Assyria

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Assyria
c. 2025 BC[a]–609 BC[b]
Flag of Assyria
Symbol of Ashur, the ancient Assyrian national deity
A map showing the ancient Assyrian heartland (red) and the extent of the Neo-Assyrian Empire in the 7th century BC (orange)
A map showing the ancient Assyrian heartland (red) and the extent of the Neo-Assyrian Empire in the 7th century BC (orange)
Capital
Official languages
Religion
Ancient Mesopotamian religion
GovernmentMonarchy
Notable kings 
• c. 2025 BC
Puzur-Ashur I (first)
• c. 1974–1935 BC
Erishum I
• c. 1808–1776 BC
Shamshi-Adad I
• c. 1700–1691 BC
Bel-bani
• c. 1363–1328 BC
Ashur-uballit I
• c. 1243–1207 BC
Tukulti-Ninurta I
• 1114–1076 BC
Tiglath-Pileser I
• 883–859 BC
Ashurnasirpal II
• 745–727 BC
Tiglath-Pileser III
• 705–681 BC
Sennacherib
• 681–669 BC
Esarhaddon
• 669–631 BC
Ashurbanipal
• 612–609 BC
Ashur-uballit II (last)
Historical era
Neo-Assyrian period
911–609 BC
• Conquest by the Neo-Babylonian and Median empires
609 BC[b]
Preceded by
Succeeded by
Third Dynasty of Ur
Neo-Babylonian Empire
Median Empire

Assyria (

Neo-Assyrian cuneiform: , māt Aššur) was a major ancient Mesopotamian civilization which existed as a city-state from the 21st century BC to the 14th century BC, then to a territorial state, and eventually an empire from the 14th century BC to the 7th century BC.[4]

Spanning from the early

largest empire then yet assembled in world history,[7][8][9]
spanning from parts of modern-day Iran in the east to Egypt in the west.

The Neo-Assyrian Empire fell in the late 7th century BC, conquered by a coalition of the Babylonians, who had lived under Assyrian rule for about a century, and the

Christianized from the 1st century AD onward. Ancient Mesopotamian religion persisted at Assur until its final sack in the 3rd century AD, and at certain other holdouts for centuries thereafter.[10]

The triumph of ancient Assyria can be attributed not only to its vigorous warrior-monarchs but also to its adeptness in efficiently assimilating and governing conquered territories using inventive and advanced administrative mechanisms. The developments in warfare and governance introduced by ancient Assyria continued to be employed by subsequent empires and states for centuries.

Greco-Roman and Hebrew literary and religious tradition.[12][13][c]

Nomenclature

In the Old Assyrian period, when Assyria was merely a city-state centered on the city of Assur, the state was typically referred to as ālu Aššur ("city of Ashur"). From the time of its rise as a territorial state in the 14th century BC and onward, Assyria was referred to in official documents as māt Aššur ("land of Ashur"), marking its shift to being a regional polity. The first attested use of the term māt Aššur is during the reign of Ashur-uballit I (c. 1363–1328 BC), who was the first king of the Middle Assyrian Empire.[14] Both ālu Aššur and māt Aššur derive from the name of the Assyrian national deity Ashur.[15] Ashur probably originated in the Early Assyrian period as a deified personification of Assur itself.[2] In the Old Assyrian period the deity was considered the formal king of Assur; the actual rulers only used the style Išši'ak ("governor").[16][17] From the time of Assyria's rise as a territorial state, Ashur began to be regarded as an embodiment of the entire land ruled by the Assyrian kings.[15]

The modern name "Assyria" is of Greek origin,[18] derived from Ασσυρία (Assuría). The term's first attested use is during the time of the ancient Greek historian Herodotus (5th century BC). The Greeks called the Levant "Syria" and Mesopotamia "Assyria", even though the local population, both at that time and well into the later Christian period, used both terms interchangeably to refer to the entire region.[18] It is not known whether the Greeks began referring to Mesopotamia as "Assyria" because they equated the region with the Assyrian Empire, long fallen by the time the term is first attested, or because they named the region after the people who lived there, the Assyrians.[19] Because the term is so "similar to Syria", scholars have been examining since the 17th century whether the two terms are connected. And because, in sources predating the Greek ones, the shortened form "Syria" is attested as a synonym for Assyria, notably in Luwian and Aramaic texts from the time of the Neo-Assyrian Empire, modern scholars overwhelmingly support the conclusion that the names are connected.[20]

