Book Read Free

Ancient Iraq

Page 54

by Georges Roux


  28. PLINY, Naturalis historia, VI, 122; PAUSANIAS, Descriptio Graeciae, I, xvi, 3.

  29. R. NORTH, ‘Status of the Warka Excavation’, Orientalia, XXVI (1957), pp. 206 – 7, 228 – 33, 327 – 41 (with bibliography).

  30. M. RUTTEN, Contrats de l'Epoque séleucide conservés au Musée du Louvre, Paris, 1935. On temple organization and functions, see: G. J. P. McEWAN, Priest and Temple in Hellenistic Babylonia, Wiesbaden, 1981.

  31. W. RÖLLIG, ‘Griechische Eigennamen in den Texten der Babylonische Spätzeit‘, Orientalia, XXIX (1960), pp. 376 – 91; A. KUHRT, ‘Assyrian and Babylonian traditions in classical authors: a critical synthesis‘, in H. J. NISSEN and J. RENGER (ed.), Mesopotamien und seine Nachbarn, Berlin, 1982, II, pp. 538 – 41.

  32. Latest English translation: S. M. BURSTEIN, The Babyloniaca of Berossus, in Sources for the Ancient Near East, I, 5, Malibu, Calif., 1978.

  33. N. C. DEBEVOISE, A Political History of Parthia, Chicago, 1938.

  34. German excavations, 1903 – 14 (W. ANDRAE, Hatra): Iraqi excavations since 1951. Preliminary reports in Sumer, VIII (1952) ff. For a general description of the site, see: D. HOLMES-FREDERICQ Hatra et ses Sculptures Parthes, Leiden, 1963, and W. I. AL-SALIHI, Hatra (Historical Monuments of Iraq, 2), Baghdad, 1973.

  35. H. LENZEN, Die Partherstadt Assur (WVDOG, 57), Leipzig, 1933.

  36. R. NORTH Orientalia, XXXVI (1957), pp. 241 – 3; UVB, XIV (1958), pp. 18 – 20; XVI (1960), pp. 13 – 21; BaM, VI (1960), pp. 104 – 14.

  37. JOSEPHUS, Antiq. Jud., XVIII, 310 – 79.

  38. J. N. STRASSMAIER, ‘Arsakideninschriften‘, ZA, III (1888), pp. 129 – 42. TH. J. PINCHES and H. SAYCE, PSBA (1902), pp. 108 ff.; TH. J. PINCHES, The Old Testament in the Light of the Historical Records of Assyria and Babylonia, London, 1902, pp. 481 – 6; J. KOHLER and A. UNGNAD, 100 ausgewahlte Rechtsurkunden der Spätzeit des babylonischen Schrifttums, Leipzig, 1909; A. J. SACHS and J. SCHAUM-BERGER, Late Babylonian Astronomical and Related Texts, Providence, Rhode Island, 1955.

  39. A. J. SACHS and J. SCHAUMBERGER, op. cit., No. 1201 (mentioned but not published).

  40. DION CASSIUS, LXXI, 2; AMMIANUS MARCELLINUS, XXIII, vi, 34; ZONARAS, XI, 22, XII, 2. L. DILLEMANN, ‘Ammien Marcellin et les pays de l'Euphrate et du Tigre‘, Syria, XXXVIII (1961), pp. 86 – 158.

  41. V. CHAPOT, La Frontière de l'Euphrate, Paris, 1907; A. POIDEBARD, La Trace de Rome dans le Desert de Syrie, Paris, 1934; D. OATES, Studies in the Ancient History of Northern Iraq, Oxford, 1968, pp. 67-117; Id., ‘Ain Sinu‘, in J. CURTIS (ed.), Fifty Years of Mesopotamian Discovery, London, 1982, pp. 120 – 22.

  42. Ctesiphon was studied by German, then German and American archaeologists in 1931 – 2 and, more recently, by the Italians working in Seleucia (see note 22 above). On the Kish palace: S. LANGDON, ‘Excavations at Kish and Barghutiat’, Iraq, I (1934), pp. 113 – 22; P. R. S. MOOREY, Kish Excavations 1923 – 1933, Oxford, 1978, p. 180 ff.

  43. H. LENZEN, ‘Ein Goldkranz aus Warka‘, Sumer, XIII (1957), pp. 205 – 6. On this tomb, the date of which has not been determined with certainty, cf. UVB, XV (1959), pp. 27 – 34; XVI (1960), pp. 23 – 9.

