<h2 class="title"><SPAN name="id2544669" name= "id2544669"></SPAN>Chapter XVIII. The Age of Semiramis</h2>
<p class="title"><b>Abstract</b></p>
<p>Queen Sammu-rammat the original of Semiramis--"Mother-right"
among "Mother Worshippers"--Sammu-rammat compared to Queen
Tiy--Popularity of Goddess Cults--Temple Worship and Domestic
Worship--Babylonian Cultural Influence in Assyria--Ethical
Tendency in Shamash Worship--The Nebo Religious Revolt--Aton
Revolt in Egypt--The Royal Assyrian Library--Fish Goddess of
Babylonia in Assyria--The Semiramis and Shakuntala Stories--The
Mock King and Queen--Dove Goddesses of Assyria, Phoenicia, and
Cyprus--Ishtar's Dove Form--St. Valentine's Day beliefs--Sacred
Doves of Cretans, Hittites, and Egyptians--Pigeon Lore in Great
Britain and Ireland--Deities associated with various Animals--The
Totemic Theory--Common Element in Ancient Goddess
Cults--Influence of Agricultural Beliefs--Nebo a form of Ea--His
Spouse Tashmit a Love Goddess and Interceder--Traditions of
Famous Mother Deities--Adad-nirari IV the "Saviour" of
Israel--Expansion of the Urartian Empire--Its Famous
Kings--Decline and Fall of Assyria's Middle Empire Dynasty.</p>
<p><SPAN name="page.anchor.417" name="page.anchor.417"></SPAN> One of the
most interesting figures in Mesopotamian history came into
prominence during the Assyrian Middle Empire period. This was the
famous Sammu-rammat, the Babylonian wife of an Assyrian ruler.
Like Sargon of Akkad, Alexander the Great, and Dietrich von Bern,
she made, by reason of her achievements and influence, a deep
impression on the popular imagination, and as these monarchs
became identified in tradition with gods of war and fertility,
she had attached to her memory the myths associated with the
mother goddess of love and battle who presided over the destinies
of mankind. In her character as the legendary Semiramis of Greek
literature, the Assyrian queen was reputed to have been the
<SPAN name="page.anchor.418" name="page.anchor.418"></SPAN>daughter of
Derceto, the dove and fish goddess of Askalon, and to have
departed from earth in bird form.</p>
<p>It is not quite certain whether Sammu-rammat was the wife of
Shamshi-Adad VII or of his son, Adad-nirari IV. Before the former
monarch reduced Babylonia to the status of an Assyrian province,
he had signed a treaty of peace with its king, and it is
suggested that it was confirmed by a matrimonial alliance. This
treaty was repudiated by King Bau-akh-iddina, who was transported
with his palace treasures to Assyria.</p>
<p>As Sammu-rammat was evidently a royal princess of Babylonia,
it seems probable that her marriage was arranged with purpose to
legitimatize the succession of the Assyrian overlords to the
Babylonian throne. The principle of "mother right" was ever
popular in those countries where the worship of the Great Mother
was perpetuated if not in official at any rate in domestic
religion. Not a few Egyptian Pharaohs reigned as husbands or as
sons of royal ladies. Succession by the female line was also
observed among the Hittites. When Hattusil II gave his daughter
in marriage to Putakhi, king of the Amorites, he inserted a
clause in the treaty of alliance "to the effect that the
sovereignty over the Amorite should belong to the son and
descendants of his daughter for evermore".<span class=
"sub">[<SPAN name="fnrex1464" href="#ftn.fnrex1464" id=
"fnrex1464">464</SPAN>]</span></p>
<p>As queen or queen-mother, Sammu-rammat occupied as prominent a
position in Assyria as did Queen Tiy of Egypt during the lifetime
of her husband, Amenhotep III, and the early part of the reign of
her son, Amenhotep IV (Akhenaton). The Tell-el-Amarna letters
testify to Tiy's influence in the Egyptian "Foreign Office", and
we know that at home she was joint ruler with her husband and
took part with him in public ceremonials. During their reign a
temple was erected to the mother goddess Mut, <SPAN id=
"page.anchor.419" name="page.anchor.419"></SPAN>and beside it was
formed a great lake on which sailed the "barque of Aton" in
connection with mysterious religious ceremonials. After
Akhenaton's religious revolt was inaugurated, the worship of Mut
was discontinued and Tiy went into retirement. In Akhenaton's
time the vulture symbol of the goddess Mut did not appear above
the sculptured figures of royalty.</p>
<p>What connection the god Aton had with Mut during the period of
the Tiy regime remains obscure. There is no evidence that Aton
was first exalted as the son of the Great Mother goddess,
although this is not improbable.</p>
<p>Queen Sammu-rammat of Assyria, like Tiy of Egypt, is
associated with social and religious innovations. She was the
first, and, indeed, the only Assyrian royal lady, to be referred
to on equal terms with her royal husband in official
inscriptions. In a dedication to the god Nebo, that deity is
reputed to be the protector of "the life of Adad-nirari, king of
the land of Ashur, his lord, and the life of Sammu-rammat, she of
the palace, his lady".<span class="sub">[<SPAN name="fnrex1465"
href="#ftn.fnrex1465" name="fnrex1465">465</SPAN>]</span></p>
<p>During the reign of Adad-nirari IV the Assyrian Court radiated
Babylonian culture and traditions. The king not only recorded his
descent from the first Shalmaneser, but also claimed to be a
descendant of Bel-kap-kapu, an earlier, but, to us, unknown,
Babylonian monarch than "Sulili", i.e. Sumu-la-ilu, the
great-great-grandfather of Hammurabi. Bel-kap-kapu was reputed to
have been an overlord of Assyria.</p>
<p>Apparently Adad-nirari desired to be regarded as the
legitimate heir to the thrones of Assyria and Babylonia. His
claim upon the latter country must have had a substantial basis.
