$Unique_ID{bob00800} $Pretitle{} $Title{History Of Religions Chapter III} $Subtitle{} $Author{Foot Moore, George} $Affiliation{} $Subject{babylonian gods marduk assyrian babylonia god kings religion assyria assur} $Date{1913} $Log{} Title: History Of Religions Book: Religions Of Babylonia And Assyria Author: Foot Moore, George Date: 1913 Chapter III Assyria Between the Little and Great Zab, on the west of the Tigris, lay the city Assur, the first capital of the Assyrians. Further north, opposite the modern Mosul, was Nineveh, also a very early foundation. Between the two, at the mouth of the Great Zab, was Calah, and nearly east of Nineveh, at the foot of the mountains, Arbela. The earliest ruler of Assur of whom we have historical notice is Ilusuma, who was engaged in a war with Sumuabu, founder of the kingdom of Babylon (ca. 2060 B.C.). Under the great kings of the First Dynasty the Assyrians were vassals of Babylon, but in the decline of Babylonian power under the Kassite kings Assyria regained its independence. The ups and downs of its history in the following centuries it is unnecessary to recount here. When it was strong enough it extended its rule to the mountains of Armenia and over all northern Mesopotamia. Early kings not only carried their victorious arms far into the heart of Asia Minor, but established colonies there which long maintained themselves. In the first half of the thirteenth century an Assyrian king conquered Babylon, though his possession of it did not last long, and the struggle between these two powers, in which sometimes the one was the aggressor and sometimes the other, continued intermittently through the following period, until from the latter part of the eighth century for more than a hundred years Babylonia was completely overshadowed by Assyria. In 689, in punishment for repeated revolts, Sennacherib totally destroyed the city of Babylon; but the city was soon rebuilt. The Assyrian civilisation shows at every point the influence of Babylonia. The system of writing was learned from the Babylonians; the art has the same origin, though northern influences also are clearly manifest in it; in religion Babylonian gods have a large place; and the ritual and the arts of divination are those which had been developed by the Babylonian priesthoods. The common impression, however, that the Assyrians took their whole civilisation, as it were, ready-made, from Babylonia appears to be an exaggeration; it would perhaps in the present state of our knowledge be more accurate to say that the Assyrians, like the Semitic Babylonians, were largely indebted to the Sumerian culture, and shared with them considerable elements derived from the civilisation of western Syria and Asia Minor - Amorite and, later, Hittite. The Sumerian kingdoms which at one time and another embraced the greater part of Babylonia had been formed by the supremacy of one city over its rivals; they never succeeded in welding the people together into a Sumerian nation. Still less did the Semitic empires of Akkad or of Babylon accomplish this. The Assyrians, however, appear from the beginning as a national unity. The change of the capital from Assur to Calah or Nineveh does not signify the hegemony of one city over others, but the removal of the royal residence from one city to another. Consequently the religion has a national character which distinguishes it from that of Babylonia, and this character was undoubtedly strengthened by the continual wars which the Assyrians waged either in aggression or defence against other peoples. Assur thus became the god of the Assyrian hosts; in his standard, the winged sun, he went before them in the march and the battle and bestowed upon them victory over their enemies. Inasmuch as the inscriptions of Assyrian kings are largely occupied with their campaigns, Assur appears oftenest in this character. But for the Assyrians themselves he was, as the national god, the giver of all blessings in peace as in war. Late Assyrian scribes sometimes write the name of Assur in such a way as to identify him with the Babylonian Anshar, who in the Combat of Bel and Tiamat figures as one of a former generation of gods, the ruler of the upper world, and modern scholars have sometimes allowed themselves to be misled by this cuneiform pun; but it is in the highest degree improbable that these militant Semites picked out for their national god a figure who among the Sumerians themselves belonged only to the cosmogonic myth, and had, so far we know, no place at all in the religion. Next in importance to Assur stand the goddesses, whom, after the manner of the Semites generally, the Assyrians named Ishtar, distinguishing them when necessary by the name of the cities over which they presided - the Ishtar of Arbela, for instance, and the Ishtar of Nineveh. As the tutelary deities of cities, the Ishtars of Assyria, like the city goddesses of Syria and Asia Minor, or like the Greek Athene, are their defenders against the assaults of enemies, their champions in the fray, and in conformity with the prevailing temper of the Assyrians are warlike goddesses. Assurbanipal, on the eve of a battle with the Elamites, appealed to the Ishtar of Arbela, who for his encouragement appeared to him in a dream: "On the left and right of her hung quivers; in her hand she held a bow, and a sharp sword did she draw to wage the battle." Adad, a west Syrian god who comes into prominence with