  44. G. LE STRANGE, The Lands of the Eastern Caliphate, 3rd ed., London, 1966, pp. 26 – 9.

  Epilogue

  I. W. W. TARN, La Civilisation Hellénistique, Paris, 1936, pp. 219 – 37.

  2. A list of these words will be found in H. W. F. SAGGS, The Greatness that was Babylon, London, 1962, pp. 493 – 5. This book also contains other examples of our Mesopotamian heritage.

  3. J. BOTTERO, ‘L‘Assyriologie et notre histoire‘, Dialogues d'Histoire Ancienne, VII, Paris, 1981, p. 95.

  4. Numerous studies have been devoted to the relations between the Greek and Oriental civilizations. They include: R. M. HAY-WOOD, Ancient Greece and the Near East, London, 1965; M. L. WEST, Early Greek Philosophy and the Orient, London, 1971; H. A. HOFFNER (ed.), Orient and Occident, (AOAT, 22), Neukirchen-Vluyn, 1973; D. KAGAN, Problems in Ancient History, I, The Ancient Near East and Greece, New York, 1975.

  5. E. PORADA, ‘The cylinder seals found at Thebes in Beotia‘, AfO, XXVIII (1981 – 2), pp. 1 – 70; J. A. BRINKMAN, ‘The Western Asiatic seals found at Thebes in Greece’, ibid., pp. 73 – 7.

  6. C. H. GORDON, Before the Bible, London, 1962, pp. 9, 132.

  7. J. FILLIOZAT, ‘Pronostic médicaux akkadiens, grecs et indiens’, Journal Asiatique, CCXL (1952), pp. 299 – 321; M. SANDRAIL, Les Sources akkadiennes de la Pensée et de la Méthode hippocratiques, Toulouse, 1953.

  8. C. H. GORDON, op. cit., pp. 49 – 97, 218 – 77. R. GRAVES, The Greek Myths, Harmondsworth, 1957, II, p. 89.

  9. See, for instance, R. D. BARNETT, ‘Ancient Oriental influences on archaic Greece‘, in The Aegean and the Near East, Studies presented to H. Goldman, New York, 1956, pp. 212 – 38; R. A. JAIRAZBHOY, Oriental Influences in Western Art, London, 1965.

  10. M. ROSTOVTZEFF, The Social and Economic History of the Hellenistic World, Oxford, 1941, I, p. 84.

  CHRONOLOGICAL TABLES

  I. PREHISTORY

  * * *

  PERIOD

  MESOPOTAMIA

  TECHNICAL AND

  CULTURAL DEVELOPMENT

  IN MESOPOTAMIA

  DATES

  B.C.

  NORTH

  SOUTH

  * * *

  c. 70000

  MIDDLE

  PALEOLITHIC

  Barda Balka

  Neanderthal hunter-gatherers living in caves and rock shelters.

  Shanidar D

  (c. 60–35000)

  Hazar Merd

  35000

  UPPER

  PALEOLITHIC

  Shanidar C

  (c. 34–25000)

  Homo sapiens sapiens. Improvement and diversification of stone implements. Wider food spectrum.

  25000

  (Hiatus)

  12000

  Shanidar B2

  Zarzi. Palegawra

  9000

  MESOLITHIC

  Shanidar B1

  Microlithic tools and weapons. Obsidian imported. Bone work. First clay figurines. First groups of dwellings. Beginnings of animal domestication.

  Zawi Chemi Shanidar

  8000

  Karim Shehir

  Mlefaat

  Mureybet

  Bus Mordeh

  7000

  NEOLITHIC

  Jarmo

  Ali Kosh

  Progressive domestication of animals and edible plants. Villages. Invention of pottery. First baked bricks.

  6000

  CHALCOLITHIC

  Umm Dabaghiuah

  Use of copper. First mural paintings. Irrigation agriculture. First seals. First temples. Decorated luxury ware. Clay and alabaster figurines. Wide use of brick.

  HASSUNA

  Yarim Tepe 1

  Matarrah

  5500

  SAMARRA

  T. Sawwan

  HALAF

  Yarim Tepe 2

  Arpachiya

  OUEILI (Ubaid O)

  5000

  ERIDU (Ubaid 1)

  Choga Mami

  4500

  HAJJI MUHAMMAD

  (Ubaid 2)

  NORTH UBAID

  SOUTH UBAID

  4000

  Tepe Gawra

  el-‘Ubaid, Ur

  Temples and houses of increasing size and complexity.

  3750

  and numerous other sites

  and numerous other sites

  Terracotta sickles and pestles.

