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8. Babylonia (900-539)

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Title: 8. Babylonia (900-539)


1
8. Babylonia (900-539) Egypt (1000-525)
  • BOT612 Old Testament Backgrounds

2
A Period of Weakness (1000-748 BCE)
  • "The first important Babylonian king of the
    millennium, Nabu-apla-iddina (ca. 887-885 b.c.),
    had a treaty with his Assyrian counterparts. His
    reign is a highlight in a bleak period of
    Babylonian history. The country's borders were
    secure, internal stability prevailed, and energy
    was devoted to reconstruction and restoration.
    For example, thanks to the discovery of a text of
    Nabu-apla-iddina's inscribed on a stone tablet,
    we know that the king sponsored the rebuilding of
    the temple of the sun-god (Shamash) at Sippar."

3
A Period of Weakness (1000-748 BCE)
  • When Nabu-apla-iddina died, his successor,
    Marduk-zakir-shumi I (ca. 854-819 BCE), renewed
    the old treaty with Assyria, which was now ruled
    by Shalmaneser III (858-824 BCE). . . . The
    renewal of the treaty proved advantageous for
    Marduk-zakir-shumi when his brother led a
    rebellion and seized some of Babylonia for
    himself, Marduk-zakir-shumi called upon
    Shalmaneser to intervene, invoking the treaty
    between them. . . . After this incident,
    Babylonia continued to enjoy peace with Assyria
    and general prosperity."

4
A Period of Weakness (1000-748 BCE)
  • "When Shalmaneser was getting very old, a major
    rebellion broke out in Assyria and continued for
    some years. It appears that one of Shalmaneser's
    sons, Shamshi-Adad, sought and gained Babylonian
    support . . . the Babylonian king used the
    occasion to demote the Assyrian to a lower status
    so that in the treaty he appears as the lesser
    party. When the rebellion had been suppressed and
    Shamshi-Adad, the fifth king of that name, had
    been crowned, he invaded Babylonia, presumably
    out of revenge for the humiliating treaty imposed
    upon him. This is the first

5
A Period of Weakness (1000-748 BCE)
  • time for almost a century that there was open
    conflict between the two states. Shamshi-Adad V
    led three expeditions into Babylonia, capturing
    major Babylonian cities, including Babylon, and
    Babylonia was forced to pay tribute."
  • "The Assyrian Adad-narari III (810-783 b.c.)
    continued the aggressive stance toward Babylonia,
    although it is unknown how many campaigns he sent
    there. A treaty favorable toward Assyria was
    imposed upon Babylonia, which again had to pay
    tribute. Fortunately for Babylonia, this reign
    marked the end of a

6
A Period of Weakness (1000-748 BCE)
  • troublesome time with Assyria. By the end of
    Adad-narari's reign, Assyria was once again hard
    pressed by another power, this time Urartu, and
    had no time to meddle in Babylonia. Thus for the
    first half of the 8th century b.c., Babylonia,
    free of foreign invasion, seemed to be in a
    position to enjoy peaceful pursuits."

7
Under Assyrian Rule (742-627 BCE)
  • "Babylonia's fate was closely linked to that of
    Assyria throughout this era, particularly so in
    the Sargonid age in Assyria. When Tiglath-pileser
    III (744-727 b.c.) took the Assyrian throne,
    Nabu-nasir (747-734 b.c.) had barely begun his
    rule at Babylon, a rule that held great promise
    for Babylonia the borders were secure, the state
    was stable internally, the king encouraged
    literary and scientific projects (including
    astronomical observations and chronicle writing),
    and Tiglath-pileser III concluded a treaty with
    Nabu-nasir."

8
Under Assyrian Rule (742-627 BCE)
  • "The death of Nabu-nasir brought an abrupt end to
    Babylonia's fortunes. Mukin-zer, the leader of a
    tribe of Chaldeans in S Babylonia, attempted to
    seize the Babylonian throne, forcing
    Tiglath-pileser III to respond by invading
    Babylonia, pushing Mukin-zer and his forces back
    south, and having himself crowned as king of
    Babylonia. Thus, for the first time, Assyria and
    Babylonia were a united kingdom, ruled by an
    Assyrian monarch."

9
Under Assyrian Rule (742-627 BCE)
  • "To understand subsequent events in Babylonian
    history, it is necessary to look briefly at the
    various groups now present in the Babylonian
    plain, for the Babylonian population was quite
    heterogeneous. Essentially there were four
    elements "native" Babylonians, Elamites,
    Arameans, and Chaldeans. . . . The most active of
    all anti-Assyrian agitators in Babylonia at this
    time was Merodach-Baladan II. He was the leader
    of a Chaldean tribe called Yakin and first took
    an active military role toward the end of
    Tiglath-pileser III's reign. When Sargon II
    (721-705 b.c.) ascended the Assyrian throne,
    Merodach-baladan had himself crowned king at
    Babylon. The Assyrian tried unsuccessfully to
    depose Merodach-baladan, who ruled Babylonia

10
Under Assyrian Rule (742-627 BCE)
  • for the next decade. But in 710 b.c., Sargon
    finally defeated the Chaldeans, and
    Merodach-baladan took refuge in the S marshes."
  • "Babylonia, as represented by Merodach-baladan
    and other leaders, staunchly resisted
    Sennacherib. Merodach-baladan actually regained
    the throne at Babylon briefly in 703 b.c.,
    forcing the Assyrian to turn from other concerns
    (Palestine) and invade Babylonia.
    Merodach-baladan again fled south to the marshes,
    but over the next few years he stirred up
    opposition to the Assyrian occupation.
    Sennacherib attempted to rule

11
Under Assyrian Rule (742-627 BCE)
  • Babylonia through puppet kings while he led the
    Assyrian army in an abortive attempt to capture
    Merodach-baladan. The critical point in this
    phase of Assyro-Babylonian affairs was the entry
    of Elam into the fray. The Elamites invaded
    Babylonia, captured Sennacherib's son and heir
    (who had been crowned king of Babylonia), and
    carried him off to exile and death."
  • "Sennacherib was enraged by this, regarding it as
    Babylonian treachery. He launched vicious
    campaigns first against Elam and then against
    Babylonia, finally capturing Babylon itself in
    689 b.c."

