Iraq - Ancient
Mesopotamia Sumer, Akkad, Babylon, and Assyria
Muhammad Ali
Contemporary Iraq occupies the territory
that historians traditionally have considered the site of the earliest
civilizations of the ancient Near East. Geographically, modern Iraq
corresponds to the Mesopotamia of the Old Testament and of other, older,
Near Eastern texts.
In Western mythology and religious
tradition, the land of Mesopotamia in the ancient period was a land of
lush vegetation, abundant wildlife, and copious if unpredictable water
resources. As such, at a very early date it attracted people from
neighboring, but less hospitable areas.
By 6000 B.C., Mesopotamia had been
settled, chiefly by migrants from
the Turkish and Iranian highlands.
The civilized life that emerged at Sumer
was shaped by two conflicting factors: the unpredictability of the
Tigris and Euphrates rivers, which at any time could unleash devastating
floods that wiped out entire peoples, and the extreme fecundity of the
river valleys, caused by centuries-old deposits of soil.
Thus, while the river valleys of
southern Mesopotamia attracted migrations of neighboring peoples and
made possible, for the first time in history, the growing of surplus
food, the volatility of the rivers necessitated a form of collective
management to protect the marshy, low-lying land from flooding.
As surplus production increased and as
collective management became more advanced, a process of urbanization
evolved and Sumerian civilization took root.
Sumer is the ancient name for southern
Mesopotamia. Historians are divided on when the Sumerians arrived in the
area, but they agree that the population of Sumer was a mixture of
linguistic and ethnic groups that included the earlier inhabitants of
the region. Sumerian culture mixed foreign and local elements.
The Sumerians were highly innovative
people who responded creatively to the challenges of the changeable
Tigris and Euphrates rivers. Many of the great Sumerian legacies, such
as writing, irrigation, the wheel, astronomy, and literature, can be
seen as adaptive responses to the great rivers.
The Sumerians were the first people
known to have devised a scheme of written representation as a means of
communication.
From the earliest writings, which were
pictograms (simplified pictures on clay tablets), the Sumerians
gradually created cuneiform--a way of arranging impressions stamped on
clay by the wedge-like section of a chopped-off
reed.
The use of combinations of the same
basic wedge shape to stand for phonetic, and possibly for syllabic,
elements provided more flexible communication than the pictogram.
Through writing, the Sumerians were able to pass on complex agricultural
techniques to successive generations; this led to marked improvements in
agricultural production.
Another important Sumerian legacy was
the recording of literature.
The most famous Sumerian epic and the
one that has survived in the most nearly complete form is the epic of
Gilgamesh.
The story of Gilgamesh, who actually was
king of the city-state of Uruk in approximately 2700 B.C., is a moving
story of the ruler's deep sorrow at the death of his friend and of his
consequent search for immortality. Other central themes of the story are
a devastating flood and the tenuous nature of man's existence. Laden
with complex abstractions and emotional expressions, the epic of
Gilgamesh reflects the intellectual sophistication of the Sumerians, and
it has served as the prototype
for all Near Eastern inundation stories.
The precariousness of existence in
southern Mesopotamia also led to a highly developed sense of religion.
Cult centers such as Eridu, dating
back to 5000 B.C., served as important centers of pilgrimage and
devotion even before the rise of Sumer.
Many of the most important Mesopotamian
cities emerged in areas surrounding the pre-Sumerian cult centers, thus
reinforcing the close relationship between religion and government.
The Sumerians were pantheistic; their
gods more or less personified local elements and natural forces.
In exchange for sacrifice and adherence
to an elaborate ritual, the gods of ancient Sumer were to provide the
individual with security and prosperity.
A powerful priesthood emerged to oversee
ritual practices and to intervene with the gods. Sumerian religious
beliefs also had important political aspects.
Decisions relating to land
rentals, agricultural questions, trade, commercial relations, and war
were determined by the priesthood, because all property belonged to the
gods.
The priests ruled from their
temples, called ziggurats, which were essentially artificial mountains
of sunbaked brick, built with outside staircases that tapered toward a
shrine at the top.
