Ancient Iraq (60 page)

Read Ancient Iraq Online

Authors: Georges Roux

Tags: #History

BOOK: Ancient Iraq
3.73Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Chapter 17

1
.
R. D. BARNETT
, ‘The Sea-Peoples’,
CAH
, II, 2, pp. 359 – 78.
N. K. SANDARS
,
The Sea-Peoples, Warriors of the Ancient Mediterranean, 1250 – 1150
B.C
, London, 1978;
R. A. MACALISTER
,
The Philistines, their History and Civilization
, Chicago, 1965.

2
. Later, the
Parsua
moved to the south-western part of Iran, occupied a district in the Bakhtiari mountains close to Elam and gave it their name:
Parsu(m) ash
, Persia, Fars. (See.
R. GHIRSHMAN
,
Iran
, Harmondsworth, 1954, pp. 91 and 119.)

3
.
W. F. ALBRIGHT
,
From the Stone Age to Christianity
, 2nd ed., New York, 1957, pp. 13 and 255. See also:
O. EISSFELD
,
CAH
, II, 2, pp. 307 – 30. This author favours a date of
c
. 1400
B.C
. for the entry into Egypt.

4
.
I Kings i-ix; II Chronicles
i – ix.
O. EISSFELD
, ‘The Hebrew Kingdom’,
CAH
, II, 2, pp. 537 – 605.

5
. Cf.
A. SCHAEFER
,
Ugaritica
I, Paris, 1939, pp. 43 – 6;
J. NOUGAYROL
, ‘Guerre et paix à Ugarit’,
Iraq
, XXV (1963), pp. 120 – 21.
M. C. ASTOUR
, ‘New evidence for the last days of Ugarit’,
AJA
, LXIX (1965), pp. 253 – 8.

6
.
I Kings
v. 1 – 12; vii. 13 ff.; ix. 11 – 14;
II Chronicles
ii. 3 – 16; iv. 11 – 18.

7
. On the civilization of the Phoenicians, see:
D. HARDEN
,
The Phoenicians
, London, 1962;
S. MOSCATI
,
The World of the Phoenicians
, London, 1973;
A. PARROT, M. H. CHEHAB, S. MOSCATI
,
Les Phéniciens
, Paris, 1975.

8
. On the alphabet, cf.
G. R. DRIVER
,
Semitic Writing
, Oxford, 1948;
D. DIRINGER
The Alphabet
, London, 1948;
J. G. FEVRIER
,
Histoire de l'Ecriture
, Paris, 1948;
I. J. GELB
,
A Study of Writing
, London, 1952.

9
.
C. H. GORDON
,
Ugaritic Literature
, Roma, 1949;
G. R. DRIVER
,
Canaanite Myths and Legends
, Edinburgh, 1956;
ANET
, pp. 130 – 55.

10
. On the Neo-Hittites generally see:
O. GURNEY
,
The Hittites
, London, 1980, pp. 41 – 7; J. D. HAWKINS, article ‘Hatti, the first millennium
B.C
.’ in
RLA
, IV, pp. 152 – 9. On writing and grammar,
E. LAROCHE
,
Les Hiéroglyphes Hittites
, Paris, 1960. For a list of hieroglyphic inscriptions, see E. LAROCHE, ‘Liste des documents hiéroglyphiques‘,
RHA
, XXVII (1969), pp. 110 – 31.

11
.
SETON LLOYD
,
Early Anatolia
, Harmondsworth, 1956, pp. 177 – 82. Good summary in the articles by I. J.
GELB
and M. J.
MELLINK
in
Bi.Or
., VII (1950), pp. 129 – 50.

12
.
J. D. HAWKINS
, ‘Assyrians and Hittites’,
Iraq
, XXXVI (1974), pp. 67 – 83.

13
. On the Aramaeans in general, cf.
S. SCHIFFER
,
Die Aramaer
, Leipzig, 1911;
E. G. KRAELING
,
Aram and Israel
, New York, 1918;
R. T. O'CALLAGHAN
,
Aram Naharaim
, Rome, 1948, pp. 93 – 130;
A. DUPONT-SOMMER
,
Les Aramëens
, Paris, 1949;
A. MALAMAT
‘The Aramaeans’, in
D. J. WISEMAN
(ed.),
Peoples of Old Testament Times
, London, 1973, pp. 134 – 55.

14
.
Deuteronomy
xxvi. 5.

15
.
ARAB
, I, § 166.