the First Dynasty of Babylon, had a high place in the Assyrian pantheon. He is a god of storm and of the storm of war; his attributes are the three-forked thunderbolt and the axe, his sacred beast is a bull. He fights in the armies of the Assyrians, and shares with Assur the sacrifices which victorious kings offer on the battle-field. The sun (Utu, Babbar) was the city-god of Larsa in southern Babylonia and of Sippar in the north; the Semites naturally named him by their own word for sun, Shamash. As has happened to sky-gods and sun-gods among other peoples, the all-seeing sun became in a peculiar sense the guardian of right and justice; he receives the title "judge." At Sippar his two daughters bear the significant names Kettu and Mesharu, which we may render Justice and Equity. On the stela on which Hammurabi's code of laws is inscribed the king is represented standing before Shamash, evidently as the god of justice, though it is not otherwise intimated in the text that the law is a revelation from him. The Assyrian kings, especially the later ones, emphasise the moral attributes of Shamash even more strongly than their predecessors. As their enemies are of course in the wrong, Shamash becomes also the vindicator of the right by punishing the foe. Among the hymns to the gods - most of them would be more accurately entitled incantations - which seldom display either poetic afflatus or religious feeling, some of the hymns to Shamash are favourably distinguished. The splendour of the sun-god, illumining heaven, earth, and sea, and his vision of all the ways of men, are sung in verses that sometimes rise out of the commonplace. To Shamash the wayfarer, the hunter, the herdsman, and he who is set upon by robbers, cry for help, and not in vain; the friendly god watches over and protects them. He is the vindicator of right. Himself the incorruptible judge, he punishes the judges who take bribes and pervert justice, and rewards those who cannot be bought and have a care for the oppressed. "The offspring of those who deal unjustly will not prosper. What their mouth utters in thy presence thou wilt undo, What issues from their mouth thou wilt annul. Thou hearest their transgressions, the plan of the wicked thou rejectest. All, whoever they be, are in thy care; Thou undertakest their suit, those in bonds thou dost release; Thou hearest, O Shamash, supplication, prayer, and invocation." We have observed that in the divination books of the Baru priests the gods whose names incessantly recur are Shamash and Adad. The all-seeing god is appropriately the revealer of hidden things; the use of divination to determine guilt or innocence, moreover, stands in intimate relation to his office as judge. For the association of Adad with Shamash there is, however, no obvious explanation in the character or other functions of Adad; the robe of the soothsayer fits the tempestuous warrior ill. It may be surmised that Adad got into the formula as the tribal or national god of the people among whom the divination texts were compiled or recast. It may be added that the inscriptions make no reference to Adad's oracular talents. The moon-god, Sin, was the chief deity of Harran in Mesopotamia as he was, under the Sumerian name Nannar, in Ur. At Harran he was the head of a divine family; his queen is called Ningal (Nikkal), he has a daughter Ishtar (the planet Venus), with the title "princess," and a son, Nusku. In Assyria itself the worship of Sin seems never to have attained great proportions, though several kings bear names compounded with his name, and in the order of the triad he regularly precedes Shamash - a survival, probably, of an older stage of Semitic religion. Of the old Sumerian gods Anu was perhaps the first to be honoured in Assyria with a local cult, a fact the more noteworthy inasmuch as in Babylonia itself his religious importance was by no means commensurate with his rank in the pantheon. He is the king and father of the gods. At the city Assur a double temple for Anu and "his gallant son Adad," erected about the end of the twelfth century B.C., has recently been excavated. A temple on the same site about a thousand years earlier was dedicated to Adad alone, without any mention of Anu. The great triad, Anu, Bel, Ea, is often invoked. The Assyrian kings who ruled over Babylonia are at pains to give a religious legitimation to their rule. They have been chosen by the gods to rule over the land of Bel; to "take the hand of Bel" belongs to the ceremony of investiture. When Shalmaneser II makes an expedition into Babylonia to put down a revolt, he declares that he did it by Marduk's command. On the other hand, they give Marduk the next place after Assur when they list several gods together. To secure the favour of the Babylonian gods they restore their temples and offer sacrifice in them. In all this we may see not only a wise policy, but true reverence for the ancient seats of religion and sources of priestly wisdom; but this homage to the Babylonian gods in Babylonia did not give them any corresponding increment of importance in Assyria; the kings built no temples for Marduk in their own land. A god designated by the signs "Nin-ib" - what he was really called is unknown - was especially honoured by some of the Assyrian kings. He was, as might be supposed, an invincible warrior, whose strength and prowess are lauded in swollen phrases; like his admirers, he was also a mighty