12
Under Assyrian Rule (742-627 BCE)
  • "The next Assyrian king, Esarhaddon (680-669
    b.c.), set himself the task of reconciliation
    with and reconstruction of Babylonia. This was a
    wise policy and won for him a reign untroubled on
    the S border."
  • "Esarhaddon had decided that when he died his
    kingdom would be divided between two of his sons,
    and thus Ashurbanipal (668-627 b.c.) came to rule
    over Assyria and Shamash-shuma-ukin (667-648
    b.c.) to rule over Babylonia. . . . Increasing
    unease broke into open battle in 652 b.c. and
    continued for four years, to 648 b.c. Assyria
    quickly gained the upper hand, and, after a long
    siege, Babylon fell and Shamash-shuma-ukin
    perished in his burning palace."

13
Imperial Beginnings (626-605 BCE)
  • "Out of the ashes of a Babylonia scorched by the
    Assyrians in 689 and 648 b.c. rose a new dynasty
    destined to establish both an independent
    Babylonia and Babylonian rule over the former
    Assyrian empire. The founder of this dynasty was
    Nabopolassar (625-605 b.c.), a Chaldean who was
    crowned king at Babylon after defeating an
    Assyrian army in Babylonia. No details of
    Nabopolassar's background are known nor is there
    much firm evidence about the situation before the
    events leading up to his coronation. It is
    apparent, however, that the Babylonians were
    actively rebelling against the Assyrians and
    trying to expel them from their land.
    Nabopolassar became the champion of this freedom
    fight, and in 626 b.c. he

14
Imperial Beginnings (626-605 BCE)
  • led Babylonian troops to lay siege to Nippur,
    which contained an Assyrian garrison. The siege
    was lengthy and the people so impoverished that
    some of them, as we know from contracts
    discovered at Nippur, were forced to sell their
    children into slavery so that they could buy
    food. Eventually the siege was lifted when an
    Assyrian army arrived and pursued the Babylonian
    troops as far as Babylon."

15
Imperial Beginnings (626-605 BCE)
  • "During the early years of Nabopolassar's reign,
    the Babylonian offensive went from success to
    success, and Assyria gradually withdrew to the
    north. When Nabopolassar pushed up to the Upper
    Euphrates region, Egypt became alarmed and sent
    aid to Assyria (616 b.c.). Such an alliance had
    never existed before and is a symbol of the
    momentous changes occurring in ancient Near
    Eastern politics. About the same time that Egypt
    aligned itself with Assyria, the Medes allied
    themselves with the Babylonians. The Medes had
    long been established in W

16
Imperial Beginnings (626-605 BCE)
  • Iran and more recently had spread their control
    westward into eastern and central Anatolia. For
    the next four years the Medes and Babylonians
    pounded away at Assyrian holdings and at the
    Assyrian heartland itself. In 614 Asshur was
    captured. Then, in 612 the allies laid siege to
    Nineveh. The siege lasted all summer before the
    city fell. A remnant of Assyrians escaped W to
    Harran, where a mini-Assyrian dynasty was
    established. Nabopolassar, supported by the
    Medes, attacked Harran in 610 and forced the
    combined armies of Assyria and Egypt to flee to
    Syria. In 609 this army returned and made a vain
    attempt to dislodge the Babylonians and Medes
    from Harran."

17
Imperial Beginnings (626-605 BCE)
  • "The decisive battle between the two sides came
    in 605 at Carchemish. Egypt now stood alone, for
    nothing is ever heard again of an Assyrian army.
    By this time the Babylonian army was being led in
    alternate years by the king Nabopolassar and his
    son and heir Nebuchadnezzar. In 605 the son was
    in charge of the expedition. Nebuchadnezzar led a
    surprise attack on the Egyptian army at
    Carchemish. The Egyptians were caught inside the
    walls but managed to break out and avoid being
    sealed in by a siege. The fighting was fierce,
    and the Egyptians eventually

18
Imperial Beginnings (626-605 BCE)
  • broke and ran with the Babylonians in hot
    pursuit, slaying every man they could catch. This
    was the ultimate victory for Babylonia. Assyria
    was destroyed, and Egypt had lost any credibility
    in Asia. Eventually the Babylonians would follow
    this up by campaigning to and claiming all of
    Syria-Palestine. But there was a slight delay.
    News arrived after the Battle of Carchemish that
    Nabopolossar had died. Nebuchadnezzar returned
    swiftly to Babylon, where he was crowned king."

19
Nabopolassar Cylindar
20
The Empire (604-556 BCE)
  • "No sooner were the coronation ceremonies over
    for Nebuchadnezzar II (604-562 BCE) , after the
    death of his father, then he hastened back to
    Syria to resume his campaigning. He had defeated
    the Egyptians at Carchemish in 605 b.c., but this
    did not automatically bring Syria-Palestine under
    Babylonian control. In the following years he led
    a series of expeditions W of the Euphrates.
    Sometimes local rulers acknowledged him as lord
    and paid tribute without question at other
    times, they resisted and the Babylonian army laid
    siege to their cities."

