Babylonian and Assyrian Literature - Anonymous
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May Bin, the supreme Guardian of heaven and earth, inundate his field like
a ...[12]
May Serah suffocate his first-born.
May Nabu, the holy minister of the gods, continually pour over his
destinies laments and curses; and blast his wishes.
May all the great gods whose name is invoked on this table, devote him to
vengeance and scorn, and may his name, his race, his fruits, his
offspring, before the face of men perish wretchedly.
By this table, the author of the everlasting limits has forever
perpetuated his name.
[Footnote 1: See at the end.]
[Footnote 2: These 25 hins represent 75 litres, 16 gallons and a half, for
seeding a surface of 207 acres.]
[Footnote 3: The great U, or arura.]
[Footnote 4: Again in this deed no statement is given in account of the
measurings. The space is determined merely by the indication of the
boundaries.
This document is also the charter of a royal donation: it is not clear
whether the below-mentioned objects are the price, or if, what is much
more verisimilar, they are only the accessoria of the field.]
[Footnote 5: Measurer is expressed by "masi-han."]
[Footnote 6: Cf. I Kings x. 29: "A chariot ... of Egypt for 600 shekels of
silver; and a horse for 150."]
[Footnote 7: It is a question here of the utensils used for measuring,
viz., thirty of one kind, and sixty of another.]
[Footnote 8: The quality of the dogs is somewhat uncertain.]
[Footnote 9: There is evidently a fault in the total number, 616 instead
of 716.
A weight of silver may be an obolus, the 360th part of a mina.]
[Footnote 10: The "akli," who were at the royal court, may have been
legists.]
[Footnote 11: All these are formulae solennes, as in the Roman law.]
[Footnote 12: Obscure.]
TRANSLATION OF AN UNEDITED FRAGMENT
Five-sixths of an _artaba_[1] of corn sows an _arura_, a field
situated on the Euphrates.
....adjoining ... wide ... adjoining
... a field in great measure ... Zirbet-u-Alzu
... and for the days to come he has given ... this
table ... sin-idin ... son of Tuklat-habal-Marduk,
Governor of the town of Nisin. Bani-Marduk, son of
Tuklat ... Malik-kilim, son of Tuklat ... Chief
of ... An-sali ... son of Zab-zib-malik ...
Malik-habal-idin, of the town of Balaki ... Chief of
Sin-idin-habal ... May he cause him to perish ...
and his offering.[2]
[Footnote 1: The artaba was 3 epha, 18 hins; the mentioned quantity of 15
hins necessary to seed this very fertile field is only 79 pints.]
[Footnote 2: Dr. Oppert copied this text twenty years ago; he does not
know whether since that time any other piece of the stone has been
discovered.]
GREAT INSCRIPTION IN THE PALACE OF KHORSABAD
TRANSLATED BY DR. JULIUS OPPERT
The document of which I publish a translation has been copied with
admirable precision by M. Botta in his "_Monuments de Ninive_" There are
four specimens of this same text in the Assyrian palace, which bear the
title of Inscriptions of the Halls, Nos. iv, vii, viii, and x.
There is another historical document in the palace of Khorsabad containing
more minute particulars, and classed in a chronological order, which I
translated in my "_Dur-Sar-kayan_," 1870, and in the "Records of the
Past," Vol. VII.
The several copies of this document have been united in one sole text in a
work which I published in common with M. Menant in the "_Journal
Asiatique_," 1863.
I published my translation of the "Great Inscriptions of Khorsabad," in
the "_Annales de Philosophie Chretienne_," July and August, 1862, tom. V
(New Series), p. 62; then in my "_Inscriptions des Sargonides_," p. 20
(1862). The same text was inserted in the work which I edited in communion
with my friend M. Joachim Menant, entitled "_La Grande Inscription des
Salles de Khorsabad_," "_Journal Asiatique_," 1863. Some passages have
been since corrected by me in my "_Dur-Sarkayan_," Paris, 1870, in the
great work of M. Victor Place, and these corrections have been totally
admitted by M. Menant in a translation which he has given in his book,
"_Annales des Rois d'Assyrie_," Paris, 1874, p. 180. As the reader may
easily convince himself in collating it with my previous attempts, this
present translation is now amended according to the exigencies of the
progressing science of Assyriology, as it is now understood.
