Assyria
(in Greek,
Ἀσσυρία; in Assyrian inscriptions called
Assur; in the Persian,
Athura; and in the Median,
Assura). The country properly so called, in the narrowest sense, was a district
of Asia, extending along the east side of the Tigris, which divided it on the west and
northwest from Mesopotamia and Babylonia, and bounded on the north and east by Mount Niphates
and Mount Zagrus, which separated it from Armenia and Media, and on the southeast by Susiana.
It was watered by several streams flowing into the Tigris from the east, two of which, the
Lycus or Zabatus (Great Zab) and the Caprus or Zabas (Little Zab), divided the country into
three parts. The district between the upper Tigris and the Lycus , called Atturia, was
probably the most ancient seat of the monarchy, containing the capital, Nineveh or Ninus. The
Lycus and the Little Zab bounded the finest portion, called Adiabené. The district
southeast of the Little Zab contained the two subdivisions Apolloniatis and
Sittacené. In a wider sense the name Assyria was used to designate the whole
country watered by the Tigris and Euphrates, including Mesopotamia and Babylonia; and in a
still more extended application it meant the whole Assyrian Empire, one of the first great
states of which we have any record.
The remarkable fertility of the country enabled it to support a large population; and its
great material prosperity, power, and culture are attested
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Restoration of an Assyrian Palace. (Reber.)
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by ancient writers, as well as by the monuments that remain to us in the
shape of ruins of cities, extensive canals and water-works, and proofs secured by excavators
of the possession of the arts and sciences. At the present day the country is almost a desert;
but from Tekrit to Bagdad, and in the vicinity of
Nineveh (q.v.), abundant ruins mark the former wealth and splendour of the people.
Ethnology.—The Assyrians were a branch of the Semitic
race, to which the Syrians, Phœnicians, Jews, and Arabs belonged, and which in
Chaldaea appears to have supplanted the Scythic or Turanian stock as early as B.C. 2100.
Assyria had in the earliest times a close connection with Aethiopia and Arabia. Hence
Herodotus speaks of Sennacherib as king of the Arabians as well as of the Assyrians. See
Babylonia.
Language.—The language of the Assyrians is allied to the
North Branch of the Semitic family, its vocabulary showing a close affinity to Hebrew and
Phœnician. In the fulness of its verbal system and richness of synonyms, however, it
resembles the Arabic. The ethnic type of the Assyrians is the Semitic modified by some
admixture with Akkadian elements. See
Akkad; Cuneiform
Inscriptions.
Assyrian literature is known to us chiefly from the discovery in the palace of
Assur-bani-pal, at
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Clay Tablet with Cylinder, impressed, from Kouyunjik.
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Nineveh, of a library of many thousand tablets collected by that king and his
father, Esar-haddon. Duplicate copies of some of these tablets have been found in excavating
the Babylonian cities. Of these tablets, many are syllabaries, dictionaries, geographies, and
other educational works, often couched in the ancient Akkadian and Sumirian tougues; so
that from them, Assyriologists have learned much about the older languages of Chaldaea. The
richest literary discov
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Inscribed Tablet impressed with Seals.
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eries, however, have been in the field of poetry and mythology. In 1872 the late Mr.
George Smith, of the British Museum, discovered a series of tablets containing an epic in
twelve books, one of which relates to the legend of the Deluge, and bears a very striking
resemblance to the account given in the Old Testament. In both accounts the Deluge is a
punishment for human sins; in both, the builder of an ark gathers into it his family and the
beasts of the field; in both, the ark rests upon a mountain; in both, peace between God and
man is restored; and in both, a sign of the restoration is the appearance of the rainbow. Many
other interesting resemblances to portions of the Book of Genesis are contained in the
Assyrian tablets. The hymns and prayers are likewise beautiful and poetic.
Results of Excavations.—Successful excavations have been
made by Botta, Layard, Oppert, Rawlinson, Smith, and others, with the result of opening up
very many palaces and temples, and bringing to light sculptures covered with inscrip
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Nebo. (British Museum.)
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tions, and including obelisks, sphinxes, winged lions and bulls, and bas-reliefs of
battle-scenes, sieges, hunts, etc. Many smaller objects are no less interesting, such as
ornaments, bells, engraved gems, and bronzes. It has been learned that the Assyrians were
acquainted with glass; that they employed the arch in building; that they used the lens as a
magnifying instrument; and had, among other mechanical appliances, the lever and the roller.
Religion.—The religion of Assyria was simpler than that
of the Babylonians, although polytheistic in character. The national deity was Assur, regarded
as the founder of the nation. Beside him there are two principal triads,
with many minor deities. The first triad is known as the Nature Triad (Ann “the
Progenitor,” Bel “the Lord of the World,” Hea “the
Lord of the Sea, Rivers, and Fountains”). The second triad is the Celestial Triad
(Sin the Moon-god, Shamas the Sun-god, Istar the Stargoddess). Minor gods are Merodach or
Marduk, son of Hea; Nebo the god of learning, who possesses many of the attributes of the
Greek
Hermes (q.v.); and Nergal and Nusku the
war-gods. (See 2 Kings, xvii. 30.)
History.—Ancient accounts of Assyrian history are those
of
Berosus (q.v.), a Graeco-Chaldean priest, who
wrote at Babylon, where he had access to the inscriptional records, about B.C. 268; of
Herodotus; and of Ctesias of Cnidus, physician to the Persian king Artaxerxes Mnemon (B.C.