21
The Empire (604-556 BCE)
  • "By 601 Nebuchadnezzar felt his hold over
    Syria-Palestine was strong enough to permit a
    campaign against Egypt. This was a mistake. A
    pitched battle between the two forces in Egypt
    resulted in a stalemate, and Nebuchadnezzar,
    choosing discretion, led his army back to
    Babylon. After a year spent repairing the damage
    to his army and equipment, he resumed his Syrian
    campaigns. This was urgent, for the Babylonian
    humiliation in Egypt had encouraged W states to
    rebel."

22
The Empire (604-556 BCE)
  • "Jerusalem during this period was torn between
    two factions, one pro-Egyptian and one
    pro-Babylonian. The king, Jehoiakim, and his
    supporters were in favor of siding with the
    Egyptians, but the prophet Jeremiah preferred the
    Babylonians. Although Jehoiakim had paid tribute
    to Babylonia after the Battle of Carchemish,
    Babylonia's ignominious withdrawal from Egypt in
    601 led him to renounce his allegiance to
    Babylonia and throw in his lot with Egypt.
    Nebuchadnezzar could not let this key center fall
    away, and so in 597 he besieged and

23
The Empire (604-556 BCE)
  • captured Jerusalem. He appointed a new king,
    Zedekiah, and imposed a heavy tribute. Jehoiakin,
    son of Jehoiakim who had died, his family, and
    many leading citizens were taken as captives to
    Babylon . . . ."
  • In the years after 597, Zedekiah allowed himself
    gradually to be persuaded by those who favored
    Egypt. Eventually, with a promise of Egyptian
    support, he abandoned allegiance to Babylonia,
    refusing to pay tribute. In 587 Nebuchadnezzar
    again invaded Judah, capturing various cities as
    he marched on Jerusalem. These Judean cities

24
The Empire (604-556 BCE)
  • were not plundered but were treated mercifully
    in a deliberate attempt to weaken the resolve of
    Jerusalem's defenders. Therefore, when
    Nebuchadnezzar laid siege to Jerusalem, Jeremiah
    and his supporters pointed to the lenient
    treatment of other cities and vainly urged
    capitulation. Meanwhile, the Egyptian army moved
    into Judah and tried, unsuccessfully, to lift the
    Babylonian siege. Then the Babylonians captured
    Jerusalem. The city was plundered and destroyed,
    its leaders were executed, and most of the
    remaining population were carried off in exile to
    Babylonia."

25
Blakes Nebuchadnezzar
26
Babylon
27
Babylon
28
Babylon
29
Babylon
30
Babylon
Babylon
31
Babylon
32
Babylon
33
Babylon
34
Babylon
35
Babylon
36
Babylon
37
Babylon
38
Babylon
39
Babylon
40
(No Transcript)
41
The Empire (604-556 BCE)
  • "After his death he was succeeded by some
    relatively unimportant monarchs, including
    Evil-Merodach and Nergal-Sharezzer. If the
    kingdom was still strong, it was nevertheless no
    longer expanding."

42
Nabonidus the Fall of Babylon (666-539 BCE)
  • "Nabonidus . . . . While forces portending doom
    to Babylonia gathered on the horizons, he found
    time to promote a religious change, to undertake
    major building operations, and even to live in
    the desert for ten years. He did not, however,
    ignore the external dangers to Babylonia's
    security - far from it. When at last the Persian
    army invaded Babylonia, he fought valiantly but
    in vain to repel them."

43
Nabonidus the Fall of Babylon (666-539 BCE)
  • "Nabonidus' religious changes provide a key to
    his other actions. He was not in the direct line
    for the throne (one Babylonian text called him a
    "usurper", and it is unknown how he became king.
    When Nabonidus came to power, he promoted the
    cult of the moon and sought out similar cults in
    Babylonia. Thus he favored the Babylonian deity
    Sin, god of the moon and the city Ur. He had
    little interest in Babylon's god, Marduk. This
    brought down upon his head the wrath of the
    Marduk priests and supporters who, among other
    things, wrote literary works condemning Nabonidus
    for his sacrilege."

44
Nabonidus the Fall of Babylon (666-539 BCE)
  • "A second unique feature of this king's reign was
    his ten-year self-imposed exile in Tema, an oasis
    in the Arabian desert. While he lived there his
    son, Belshazzar, managed affairs at Babylon. . .
    . It is a fact that pre-Islamic Arabs in the
    Arabian peninsula revered the moon-god, and this
    may have been an important motivation for
    Nabonidus, given his intense interest in this
    cult. But this would not exclude one or more
    other reasons, such as an attempt to regain his
    health, for the long exile."

45
Nabonidus the Fall of Babylon (666-539 BCE)
  • "The third area of special interest in this reign
    was the manner in which Nabonidus conducted his
    building operations. It was, of course, usual for
    a Babylonian king to erect or restore monumental
    buildings, as Nabonidus did. What was unusual was
    the zeal with which he sought out ancient statues
    and inscriptions of his predecessors when digging
    in the foundations of old buildings. This
    characteristic has won for Nabonidus the epithet
    "the world's first archaeologist" among modern
    scholars."

46
Nabonidus the Fall of Babylon (666-539 BCE)
  • "The Persians under Cyrus the Great had been
    gathering around the borders of the Babylonian
    empire, preparing for a major assault which took
    place in 539 b.c. The Persians came down the
    Diyala river, and Nabonidus, at the head of his
    army, met and fought with them at Opis near
    modern Baghdad. Nabonidus was defeated. The
    Persians then marched on Babylon where, according
    to a native source, the Babylonians opened the
    gates and with rejoicing welcomed Cyrus as a
    deliverer from the "tyrant" Nabonidus."

