Ishtartv.com
- ancient-origins.net
Ashley Cowie, 10 AUGUST, 2020
On this day, 2,632 years ago, the
ancient metropolis of Nineveh fell.
“ ABC 3 ” is a historiographical text from ancient Babylonia which
records August 10th 612 BC as the date of this dramatic occurrence. At that
time, Nineveh was the largest city in the world and the capital of Assyria.
This all came to an abrupt end when Nabopolassar,
the Chaldean king of Babylonia and a central figure in the fall of the
Neo-Assyrian Empire, siezed Nineveh. This marked what historians know as one of
the most shocking events in ancient history: The “First” Fall of Nineveh. The
“second” Fall of Nineveh occurred in 2015 with more destruction by ISIS.
The Discovery of Nineveh: A
Unparalleled Archaeological Find
Ancient Mesopotamia was
a cradle of civilization in the northern part of western Asia’s Fertile
Crescent, corresponding to modern Iraq, Kuwait, eastern Syria, southeastern
Turkey and areas along the Turkish–Syrian and Iran–Iraq borders. In 1839, Paul-Émile
Botta of France excavated a series of mounds in the Iraqi desert that
led to the incredible discovery of Nineveh, the vast ancient Assyrian city of
Upper Mesopotamia located on the outskirts of modern-day Mosul in
northern Iraq
This discovery in
mid-19th-century Europe was truly amazing, because it meant that at least one
of the ancient cities and cultures mentioned in the Bible actually
existed. This gave the Holy Bible a breath of newfound esteem at a time when
scientists were demanding the empirical testing of supernatural claims,
replacing time worn myths with logic and reason. The discovery of ancient
Nineveh changed everything.
Ancient Nineveh: A Royal City
Envied Far And Wide
The Assyrian Empire started to
become unstable after the death of King
Aššurbanipal in 631 BC when the Babylonians ended their independence.
Around 627 AD the Babylonian general Nabopolassar defeated the Assyrians in a
battle near Babylon and
became king, marking the beginning of the Babylonian Empire which lasted until
Nineveh was captured by the Persian Cyrus
the Great in October 539 AD.
Although he had liberated
Babylonia, Nabopolassar also wanted destroy its capital cities including the religious
center at Aššur,
the first Assyrian city, and the administrative center at Nineveh. To
prevent this, which would have caused a major shift of power in the Near East,
the Egyptians offered military support to Assyria. The Fall of Nineveh Chronicle says that on 25 July 616 AD
Nabopolassar defeated an Assyrian force on the banks of the Euphrates to the
south of Harran. However, soon after he retreated when an Egyptian army closed
on his forces. By at the end of the following year, the Medes, a tribal
federation living in modern Iran, seized the moment, amidst all the unrest, and
had took control of Nineveh.
Nabopolassar tactfully signed a
treaty with the Medes king Umakištar (Cyaxares). The Babylonian crown prince
Nabû-kudurru-usur (Nebuchadnezzar) is said to have married Amytis, who many
historians hold to have been the daughter of Cyaxares' son Astyages. The joint
Medes-Babylonian army invaded Nineveh in May 612 AD the city finally fell in
July. According to an article on Livius after
the suicide of King Sin-šar-iškun, “the looting of Nineveh continued until 10
August, when the Medes finally went home,” and that the fall of Nineveh
“shocked the ancient world.” From distant Greece, the poet Phocylides of
Miletus reported of the destruction of this ancient city.
2015: The “Second” Fall of Nineveh By ISIS
Destruction
While Nineveh fell for the first
time over 2500 years ago, destruction of the ancient city continued in 2015
when a priceless Assyrian winged bull was demolished at the Nineveh site. An
article in The Guardian discussing the destruction of cultural
heritage in Iraq by the Islamic State militant group (ISIS) described the
destruction as a “war crime.” At the same time, the terrorist organization
attempted to attract a sympathetic audience to gain new recruits in their
homeland, while provoking reactions in the West.
A 2015 Aljazeera video
shows the destruction of several 7th century artifacts from Nineveh on February
26 2015, when ISIS publicly destroyed the Mosul Museum. Many other artifacts
were stolen and put up for sale in foreign markets. However in 2019, the BBC announced that since Iraqi troops recaptured Mosul
in 2017, part of the Mosul Museum has been restored and reopened to exhibit contemporary
art, while the rest of the museum remains closed “to protect what is left,”
said the museum director. If the first Fall of Nineveh was incredible, the
second fall of Nineveh was both tragic and disturbing.
Top image: Assyrian soldiers
carry beheaded heads of their prisoners as depicted on a wall in the South-West
Palace at Nineveh, during the “First” Fall of
Neneveh. Source: Osama
Shukir Muhammed Amin / CC BY-SA 4.0
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