hunter. His great temple was in Calah. Nergal, the god of Kutha in northern Babylonia, whom we have already met as a god of the realms of the dead, was also worshipped in Assyria as a god of war and the chase - a character, indeed, which all gods and goddesses took among that bellicose folk. The Assyrian temples, to judge from the few examples of which anything is known, were of the same general type as those of Babylonia; the characteristic temple tower stood beside them also. The ritual, the arts of incantation and divination, were taken over from the Babylonians, as has been already said. The kings entitle themselves in religious inscriptions priests of Assur, and stand at the head of the state religion. Many reliefs from their palaces represent acts of worship in which the king participates, and from them our knowledge of the apparatus of the cult is chiefly derived; it is, however, more frequently sacrifice or divination in the camp or the field than worship in the temples that appears in these reliefs. The latter half of the eight and the first half of the seventh centuries were the climax of Assyrian greatness; the rule of the Assyrian kings at its widest extent reached from Babylonia to Egypt, but it was never a stable and well-ordered empire, and was maintained only by incessant wars which in the end exhausted the race as the Napoleonic wars exhausted France. A new upheaval in those Asiatic steppes which so often in history have poured out the scourges of God set in motion the Scythian hordes, who overran the weakened countries of western Asia; a new power arose in Media; the dynasts of the "Sea Country" on the shores of the Persian Gulf, whose independent spirit the Assyrians had never been able to subdue, made themselves masters of Babylon and allied themselves with the Medes against Assyria. In 606 Nineveh fell, and with that catastrophe the nation which but a generation before had seemed invincible disappears from history in a way that has hardly a parallel. The Neobabylonian, or Chaldean, kingdom which arose upon its ruins had a national character which the old Babylonian states lacked; Marduk was the national god in the same way that Assur had been in Assyria. The exaltation of national consciousness expressed itself in a religious revival or restoration; not only were the great temples of Marduk in Babylon and of Nabu at Borsippa rebuilt with unprecedented splendour, but throughout all the land the gods, great and small, were honoured in similar fashion. Nebuchadnezzar, whom with our mind on the Old Testament we think of chiefly as a conqueror, records in his inscriptions not his successes in war, but his piety in building and renewing temples. The last of the kings, Nabonnedos, was digging up long-buried corner-stones of ancient temples and rejoicing over them with archaeological enthusiasm while the Persians were knocking the empire to pieces about his head. The signature of the period is artificial repristination, very like that which the Saite Dynasty was busy with in Egypt about the same time. The Persian conquest (538 B.C.) put an end to Babylonian nationality. Cyrus treated the religion of the country with statesmanlike respect; he attributes his victory to Marduk, who had bidden him visit on Nabonnedos the god's displeasure at some of his religious innovations; he orders the images of the gods which that king had collected in Babylon to be restored to their own temples. But though the Persian kings and the Greeks after them did something for Marduk and Nabu, the great gods of the capital, the religion was no longer the religion of the state, and under new political and economic conditions and in contact with an alien civilisation it slowly but steadily declined. While the gods thus sank into provincial obscurity, the arts of the Babylonian magicians and diviners were celebrated in all lands, and the adepts found new and lucrative fields for their practice in the West. Hoary antiquity, mystifying hocus-pocus, and elaborate pretence of method conspired to give these Chaldeans, or "mathematicians," or whatever else they were called, a great vogue. Divination from astronomical phenomena, in particular, was an imposing pseudoscience, which formed the basis of astrology. Reasons have been given above, ^1 for the opinion that this method of divination was developed by the Semitic Babylonians, rather than by the Sumerians. It is known to us chiefly through the reports of Assyrian court astrologers and still later sources, but bears clearly enough the impress of its Babylonian origin. Signs were taken not only from the moon and the sun, but from the planets, their heliacal rising, brightness, positions relatively to one another, to the moon, and to certain stars or constellations, their presence within a ring around the moon, and the like. The planet Venus was from the earliest times the star of Ishtar (and her Sumerian doubles of various names); the astrologers connected the other planets with the greater gods of the Babylonian pantheon, but with which gods they were severally associated, and whether at all periods the same gods, is still subject to controversy. For the Assyrian and Neobabylonian period it seems to be fairly made out that Jupiter was assigned to Marduk, Mercury to Nabu, Mars to Nergal, and Saturn to "Nin-ib." An examination of the texts does not show any dominant correspondence between the sphere or character of the deity and the