It is not too much to assume that he was a son of a princess of
its ancient royal family. Sammurammat <SPAN name="page.anchor.420"
name="page.anchor.420"></SPAN>may therefore have been his mother.
She could have been called his "wife" in the mythological sense,
the king having become "husband of his mother". If such was the
case, the royal pair probably posed as the high priest and high
priestess of the ancient goddess cult--the incarnations of the
Great Mother and the son who displaced his sire.</p>
<p>The worship of the Great Mother was the popular religion of
the indigenous peoples of western Asia, including parts of Asia
Minor, Egypt, and southern and western Europe. It appears to have
been closely associated with agricultural rites practised among
representative communities of the Mediterranean race. In
Babylonia and Assyria the peoples of the goddess cult fused with
the peoples of the god cult, but the prominence maintained by
Ishtar, who absorbed many of the old mother deities, testifies to
the persistence of immemorial habits of thought and antique
religious ceremonials among the descendants of the earliest
settlers in the Tigro-Euphrates valley. Merodach's spouse
Zerpanitu<span class='phonetic'>m</span> was not a shadowy deity
but a goddess who exercised as much influence as her divine
husband. As Aruru she took part with him in the creation of
mankind. In Asia Minor the mother goddess was overshadowed by the
father god during the period of Hatti predominance, but her
worship was revived after the early people along the coast and in
the agricultural valleys were freed from the yoke of the
father-god worshippers.</p>
<p>It must be recognized, in this connection, that an official
religion was not always a full reflection of popular beliefs. In
all the great civilizations of antiquity it was invariably a
compromise between the beliefs of the military aristocracy and
the masses of mingled peoples over whom they held sway. Temple
worship had therefore a political <SPAN name="page.anchor.421" name=
"page.anchor.421"></SPAN>aspect; it was intended, among other
things, to strengthen the position of the ruling classes. But
ancient deities could still be worshipped, and were worshipped,
in homes and fields, in groves and on mountain tops, as the case
might be. Jeremiah has testified to the persistence of the folk
practices in connection with the worship of the mother goddess
among the inhabitants of Palestine. Sacrificial fires were lit
and cakes were baked and offered to the "Queen of Heaven" in the
streets of Jerusalem and other cities. In Babylonia and Egypt
domestic religious practices were never completely supplanted by
temple ceremonies in which rulers took a prominent part. It was
always possible, therefore, for usurpers to make popular appeal
by reviving ancient and persistent forms of worship. As we have
seen, Jehu of Israel, after stamping out Phoenician Baal worship,
secured a strong following by giving official recognition to the
cult of the golden calf.</p>
<p>It is not possible to set forth in detail, or with intimate
knowledge, the various innovations which Sammu-rammat introduced,
or with which she was credited, during the reigns of Adad-nirari
IV (810-782 B.C.) and his father. No discovery has been made of
documents like the Tell-el-Amarna "letters", which would shed
light on the social and political life of this interesting
period. But evidence is not awanting that Assyria was being
suffused with Babylonian culture. Royal inscriptions record the
triumphs of the army, but suppress the details of barbarities
such as those which sully the annals of Ashur-natsir-pal, who had
boys and girls burned on pyres and the heroes of small nations
flayed alive. An ethical tendency becomes apparent in the
exaltation of the Babylonian Shamash as an abstract deity who
loved law and order, inspired the king with wisdom and ordained
the <SPAN name="page.anchor.422" name="page.anchor.422"></SPAN>destinies
of mankind. He is invoked on equal terms with Ashur.</p>
<p>The prominence given to Nebo, the god of Borsippa, during the
reign of Adad-nirari IV is highly significant. He appears in his
later character as a god of culture and wisdom, the patron of
scribes and artists, and the wise counsellor of the deities. He
symbolized the intellectual life of the southern kingdom, which
was more closely associated with religious ethics than that of
war-loving Assyria.</p>