47
Belshazzar (556-539 BCE)
  • "Son of Nabonidus (556-539 b.c.), the last king
    of Babylonia prior to the Persian conquest,
    Belshazzar ruled as co-regent for at least three
    years while his father was in Arabia. This
    arrangement in itself is important, since it has
    no parallel in any other period of Mesopotamian
    history. There is no direct evidence that he
    altered conditions in southern Mesopotamia in any
    way during his father's absence."

48
Belshazzar (556-539 BCE)
  • "He appears to have had ample authority to give
    orders to temple officials in Uruk and Sippar and
    could even lease out temple land. His name
    disappears from the contract tablets in
    Nabonidus' thirteenth year it has been suggested
    that this coincides with Nabonidus' return to
    Babylonia from Tema."
  • Belshazzar commanded Babylonian troops in the
    vicinity of Sippar when Cyrus of Persia conquered
    Anatolia (545 b.c.). Nothing is known of his
    activities after 543 b.c."

49
Egypt Third Intermediate Period (Dynasty 21-26)
  • "The era immediately succeeding that of the New
    Kingdom (NK) witnessed varied developments in
    society, culture, and economy (Kitchen 1973).
    Notwithstanding the apparent paucity of royal
    inscriptions, much has been revealed by recent
    research concentrated on this hitherto presumed
    Dark Age of Egypt. However, the paramount and
    consistent trend in the dynasties following the
    fall of the NK is one of political
    decentralization and corresponding lack of a firm
    unified monarchy (Yoyotte 1961). Foreigners, too,
    made an impact on the Nile

50
Egypt Third Intermediate Period (Dynasty 21-26)
  • valley, and not one but three different
    contenders for the prize of Egypt left their
    mark. First, there were the Libyans, who had
    already settled in the north during the reign of
    Ramesses III then Egypt was faced with a
    southern incursion, that of the Kishites
    finally, the mighty Assyrians attempted to
    conquer the land. As a result, the political
    history of this time is difficult to view as a
    whole if only because Egypt was not unified as
    before."

51
Egypt Third Intermediate Period (Dynasty 21-26)
  • "For the sake of simplicity and ease of
    comprehension, modern scholarship now uses the
    term "Third Intermediate Period" to cover
    Dynasties 2125 (ca. 1069664 b.c.). This, in
    turn, was followed by the Saite Period, Dyn. 26
    (664525 b.c.), an era of unity. However, it
    should be stressed that the 3d Intermediate
    Period is purely a global designation, revealing
    little about the 400-year span of Egyptian
    history, a time that witnessed the emergence of a
    society quite different than any preceding."

52
Egypt in Dynasty 21 (ca. 1069945 BCE)
  • "The last years of Pharaoh Ramesses XI saw a
    subtle alteration in the power structure of
    Egypt. The famous report of Wenamun (ca. 1076
    BCE) alludes in fairly direct language to the
    dual control of Egypt in the south, control had
    effectively passed to the high priest of Amun,
    Herihor, while the north was under the de facto
    jurisdiction of Smendes from his capital at the
    seaport of Tanis in the East Delta. At the death
    of the last Ramesside ruler, the two offices
    passed smoothly to, respectively, the then
    incumbent high priest of Amun Pinudjem and to
    Pharaoh Smendes himself."

53
Egypt in Dynasty 21 (ca. 1069945 BCE)
  • "Pinudjem I renewed the burials of his royal
    ancestors in the Valley of the Kings, albeit with
    some possible mistakes in attribution. He also
    had himself proclaimed pharaoh in his own right,
    the first clear-cut evidence of this practice
    from the temple of Khonsu at Thebes. In the 16th
    regnal year of Smendes (ca. 1057 b.c.), Pinudjem
    became the first pharaoh of the south, while his
    son Masaharta took the position of high priest
    of Amun. Although this was not the start of a
    civil war, it essentially created a separate and
    continuing dynasty in addition to the royal line
    of Tanis."

54
Egypt in Dynasty 21 (ca. 1069945 BCE)
  • ". . . there are no regnal years associated with
    Pinudjem as king, a point worth stressing as it
    indicates that Smendes still was superior, if
    only in form."
  • "With the deaths of Smendes and his short-lived
    son, the Tanite line then passed on to the
    energetic Psusennes I (ca. 1039991 b.c.).
    Although the southern line of high priests never
    again rose to claim royalty after Pinudjem Is
    death seven years later, Psusennes himself took
    the title of high priest of Amun (this time in
    Tanis). He copied the policy of his southern
    contemporaries by

55
Egypt in Dynasty 21 (ca. 1069945 BCE)
  • securing his control over various priestly
    offices. Indeed, unlike the administrative setup
    of the NK, Dyn. 21 and its successors reveal the
    intimate family relationships that existed
    between the kings and the religious benefices in
    the land."
  • "Very little is known concerning the south of
    Egypt during the reign of Psusennes and his
    successors. The line of Menkheperre continued to
    hold the office of High Priest of Amun, but none
    of his descendants ever took the kingship."