Because the well-being of the community
depended upon close observation of natural phenomena, scientific or
protoscientific activities occupied much of the priests' time. For
example, the Sumerians believed that each of the gods was represented by
a number.
The number sixty, sacred to the god An,
was their basic unit of calculation. The minutes of an hour and the
notational degrees of a circle were Sumerian concepts.
The highly developed agricultural
system and the refined irrigation and water-control systems that enabled
Sumer to achieve surplus production also led to the growth of large
cities.
The most important city-states
were Uruk, Eridu, Kish, Lagash, Agade, Akshak, Larsa, and Ur (birthplace
of the prophet Abraham).
The emergence of urban life led to
further technological advances. Lacking stone, the Sumerians made marked
improvements in brick technology, making possible the construction of
very large buildings such as the famous ziggurat of Ur. Sumer also
pioneered advances in warfare technology. By the middle of the third
millennium
B.C., the Sumerians had developed the wheeled chariot.
At approximately the same time, the
Sumerians discovered that tin and copper when smelted together produced
bronze--a new, more durable, and much harder metal.
The wheeled chariot and bronze
weapons became increasingly important as the Sumerians developed the
institution of kingship and as individual city-states began to vie for
supremacy.
Historians generally divide Sumerian
history into three stages. In the first stage, which extended roughly
from 3360 B.C. to 2400 B.C., the most important political development
was the emergence of kings who, unlike the first priestly rulers,
exercised distinct political rather than religious authority.
Another important feature of this period
was the emergence of warring Sumerian city-states, which fought for
control of the river valleys in lower Mesopotamia.
During the second phase, which
lasted from 2400 B.C. to 2200 B.C., Sumer was conquered in approximately
2334 B.C. by Sargon I, king of the Semitic city of Akkad. Sargon was the
world's first empire-builder, sending his troops as far as Egypt and
Ethiopia.
He attempted to establish a unified
empire and to end the hostilities among the city-states. Sargon's rule
introduced a new level of political organization that was characterized
by an even more clear-cut separation between religious authority and
secular authority.
To ensure his supremacy, Sargon created
the first conscripted army, a development related to the need to
mobilize large numbers of laborers for irrigation and flood-control
works. Akkadian strength was boosted by the invention of the composite
bow, a new weapon made of strips of wood and horn.
Despite their military prowess, Akkadian
hegemony over southern Mesopotamia lasted only 200 years. Sargon's
great-grandson was then overthrown by the Guti, a mountain people from
the east.
The fall of the Akkadians and the
subsequent reemergence of Sumer under the king of Ur, who defeated the
Guti, ushered in the third phase of Sumerian history. In this final
phase, which was characterized by a synthesis of Sumerian and Akkadian
cultures, the king of Ur established hegemony over much of Mesopotamia.
Sumerian supremacy, however, was on the wane.
By 2000 B.C. the combined attacks of the
Amorites, a Semitic people from the west, and the Elamites, a Caucasian
people from the
east, had destroyed the Third Dynasty of Ur. The invaders nevertheless
carried on the Sumero-Akkadian cultural legacy.
The Amorites established cities on the
Tigris and the Euphrates rivers and made Babylon, a town to the north,
their capital.
During the time of their sixth
ruler, King Hammurabi (1792-1750 B.C.), Babylonian rule encompassed a
huge area covering most of the Tigris-Euphrates river valley from Sumer
and the Persian Gulf in the south to Assyria in the north.
To rule over such a large area,
Hammurabi devised an elaborate administrative structure.
His greatest achievement, however,
was the issuance of a law code designed "to cause justice to prevail in
the country, to destroy the wicked and the evil, that the strong may not
oppress the weak." The Code of Hammurabi, not the earliest to appear in
the Near East but certainly the most complete, dealt with land tenure,
rent, the position of women, marriage, divorce, inheritance, contracts,
control of public order, administration of justice, wages, and labor
conditions.
In Hammurabi's legal code, the
civilizing trend begun at Sumer had evolved to a new level of
complexity.
The sophisticated legal principles
contained in the code reflect a highly advanced civilization in which
social interaction extended far beyond the confines of kinship. The
large number of laws pertaining to commerce reflect a diversified
economic base and an extensive trading network.