GREAT INSCRIPTION OF THE PALACE OF KHORSABAD
1 Palace of Sargon, the great King, the powerful King,
King of the legions, King of Assyria, Viceroy of the gods
at Babylon, King of the Sumers and of the Accads, favorite
of the great gods.
2 The gods Assur, Nebo, and Merodach have conferred on
me the royalty of the nations, and they have propagated
the memory of my fortunate name to the ends of the earth.
I have followed the reformed precepts of Sippara, Nipur,
Babylon, and Borsippa; I have amended the imperfections
which the men of all laws had admitted.
3 I have reunited the dominions of Kalu, Ur, Orchoe, Erikhi,
Larsa,[1] Kullab, Kisik, the dwelling-place of the god Laguda;
I have subdued their inhabitants. As to the laws
of Sumer[2] and of the town of Harran, which had fallen
into desuetude from the most ancient times, I have restored
to fresh vigor their forgotten customs.
4 The great gods have made me happy by the constancy of
their affection, they have granted me the exercise of my
sovereignty over all kings; they have re-established obedience
upon them all. From the day of my accession there
existed no princes who were my masters; I have not, in
combats or battles, seen my victor. I have crushed the
territories of the rebels like straws, and I have struck them
with the plagues of the four elements. I have opened innumerable
deep and very extensive forests, I have levelled
their inequalities. I have traversed winding and thick
valleys, which were impenetrable, like a needle, and I
passed in digging tanks dug on my way.
5 By the grace and power of the great gods, my Masters, I
have flung my arms; by my force I have defeated my enemies.
I have ruled from Iatnan,[3] which is in the middle
of the sea of the setting sun, to the frontiers of Egypt and
of the country of the Moschians, over vast Phoenicia, the
whole of Syria, the whole of _guti muski_[4] of distant Media,
near the country of Bikni, to the country of Ellip, from Ras
which borders upon Elam, to the banks of the Tigris, to
the tribes of Itu, Rubu, Haril, Kaldud, Hauran, Ubul,
Ruhua, of the Litai who dwell on the borders of the Surappi
and the Ukne, Gambul, Khindar, and Pukud.[5] I have
reigned over the _suti_ hunters who are in the territory of
Iatbur, in whatever it was as far as the towns of Samhun,
Bab-Dur, Dur-Tilit, Khilikh, Pillat, Dunni-Samas, Bubi,
Tell-Khumba, which are in the dependency of Elam,[6] and
Kar-duniyas[7] Upper and Lower, of the countries of Bit-Amukkan,
Bit-Dakkur, Bit-Silan, Bit-Sa'alla, which together
form Chaldea in its totality, over the country of Bit-Iakin,
which is on the sea-shore, as far as the frontier of
Dilmun. I have received their tributes, I have established
my Lieutenants over them as Governors, and I have reduced
them under my suzerainty.
6 This is what I did from the beginning of my reign to my
fifteenth year of reign:
I defeated Khumbanigas, King of Elam, in the plains of
Kalu.
7 I besieged and occupied the town of Samaria, and took
27,280 of its inhabitants captive. I took from them 50
chariots, but left them the rest of their belongings. I
placed my Lieutenants over them; I renewed the obligation
imposed upon them by one of the Kings who preceded
me.[8]
8 Hanun, King of Gaza, and Sebech, Sultan[9] of Egypt,
allied themselves at Rapih[10] to oppose me, and fight against
me; they came before me, I put them to flight. Sebech
yielded before my cohorts, he fled, and no one has ever
seen any trace of him since. I took with my own hand
Hanun, King of Gaza.