16
.
S. MOSCATI
, ‘The Aramaean Ahlamû’,
JSS
, IV (1959), pp. 303 – 7.

17
.
M. FREIHERR VON OPPENHEIM
,
Der Tell Halaf
, Leipzig, 1931, pp. 71 – 198, and
Tell Halaf II, Die Bauwerke,
Berlin, 1950;
A. MOORTGAT
Tell Halaf, III, Die Bildwerke,
Berlin, 1955;
B. HROUDA
,
Tell Halaf IV, Die Kleinfunde aus historischer Zeit,
Berlin, 1962.

18
.
P. GARELLI
, ‘Importance et rôle des Araméens dans l'administration de l'empire assyrien’ in
H. J. NISSEN
and
J. RENGER
(ed.),
Mesopotamien und seine Nachbarn
, Berlin, 1982, II, pp. 437 – 47;
H. TADMOR
, ‘The aramaization of Assyria: aspects of western impact’,
ibid
., pp. 449 – 70.

19
. On this and following periods, see:
J. A. BRINKMAN
,
A Political History of Post-Kassite Babylonia (1158 – 722
), Rome, 1968.

20
. On this curious text of ‘lamentation’, see
H. TADMOR
, ‘Historical implications of the correct rendering of Akkadian
dâku’, JNES
, XVII (1958), pp. 138 – 9. Cf.
CAH
, II, 2, p. 501.

21
. L. KING,
BBS
, No. VI, pp. 29 – 36.

22
.
W. G. LAMBERT
, ‘The reign of Nebuchadnezzar I: a turning point in the history of ancient Mesopotamian religion’ in
W. S. MCCULLOUGH
(ed.),
The Seed of Wisdom
, Toronto, 1964, pp. 3 – 13.

23
.
ARAB
, I, § 257 (Inscription of Tiglathpileser I).

24
.
ARAB
, I, § 300 – 303;
ANET
, pp. 274 – 5.

25
.
ARAB
, I, § 309. Cf.
E. WEIDNER
, ‘Die Feldzüge and Bauten Tiglatpilesers I,
AfO
, XVIII (1958), pp. 342 – 60.

26
. Stone tablet of Nabû-apal-iddina (885 – 852
B.C.
), Col. I, 4 – 5. (
L. KING
,
BBS
, p. 121.)

27
.
L. W. KING
,
Chronicles
, II, pp. 143 – 79. Cf. in particular, the ‘Religious chronicle’ (
ABC
, pp. 133 – 8); some parts of the ‘Dynastic chronicle’ (
ABC
, pp. 139 – 44) and a fragment of Assyrian chronicle (
ABC
, p. 189).

28
.
P. GÖSSMANN
,
Das Erra-Epos
, Würzburg, 1955;
L. CAGNI
,
L'epopea di Erra, Rome
, 1969. Cf.
R. BORGER
and
W. G. LAMBERT
,
Orientalia
, XXVII (1958) pp. 137 – 49.

29
. ‘Religious chronicle’, III, 4 – 15 (
ABC
, pp. 137 – 8).

30
.
M. DIETRICH
,
Die Aramäer Südbabyloniens in der Sargonidenzeit
(700 – 648), Neukirchen-Vluyn, 1970. Cf.
F. MALBRAN
in
Journal Asiatique
, Paris, 1972, pp. 15 – 38.

Chapter 18

1.
Exactly since Ninurta apal-ekur (1192 – 1180
B.C.
).

2
. The main sources for the political history of the so-called Neo-Assyrian period are (1) the Assyrian royal inscriptions translated by
D. LUCKENBILL
,
Ancient Records of Assyria and Babylonia (ARAB)
, 2 vol., Chicago, 1926–7, and, partly, by
A. K. GRAYSON
,
Assyrian Royal Inscriptions (ARI)
, 2 vol., Wiesbaden, 1972 – 6; (2) the Babylonian royal inscription to be found in
J. A. BRINKMAN
,
A Political History of Post-Kassite Babylonia (PKB)
, Roma, 1967: (3) the Assyrian and Babylonian Chronicles translated by
A. K. GRAYSON
,
Assyrian and Babylonian Chronicles (ABC)
, Locust Valley (New York), 1975; (4) the royal correspondence from Nineveh published by
R. F. HARPER
,
Assyrian and Babylonian Letters belonging to the Kuyunjik Collection of the British Museum (ABL)
, 14 vol., London/Chicago, 1892 – 1914, and translated by
LEROY WATERMAN
,
Royal Correspondence of the Assyrian Empire (RCAE)
, 4 vol., Ann Arbor, Mich., 1930 – 36; (5) the royal correspondence from Nimrud published and translated by
D. J. WISEMAN, H. W. SAGGS, J. V. KINNIER WILSON
and
B. PARKER
in
Iraq
, XII (1950) to XXVIII (1966); the remarkable series
State Archives of Assyria (SAA)
,
K. DELLER
et al
. (ed.), 5 volumes published, Helsinki, 1987 ff.; the
Old Testament
, notably
II Kings, II Chronicles, Prophets
. For a general view of the Assyrians and Assyria, see:
H. W. F. SAGGS
,
The Might that was Assyria
, London, 1984.