56
Egypt in Dynasty 21 (ca. 1069945 BCE)
  • The next three Tanite kings, although of
    relatively small importance, present interesting
    aspects. During the reigns of the first two,
    Amenemope and Osorkor(n), now named The Elder,
    close connections appear to have been forged
    between the Tanite court and Hadad the Edomite (1
    Kgs 111422), a political refugee from the
    north. It was probably during these two reigns
    that Hadad came to Tanis and secured for himself
    a place in exile after the victorious armies of
    King David had taken control of his kingdom. This
    passive support of an enemy of the Israelite

57
Egypt in Dynasty 21 (ca. 1069945 BCE)
  • Kingdom was to have repercussions toward the
    close of Dyn. 21. Such brief indications of
    international maneuverings clearly indicate that
    the paucity of our sources for this period does
    not necessarily indicate that the Tanite kings
    eschewed foreign affairs."
  • "The second pharaoh, Osorkor(n) (ca. 984978
    b.c.), bears a good Libyan name and there is
    little doubt . . . that he was not related to the
    previous pharaoh. Quite the contrary, Osorkor(n)
    was descended from an important Libyan (or
    Meshwesh, as they called themselves) tribe that
    had settled in the north

58
Egypt in Dynasty 21 (ca. 1069945 BCE)
  • in Dyn. 20. His father was a tribal emir of
    great importance and he himself was the uncle of
    the future founder of Dyn. 22."
  • "Siamun (ca. 978959 b.c.) continued to support
    the refugee Hadad at his court. However, when the
    aged king David of Israel died, he took the
    opportunity to support fully Hadads return to
    Edom and at the same time moved his army north
    into Philistia (Malamat 1963 1216 Kitchen
    1973 28083). This campaign, although minor in
    comparison to those of the NK, nevertheless
    indicates that Tanis regarded her northern
    neighbor, the kingdom of Israel, with a jaundiced
    if not jealous eye. Precisely at Davids death
    and coinciding with the problems of royal

59
Egypt in Dynasty 21 (ca. 1069945 BCE)
  • succession in Israel, Siamun moved on Gezer and
    seized it. Unfortunately for the Egyptian, events
    in Israel had also sped swiftly and Solomon
    quickly took control of his fathers kingdom. As
    a result, the Tanite monarch made an about-face
    and, under the guise of a diplomatic marriage
    agreement, gave the captured city of Gezer to
    Solomon as a dowry with his daughter, thereby
    cementing an alliance with his powerful
    neighbor."
  • "The last pharaoh of Dyn. 21 (Psusennes II ca.
    959945 b.c.) rounded out the domination of
    Tanis."

60
The Libyan Era (Unity) Dyn 22
  • "Owing to the complexities of the period during
    which the Libyans dominated Egypt, it is best to
    divide it into a time of comparative unity (ca.
    945850 b.c.), followed by a gradual
    disintegration leading to the fragmented
    political structure so well evident (c. 750 b.c.)
    just before Assyria and the Kushites became
    interested in the Nile Valley."

61
The Libyan Era (Unity) Dyn 22
  • Sheshonk I (ca. 945924 BCE)
  • "He followed the practice of his less successful
    predecessors of Dyn. 21 in cementing control over
    the Theban hierarchy through appointments of his
    relatives."
  • Sheshonks well-known campaign into Asia, for
    example, was not one of conquest. Quite the
    contrary, he seized upon an opportune time to
    damage the power of his immediate neighbor to the
    north by marching into Palestine a few years
    after the death of Solomon. Recent work has
    revealed that rather than attempt to annex
    property, Sheshonk preferred to despoil the
    territories of Israel and Judah, which had the

62
The Libyan Era (Unity) Dyn 22
  • added advantage of providing needed booty in
    order to pay his army. Certainly the campaign was
    a success if the limited nature of the strategy
    is seen and understood (Redford 1973 713).
    Unlike Siamun before him, who had to contend with
    a united kingdom of Israel, the split between the
    north and south after the death of Solomon lent
    itself to an effective war of attrition.
    Significantly, Sheshonk did not return to
    Palestine, even though the state of Judah was
    weakened from the attack as well as from the
    desertion of Israel. Hence, one might also
    interpret Sheshonks action as an attempt to
    break Israels commercial monopoly in the north
    which had grown considerably at the expense of a
    weak Tanite line."

63
The Libyan Era (Unity) Dyn 22
  • "It is therefore wrong to view the policy of
    Sheshonk and his immediate successors, Osorkon I
    (ca. 924889 b.c.) and Takelot I (ca. 889874
    b.c.), as an attempt to revive the glory and
    power of the NK. While it is true that the former
    (Sheshonk Is son) did involve himself to the
    north in Judah, this was a minor foray (2 Chr
    14915) and probably intended solely for added
    booty. Close connections were also maintained
    with Byblos, the age-old ally of Egypt in the
    Levant. At home, Osorkon I is presumed to have
    provided the major temples of Egypt (Thebes and
    those in the north) with a great deal of wealth,
    or so says a lengthy inscription from Bubastis."

64
The Libyan Era (Unity) Dyn 22
  • "With Osorkon II (ca. 874850 b.c.) we come to
    the last significant king of Dyn. 22. His reign
    is noteworthy for a great amount of temple
    building, especially at his capital, Tanis."
  • ". . . Osorkon himself, despite his construction
    projects, his close connections with Byblos and
    his abortive attempt to stave off the Assyrians
    at Qarqar (853 b.c.), he was unable to halt the
    internal developments within Egypt. Although he
    passed the throne to his son Takelot II, with his
    death the land split into warring camps."