9 I imposed a tribute on Pharaoh, King of Egypt; Samsie,
Queen of Arabia; It-amar, the Sabean, of gold, sweet smelling
herbs of the land, horses, and camels.
10 Kiakku of Sinukhta had despised the god Assur, and refused
submission to him. I took him prisoner, and seized
his 30 chariots and 7,350 of his soldiers. I gave Sinuhta,
the town of his royalty, to Matti from the country of Tuna,
I added some horses and asses to the former tribute and
appointed Matti as Governor.
11 Amris of Tabal, had been placed upon the throne of Khulli
his father; I gave to him a daughter and I gave him Cilicia[10]
which had never submitted to his ancestors. But he did
not keep the treaty and sent his ambassador to Urzaha,
King of Armenia, and to Mita, King of the Moschians,
who had seized my provinces. I transported Amris to
Assyria, with his belongings, the members of his ancestors'
families, and the magnates of the country, as well as 100
chariots; I established some Assyrians, devoted to my government,
in their places. I appointed my Lieutenant Governor
over them, and commanded tributes to be levied
upon them.
12 Jaubid of Hamath, a smith,[12] was not the legitimate master
of the throne, he was an infidel and an impious man, and
he had coveted the royalty of Hamath. He incited the
towns of Arpad, Simyra, Damascus, and Samaria to rise
against me, took his precautions with each of them, and
prepared for battle. I counted all the troops of the god
Assur; in the town of Karkar which had declared itself
for the rebel, I besieged him and his warriors, I occupied
Karkar and reduced it to ashes. I took him, himself, and
had him flayed, and I killed the chief of the rioters in each
town, and reduced them to a heap of ruins. I recruited
my forces with 200 chariots and 600 horsemen from among
the inhabitants of the country of Hamath and added them
to my empire.
13 Whilst Iranzu of Van[13] lived, he was subservient and devoted
to my rule, but fate removed him. His subjects
placed his son Aza on the throne. Urzaha the Armenian
intrigued with the people of Mount Mildis, Zikirta, Misiandi,
with the nobles of Van, and enticed them to rebellion;
they threw the body of their Master Aza on the top of the
mountains. Ullusun of Van, his brother, whom they had
placed on his father's throne, did homage to Urzaha, and
gave him 22 fortresses with their garrisons. In the anger
of my heart I counted all the armies of the god Assur, I
watched like a lion in ambush and advanced to attack these
countries. Ullusun of Van saw my expedition approaching,
he set out with his troops and took up a strong position
in the ravines of the high mountains. I occupied Izirti the
town of his royalty, and the towns of Izibia and Armit, his
formidable fortresses, I reduced them to ashes. I killed
all that belonged to Urzaha the Armenian, in these high
mountains. I took with my own hand 250 royal members
of his family. I occupied 55 royal towns of which 8 were
ordinary towns and 11 impregnable fortresses. I reduced
them to ashes. I incorporated the 22 strong towns, that
Ullusun of Van had delivered to him with Assyria. I occupied
8 strong cities of the country of Tuaya and the districts
of Tilusina of Andia; 4,200 men, with their belongings,
were carried away into slavery.
14 Mitatti, of Zikirta, had secured himself against my arms;
he and the men of his country had fled into the forests;
no trace of them was to be seen. I reduced Parda, the
town of his royalty to ashes; I occupied twenty-three great
towns in the environs, and I spoiled them. The cities of
Suandakhul and Zurzukka, of the country of Van, took
the part of Mitatti; I occupied and pillaged them. Then I
took Bagadatti of the Mount Mildis, and I had him flayed.
I banished Dayaukku and his suite to Hamath, and I made
them dwell there.
15 Then Ullusun heard in his high mountains of my glorious
exploits: he departed in haste like a bird, and kissed my
feet; I pardoned his innumerable misdeeds, and I blotted
out his iniquities. I granted pardon to him; I replaced
him upon the throne of his royalty. I gave him the two
fortresses and the 22 great towns that I had taken away
from Urzaha and Mitatti. I endeavored to restore peace
to his country. I made the image of my Majesty: I wrote
on it the glory of the god Assur, my Master, I erected many
fac-similes of it in Izirti, the town of his royalty.