3
. Inscriptions of Adad-nirâri II in
ARAB
, I, §§ 355 – 99 and
ARI
, II, § 394 – 460.

4
.
ARAB
, I, § 360;
ARI
, II, §§ 420, 422;
Synchr. History
, III, 1 – 6 (
ABC
, p. 166). Cf.
PKB
, pp. 177 – 80.

5
.
Synchr. History
, III, 9 – 21 (
ABC
p. 166). Cf.
PKB
, pp. 180 – 82.

6
.
ARAB, I
, § 402 – 34; ARI, II, § 464 – 88. Also see:
W. SCHRAMM
, ‘Die Annalen des assyrischen Konigs Tukulti-Ninurta II’,
Bi. Or., XXVII
(1970), pp. 147 – 60.

7
. On this subject see
W. G LAMBERT
, ‘The reigns of Assurnasirpal II and Shalmaneser III, an interpretation’,
Iraq
, XXXVI (1974), pp. 103 – 6;
H. TADMOR
, ‘Assyria and the West: the ninth century and its aftermath’ in
H. GOEDICKE
and
J. J. ROBERTS
(ed.),
Unity and Diversity
, Baltimore, 1975, pp. 36 – 48;
A. K. GRAYSON
, ‘Studies in Neo-Assyrian history: the ninth century
B.C
.’, XXXIII (1976), pp. 134 – 45;
M. LIVERANI
, The ideology of the Assyrian empire’ in
M. T. LARSEN
(ed.),
Power and Propaganda
, Copenhagen, 1979, pp. 297 – 317;
J. READE
, Ideology and propaganda in Assyrian Arts',
ibid
., pp. 329 – 43.

8
.
D. G. HOGARTH
,
The Ancient Near East
, London, 1950, p. 25.

9
. It was only in the Middle-Assyrian period (XIII – XIth centuries) that Ashur became a dominant war god. In an Assyrian version of the Epic of Creation (
enuma elish
), he replaces Marduk at the second rank of the Mesopotamian pantheon.

10
.
F. M. FALES
; ‘The enemy in the Neo-Assyrian inscriptions: the “moral judgement”’, in
H. J. NISSEN
and
J. RENGER
(ed.),
Mesopotamien und seine Nachbarn
, Berlin, 1982, II, pp. 425 – 35.

11
.
ARAB
, I, § 466, 501 – 2;
ARI
, II, §§ 574, 641. The talent (
biltu
) was about 33 kilos and the
gur
, about 70 litres.

12
. See
A. T. OLMSTEAD
,
History of Assyria
, New York, 1923, pp. 530 – 32.

13
.
J. N. POSTGATE
,
Taxation and Conscription in the Assyrian Empire
, Rome, 1974, pp. 201 – 2.

14
.
AAO
, pl. 82;
A. PARROT
,
Assur
, Paris, 1961, pls. 22 – 3.

15
. Inscriptions of Ashurnasirpal in
ARAB
, I, §§ 436 – 552,
ARI
, II §§ 529 – 869. Also:
E. MICHEL
, ‘Die Texte Assur-nasir-aplis II’,
Die Welt der Orient
II (1954), pp. 313 – 21, 404 – 7.

16.
ARAB
, I, § 443.
ARI
, II, § 587.

17
.
ANET
, p. 276;
ARAB
, I, §§ 479, 518;
ARI
, II, § 586.

18
.
Tushhan
is Kurkh, twenty miles south of Diarbakr.
Kar-Ashurnasirpal
and
Nibarti-Ashur
, facing each other on either side of the Euphrates, are probably Zalabiyah and Halabiyah, between Raqqa and Deir-ez-Zor.

19
.
ARAB
, I, §§ 443, 445, 472;
ARI
, II, §§ 547, 549, 579.