prognostications drawn from the behaviour of his planet; Mars is generally a baleful star, but for that there are other possible explanations besides association with Nergal. The omens of Jupiter have no such specific reference to the fortunes of the king and the nation as might be expected of Marduk's planet; Venus gives substantially the same omens. In general, the planets have no such distinctive and significant characters as in European astrology, in which they determine the fortune of individuals. [Footnote 1: See p. 228.] It has been asserted that the Babylonian astrology was based on the theory of an exact correspondence between celestial phenomena and terrestrial events: the world is in all respects the counterpart of the heavens, and there is a complete and necessitated parallelism between what goes on above and below. This theory of the universe, it is affirmed, underlies the Babylonian religion and gives it its peculiar character; from Babylonia it passed to the West, and dominated Greek as well as Hebrew thought. In short, the conception of the universe which prevailed in all our world down to the epoch of modern science is at bottom the Babylonian "Weltanschauung." The Babylonian theory itself, according to this doctrine, rests upon an observation and interpretation of astronomical phenomena which in very remote times led to extraordinary results. Not only was the track of the planets early mapped off into the twelve signs of the zodiac, but the precession of the equinoxes was known to the Babylonian star-gazers thousands of years before our era. It has been proved, on the contrary, that the Babylonian astronomers at the height of their art, down to the second century B.C., were ignorant of the precession of the equinoxes, and that, though some zodiacal constellations appear on "boundary stones" from Kassite times, there is no trace of the equal division of the ecliptic into twelve parts till the Neobabylonian or Persian period. Anything like a scientific astronomy, as distinguished from observations for purposes of divination, begins only in the last millennium before our era, and reaches its highest point only after the fall of Babylon - in fact, in the Greek and Arsacidan time. Divination by the stars was practised by the Babylonians and Assyrians to learn what was going to befall kings and peoples; they do not seem to have imagined that the private fortunes of individuals were determined by the heavenly bodies, and therefore to be read in the sky. The development of this side of astrology, with its elaborate methods of forecasting the whole life of a man by the position of the stars at the hour of his birth (genethlialogy), is of later date, and, however much they may have learned from the "Chaldeans," the Greeks were its inventors. The religion of Assyria, as we have seen, was closely akin to that of its neighbours in northern Babylonia, from which it borrowed largely. The extension of Assyrian dominion over a great part of Syria introduced the worship of Assyrian-Babylonian gods. In the eastern part of this area, which was for centuries really a part of Assyria, the influence of Assyrian civilisation and religion was most profound and durable. The worship of the Babylonian Bel and Nabu at Edessa, for example, flourished until Christian times. Even in this region, however, the native elements greatly preponderated in the local religions; and farther west Assyrian-Babylonian influence is, speaking generally, sporadic and superficial, while there is a larger admixture from Asia Minor. On the seaboard, finally, the most diverse civilisations in successive ages left their mark - Syrian, Hittite, Phoenician, Cypriote, Egyptian - but it is hardly at all affected, directly or indirectly, by Babylonian culture. Not only has the influence of the Babylonian religion been enormously exaggerated, but wholly erroneous notions are entertained about the religion itself. So far from being the religious initiators of humanity, the Babylonians remained to the end on a relatively low plane of religious development - compared with the ancient Chinese, for example. They were great in demonology and divination, but showed no capacity for religious ideas. The "latent" monotheism which some Assyriologists attribute to them comes to no more than such banal litanies as "Ninib is the Marduk of might, Nergal is the Marduk of fight, Zamama is the Marduk of battle, Enlil is the Marduk of rule and dominion, Nabu is the Marduk of superintendence(?), Sin is the Marduk of nocturnal light, Shamash is the Marduk of decisions, Adad is the Marduk of rain," etc. That is to say - putting the utmost possible into the words - the many gods are names of Marduk in various functions and operations. Such utterances may signify much or little. When we read in the Veda, "Men call it Indra, Mitra, Agni, Varuna, Or heavenly Garutman with glorious pinions. By many names the poets name what is but One; They name it Agni, Yama, Mataricvan," we recognise the dawning of a philosophical conception of unity, out of which the monism of the Upanishads will spring. We understand the pantheistic self-laudation of Isis in Apuleius. But the Babylonian text before us conceals no such subtleties; what it says is that Marduk is the whole pantheon, and that, not as a piece of speculation, but as a liturgical glorification of Marduk. Even such purely verbal unifications of the godhead are late and infrequent.