<p>A great temple was erected to Nebo at Kalkhi, and four statues
of him were placed within it, two of which are now in the British
Museum. On one of these was cut the inscription, from which we
have quoted, lauding the exalted and wise deity and invoking him
to protect Adad-nirari and the lady of the palace, Sammu-rammat,
and closing with the exhortation, "Whoso cometh in after time,
let him trust in Nebo and trust in no other god".</p>
<p>The priests of Ashur in the city of Asshur must have been as
deeply stirred by this religious revolt at Kalkhi as were the
priests of Amon when Akhenaton turned his back on Thebes and the
national god to worship Aton in his new capital at
Tell-el-Amarna.</p>
<p>It would appear that this sudden stream of Babylonian culture
had begun to flow into Assyria as early as the reign of
Shalmaneser III, and it may be that it was on account of that
monarch's pro-Babylonian tendencies that his nobles and priests
revolted against him. Shalmaneser established at Kalkhi a royal
library which was stocked with the literature of the southern
kingdom. During the reign of Adad-nirari IV this collection was
greatly increased, and subsequent additions were made to it by
his successors, and especially Ashur-nirari IV, the last monarch
of the Middle Empire. The inscriptions of <SPAN name="page.anchor.423"
name="page.anchor.423"></SPAN>Shamshi-Adad, son of Shalmaneser III,
have literary qualities which distinguish them from those of his
predecessors, and may be accounted for by the influence exercised
by Babylonian scholars who migrated northward.</p>
<p>To the reign of Adad-nirari belongs also that important
compilation the "Synchronistic History of Assyria and Babylonia",
which deals with the relations of the two kingdoms and refers to
contemporary events and rulers.</p>
<p>The legends of Semiramis indicate that Sammu-rammat was
associated like Queen Tiy with the revival of mother worship. As
we have said, she went down to tradition as the daughter of the
fish goddess, Derceto. Pliny identified that deity with Atargatis
of Hierapolis.<span class="sub">[<SPAN name="fnrex1466" href=
"#ftn.fnrex1466" name="fnrex1466">466</SPAN>]</span></p>
<p>In Babylonia the fish goddess was Nina, a developed form of
Damkina, spouse of Ea of Eridu. In the inscription on the Nebo
statue, that god is referred to as the "son of Nudimmud" (Ea).
Nina was the goddess who gave her name to Nineveh, and it is
possible that Nebo may have been regarded as her son during the
Semiramis period.</p>
<p>The story of Semiramis's birth is evidently of great
antiquity. It seems to survive throughout Europe in the nursery
tale of the "Babes in the Wood". A striking Indian parallel is
afforded by the legend of Shakuntala, which may be first referred
to for the purpose of comparative study. Shakuntala was the
daughter of the rishi, Viswamitra, and Menaka, the Apsara
(celestial fairy). Menaka gave birth to her child beside the
sacred river Malini. "And she cast the new-born infant on the
bank of that river and went away. And beholding the newborn
infant lying in that forest destitute of human beings but
abounding with lions and tigers, a number of vultures sat around
to protect it from harm." A sage discovered <SPAN id=
"page.anchor.424" name="page.anchor.424"></SPAN>the child and
adopted her. "Because", he said, "she was surrounded by
<span class="emphasis"><em>Shakuntas</em></span> (birds),
therefore hath she been named by me <span class=
"emphasis"><em>Shakuntala</em></span> (bird
protected)."<span class="sub">[<SPAN name="fnrex1467" href=
"#ftn.fnrex1467" name="fnrex1467">467</SPAN>]</span></p>
<p>Semiramis was similarly deserted at birth by her Celestial
mother. She was protected by doves, and her Assyrian name,
Sammu-rammat, is believed to be derived from "Summat"--"dove",
and to signify "the dove goddess loveth her". Simmas, the chief
of royal shepherds, found the child and adopted her. She was of
great beauty like Shakuntala, the maiden of "perfect symmetry",
"sweet smiles", and "faultless features", with whom King
Dushyanta fell in love and married in Gandharva
fashion.<span class="sub">[<SPAN name="fnrex1468" href=
"#ftn.fnrex1468" name="fnrex1468">468</SPAN>]</span></p>
<p>Semiramis became the wife of Onnes, governor of Nineveh, and
one of the generals of its alleged founder, King Ninus. She
accompanied her husband to Bactria on a military campaign, and is
said to have instructed the king how that city should be taken.