In politics, Hammurabi's code is
evidence of a more pronounced separation between religious and secular
authority than had existed in ancient Sumer.
In addition to Hammurabi's legal code,
the Babylonians made other important contributions, notably to the
science of astronomy, and they increased the flexibility of cuneiform by
developing the pictogram script so that it stood for a syllable rather
than an individual word.
Beginning in approximately 1600 B.C.,
Indo-European-speaking tribes invaded India; other tribes settled in
Iran and in Europe.
One of these groups, the Hittites,
allied itself with the Kassites, a people of unknown origins. Together,
they conquered and destroyed Babylon.
Hittite power subsequently waned, but,
in the first half of the fourteenth century B.C., the Hittites
reemerged, controlling an area that stretched from the Mediterranean Sea
to the Persian Gulf.
The military success of the
Hittites has been attributed to their monopoly in iron production and to
their use of the chariot. Nevertheless, in the twelfth century B.C., the
Hittites were destroyed, and no great military power occupied
Mesopotamia until the ninth century B.C.
One of the cities that flourished in the
middle of the Tigris Valley during this period was that of Ashur, named
after the sun-god of the Assyrians.
The Assyrians were Semitic speakers who
occupied Babylon for a brief period in the thirteenth century B.C.
Invasions of iron-producing peoples into the Near East and into the
Aegean region in approximately 1200 B.C. disrupted the indigenous
empires of Mesopotamia, but eventually the Assyrians were able to
capitalize on the new alignments of power in the region. Because of what
has been called "the barbarous and unspeakable cruelty of the
Assyrians," the names of such Assyrian kings as Ashurnasirpal (883-859
B.C.), Tiglath-Pileser III (745- 727 B.C.), Sennacherib (704-681 B.C.),
and Ashurbanipal (669-626 B.C.) continue to evoke images of powerful,
militarily brilliant, but brutally savage conquerors.
The Assyrians began to expand to the
west in the early part of the ninth century B.C.; by 859 they had
reached the Mediter- ranean Sea, where they occupied Phoenician cities.
Damascus and Babylon fell to the next generations of Assyrian rulers.
During the eighth century B.C., the
Assyrians' control over their empire appeared tenuous, but
Tiglath-Pileser III seized the throne and rapidly subdued Assyria's
neighbors, captured Syria, and crowned himself king of Babylon.
He developed a highly proficient
war machine by creating a permanent standing army under the adminis-
tration of a well-organized bureaucracy.
Sennacherib built a new capital,
Nineveh, on the Tigris River, destroyed Babylon (where citizens had
risen in revolt), and
made Judah a vassal state.
In 612 B.C., revolts of subject peoples
combined with the allied forces of two new kingdoms, those of the Medes
and the Chaldeans (Neo-Babylonians), effectively to extinguish Assyrian
power. Nineveh was razed.
The hatred that the Assyrians
inspired, particularly for their policy of wholesale resettlement of
subject peoples, was sufficiently great to ensure that few traces of
Assyrian rule remained two years later.
The Assyrians had used the visual
arts to depict their many conquests, and Assyrian friezes, executed in
minute detail, continue to be the best artifacts of Assyrian
civilization.
The Chaldeans became heir to Assyrian
power in 612 B.C., and they conquered formerly Assyrian-held lands in
Syria and Palestine. King Nebuchadnezzar (605-562 B.C.) conquered the
kingdom of Judah, and he destroyed Jerusalem in 586 B.C. Conscious of
their ancient past, the Chaldeans sought to reestablish Babylon as the
most magnificent city
of the Near East.
It was during the Chaldean period
that the Hanging Gardens of Babylon, famed as one of the Seven Wonders
of the Ancient World, were created. Because of an estrangement of the
priesthood from the king, however, the monarchy was severely weakened,
and it was unable to withstand the rising power of Achaemenid Iran. In
539 B.C.,
Babylon fell to Cyrus the Great (550-530
B.C.). In addition to incorporating Babylon into the Iranian empire,
Cyrus the Great released the Jews who had been held in captivity there.