PowerPoint Presentationfaculty.uml.edu/.../Teaching/documents/HIST213L21NeoBabylonian.pdf · The...

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3/14/2012 1 Lecture 21: Neo-Babylonian Pacification HIST 213 Spring 2012 Hanging Gardens of Babylon (artist reconstruction) Hanging Gardens of Babylon (archaeological site) The Neo-Babylonian Empire Neo ^ Destruction of Assyria Assyrian King Assurbanipal dies in 627 BCE family fighting over succession No recognized king of Babylon Chaldean be the name of Nabu-apla-usur “Nabu Protect the Heir” by 616 Nabu has gained control of Babylonia tries to take Assur fails but Assyrian army follow Nabu south allows Medes to attack homeland

Transcript of PowerPoint Presentationfaculty.uml.edu/.../Teaching/documents/HIST213L21NeoBabylonian.pdf · The...

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Lecture 21: Neo-Babylonian Pacification

HIST 213 Spring 2012

Hanging Gardens of Babylon (artist reconstruction)

Hanging Gardens of Babylon (archaeological site)

The Neo-Babylonian Empire

Neo ^

Destruction of Assyria

Assyrian King Assurbanipal dies in 627 BCE

• family fighting over succession

No recognized king of Babylon

• Chaldean be the name of Nabu-apla-usur – “Nabu Protect the Heir”

• by 616 Nabu has gained control of Babylonia

• tries to take Assur – fails but Assyrian army follow Nabu south

– allows Medes to attack homeland

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Rise of Neo-Babylonian [Chaldean] Empire (625-560 BCE)

Coalition of Medes and Babylonians absorb Assyria:

– 612 sack Nineveh (flee to Harran)

– 610 sack Harran

– 609 Battle of Carcamesh (Egypt joins Assyrians)

Assyria ceased to exist as independent power

– Medes take eastern Assyria

• Persians are vassals of Medes

– Babylonians take Mesopotamia

• trade with western cities (Phoenicia) vital for economic growth

Nebuchadnezzar II (604-562 BCE)

• crown prince of Babylonia [son of Nabu-apla-usur] • commander of Babylonian forces in Levant Peruses Egyptian retreat until hears Nabu is dead

– return to Babylon for coronation

Returns to Syria • collects tribute :

– Damascus – Sidon – Tyre – Judah

• destroys states who resist (Ashkelon)

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Schoyen stele, Norway depicts Nebuchadnezzar II with a ziggurat to Marduk

International Affairs with Judah/Israel

King of Judah heeds words of Prophet Jeremiah • stops paying tribute to Babylon 598 BCE Babylonian armies march to Judah • King of Judah dies • Jehoiachin 18 y.o. son on throne 597 BCE siege of Jerusalem • Neb takes treasures of Solomon temple 587 BCE Another revolt/siege of Jerusalem • Jews forcibly resettled in Babylonia

– “Babylonian Exile” of the Bible (Book of Daniel)

Meanwhile Medes campaign in Anatolia

• Medes come into contact with Lydian Kingdom – not really an empire

– smash and grab raiding zone

May 28 585 BCE

• solar eclipse

• interrupts battle – both sides agree to a peace

treaty

– Halys River new boundary of Medes

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last moves of Nebuchadnezzar II

Fearful of Medes

• mostly on friendly terms

• but fearing raids – builds a large wall between Tigris and Euphrates

• same place as in Ur III period

Conquers Phoenicia

• siege of island of Tyre – holds out for 13 years

– finally gives up the city

562 BCE Nebuchadnezzar II dies

wall of Shu-sin

Neo-Babylonian Culture

• more people living in urban areas than ever before – 100,000 people

• Euphrates dividing the city in two halves

• building projects

• commercial activity

• height of literate culture – mathematics

– astronomy

– cartography

Beautification of Babylon

• “Hanging Gardens of Babylon”

• Northern Palace

– doubled walled

• Ishtar Gate

• Processional Way

• Etemenanki

– ziggurat temple to Marduk

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Archaeological Imperialism

Ishtar Gate Europe circa 1910

Neo-Babylonian Economics

• large construction funded by economic growth

– everyone (even king) had to pay tribute to temples

• overseas trade with West and East

• tribute of conquered territory

• private enterprises

– localized control of elite families

proto-banking developments

• financial transactions based

on basic promissory note

• listed materials being loaned – lender and borrower

– scribe, date and place of transaction

– taxes, dues, assignment of credit and purchases • page 302 in textbook

• commodities market – grain speculation

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Neo-Babylonian Credit system

• Not all loans had interest payments

– but average interest at 20%

• silver was loaned for an indefinite time

– usually women for dowries

• standardized coinage in Lydia c. 650 BCE

– still not used by Neo-Babylonians

Babylonian Marriage Contracts

Mr. Dagil-ili, son of Mr. Zambubu, spoke to Ms. Hamma, daughter of Mr. Nergal-iddini: “Please let me have your daughter.”…

Ms. Hamma agreed and in consideration Mr. Dagil-ili gave a slave bought for one half pound of silver and another for one half-pound of silver. …

Should Mr. Dagil-ili take another wife, he will one pound of silver to (his old) wife, and she may go whereever she wishes.

Witnesses were x and y and Z the priestess of Ishtar

Population Deportation

• Neo-Babylonians continued practice of “social engineering”

• relocation of whole populations who rebelled or defeated in battle

• royal families of defeated kingdoms allowed to live in the palace – ex: Jehoiachin former king of Judah

– made cities very cosmopolitan • Elam, Persia, Media, Lydia, Ionian, Phoenicia, Syria etc.

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Scholarly Activity

Most important advances in astronomy

• could predict eclipse from 747 BCE onwards

• according to Ptolemy (Macedonian king)

• finalized lunar calendar by 500 BCE

• 354 day year

– leap “month” every 3 years

• word “Chaldean” synonymous with “astronomer”

– 3 wise men of the nativity story

Linguistic Shift

• Region began to speak Aramaic instead of Akkadian

– Akkadian still official language of correspondence, literature and science

• Babylonian kings showed great reverence for the Mesopotamian past

– last king Nabonidus

Nabonidus the antiquarian

King from 556-539 BCE • developed a deep love of Babylonian past

– Mesopotamian moon god Sin

• rebuilds ziggurats and temples of Ur • sends out archaeologists to find inscriptions,

foundation deposits, ritual objects of temples of Sumer and Akkad

• makes his daughter High Priestess of Nanna (Sin) – just as Sargon had earlier

• would not celebrate Babylonian “New Year’s Day” festival

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New Year’s Festival of Akitu

12 day long religious festival • King’s presence was required • first few days involved sacrificing to Marduk

– King stripped of royal insignia – slapped in the face – forced on his knees in front of Marduk – priest pulled on his ears until tears formed – solemn oath to obey Marduk

• go out and walk through the crops – cosmos (harmony)

Marduk and his snake dragon from J. Black & A. Green, Gods, Demons and Symbols of Ancient Mesopotamia, 1992

The Akitu procession From W. Andrae, Das wiederentstandene Assur 1977

Babylonian Assyrian Youth Union in Denmark arranged AKITU FESTIVAL in 2006 re-enacting the ancient pagan festival known today as "New Years".

Traditional priests cheesed off

• priestly class angered at Nabonius’ sacrilegious behavior

• spread rumors that Nabonius is a madman

– these charges circulate for some time

– Book of Daniel wrongly ascribes them to Neb II

• secretly make a pact with Cyrus II

– King of Persia

• evidenced in Nabonidus Chronicle

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