65
The Libyan Era (Anarchy) Dyn 23
  • "Within the next twenty or so years, Egypt was
    witness to the complete fragmentation of
    political power so evident in the numerous small
    principalities that the Assyrians later faced. At
    this time one of the ostensible causes was the
    attempt of Pharaoh Takelot II (ca. 850825 b.c.)
    to secure his son, a certain Osorkon, the
    position of high priest of Amun-Re in Thebes. . .
    . Basically, the king attempted to control the
    south by placing his son, Osorkon, as pontiff.
    This time the resistance was too great. For ten
    years the political and military fortunes of this
    man waxed and waned, until he reconciled with his
    opponents and then studiously followed a policy
    of realism."

66
The Libyan Era (Anarchy) Dyn 23
  • "With Sheshonk III (ca. 825773 b.c.), we reach
    the end of a united kingdom. Although the south,
    particularly Thebes, went its own way, a second
    dynasty established itself at Leontopolis in the
    East Delta. Indeed, the country can be envisaged
    at this time as being peppered with pro-Bubastite
    (Dyn. 22) and pro-Leontopolite (Dyn. 23) rulers,
    all small Libyan potentates. This political
    fragmentation is confusing as both lines followed
    their own system of regnal dating."

67
The Libyan Era (Anarchy) Dyn 23
  • "For the next eighty years or so the Egyptian
    state became a country with numerous Libyan
    principalities, each quasi-independent of any
    royal control. The split between Dyn. 22 and 23
    merely hastened the breakup of the country."
  • "This period of extreme political fragmentation
    did not end abruptly. A series of internal
    struggles was to be compounded by external
    threats from both the south and the north, until
    a new and unified Egypt could be forged. One such
    long-range trend was the consolidation of the
    kingdom of the West Delta. By year 36 of Sheshonk
    V (of Bubastis) a certain Tefnakht of Sais
    claimed to be Great Chief of the Libu and two
    years later absorbed the remaining

68
The Libyan Era (Anarchy) Dyn 23
  • western principalities into his realm. His later
    contemporary, Osorkon IV, ruled as the nominal
    head of Dyn. 22, while the contender of Dyn. 23
    faced more serious problems from the south.
    Indeed, it is the south and particularly the
    kingdom of Kush that performs the main role in
    the next act of Egypt."

69
Kushite Era (ca. 747664 BCE)
  • "The Kushites did not begin with their surprise
    move northward into Egypt. One must remember
    that, after the fall of the NK, the south was
    severed from Egyptian control. A new power had
    emerged which, although native, was very
    Egyptianized and had absorbed much of NK Amun
    religion. This new expansive commercial kingdom
    had its capital at the Fourth Cataract at Gebel
    Barkal (Napata) and held territory even farther
    south. By the middle of the 8th century b.c.,
    this new state began a series of northern
    campaigns that was to head it into the hornets
    nest of divided Egypt."

70
Kushite Era (ca. 747664 BCE)
  • "Under the first known king, Kashta, both Lower
    Nubia and Thebes were taken. This move downstream
    (i.e., northward) was not lost upon the nominal
    ruler of Thebes, a Dyn. 23 ruler. However, the
    Kushites possessed a unity sorely lacking in
    Egypt, and a religious fervor for their god Amun
    which seems to have enabled them to withstand
    adversity."
  • "Following Kashtas death, his son Piankhy (or
    Piye as perhaps he should be called) was the
    effective ruler of a kingdom that included part
    of Upper Egypt (Thebes to Elephantine) and all of
    Nubia, in addition to core territory with a
    capital at Napata. It was in his 20th regnal year
    that Piye heard of an

71
Kushite Era (ca. 747664 BCE)
  • ominous developmentthe Chief of the West Delta,
    a certain Tefnakht, had not merely laid claim to
    his fathers territory (with its capital at
    Sais), but had moved southward and found allies
    eastward. In other words, a rival to the Kushite
    king now existed."
  • ". . . whenever the Kushite met the Libyan allies
    of Tefnakht or even those cities loyal to the new
    ruler, he was victorious, even under siege
    conditions (as, for example, at Hermopolis and
    Memphis). . . . However, Piye failed to achieve
    his ultimate desire despite the fact that
    Tefnakht was pushed out of Middle Egypt and lost
    Memphis as well, the Kushites were unable to
    penetrate far into his

72
Kushite Era (ca. 747664 BCE)
  • kingdom of the west. . . . Piye first received
    the submission of his opponents in Memphis after
    Tefnakht had fled home. The latter eventually
    sent a messenger to sue for peace, but this was
    only a token submission Tefnakht remained in
    complete control over his small kingdom, and when
    the Kushites withdrew southward, he was now slow
    in claiming royalty for himself."

73
Kushite Era (ca. 747664 BCE)
  • ". . . Tefnakht, who capitalized on the absence
    of any Kushites in the north by proclaiming
    himself pharaoh and effective founder of Dyn. 24.
    Since no military or administrative network was
    established by the victorious Kushites, one
    wonders if their main purpose was simply to
    prevent any major kingdom coming to power in
    Egypt that would threaten their control of Upper
    Egypt."
  • "Piyes successor and brother, Shabako (ca.
    715700 b.c.), was forced to repeat the military
    actions of his predecessor, although after
    conquering the north, he remained in

74
Kushite Era (ca. 747664 BCE)
  • Egypt. Dyn. 24 was itself extinguished with the
    last pharaoh, Bakenranef (Bocchoris), dying in
    opposition. The new Kushite capital was placed at
    Memphis and it is from this time that a marked
    intellectual influence can be seen on the
    Kushites."
  • "There is little doubt that the Kushites and
    later their successors of Dyn. 26 copied the
    artistic style of the Old Kingdom (OK), but this
    was probably in part due to the proximity of
    private tombs at Memphis and Sakkara. The Kushite
    move from Thebes as their

75
Kushite Era (ca. 747664 BCE)
  • outlying capital in Egypt to Memphis meant a
    switch from NK traditions (for example, the cult
    of Amun-Re) to those of the OK."
  • "Despite the apparent unity under the 25th Dyn.
    kings, the fabric of Egyptian society remained
    complex. The local Libyan princes were suppressed
    but their lineages were alive resistance was
    quashed but nationalism persisted. Hence, Shabako
    and his successors, Shebitku (ca. 702690 b.c.),
    Taharqa (690664 b.c.), and Tanwetamani
    (Tanutamun) (664656 b.c. in Egypt), always faced
    the same problem their administration was

76
Kushite Era (ca. 747664 BCE)
  • strained, stretching from Napata at the Fourth
    Cataract up to the Mediterranean, and they
    continued to depend heavily upon local support,
    whether it be from an Egyptian prince or a
    Libyan."

