Assyrians came from northern Mesopotamia. Their geography made them susceptible to invasion. To...
-
Upload
ralf-anthony -
Category
Documents
-
view
230 -
download
0
Transcript of Assyrians came from northern Mesopotamia. Their geography made them susceptible to invasion. To...
The Assyrian Empire
Assyrians came from northern Mesopotamia.Their geography made them susceptible to invasion.To survive the Assyrians developed their warlike
behavior.Assyrian kings, like Sennacherib, built an empire
from the Tigris River to central Egypt.The Assyrian military society used the skill of
ironworking – created weapons that were superior.They also used new techniques in waging war that
were very effective.They showed no mercy in their attacks.
A Mighty Military Machine
Sennacherib and His Military Machine
By 650 B.C., the Assyrians had put together an empire that included almost all of the old centers of civilization and power in SW Asia.
Conquered lands closest to them were ruled as provinces and were dependent territories.
Assyrians had local governors report to a central authority.
Lands acquired through military successes would bring in new sources of taxes and tribute.
If conquered lands refused to cooperate their cities would be destroyed and their people exiled.
An Expanding Empire
Assyrian kings were fearsome and yet they were also great builders.
King Sennacherib established the Assyrian capital at Nineveh.
Art found at Nineveh suggest the fascination of Assyrian’s with brutal military campaigns and the lion hunt.
King Assurbanipal established one of the largest libraries in the ancient world at Nineveh – which included over 20,000 clay tablets from the Fertile Crescent including the Epic of Gilgamesh.
Assyrian Culture
Assurbanipal’s Library
Assurbanipal was one of the last mighty Assyrian kings.In 612 B.C., a combined army of Medes, Chaldeans, and
others burned and leveled Nineveh.The Chaldeans made Babylon their capital and it became the
center of a new empire.Chaldean king, Nebuchadnezzar, restored the city which was
famous for the Hanging Gardens, one of the wonders of the ancient world.
Babylon was home to a 300 ft. high ziggurat where astronomers recorded the movement of the stars and planets forming the basis for astronomy and astrology.
After Nebuchadnezzar’s death the empire fell, but the conquering Persians adopted many Assyrian military, political, and artistic inventions.
The Empire Crumbles