20
. For a reappraisal of Assyrian ‘cruelty’, see
H. W. F. SAGGS
, ‘Assyrian prisoners of war and the right to live’,
AfO, Beiheft
19 (1982), pp. 85 – 93. Also see the remarks of
A. T. OLMSTEAD
, ‘The calculated frightfulness of Ashur-nasir-apal‘,
JAOS
, XXXVIII (1918), pp. 209 – 63.

21
.
ARAB
, I, § 489;
ARI
, II, § 653.

22
.
A. H. LAYARD
,
Nineveh and its Remains
, London, 1849;
Nineveh and Babylon
, London, 1882.

23
. British excavations from 1949 to 1963. Preliminary reports in
Iraq
, XII (1950) to XXV (1963). Final report:
M. E. L. MALLOWAN
,
Nimrud and its Remains
, 2 vol., London, 1966. Summaries in
M. E. L. MALLOWAN
,
Twenty-five Years of Mesopotamian Discovery
, London, 1956, pp. 45 – 78, and in
J. CURTIS
(ed.),
Fifty Years of Mesopotamian Discovery
, London, 1982, pp. 99 – 112. Polish excavations from 1972 to 1982. Summarized by
R. SOBOLEwSKI in ZA
, LXXI (1982), pp. 248 – 73. Iraqi restorations and excavations since 1970.

24
.
D. J. WISEMAN
, ‘A new stele of Assur-nasir-pal’,
Iraq
, XIV (1952), pp. 23 – 39.

25
.
AAO
, pl. 93.

26
.
D. OATES
‘Fort Shalmaneser. An interim report‘,
Iraq
, XXI (1959), pp. 98 – 129; ‘The excavations at Nimrud‘, 1960,
Iraq
, XXIII (1961), pp. 1 – 14,
J. LAESSØE
, ‘A statue of Shalmaneser III, from Nimrud‘,
Iraq
, XXI (1959), pp. 147 – 57.

27
.
H. RASSAM
,
Asshur and the Land of Nimrod
, New York, 1897;
D. OATES
, ‘Balawat (Imgur-Enlil’),
Iraq
, XXXVI (1974), pp. 173 – 8; J.
CURTIS
, ‘Balawat‘, in
Fifty Years of Mesopotamian Discovery
, pp. 113 – 19. On the gates:
L. W. KING
,
Bronze Reliefs from the Gates of Shalmaneser
, London, 1915. Cf.
AAO
, pl. 91, 92;
A. PARROT
,
Assur
, pl. 121 – 9.

28
. To the inscriptions published in
ARAB
, I, §§ 553 – 612, add now;
G. G. CAMERON
, ‘The annals of Shalmaneser III, a new text’,
Sumer
, VI (1950), pp. 6 – 26;
FUAD SAFAR
, ‘A further text of Shalmaneser III,
Sumer
, VII (1951), pp. 3 – 21;
J. LAESSØE
, ‘Building inscriptions from Fort Shalmaneser’,
Iraq
, XXI (1959), pp. 38 – 41. Poetic version of the campaign in Urartu:
W. G. LAMBERT
, ‘The Sultantepe tablets, VIII, Shalmaneser in Ararat’,
Anatolian Studies
, XI (1961), pp. 143 – 58.
J. V. KINNIER WILSON
, ‘The Kurba‘il statue of Shalmaneser III’,
Iraq
, XXIV (1962), pp. 90 – 115.

29
. French excavations 1929 – 31:
F. THUREAU-DANGIN
and
M. DUNAND
,
Til-Barsib
, Paris, 1936.

30
.
ARAB
, I, § 611;
ANET
, p. 279. Note that this is the first historical mention of the Arabs.

31
.
ARAB
, I, § 681. Cf.
II Kings
viii. 7 – 15.

32
.
BBS
, pp. 120 – 27.

33
.
ARAB
, I, § 624.
Synchr. Hist
. III, 22 – 35 (
ABC
, p. 167).

34
A throne-base found at Nimrud shows Shalmaneser shaking hands with Marduk-zakir-shumi. Cf.
D. OATES
,
Iraq
, XXV (1963), pp. 20 – 21, and
P. HULIN
,
ibid
., pp. 48 – 69.

Other books

The Stipulation by Young, M.L.
A Place Beyond The Map by Thews, Samuel
Spiraling Deception by Noree Kahika
The Touch by Colleen McCullough
Promised to the Crusader by Anne Herries
The Way Things Were by Aatish Taseer