  URUK PERIOD

  Tepe Gawra

  Urbanization. Potter's wheel. Swing-plough. Sail. Metal work (bronze, gold, silver). First cylinder-seals. Invention of writing (c. 3300). Development of sculpture. Expanding trade.

  Qalinj Agha, Grai

  Resh, Habuba Kabira

  and numerous other sites

  Uruk, Tell ‘Uqair

  and numerous other sites

  ANCIENT BRONZE

  Tell Brakr />
  ---------------------

  3000

  NINEVEH V

  JEMDAT NASR

  Early Dynastic I

  SUMERIAN CIVILIZATION

  2700

  City-states. Fortified towns. Development of writing.

  Early Dynastic II

  Administrative archives from Fara and Abu Salabikh.

  HISTORIC

  2500

  Early Dynastic III

  * * *

  II. EARLY DYNASTIC PERIOD (c. 2900 – 2384 B.C.)

  III. DYNASTIES OF AKKAD, GUTIUM AND UR III (c. 2334–2004 B.C.)

  * * *

  DATES

  B.C. AKKAD/UR URUK/ISIN GUTI/LARSA LAGASH MARI

  * * *

  DYNASTY OF AKKAD Lugalzagesi

  Sharru-kîn (Sargon)

  (2334–2279) Sargon takes Mari and Ebla

  2300 Rimush (2278–2270)

  Manishtusu (2269–2255)

  2250 Narâm-Sîn (2254–2218)

  Lugal-ushumgal (2230–2200) Narâm-Sîn conquers

  Mari and destroys Ebla

  2200 Shar-kalli-sharri

  (2217–2193) DYNASTY OF GUTIUM

  21 Guti Kings down to 2120 SHAKKANAKKU

  Ididish

  Shu-Dagan

  Isma-Dagan

  (2199–2154)

  Anarchy

  Shu-Turul (2168–2154) URUK IV The Guti invade

  Akkad and Sumer ENSI OF LAGASH

  Ur-Baba (2155–2142) Nur-Mêr

  Ishtup-Ilum

  2150

  * * *

  Ur-nigina (2153–2147)

  Ur-gigira (2146–2141)

  +3 kings Gudea (2141–2122)

  Ur-Ningirsu (2121–2118)

  Pirig-me (2117–2115)

  Ur-gar (2114)

  Nam-mahazi (2113–2111) Ishkun-Addu

  UR III URUK V

  Utu-hegal (2123–2113) Tiriqan (x-2120) Apil-Kin

  (2126–2091)

  Ur-Nammu (2112–2095)

  * * *

  * * *

  * * *

  2100 GOVERNORS OF LAGASH VASSALS OF UR

  Shulgi (2094–2047) Ur-Ninsuna

  Ur-Ninkimara

  Lu-kirilaza Iddin-Ilum

  Ilum-Ishtar

  Turam-Dagan

  (2071–2051)

  2050 Amar-Sîn (2046–2038)

  Shu-Sîn (2037–2029)

  Ibbi-Sîn (2028–2004) DYNASTY OF ISIN

  Ishbi-Erra (2017–1985) DYNASTY OF LARSA

  Naplânum (2025–2005) Ir-Nanna Puzur-Ishtar

  (2050–2025)

  Hilal-Erra

  2000 Fall of Ur (2004) Emisum (2004–1977) Lagash becomes independent

  (2023) Hanun-Dagan

  (2016–2008)

  * * *

  IV. ISIN-LARSA, OLD BABYLONIAN AND OLD ASSYRIAN PERIOD (c. 2000 – 1600 B.C.)

  V. KASSITE PERIOD (c. 1600 – 1200 B.C.)

  VI. MIDDLE BABYLONIAN AND MIDDLE ASSYRIAN PERIODS (c. 1150 – 750 B.C.)

  VII. NEO-ASSYRIAN* AND CEO-BABYLONIAN PERIODS (744–539 B.C.)

  VIII. ACHAEMENIAN AND HELLENISTIC PERIODS (539–126 B.C.)

  * * *

  DATES

  B.C. GREECE IRAN MESOPOTAMIA

  * * *

  Solon, archon (since c. 620) ACHAEMENIDS (since c. 700)

  550 539: Cyrus conquers Babylon

  Pisistratus (tyrant) (539–528) Cambyses II (530–522)

  Darius I (522–486) ACHAEMENIAN PERIOD Revolts of Nebuchadrezzar III and Nebuchadrezzar IV (522–521)