Both "Assyria" and the contraction, "Syria," are ultimately derived from the Akkadian Aššur.[21] Following the decline of the Neo-Assyrian Empire, the subsequent empires that held dominion over the Assyrian lands adopted distinct appellations for the region, with a significant portion of these names also being rooted in Aššur. The Achaemenid Empire referred to Assyria as Aθūrā ("Athura").[22] The Sasanian Empire inexplicably referred to Lower Mesopotamia as Asoristan ("land of the Assyrians"),[23] though the northern province of Nōdšīragān, which included much of the old Assyrian heartland, was also sometimes called Atūria or Āthōr.[24] In Syriac, Assyria was and is referred to as ʾĀthor.[25]

History

Post-imperial AssyriaNeo-Assyrian EmpireMiddle Assyrian EmpireOld Assyrian periodEarly Assyrian period

Early history

The head of a female statue, dating to the Akkadian period (c. 2334–2154 BC). Found at Assur, on display at the Pergamon Museum in Berlin

Agricultural villages in the region that would later become Assyria are known to have existed by the time of the Hassuna culture,[26] c. 6300–5800 BC.[27] Though the sites of some nearby cities that would later be incorporated into the Assyrian heartland, such as Nineveh, are known to have been inhabited since the Neolithic,[28] the earliest archaeological evidence from Assur dates to the Early Dynastic Period, c. 2600 BC.[29] During this time, the surrounding region was already relatively urbanized.[26] There is no evidence that early Assur was an independent settlement,[3] and it might not have been called Assur at all initially, but rather Baltil or Baltila, used in later times to refer to the city's oldest portion.[30]

The name "Assur" is first attested for the site in documents of the

Akkadian period in the 24th century BC.[31] Through most of the Early Assyrian period (c. 2600–2025 BC), Assur was dominated by states and polities from southern Mesopotamia.[32] Early on, Assur for a time fell under the loose hegemony of the Sumerian city of Kish[33] and it was later occupied by both the Akkadian Empire and then the Third Dynasty of Ur.[3] In c. 2025 BC, due to the collapse of the Third Dynasty of Ur, Assur became an independent city-state under Puzur-Ashur I.[34]

The ruins of the Old Assyrian trading colony at Kültepe

Assur was under the Puzur-Ashur dynasty home to less than 10,000 people and likely held very limited military power; no military institutions at all are known from this time and no political influence was exerted on neighboring cities.[35] The city was still influential in other ways; under Erishum I (r.c. 1974–1934 BC), Assur experimented with free trade, the earliest known such experiment in world history, which left the initiative for trade and large-scale foreign transactions entirely to the populace rather than the state.[36]

Royal encouragement of trade led to Assur quickly establishing itself as a prominent trading city in northern Mesopotamia[37] and soon thereafter establishing an extensive long-distance trade network,[38] the first notable impression Assyria left in the historical record.[32] Among the evidence left from this trade network are large collections of Old Assyrian cuneiform tablets from Assyrian trade colonies, the most notable of which is a set of 22,000 clay tablets found at Kültepe, near the modern city of Kayseri in Turkey.[38]

As trade declined, perhaps due to increased warfare and conflict between the growing states of the Near East,[39] Assur was frequently threatened by larger foreign states and kingdoms.[40] The original Assur city-state, and the Puzur-Ashur dynasty, came to an end c. 1808 BC when the city was conquered by the Amorite ruler of Ekallatum, Shamshi-Adad I.[41] Shamshi-Adad's extensive conquests in northern Mesopotamia eventually made him the ruler of the entire region,[39] founding what some scholars have termed the "Kingdom of Upper Mesopotamia".[42] The survival of this realm relied chiefly on Shamshi-Adad's own strength and charisma and it thus collapsed shortly after his death c. 1776 BC.[43]

After Shamshi-Adad's death, the political situation in northern Mesopotamia was highly volatile, with Assur at times coming under the brief control of

Adaside dynasty, which after his reign ruled Assyria for about a thousand years.[51]

Assyria's rise as a territorial state in later times was in large part facilitated by two separate invasions of Mesopotamia by the

Kassite Babylonia to rise in the north and south, respectively.[52] Around c. 1430 BC, Assur was subjugated by Mitanni, an arrangement that lasted for about 70 years, until c. 1360 BC.[53] Another Hittite invasion by Šuppiluliuma I in the 14th century BC effectively crippled the Mitanni kingdom. After his invasion, Assyria succeeded in freeing itself from its suzerain, achieving independence once more under Ashur-uballit I (r.c. 1363–1328 BC) whose rise to power, independence, and conquests of neighboring territory traditionally marks the rise of the Middle Assyrian Empire (c. 1363–912 BC).[54]

Assyrian Empire