16 I imposed a tribute of horses, oxen, and lambs upon Ianzu,
King of the river country, in Hupuskia, the town of his
power.
17 Assurlih, of Kar-Alla, Itti, of Allapur, had sinned against
Assur and despised his power. I had Assurlih flayed. I
banished the men of Kar-Alla, whoever they were, and Itti,
with his suite, I placed them in Hamath.
18 I took the inhabitants of the towns of Sukkia, Bala,
Ahitikna, Pappa,[14] Lallukni away from their homes; I made
them dwell at Damascus in Syria.
19 I occupied the 6 towns of the country of Niksamma, I took
with my own hand Nirisar, Governor of the town of Surgadia;
I added these towns to the satrapy of Parsuas.[15]
20 Bel-sar-usur[16] was King of the town of Kisisim; I had him
transported to Assyria with all that he possessed, his treasure,
the contents of his palace; I put my Lieutenant in as
Governor of the town, to which I gave the name of Kar-Marduk.
I had an image made of my Majesty and erected
it in the middle of the town. I occupied 6 towns in the
neighborhood and I added them to his government.
21 I attacked and conquered Kibaba, Prefect of the town of
Kharkhar, I took him and the inhabitants of his country
captive, I rebuilt this city and made the inhabitants of the
provinces, that my arm had conquered, live there. I placed
my Lieutenant as Governor over them. I named the town
Kar-Sarkin; I established the worship of the god Assur,
my Master, there. I erected an image of my Royal self.
I occupied 6 towns in the environs, and added them to his
government.
22 I besieged and took the towns of Tel-Akhi-tub, Khindau,
Bagai, and Anzaria; I transported the inhabitants of them
to Assyria. I rebuilt them; I gave them the names of
Kar-Nabu, Kar-Sin, Kar-Ben, Kar-Istar.
23 To maintain my position in Media, I have erected fortifications
in the neighborhood of Kar-Sarkin. I occupied
34 towns in Media and annexed them to Assyria and I
levied annual tributes of horses upon them.
24 I besieged and took the town of Eristana, and the surrounding
towns in the country of Bait-Ili; I carried away the
spoil.
25 The countries of Agag[17] and Ambanda,[18] in Media, opposite
the Arabs of the East, had refused their tributes, I destroyed
them, laid them waste, and burnt them by fire.
26 Dalta of Ellip was subject to me, and devoted to the worship
of Assur; 5 of his towns revolted and no longer recognized
his dominion. I came to his aid, I besieged and
occupied these towns, I carried the men and their goods
away into Assyria with numberless horses.
27 Urzana, of the town of Musasir, had attached himself to
Urzaha the Armenian, and had refused me his allegiance.
With the multitude of my army, I covered the city of Musasir
as if it were with ravens, and he to save his life, fled
alone into the mountains.
28 I entered as a Ruler into Musasir. I seized as spoil Urzana's
wife, sons and daughters, his money, his treasures, all
the stores of his palace whatever they were, with 20,100
men and all that they possessed, the gods Haldia and Bagabarta,
his gods, and their holy vessels in great numbers.
29 Urzaha, King of Armenia, heard of the defeat of Musasir
and the carrying away of the god Haldia[19] his god, he cut
off his life by his own hands with a dagger of his girdle.
I held a severe judgment over the whole of Armenia. I
spread over the men, who inhabit this country, mourning
and lamentation.
30 Tarhunazi, of the town of Melid, sought for revenge. He
sinned against the laws of the great gods, and refused his
submission. In the anger of my heart, I crushed like
briars Melid, which was the town of his kingdom, and the
neighboring towns. I made him, his wife, sons and daughters,
the slaves of his palace whoever they were, with 5,000
warriors, leave Tel-Garimmi; I treated them all as booty.
