, however, the kings followed the example of
Hammurabi by exalting Merodach.</p>
<p>The Kassite language added to the "Babel of tongues" among the
common people, but was never used in inscriptions. At an early
period the alien rulers became thoroughly Babylonianized, and as
they held sway for nearly six centuries it cannot be assumed that
they were unpopular. They allowed their mountain homeland, or
earliest area of settlement in the east, to be seized and
governed by Assyria, and probably maintained as slight a
connection with it after settlement in Babylonia as did the
Saxons of England with their Continental area of origin.</p>
<p>Although Babylonia was not so great a world power under the
Kassites as it had been during the Hammurabi Dynasty, it
prospered greatly as an industrial, agricultural, and trading
country. The Babylonian language was used throughout western Asia
as the language of diplomacy and commerce, and the city of
Babylon was the most <SPAN name="page.anchor.372" name=
"page.anchor.372"></SPAN>important commercial metropolis of the
ancient world. Its merchants traded directly and indirectly with
far-distant countries. They imported cobalt--which was used for
colouring glass a vivid blue--from China, and may have
occasionally met Chinese traders who came westward with their
caravans, while a brisk trade in marble and limestone was
conducted with and through Elam. Egypt was the chief source of
the gold supply, which was obtained from the Nubian mines; and in
exchange for this precious metal the Babylonians supplied the
Nilotic merchants with lapis-lazuli from Bactria, enamel, and
their own wonderful coloured glass, which was not unlike the
later Venetian, as well as chariots and horses. The Kassites were
great horse breeders, and the battle steeds from the Babylonian
province of Namar were everywhere in great demand. They also
promoted the cattle trade. Cattle rearing was confined chiefly to
the marshy districts at the head of the Persian Gulf, and the
extensive steppes on the borders of the Arabian desert, so well
known to Abraham and his ancestors, which provided excellent
grazing. Agriculture also flourished; as in Egypt it constituted
the basis of national and commercial prosperity.</p>
<p>It is evident that great wealth accumulated in Karduniash
during the Kassite period. When the images of Merodach and
Zerpanitu<span class='phonetic'>m</span> were taken back to
Babylon, from Assyria, they were clad, as has been recorded, in
garments embroidered with gold and sparkling with gems, while
E-sagila was redecorated on a lavish scale with priceless works
of art.</p>
<p>Assyria presented a sharp contrast to Babylonia, the mother
land, from which its culture was derived. As a separate kingdom
it had to develop along different lines. In fact, it was unable
to exist as a world power without the enforced co-operation of
neighbouring States. Babylonia, <SPAN name="page.anchor.373" name=
"page.anchor.373"></SPAN>on the other hand, could have flourished in
comparative isolation, like Egypt during the Old Kingdom period,
because it was able to feed itself and maintain a large
population so long as its rich alluvial plain was irrigated
during its dry season, which extended over about eight months in
the year.</p>
<p>The region north of Baghdad was of different geographical
formation to the southern plain, and therefore less suitable for
the birth and growth of a great independent civilization. Assyria
embraced a chalk plateau of the later Mesozoic period, with
tertiary deposits, and had an extremely limited area suitable for
agricultural pursuits. Its original inhabitants were nomadic
pastoral and hunting tribes, and there appears to be little doubt
that agriculture was introduced along the banks of the Tigris by
colonists from Babylonia, who formed city States which owed
allegiance to the kings of Sumer and Akkad.</p>
<p>After the Hammurabi period Assyria rose into prominence as a
predatory power, which depended for its stability upon those
productive countries which it was able to conquer and hold in
sway. It never had a numerous peasantry, and such as it had
ultimately vanished, for the kings pursued the short-sighted
policy of colonizing districts on the borders of their empire
with their loyal subjects, and settling aliens in the heart of
the homeland, where they were controlled by the military. In this
manner they built up an artificial empire, which suffered at
critical periods in its history because it lacked the great
driving and sustaining force of a population welded together by
immemorial native traditions and the love of country which is the
essence of true patriotism. National sentiment was chiefly
confined to the military aristocracy and the priests; the
