A Manual of Ancient History. M. E. Thalheimer

A Manual of Ancient History - M. E. Thalheimer


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Astronomy began to be studied in very early times, and the observations were carefully recorded. The name of Chaldæan became equivalent to that of seer or philosopher.

      27. The names of fifteen or sixteen kings have been deciphered upon the earliest monuments of the country, but we possess no records of their reigns. It is sufficient to remember the dynasties, or royal families, which, according to Bero´sus,[6] ruled in Chaldæa from about two thousand years before Christ to the beginning of connected chronology.

      1. A Chaldæan Dynasty, from about 2000 to 1543 BC The only known kings are Nimrod and Chedorlao´mer.

      2. An Arabian Dynasty, from about 1543 to 1298 BC

      3. A Dynasty of forty-five kings, probably Assyrian, from 1298 to 772 BC

      4. The Reign of Pul, from 772 to 747 BC

      During the first and last of these periods, the country was flourishing and free; during the second, it seems to have been subject to its neighbors in the south-west; and, during the third, it was absorbed into the great Assyrian Empire, as a tributary kingdom, if not merely as a province.

      ASSYRIAN MONARCHY.

      28. At a very early period a kingdom was established upon the Tigris, which expanded later into a vast empire. Of its earliest records only the names of three or four kings remain to us; but the quadrangular mounds which cover the sites of cities and palaces, and the rude sculptures found by excavation upon their walls, show the industry of a large and luxurious population. The history of Assyria may be divided into three periods:

I. From unknown commencement of the monarchy to the Conquest of Babylon, about 1250 BC
II. From Conquest of Babylon to Accession of Tiglath-pileser II, 745 BC
III. From Accession of Tiglath-pileser to Fall of Nineveh, 625 BC

      BC 1270.

      One king of the First Period, Shalmaneser I, is known to have made war among the Armenian Mountains, and to have established cities in the conquered territory.

      BC 1130.

      BC 1100–909.

      BC 886–858.

      BC 858–823.

      BC 771–753.

      BC 753–745.

      31. Asshur-danin-il II was less warlike than his ancestors. The time of his reign is ascertained by an eclipse of the sun, which the inscriptions place in his ninth year, and which astronomers know to have occurred June 15, 763 BC After Asshur-likh-khus, the following king, the dynasty was ended with a revolution. Nabonas´sar, of Babylon, not only made himself independent, but gained a brief supremacy over Assyria. The Assyrians, during the Second Period, made great advances in literature and arts. The annals of each reign were either cut in stone or impressed upon a duplicate series of bricks, to guard against destruction either by fire or water. If fire destroyed the burnt bricks, it would only harden the dried; and if the latter were dissolved by water, the former would remain uninjured. Engraved columns were erected in all the countries under Assyrian rule.

      BC 745–727.

      BC 705–680.

      BC 667–647.


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