405). The narrative of Berosus has met with much confirmation from recent excavations and
explorations. In the Bible narrative we are told that Nineveh was founded from Babylonia.
“Out of that land [Babylonia] he [Nimrod] went forth into Assyria” (Gen.
x. 11)—and this statement is fully confirmed by the results of recent explorations.
The earliest inscriptions found on the bricks from Assur (Kileh-Shergat), the ancient capital,
give to the first rulers of the land the Akkadian title of Patesi, or “high-priest
of the city of Assur,” and to the city itself the Akkadian name of Pal-bi-ki. The
next notice of Assyria does not occur until the Assyrian king Pul, or Tiglath-pileser II.,
invaded Palestine, and was bought off by Menahem, king of Israel (B.C. 738). In the same reign
we find the Jewish king Jehoahaz (Ahaz) becoming a vassal of the court of Assyria, and the
tribes beyond Jordan carried away captive (B.C. 734). In B.C. 722, Samaria is captured by
Sargon the Tartan, who had usurped the throne from his weak master, Shalmaneser IV. The next
reference to Assyria is that of the siege and capture of Jerusalem by Sargon (Isaiah, x., xi.,
xx.), and the siege of Ashdod (B.C. 712-711). This event is now proved to be distinct from the
siege by Sennacherib in B.C. 701, which terminated apparently in a disaster for the Assyrian
army. The last mention of Assyria is the record of the murder of Sennacherib by his sons in
B.C. 681, and the accession of his faithful son Esar-haddon, the most powerful of all the
Assyrian monarchs, for he carried his arms as far as the Mediterranean and conquered Egypt.
Little credit is to be attached to the expedition of Holofernes recorded in the apocryphal
Book of Judith.
After this the Empire appears to have gradually decayed, until at last, in the reign of
Assur-banipal or Sardanapalus, or that of Esar-haddon II. (Sarakos), a league for its
destruction was formed between Nabopolassar, governor of Babylon, and Cyaxares, king of Media,
which was strengthened by the marriage of Nebuchadnezzar, son of the former, to Nitocris,
daughter of the latter. The war and siege are said to have been interrupted by an
invasion of the Scythians, which drew off Cyaxares; but at length Nineveh was taken and
destroyed about B.C. 605, or, according to Rawlinson, 625. In the time of Darius Hystaspes
Assyria rebelled without success in conjunction with Media. In the time of Herodotus the
capital had ceased to exist; and when Xenophon passed it the very name was forgotten, though
he testifies to the extent of the deserted city, and asserts the height of the ruined walls to
be 150 feet. An inconsiderable town seems to have existed on its ruins in the reign of
Claudius; and the last notice we have of Nineveh in the classics is in Tacitus.
The fanciful history related by Ctesias is now found to be based on distorted Graeco-Persian
traditions; and though the writer managed to make the ancient world give credit to him in
preference to Herodotus, his work is now proved to be very untrustworthy. According to him,
for thirty generations after Ninyas the kings led a life of luxury and indolence in their
palace; the last of them, Sardanapalus, made a vigorous defence against Ar
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Assyrian Dwellings. (Relief from Kouyunjik.)
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baces, the rebel governor of Media, but, finding it impossible to defend Nineveh, he
set fire to his palace, and burned himself with all his treasures. This event took place 1306
years after Ninus. Now, the above account represents Nineveh to have perished nearly three
centuries before the real date, which was about B.C. 606, and is utterly incompatible with
Scripture. Herodotus assigns to the Empire a duration of 520 years, and Berosus of 526. In
order to reconcile these conflicting accounts, historians have supposed that Nineveh was twice
destroyed, but this supposition is now generally rejected. However, that part of Nineveh was
actually destroyed by fire is proved by the condition of the slabs and statues found in its
ruins, which show the action of intense heat.
Bibliography.—For Assyrian archæology, see the
works of Layard, Oppert, and Smith; Perrot and Chipiez,
Chaldée et
Assyrie (Eng. trans. 1884). For the religion, see
Sayce,
Assyria (1885); Robertson
Smith, Religion of the
Semites (1888); Tiele,
Comparative Hist. of Relig. (Eng.
trans. 1884);
Sayce, Hibbert Lectures (1887). For the
language and literature, see Delitszch,
Assyrische
Grammatik (Eng. trans. by Kennedy, 1889); id.
Assyrisches
Wörterbuch, vols. i.-iii.
(1887);
Peiser,
Keilinschriftliche Bibliothek (1890);
Sayce, Lectures on
the Syllabary and Grammar (1877). For the history, see Rawlinson,
The
Five Great Monarchies of the Ancient Eastern World, 4 vols.
(1862-67);
Oppert, Histoire des Empires de Chaldée et d'Assyrie
(1865); Lenormant,
Manuel d'Histoire Ancienne de l'Orient, 3 vols.
(1869);
Ménant, Annales des Rois d'Assyrie
(1874); Maspero,
Histoire Ancienne des Peuples de l'Orient (4th
ed. 1883);
Sayce, Ancient Empires of the East (1884); id.
Fresh Light from the Ancient Monuments (1886); Maspero,
Life in Ancient Egypt and Assyria (Eng. trans. 1892).