I rebuilt Tel-Garimmi; I had it entirely occupied by some
archers from the country of Khammanua, which my hand
had conquered, and I added it to the boundaries of this
country. I put it in the hands of my Lieutenant, and I
restituted the surface of the dominion, as it had been in
the time of Gunzinan, the preceding King.
31 Tarhular, of Gamgum, had a son Muttallu, who had murdered
his father by the arms, and sat on the throne against
my will, and to whom they had intrusted their country.
In the anger of my heart, I hastily marched against the
town of Markasi, with my chariots and horsemen, who
followed on my steps, I treated Muttallu, his son and the
families of the country of Bit-Pa'alla in its totality, as
captives, and seized as booty the gold and silver and the
numberless treasures of his palace. I reinstated the men of
Gamgum and the neighboring tribes, and placed my Lieutenant
as Governor over them; I treated them like the
Assyrians.
32 Azuri, King of Ashdod,[20] determined within himself to
render no more tributes; he sent hostile messages against
Assyria to the neighboring kings. I meditated vengeance
for this, and I withdrew from him the government over
his country. I put his brother Akhimit on his throne.
But the people of Syria, eager for revolt, got tired of Akhimit's
rule, and installed Iaman, who like the former, was
not the legitimate master of the throne. In the anger of
my heart, I did not assemble the bulk of my army nor
divide my baggage, but I marched against Ashdod with
my warriors, who did not leave the trace of my feet.
33 Iaman learnt from afar of the approach of my expedition;
he fled beyond Egypt toward Libya (Meluhhi),[21] and no
one ever saw any further trace of him. I besieged and
took Ashdod and the town of Gimtu-Asdudim;[22] I carried
away captive Iaman's gods, his wife, his sons, his daughters,
his money, and the contents of his palace, together
with the inhabitants of his country. I built these towns
anew and placed in them the men that my arm had conquered.
34 I placed my Lieutenant as Governor over them, and I
treated them as Assyrians. They never again became
guilty of impiety.
35 The King of Libya[23] lives in the middle of the desert, in an
inaccessible place, at (a month's) journey. From the most
remote times until the renewal of the lunar period[24] his
fathers had sent no ambassadors to the kings, my ancestors,
to ask for peace and friendship and to acknowledge the
power of Merodach. But the immense terror inspired by
my Majesty roused him, and fear changed his intentions.
In fetters of iron he threw him (Iaman), directed his steps
toward Assyria and kissed my feet.
36 Muttallu, of Commagene, a fraudulent and hostile man,
did not honor the memory of the gods, he plotted a conspiracy,
and meditated defection. He trusted upon Ar-gisti,[25]
King of Armenia, an helper who did not assist him,
took upon himself the collection of the tributes and his
part of the spoil, and refused me his submission. In the
anger of my heart, I took the road to his country with the
chariots of my power, and the horsemen who never left
the traces of my feet. Muttallu saw the approach of my
expedition, he withdrew his troops, and no one saw any
further trace of him. I besieged and occupied his capital
and 62 large towns all together. I carried away his wife,
his sons, his daughters, his money, his treasure, all precious
things from his palace, together with the inhabitants of his
country as spoil, I left none of them. I inaugurated this
town afresh; I placed in it men from the country of Bit-Iakin,
that my arm had conquered. I instituted my Lieutenant
as Governor, and subdued them under my rule. I
previously took from them 150 chariots, 1,500 horsemen,
20,000 archers, 1,000 men armed with shields and lances,
and I confided the country to my Satrap.
37 While Dalta, King of Ellip, lived, he was submissive and
devoted to my rule, the infirmities of age however came
and he walked on the path of death. Nibie and Ispabara,
the sons of his wives, claimed both the vacant throne of
his royalty, the country and the taxes, and they fought a
battle. Nibie applied to Sutruk-Nakhunti[26] King of Elam
to support his claims, giving to him pledges for his alliance,
and the other came as a helper. Ispabara, on his side,
implored me to maintain his cause, and to encourage him,
at the same time bowing down, and humbling himself, and
asking my alliance. I sent seven of my Lieutenants with
their armies to support his claims, they put Nibie and the
army of the four rivers,[27] which had helped him, to flight,
at the town of Mareobisti. I reinstated Ispabara on the
throne; I re-established peace in his country, and confided
it to his care.