enslaved and uncultured masses of <SPAN name="page.anchor.374" name=
"page.anchor.374"></SPAN>aliens were concerned mainly with their
daily duties, and no doubt included communities, like the
Israelites in captivity, who longed to return to their native
lands.</p>
<p>Assyria had to maintain a standing army, which grew from an
alliance of brigands who first enslaved the native population,
and ultimately extended their sway over neighbouring States. The
successes of the army made Assyria powerful. Conquering kings
accumulated rich booty by pillaging alien cities, and grew more
and more wealthy as they were able to impose annual tribute on
those States which came under their sway. They even regarded
Babylonia with avaricious eyes. It was to achieve the conquest of
the fertile and prosperous mother State that the early Assyrian
emperors conducted military operations in the north-west and laid
hands on Mesopotamia. There was no surer way of strangling it
than by securing control of its trade routes. What the command of
the sea is to Great Britain at the present day, the command of
the caravan roads was to ancient Babylonia.</p>
<p>Babylonia suffered less than Assyria by defeat in battle; its
natural resources gave it great recuperative powers, and the
native population was ever so intensely patriotic that centuries
of alien sway could not obliterate their national aspirations. A
conqueror of Babylon had to become a Babylonian. The Amorites and
Kassites had in turn to adopt the modes of life and modes of
thought of the native population. Like the Egyptians, the
Babylonians ever achieved the intellectual conquest of their
conquerors.</p>
<p>The Assyrian Empire, on the other hand, collapsed like a house
of cards when its army of mercenaries suffered a succession of
disasters. The kings, as we have indicated, depended on the
tribute of subject States to pay <SPAN name="page.anchor.375" name=
"page.anchor.375"></SPAN>their soldiers and maintain the priesthood;
they were faced with national bankruptcy when their vassals
successfully revolted against them.</p>
<p>The history of Assyria as a world power is divided into three
periods: (1) the Old Empire; (2) the Middle Empire; (3) the New
or Last Empire.</p>
<p>We have followed the rise and growth of the Old Empire from
the days of Ashur-uballit until the reign of Tukulti-Ninip, when
it flourished in great splendour and suddenly went to pieces.
Thereafter, until the second period of the Old Empire, Assyria
comprised but a few city States which had agricultural resources
and were trading centres. Of these the most enterprising was
Asshur. When a ruler of Asshur was able, by conserving his
revenues, to command sufficient capital with purpose to raise a
strong army of mercenaries as a business speculation, he set
forth to build up a new empire on the ruins of the old. In its
early stages, of course, this process was slow and difficult. It
necessitated the adoption of a military career by native
Assyrians, who officered the troops, and these troops had to be
trained and disciplined by engaging in brigandage, which also
brought them rich rewards for their services. Babylonia became
powerful by developing the arts of peace; Assyria became powerful
by developing the science of warfare.</p>
<br/>
<hr width="100" align="left" />
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex1407" href="#fnrex1407" id=
"ftn.fnrex1407">407</SPAN>]</span> At Carchemish a railway bridge
spans the mile-wide river ferry which Assyria's soldiers were
wont to cross with the aid of skin floats. The engineers have
found it possible to utilize a Hittite river wall about 3000
years old--the oldest engineering structure in the world. The
ferry was on the old trade route.
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex1408" href="#fnrex1408" id=
"ftn.fnrex1408">408</SPAN>]</span> <span class=
"emphasis"><em>Deuteronomy</em></span>, xxvi, 5
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex1409" href="#fnrex1409" id=
"ftn.fnrex1409">409</SPAN>]</span> Pr. <span class=
"emphasis"><em>u</em></span> as <span class=
"emphasis"><em>oo</em></span>.
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex1410" href="#fnrex1410" id=
"ftn.fnrex1410">410</SPAN>]</span> The chief cities of North Syria
were prior to this period Hittite. This expansion did not change
the civilization but extended the area of occupation and
control.
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex1411" href="#fnrex1411" id=
"ftn.fnrex1411">411</SPAN>]</span> Garstang's <span class=
"emphasis"><em>The Land of the Hittites,</em></span> p.
349.
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex1412" href="#fnrex1412" id=
"ftn.fnrex1412">412</SPAN>]</span> "Burgh of Tukulti-Ninip."
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />