Claimed conquest of Samaria, which was practically completed by Shalmaneser V in 722 B.C.
717 B.C. Carchemish, last of Hittite states on upper Euphrates fell to Sargon.
721 B.C. Chaldean kinglet Marduk-apal-iddina (Merodach Baladan) made himself king of Babylon —
Sargon tried to take over and failed; ten years later (711 or 710) he “liberated” Babylon from Chaldeans and called himself “governor of Babylon.”
Did much building in Ashur, Nineveh, Babylon, Dur-Sharrukin — magnificient palace, walls with bas-reliefs.
Sargon died on a military expedition.
Sennacherib (704-681 B.C.)
Son of Sargon, gifted military commander, arrogant, created hatred, alienated from own sons.
Had revolted against his father; is killed by his sons.
701 B.C. — crushed Phoenicean-Philistine alliance, occupied all of Judah except Jerusalem. Deliverance of Jerusalem in Kings and Isaiah.
Much trouble with Babylon. Merodach Baladan back on throne for 6 months sometime during first years of Sennacherib.
In 689 B.C. Sennacherib finally conquered Babylon and leveled it, deporting inhabitants, water channeled over ruins.
Little known of his last years.
Esarhaddon (680-669 B.C.)
Son of Sennacherib.
Conquered Egypt, but weakened defenses of north border.
Rebuilt Babylon, temples, etc. and returned the citizens.
673 B.C. – first expedition to Egypt was stopped.
Second expedition – named younger son, Ashurbanipal, coregent and heir — Babylon to oldest son — grave political mistake — Memphis fell.
On way to subdue revolt in Egypt, Esarhaddon died Oct 669 B.C.
Ashurbanipal (668-c.631 B.C.)
Son of Esarhaddon – last of great Assyrian kings, commander, statesman, hunter, art collector, lover of antiquities, library in Nineveh 20,000 tablets, main works of Assyrian-Babylonian lit., but ruthless in war.
In Egypt – father’s expedition carried to triumphant conclusion by commander Shanabusher.
7 years later Egypt revolted – Assyrians returned – Thebes fell 663 B.C.
Tyre conquered after 10 year siege – Assyria attained height of its power.
Revolt of brother in Babylon with coalition of Assyrian enemies 652 B.C. — civil war 4 years, weakened Assyria — Babylon subdued — Kandalanu put on throne. Elam invaded and conquered. Susa destroyed 639 B.C.
No effort to re-take Egypt.
Revenues and manpower no longer equal to maintaining empire.
Date of death uncertain.
Ashur-etil-ilani (c.630-628 B.C.)
Son of Ashurbanipal – Able to retain Babylon and repel Medes.
627 B.C. Usurper Sin-shum-lishir took throne, but he was deposed by another son of Ashurbanipal.
Sin-shar-ishkun (c.627-612 B.C.)
Able to subdue Babylonian revolt under Kandalanu.
Chaldean Nabopolassar claimed throne of Babylon – his authority undisputed after 625 B.C.
Power of Media increasing — Assyria, Scythia and Egypt make alliance.
Cyaxares the Mede defeats Scythians 616 B.C. while Nabopolassar defeats Assyrians.
Egypt assisted Assyria, but in 614 B.C. Cyaxares conquered Ashur, Assyrian king died.
July 612 B.C. Nineveh fell to Medes and Chaldeans — Nineveh, Kalah, all important cities razed.
Ashur-uballit II assumed kingship in Haran with help of Egypt. 610 B.C. fell to Medes and Chaldeans, withdrew to northern Syria.
NEO-BABYLONIAN EMPIRE
Nabopolassar (625-605 B.C.)
“Son of nobody” – claimed kingship after Kandalanu.
Revolted against Assyria and was put down.
Made treaty with Cyaxares, king of Medes — Media would take northern Mesopotamia, leaving Nabopolassar free in middle Babylon and Syria.
Participated with Media in destroying Assyria.
Sent general and crown-prince, his son, Nebuchadnezzar, to gain Syria after conquest of Harran.
605 B.C. Nebuchadnezzar defeated Egypt at Carchemish.
Second victory at Hamath on Orontes — gained control of Syria and Palestine to border of Egypt. (This must include siege of Jerusalem in Daniel 1:1)
Nabopolassar restored sanctuaries of Babylon, built a bridge over the Euphrates, connecting the two sections of the city
Nebuchadnezzar (605-562 B.C.)
Greatest of kings of Babylon — much building activity.
601 B.C. battle with Pharaoh Amasis.
597 B.C. stormed Jerusalem, took Jehoiachin & his mother hostages. 9 years later Zedekiah revolted, relying on support of Egypt.
586 B.C. Jerusalem fell after siege of 18 mo.
586 B.C. Nabonidus — high official, later king — negotiated a peace treaty between Media and Lydia.
Tyre fell after siege of 13 years – spoils not worth the trouble.
Babylon — area of six square miles.
Amel-Marduk (Evil-Merodach) (561-560 B.C.)
Son of Nebuchadnezzar, little known of him.
Freed Jehoiachin from prison after 37 years.
Driven from throne by brother-in-law.
Nergal-shar-usur (Neriglissar) (c.560-556 B.C.)
Brother-in-law of Amel-Marduk.
Directed military campaign against Taurus and defeated.
Rising power of Persia a threat.
Rift between priests of Marduk in Babylon and Aramaic priests of Sin, the moon god, at Ur and Harran.
Died after short reign.
Labashi-Marduk
Son of Neriglissar.
Priests of moon god, Sin, had him murdered and put Nabonidus on throne.
Nabonidus (555-539 B.C.)
Native of Harran; mother a high-priestess of Sin; devoted to moon god; built temples in Ur and Harran. (Not surprising that priests of Marduk greeted Cyrus as a liberator.)
No revolution during time of Nabonidus.
Supported Cyrus in his struggle against Astyages of Media 550/549.
Fortified Harran as emergency capital for future confrontation with Cyrus.
Alliance with Arabs — needed interest in trade routes to south and west — couldn’t go east because of Persia; garrisons and colonies as far south as Medina on Red Sea.
Made son Bel-shar-urur (Belshazzar) co-regent in Babylon.
Omissions of New Year festival caused discontent; Celebration in 539 B.C. but too late.
A general of Babylon joined Cyrus.
Battle at Sippar, Gobryas forced crossing of Tigris.
Oct 12, 539 B.C. (2 days after above) Persians entered Babylon without fighting: Nabonidus taken prisoner; Belshazzar apparently killed in a palace skirmish.
Oct. 29 Cyrus entered Babylon.
MEDIA
Medes and Persians were part of an Aryan invasion from beyond the Caucasus Mts. in middle of 2nd millenium B.C. Medes first to attain political organization — about 700 B.C.
Deioces
First king according to Herodotus.
Founded capital at Ecbatana.
Phraortes
Son of Deioces;
active against Assyrians at time of Esarhaddon.
Scythian invasion stopped Median growth 653-625 B.C.
Cyaxares (625-585 B.C.)
Took Media from Barbarians.
Attacked Assyria – captured Ashur 614 B.C.
612 B.C. – with Nabopolassar captured Nineveh.
Crossed River Halys, almost crushing Lydia; peace treaty negotiated by Nabonidus.
Astyages (585-550 B.C.)
Great wealth, interest in war declined.
Had held Persia as vassal, but tables turned.
As long as Nebuchadnezzar lived (562 B.C.) peaceful relations between Media and Babylon; under weak successors of Neb., Medes and Persians encroached.
Daughter of Astyages married Cambyses I of Persia; son Cyrus the Great conquered Media and Babylon.
PERSIA
Teispes (675-640 B.C.)
Son of Achaemenes.
First Persian king to distinguish himself.
Two sons – Cyrus I, the older, inherited Parsumash, and Ariaramnes, inherited Persia proper.
Cyaxares defeated Scythians and may have annexed Persia.
Cyrus I left in control of Parsumash as vassal king.
Cambyses I
Second son of Cyrus I – brother carried off to Nineveh as hostage by Ashurbanipal.
Married daughter of Astyages of Media.
Cyrus II (559-530 B.C.)
Grandson of Astyages of Media – son of Cambyses I.
First occupied throne as vassal to Astyages.
After six years rebelled – Media surrendered in one battle; Median army rebelled, handed their king to Cyrus.
Crossed Halys River, defeated Lydian army, occupied Sardis, its capital, 546 B.C. Croesus, its king, treated with leniency.
539 B.C. entered Babylon.
Media, Assyria, Lydia and Babylon incorporated into Persian empire.
539 B.C. decree for Jewish captives to return to Jerusalem to rebuild temple.
Died in battle against barbarians on northern boundary.
Cambyses II (529-522 B.C.)