38 Merodach-Baladan, son of Iakin,[28] King of Chaldaea, the
fallacious, the persistent in enmity, did not respect the
memory of the gods, he trusted in the sea, and in the retreat
of the marshes; he eluded the precepts of the great
gods, and refused to send his tributes. He had supported
as an ally Khumbanigas, King of Elam. He had excited
all the nomadic tribes of the desert against me. He prepared
himself for battle, and advanced. During twelve
years,[29] against the will of the gods of Babylon, the town
of Bel which judges the gods, he had excited the country
of the Sumers and Accads, and had sent ambassadors to
them. In honor of the god Assur, the father of the gods,
and of the great and august Lord Merodach, I roused my
courage, I prepared my ranks for battle. I decreed an
expedition against the Chaldeans, an impious and riotous
people. Merodach-Baladan heard of the approach of my
expedition, dreading the terror of his own warriors, he fled
before it, and flew in the night time like an owl, falling back
from Babylon, to the town of Ikbibel. He assembled together
the towns possessing oracles, and the gods living
in these towns he brought to save them to Dur-Iakin, fortifying
its walls. He summoned the tribes of Gambul,
Pukud, Tamun, Ruhua, and Khindar, put them in this place,
and prepared for battle. He calculated the extent of a
plethrum[30] in front of the great wall. He constructed a
ditch 200 spans[31] wide, and deep one fathom and a half.[32]
The conduits of water, coming from the Euphrates, flowed
out into this ditch; he had cut off the course of the river,
and divided it into canals, he had surrounded the town,
the place of his revolt, with a dam, he had filled it with
water, and cut off the conduits. Merodach-Baladan, with
his allies and his soldiers had the insignia of his royalty
kept as in an island on the banks of the river; he arranged
his plan of battle. I stretched my combatants all along
the river dividing them into bands; they conquered the
enemies. By the blood of the rebels the waters of these
canals reddened like dyed wool. The nomadic tribes
were terrified by this disaster which surprised him and fled;
I completely separated his allies and the men of Marsan
from him; I filled the ranks of the insurgents with mortal
terror. He left in his tent the insignia of his royalty, the
golden ...[33] the golden throne, the golden parasol,
the golden sceptre, the silver chariot, the golden ornaments,
and other effects of considerable weight; he fled
alone, and disappeared like the ruined battlements of his
fortress, and I entered into his retreat. I besieged and
occupied the town of Dur-Iakin, I took as spoil and made
captive, him, his wife, his sons, his daughters, the gold
and silver and all that he possessed, the contents of his
palace, whatever it was, with considerable booty from the
town. I made each family and every man who had withdrawn
himself from my arms, accountable for this sin. I
reduced Dur-Iakin the town of his power to ashes. I undermined
and destroyed its ancient forts. I dug up the
foundation stone;[34] I made it like a thunder-stricken ruin,
I allowed the people of Sippara, Nipur, Babylon, and Borsippa,
who live in the middle of the towns to exercise their
profession, to enjoy their belongings in peace, and I have
watched upon them. I took away the possession of the
fields which from remote times had been in the hand of
the _Suti_ Nomad, and restored them to their rightful owners.
I placed the nomadic tribes of the desert again under my
yoke, and I restored the forgotten land delimitations which
had existed during the tranquillity of the land. I gave to
each of the towns of Ur, Orchoe, Erikhi, Larsa, Kullab,
and Kisik, the dwelling of the god Laguda, the god that
resides in each, and I restored the gods who had been
taken away, to their sanctuaries. I re-established the
altered laws in full force.