  500 Median wars (490–478) Xerxes I (485–465) Revolts of Bêl-shimanni and Shamash-erîba (482). Xerxes sacks Babylon

  Artaxerxes I (464–424) c. 460: Herodotus in Babylon? The Murashû family, bankers at Nippur (455–403)

  450 Pericles (strategus) (443–430)

  Peloponnesian war (431–404) Darius II (423–405) Nabû-rimânni and Kidinnu astronomers

  400 Artaxerxes II (404–359) 401: Xenophon in Babylonia

  Philip of Macedonia (359–337) Artaxerxes III (358–338)

  350 Alexander the Great (336–323) Darius III (335–331)

  * * *

  Gaugameles (331), Alexander enters Babylon and dies there in 323

  DIADOCHI

  Seleucos I (305–281)

  SELEUCIDS HELLENISTIC PERIOD

  311: beginning of the era of Seleucos

  300 c. 300, Seleucia-on-the-Tigris founded

  Antiochos I (281–260) Last royal inscriptions in Akkadian (Antiochos I)

  Antiochos II (260–246) Berossus writes the ‘Babyloniaca’.

  250 ARSACID PARTHIANS

  Arsaces (250–248)

  Seleucos II (245–226) Tiridates I (248–211)

  Antiochos III (222–187) Temples built in Uruk

  200 Artabanus I (211–191)

  Antiochos IV (175–164)

  Demetrios I (162–150) Mithridates I (171–138) Greek theatre at Babylon

  150 Demetrios II (145–126) Artabanus II (128–124) 144: Mithridates founds Ctesiphon Demetrios reconquers Babylonia

  Antiochos VIII (126–96) Mithridates II (123–88) 126: Artabanus II snatches Babylonia from the Seleucids

  100 PARTHIAN PERIOD

  Major building works

  Orodes I (80–76) Assyria repopulated

  Antiochos XIII (69–65)

  64: Pompey conquers Antioch Phraates III (70–57)

  Orodes II (57–37) Kingdoms of ADIABENE

  (Assyria), OSRHOENE

  (Edessa = Urfa) and CHARACENE (ancient sea-land).

  50 Crassus defeated at Carrhae (Harran) (53 B.C.)

  * * *

  IX. PARTHIAN AND SASSANIAN PERIODS (126 B.C.–637 A.D.)

  * * *

  DATES

  B.C. ROME IRAN MESOPOTAMIA

  * * *

  50 Caesar and Antony

  Phraates IV (37–2) 38: Labienus' war against the Parthians

  ROMAN EMPIRE

  Octavius Augustus

  (–27 to 14)

  A.D.

  Tiberius (14–37) Artabanus III

  (11–38)

  Caligula (37–41)

  Claudius (41–54)

  50 Vologazes I (51–78)

  Nero (54–68) Foundation of Hatra

  (c. 70?)

  Vespasian (70–79)

  Domitian (81–96) Pacorus II

  (78–115) 74/75: Last known cuneiform text

  Trajan (98–117)

  100 Osroes (109–128) Temple of Gareus at Uruk (c. 110)

  Hadrian (117–138) 114–117: Trajan’s campaigns in Mesopotamia takes Ctesiphon and reaches the Arabo-Persian Gulf

  Antoninus (138–161) Mithridates IV

  (128–147)

  150 Marcus Aurelius (161–180) Vologazes III

  (148–192) Kingdom of HATRA

  (c. 160–240)

  Commodus (180–192) 164: Cassius, legate of Syria, conquers Nisibin and Ctesiphon

  Septimus Severus

  (193–211) Vologazes IV

  (192–207) 197: Septimus Severus conquers Ctesiphon Caracalla murdered at Carrhae (Harran)

  200 Caracalla (211–217) Artabanus V

  (208–226)

  SASSANIDS SASSANIAN PERIOD

  Alexander Severus

  (222–235) Ardeshir I

  (224–241)

  Shapur I

  (241–272) 226: Ardeshir conquers Mesopotamia

  232: Unsuccessful campaign of Alexander Severus.

  250 Valerian (253–260) 240: Ardeshir destroys Hatra

  256: Shapur destroys Assur

  260: Valerian prisoner of Shapur I

  Aurelian (270–275) Bahram II

  (276–293) 262: Odenath (Palmyra), allied to the Romans, marches on Ctesiphon

  Diocletian (285–305)

  300 Narses (293–302) 296: War against Narses, then peace. Rome gains provinces in Mesopotamia

  Constantine (312–337) Shapur II

 

‹ Prev