77
Assyrians and Kushites
  • "Over a period of expansion lasting three
    centuries, Assyria had moved from an insular
    state to a far-ranging one. Her battles against
    the Arameans had formed the nucleus of the
    greatest army that the world had seen the north
    Syrian states had fallen, one by one, in the 9th
    and 8th centuries b.c., the Lebanon was taken,
    Phoenicia made into a client, and the kingdom of
    Israel crushed in 722 b.c. Confrontation with
    Egypt was inevitable. Sargon II (722705 b.c.)
    was the first Neo-Assyrian ruler to encounter
    Egyptian or Kushite armies. His claim was not on
    Egypt

78
Assyrians and Kushites
  • herself rather, Sargon intended to control the
    sea trade of the East Mediterranean through the
    subjugation of the small kingdom of Judah,
    Egypts northern neighbor, and the capture of
    Philistia. However, such a policy automatically
    carried the seeds of further warfare since Judah,
    Philistia, or even a Phoenician city, could
    always appeal to Egypt for aid."
  • "In ca. 726 b.c. Hoshea of Israel had sought
    military support against the Assyrians who were
    besieging his country. The king wrote to

79
Assyrians and Kushites
  • a certain So, King of Egypt, for aid (2 Kgs
    174) and it has been argued that the local
    Egyptian ruler was Osorkon IV, the last nominal
    pharaoh of Dyn. 22. In 720 b.c. Sargon of Assyria
    marched into Philistia, Egypts closest neighbor
    to the north. At this time the king of Gaza
    received logistic support from one of the
    generals in the Delta. The upshot of the affair
    was that Gaza fell and Raphia, the final post
    leading from Palestine, was taken. However, it
    must be noted that Sargons policy was
    circumscribed he set up a trade post but made no
    pretense of invading Egypt."

80
Assyrians and Kushites
  • "With Shabakos triumph, Dyn. 25 now controlled
    the north more or less completely. However,
    relations with Assyria could not be ignored by
    him. By 713/12 b.c. another minor affair, again
    close to the southern border of Philistia, broke
    out. This time the city of Ashdod rebelled and
    the local ruler, Yamani, fled to Egypt. He was
    ungraciously returned by Shabako, whom the
    Assyrians designated king of Egypt, adding that
    the territories now belonged to Kush. Hence,
    despite a change of political climate in the Nile
    Valley, relations between Assyria and Egypt
    remained ostensibly cordial."

81
Assyrians and Kushites
  • "The famous 701 b.c. clash with Sennacherib
    (705689 BCE) indicates just how extended the
    interests of Assyria had become. The Assyrian
    king tried to crush totally the rump kingdom of
    Judah, now under the leadership of Hezekiah. The
    latter sought active support from Egypt, or from
    the Kushites. An army composed of Egyptians,
    Kushites, and Libyans was sent north to meet the
    Assyrians, but failed and retreated after losing
    the battle of Eltekeh. The Bible (2 Kgs
    18131937), as well as Assyrian sources (ANET
    28788),

82
Assyrians and Kushites
  • provide independent accounts of this conflict
    the Kushites may have been led by Taharqa, who
    was not yet pharaoh the Judeans resisted the
    siege of Jerusalem and the Assyrians failed to
    achieve their desired goals. Henceforth,
    Sennacherib stayed out of Judean politics,
    preferring to concentrate his energies elsewhere,
    and the Kushites, although defeated, had time to
    regroup for further war. In a nutshell, the
    battle of Eltekeh reveals the foreign policies of
    this region for the next half-century or so
    Egypt would support Judah and any local city
    against the superpower of Assyria, despite the
    latters overwhelming strength and military
    capability."

83
Assyrians and Kushites
  • "Late in the 670s, he fought with his enemy in
    Asia. His opponent, Esarhaddon, finally managed
    to defeat the Kushite king and drive him out of
    Memphis ca. 671 b.c. This apparent success ought
    to have resolved for the Assyrians their
    perennial difficulties with Egypt. Nevertheless,
    they found themselves in the same situation as
    Kush herself following Piyes invasion almost a
    half-century earlier, viz., the land was divided
    into small principalities each led by a warrior
    class."

84
Assyrians and Kushites
  • "It comes as no surprise that Egypt (or Kush)
    revolted when the Assyrians left and a second
    campaign was undertaken in 669 b.c., the date of
    the death of Esarhaddon. Taharqas support came
    from the native Egyptians or their Libyan
    leaders, but so did Esarhaddons. It was clear
    that whoever wrested effective control of the
    land would be the accepted pharaoh. Assurbanipal,
    Esarhaddons successor, attempted twice. In
    668/67 b.c. and 664 b.c. the Assyrians marched to
    the Nile, first taking Memphis and then even
    Thebes. Significantly, in the interim there was
    another revolt and the Kushites regained their
    former territories."