Put his brother Smerdis to death;
Defeated Egyptians, occupied Memphis.
Killed wife, shot son with arrow, buried 12 Persian nobles alive — outbursts of insanity.
On way to Persia to subdue revolt died or committed suicide.
Gaumata – Pseudo Smerdis, the usurper.
Devotee of the early Magian faith; resolved to destroy Zoroastrianism, official religion of Persia.
Killed by Darius.
Darius I (521-486 B.C.)
Claimed to be descendant of Teispes and Ariaramnes.
Behistun inscription in Old Persian, Elamite, Akkadean tells of long struggle to gain control.
Took Babylon after long siege.
Great administrator – postal service.
36 years consolidating his empire — borders of Libya and Aegean coast in west to River Indus in east. Black and Caspian Seas to north, Indian Ocean on south.
When Greek cities revolted, Darius declared war on Greece.
492 B.C. Persian fleet wrecked in storm off Mt. Athos.
Second expedition landed at Marathon, defeated by Athenians under Miltiades in 490 B.C.
While preparing for 3rd attack, Darius died.
Xerxes (486-465 B.C.)
Son of Darius – Ahasuerus of Ezra 4:6.
484 B.C. reconquered Egypt which had revolted – made a satrapy.
482 B.C. crushed a revolt in Babylon — Babylonia incorporated into satrapy of Assyria.
Campaigns against Greece a total failure: 480 B.C. – naval battle of Salamis – navy routed, 479 B.C. – battle of Platea – army defeated, 479 B.C. – another Persian fleet destroyed.
Much building in Persepolis.
Assassinated in bed chamber by group of conspirators.
Artaxerxes I (465-423 B.C.) (Longimanus)
Had to put down revolts in Bactria and Egypt.
Time of Herodotus, visited Egypt then 7th year — decree in Ezra 7 authorizing Jews to return under Ezra.
20th year (13 years later) Nehemiah, cup-bearer, sent as governor of Judah to rebuild walls.
After 445 B.C. Thrace lost, Greek fleet in Mediterranean, Persian power waning.
Xerxes II (423 B.C. — 45 days.)
Overcome by a half-brother, who was in turn defeated by another half-brother, Vahuka, or Ochos, who assumed title of Darius.
Darius II (423-404 B.C.)
Many revolts.
Jewish colony in Egypt (408) wrote to Bigwai, Persian governor, for Jerusalem for aid to get permission from Persia to rebuild their temple.
404 B.C. Egypt regained independence.
Artaxerxes II (404-358 B.C.)
Oldest son of Darius II.
Opposed by brother Cyrus who should have been king under law.
Cyrus killed at battle of Cunaxa (401). Xenophon wrote of retreat of Greeks (mercenaries hired by Cyrus) “Anabasis”
374 B.C. Attempt to reconquer Egypt failed.
Artaxerxes III (358-337 B.C.)
Original name Vahuka. Got rid of rivals. Killed 80 brothers.
Put down revolts in Asia Minor, Cyprus, Phoenicia.
342 B.C. reconquered Egypt.
Bagoas poisoned king and older sons. Spared younger Arses.
Arses (337-336 B.C.)
Not a willing puppet; also killed.
Darius III (336-331 B.C.)
Put on throne by Bagoas, had Bagoas poisoned.
Conquest of Persia by Alexander – began 334 B.C.; battles of Granicus, Issus, Arbella.
Darius fled, murdered by own officers.
Whole Persian empire fell under control of Alexander.
Persian empire was largest to that time. Main capital at Susa; summer (?) palace at Persepolis (Greek name – Persian name Parsa). Council of seven — high officials included cup-bearer (Nehemiah’s position). Aramaic common language through empire. Persian in cuneiform script became limited to monument inscriptions. 20 satrapies, under satrap, who was immediate representative of king.
Unity
uniform jurisprudence,
net of royal roads,
postal system for govt. and business,
uniform currency,
universal use of Aramaic language and script;
but neither cultural or spiritual bond of unity; increasing reliance on mercenary troops.
Religion
Zoroaster is Greek form of Zarathustra, prophet of 7th century B.C. — writings of faith Avesta dates from 200 B.C.
Ahuramazda, good god – monotheism.
Zoroaster himself unable to explain evil; dualism arose later. Ahriman — evil spirit.
Zoroaster is prophet, not law giver;
real life beyond grave; glorious consummation — total triumph of Ahuramazda;
ethical life; brotherhood of man; kindness to animals.