Babylonia - USA History.
Publié le 02/05/2013
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Pharmacology, too, doubtless had made considerable progress, although the only major direct evidence of this comes from a Sumerian tablet written several centuriesbefore Hammurabi.
C Legal System and Writing
Law and justice were key concepts in the Babylonian way of life.
Justice was administered by the courts, each of which consisted of from one to four judges.
Often theelders of a town constituted a tribunal.
The judges could not reverse their decisions for any reason, but appeals from their verdicts could be made to the king.
Evidenceconsisted either of statements from witnesses or of written documents.
Oaths, which played a considerable role also in the administration of justice, could be eitherpromissory, declaratory, or exculpatory.
The courts inflicted penalties ranging from capital punishment and mutilation to flogging, reduction to slavery, and banishment.Awards for damages were from 3 to 30 times the value of the object to be restored.
To ensure that their legal, administrative, and economic institutions functioned effectively, the Babylonians used the cuneiform system of writing developed by theirSumerian predecessors.
To train their scribes, secretaries, archivists, and other administrative personnel, they adopted the Sumerian system of formal education, underwhich secular schools served as the cultural centers of the land.
The curriculum consisted primarily of copying and memorizing both textbooks and Sumero-Babyloniandictionaries containing long lists of words and phrases, including the names of trees, animals, birds, insects, countries, cities, villages, and minerals, as well as a largeand diverse assortment of mathematical tables and problems.
In the study of literature, the pupils copied and imitated various types of myths, epics, hymns,lamentations, proverbs, and essays in both the Sumerian and the Babylonian languages.
III HISTORY
Long periods of the history of the Middle East in antiquity cannot be dated by an absolute chronology or according to a modern system of reckoning.
The Sumerian King List gives a succession of rulers to the end of the dynasty of Isin, about 1790 BC, but it is quite unreliable for dates prior to the dynasty of Akkad, about 2340 BC.
A relative chronology is well established for the era from the beginning of the dynasty of Akkad to the end of the 1st Dynasty of Babylon, about 1595 BC.
This period, however, is followed by an obscure period of more than 700 years, during which dates are only approximate.
Scholars follow at least three chronological systems for theancient Middle East: high, middle, or low, depending upon whether the date assigned to the first year of the reign of Hammurabi of Babylon is 1848, 1792, or 1728 BC. The dates in this article and in that on Sumer follow the so-called middle chronology and date the first year of Hammurabi's reign to 1792 BC.
A The Sumerians
Toward the end of the 3rd millennium BC, Sumer and Akkad was a kingdom of empire proportions ruled by a Sumerian dynasty known as the 3rd Dynasty of Ur.
After a century or two, hordes of Semitic nomads, the Amurru, or biblical Amorites, who had migrated from the Arabian desert lands to the west, made themselves masters ofsome of the more important cities such as Isin, Larsa, Babylon, and Eshnunna (now Tell Asmar).
About 2000 BC the last ruler of the 3rd Dynasty of Ur was carried off into captivity by the Elamites.
The kingdom of Sumer and Akkad disintegrated, and civil strife became rampant.
At first the city of Isin attempted to control Sumer andAkkad, but in the course of time its authority was challenged by Larsa, considerably to the south, and the two cities were constantly at war.
About 1790 BC King Rim-Sin (reigned about 1823-1763 BC) of Larsa conquered and occupied Isin, an event considered so important that it actually marked the beginning of a new, though limited, dating era in the scribal annals.
B Hammurabi
Rim-Sin was unable to exploit his victory, because at the same time in the previously unimportant city of Babylon to the north, the ruler Hammurabi came to the fore.As king, Hammurabi combined astute diplomacy and military leadership; he defeated Rim-Sin, as well as the kings of Elam, Mari, and Eshnunna, and about 1760 BC became the ruler of a united kingdom extending from the Persian Gulf to the Habur River.
The history of Babylonia is considered to begin with Hammurabi.
An unusually active and capable administrator, Hammurabi gave his personal attention to such details as the cleaning of irrigation canals and the insertion of an extramonth into the calendar.
He was an outstanding lawgiver; the Code of Hammurabi is one of the most significant legal documents ever uncovered.
He was also aninspiring religious leader; during his reign the Babylonian city god Marduk became a recognized leader in the pantheon of deities.
C The Kassites and the 2nd Dynasty of Isin
During the reigns of Hammurabi and his son Samsu-iluna (reigned about 1750-1712 BC), who succeeded him, Babylonian civilization reached the zenith of its cultural development and political power.
Some of the more important cities of Babylonia began to seek independence, however, and, in the reign of Samsu-iluna, the Kassitesfirst invaded the country.
Although Samsu-iluna succeeded in beating them off, the Kassites continued to infiltrate Babylonia in the centuries that followed.
Samsu-ilunasuffered another serious setback when a rebel leader, Iluma-ilum, founded a dynasty in the southern Babylonian district, bordering on the Persian Gulf, commonlyknown as the Sea-land.
Under Samsu-iluna's successors Babylonia suffered a serious decline in power and territory.
When, about 1595 BC, a Hittite army penetrated as far south as Babylon and carried off Babylonian prisoners and wealth to far-off Anatolia, the kingdom became badly disorganized.
Babylonia later fell under the rule of the dynasty of theSea-land, at least for a brief period.
Finally, toward the middle of the 16th century BC, a Kassite ruler named Agum (reigned about 1570 BC) became master of Babylonia and extended its territory from the Euphrates River to the Zagros Mountains.
Under Kassite rule, Babylonia once again became a power of considerable importance.
At the beginning of the 15th century BC, for example, it was one of the four major powers of the Orient, the other three being the Egyptian, Mitanni, and Hittite empires.
After Assyria made itself independent of Mitanni domination early in the 14th century BC, its rulers began to interfere in the affairs of Babylonia and sought to control it politically.
They were eventually successful, and Babylonia became so weak that it fell prey to the Elamites who invaded it from the east, deposed its Kassite king, andpractically reduced it to a state of vassalage.
A revolt then broke out in southern and central Babylonia, and a new dynasty, known usually as the 2nd Dynasty of Isin,was founded.
Toward the end of the 12th century BC, Nebuchadnezzar I (reigned about 1125-1103 BC), one of the Isin kings, defeated the Elamites and even attacked Assyria.
Not long afterward Aramaean nomads began swarming into Babylonia.
For about two centuries thereafter the country was in a state of political chaos.
D The Chaldean Period
Among the surrounding tribes was one powerful group known as the Chaldeans.
They settled in and dominated the district along the Persian Gulf.
Beginning in the 9thcentury BC, the Chaldeans were destined to play an important political role in the history of the Orient; their rulers helped destroy the Assyrian Empire and, at least for a brief period, made Babylonia, or, as it gradually came to be known, Chaldea, the dominant power of Mesopotamia..
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