85
Saite Period (664525 BCE)
  • "The following period properly speaking belongs
    to the rule of a united Egypt led by the pharaohs
    of Sais. It should be added by way of
    clarification that Psammetichus remembered his
    alliance with Assyria and that he and his son,
    Necho II, aided the tottering Assyrian Empire in
    the last decades of the 7th century b.c., thereby
    proving their allegiance. In Egypt itself,
    Psammetichus carefully quashed his Delta rivals
    and took first Memphis and then, after some
    diplomatic wrangling, Thebes."

86
Saite Period (664525 BCE)
  • "The reign of Psammetichus I (664610 b.c.) set
    the paradigm for the new united dynasty. He
    carefully built up his power in the Delta,
    outwitting his local rivals until the only
    opposition remaining was that of Thebes. . . .
    Psammetichus accomplished the annexation of the
    south by 656 b.c. Noteworthy in the first decades
    of his rule is the kings reliance upon the
    military."

87
Saite Period (664525 BCE)
  • "Necho II (610595 b.c.) succeeded his father to
    the throne of Egypt and reigned during one of the
    momentous periods of world history. Already late
    in the life of his father, the Assyrian Empire
    had begun to break up at the death of
    Assurbanipal (629 b.c.). Egypt, which may well
    have been promised support and territory from the
    Assyrians, sided with them against the new
    opposition of the Babylonians and Medes."

88
Saite Period (664525 BCE)
  • "In a famous encounter with the resurrected
    kingdom of Judea, now led by Josiah, Necho
    (biblical Neco 1 Kgs 2429) smashed his
    opponents at Megiddo before traveling north.
    Allied to Assuruballit of Assyria, Necho fought
    against Nabopolassar, the king of Babylonia. In
    the next few years, Assyria fell, but the
    Egyptians maintained a presence in Lebanon until
    Nabopolassars son, Nebuchadnezzar, defeated
    Necho at Carchemish in 605 b.c. Necho was able to
    keep the Babylonians out of Egypt, being just

89
Saite Period (664525 BCE)
  • sufficiently powerful to prevent an invasion in
    601 b.c. The result of these sudden political and
    military alterations was that Egypt lost whatever
    power she had accrued in Asia during the reign of
    Psammetichus I. Indeed, despite later support for
    the kingdom of Judah, the best that Necho and
    later Psammetichus II could do was to stave off
    invasion by a triumphant Babylonia."

90
Saite Period (664525 BCE)
  • "Internally, Necho is best known for his attempt
    to build a canal between the Red Sea and the
    Nile, a proto-Suez Canal, one may say. This
    probably successful enterprise highlights the
    direct continuation of his fathers policy. Owing
    to the importance of the kingdoms of Lydia and
    Cyprus during this period, the Saite rulers found
    it politically beneficial to maintain a strong
    commercial and military presence in the East
    Mediterranean."

91
Saite Period (664525 BCE)
  • "In similar fashion, Necho supported the
    circumnavigation of Africa, an event well known
    to the Greeks, who later kept record of this
    astounding maneuver. With Babylonia now fully in
    control of the Lebanon, Nechos maritime strategy
    had the added advantage of not involving him in
    fruitless land wars."
  • "Nechos son, Psammetichus II (595589 b.c.), did
    not rule long. Nevertheless, he followed an
    interesting foreign policy with respect to the
    north and south. Although avoiding direct
    involvement with Babylonia, he actively

92
Saite Period (664525 BCE)
  • supported the state of Judah against
    Nebuchadnezzar just as earlier the Libyans and
    Kushites maneuvered in Palestine against the
    Assyrians. It is probable that the Egyptians
    reckoned correctly with their Judean allies by
    not overtly committing themselves to a policy
    antagonistic to Babylon Judah under her last
    king Zedekiah was, after all, nothing more than a
    rump state with no outlet to the sea."

93
Saite Period (664525 BCE)
  • "In year 3 of Psammetichus IIs reign, a combined
    Egyptian-Greek army, led by Egyptians, traveled
    south into the heartland of Nubia. This military
    campaign was successful and we possess important
    hieroglyphic records of the encounter which
    indicate that Napata (Gebel Barkal) was taken."
  • "Psammetichus II died and was succeeded by his
    son Apries, who ruled until 570 b.c. This pharaoh
    continued to play an important role in the
    political affairs of the east by moving

94
Saite Period (664525 BCE)
  • against the Phoenician cities of Tyre and Sidon
    in an effort to prohibit their control by
    Nebuchadnezzar. Although inheriting the continual
    war with Babylon, for almost all of his reign
    Apries was able to keep the enemy at bay. His
    dependence upon Greek mercenaries was cited by
    later historians, such as Herodotus, as proof of
    his philohellenic policy."

95
Saite Period (664525 BCE)
  • "Unfortunately for Egypt, the Babylonians were
    overrun by the more vigorous Medes and Persians,
    led by Cyrus. With the fall of Babylon (ca. 546
    b.c.), most of the Near East became part of the
    second World Empire, i.e., Achaemenid Persia.
    Cyrus then marched against Lydia and took it.
    Therefore, at the death of Amasis in 526 b.c.
    little remained independent of Persia in the Near
    East outside of the Nile Valley. In fact, under
    Cyrus successor, Cambyses, plans were already
    under way for an attack on Egypt.

96
Saite Period (664525 BCE)
  • Cambyses found natives who would support him, and
    within a year, purposely not long after the
    accession of the new pharaoh Psammetichus III,
    the Persians moved southwest and conquered
    Egypt."
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