Ninus fell in love with Semiramis, and Onnes, who refused to give
her up, went and hanged himself. The fair courtesan then became
the wife of the king.</p>
<p>The story proceeds that Semiramis exercised so great an
influence over the impressionable King Ninus, that she persuaded
him to proclaim her Queen of Assyria for five <SPAN id=
"page.anchor.425" name="page.anchor.425"></SPAN>days. She then
ascended the throne decked in royal robes. On the first day she
gave a great banquet, and on the second thrust Ninus into prison,
or had him put to death. In this manner she secured the empire
for herself. She reigned for over forty years.</p>
<SPAN name="id2545156" name="id2545156"></SPAN>
<p class="title"><b>Figure XVIII.1. THE SHEPHERD FINDS THE BABE
SEMIRAMIS</b></p>
<blockquote class="blockquote">
<p><span class="emphasis"><em>From the Painting by E.
Wallcousins</em></span></p>
</blockquote>
<ANTIMG alt="" src="img/35.jpg" />
<p>Professor Frazer inclines to the view that the legend is a
reminiscence of the custom of appointing a mock king and queen to
whom the kingdom was yielded up for five days. Semiramis played
the part of the mother goddess, and the priestly king died a
violent death in the character of her divine lover. "The mounds
of Semiramis which were pointed out all over Western Asia were
said to have been the graves of her lovers whom she buried
alive.... This tradition is one of the surest indications of the
identity of the mythical Semiramis with the Babylonian goddess
Ishtar or Astarte."<span class="sub">[<SPAN name="fnrex1469" href=
"#ftn.fnrex1469" name="fnrex1469">469</SPAN>]</span> As we have seen,
Ishtar and other mother goddesses had many lovers whom they
deserted like La Belle Dame sans Merci (pp. <SPAN href=
"#page.anchor.174">174</SPAN>-<SPAN href=
"#page.anchor.175">175</SPAN>).</p>
<p>As Queen of Assyria, Semiramis was said to have cut roads
through mountainous districts and erected many buildings.
According to one version of the legend she founded the city of
Babylon. Herodotus, however, says in this connection: "Semiramis
held the throne for five generations before the later princess
(Nitocris).... She raised certain embankments, well worthy of
inspection, in the plain near Babylon, to control the river
(Euphrates), which, till then, used to overflow and flood the
whole country round about."<span class="sub">[<SPAN name="fnrex1470"
href="#ftn.fnrex1470" name="fnrex1470">470</SPAN>]</span> Lucian, who
associates the famous queen with "mighty works in Asia", states
that she was reputed by some to be the builder of the ancient
temple of Aphrodite in the Libanus, although others credited it
to Cinyras, or Deukalion.<span class="sub">[<SPAN name="fnrex1471"
href="#ftn.fnrex1471" name="fnrex1471">471</SPAN>]</span> Several
Median places bear her name, and according to ancient Armenian
tradition she was the founder of Van, which was formerly called
"Shamiramagerd". Strabo tells that unidentified mountains in
Western Asia were named after Semiramis.<span class=
"sub">[<SPAN name="fnrex1472" href="#ftn.fnrex1472" id=
"fnrex1472">472</SPAN>]</span> Indeed, many of the great works in
the Tigro-Euphrates valley, not excepting the famous inscription
of Darius, were credited to the legendary queen of Babylonia and
<SPAN name="page.anchor.426" name=
"page.anchor.426"></SPAN>Assyria.<span class="sub">[<SPAN name=
"fnrex1473" href="#ftn.fnrex1473" name="fnrex1473">473</SPAN>]</span>
She was the rival in tradition of the famous Sesostris of Egypt
as a ruler, builder, and conqueror.</p>
<p>All the military expeditions of Semiramis were attended with
success, except her invasion of India. She was supposed to have
been defeated in the Punjab. After suffering this disaster she
died, or abdicated the throne in favour of her son Ninyas. The
most archaic form of the legend appears to be that she was turned
into a dove and took flight to heaven in that form. After her
death she was worshipped as a dove goddess like "Our Lady of
Trees and Doves" in Cyprus, whose shrine at old Paphos was
founded, Herodotus says, by Phoenician colonists from
Askalon.<span class="sub">[<SPAN name="fnrex1474" href=
"#ftn.fnrex1474" name="fnrex1474">474</SPAN>]</span> Fish and doves
were sacred to Derceto (Attar),<span class="sub">[<SPAN name=
"fnrex1475" href="#ftn.fnrex1475" name="fnrex1475">475</SPAN>]</span>
who had a mermaid form. "I have beheld", says Lucian, "the image
of Derceto in Phoenicia. A marvellous spectacle it is. One half
is a woman, but the part which extends from thighs to feet
terminates with the tail of a fish."<span class="sub">[<SPAN name=
"fnrex1476" href="#ftn.fnrex1476" id=
"fnrex1476">476</SPAN>]</span></p>
<p>Derceto was supposed to have been a woman who threw herself in
despair into a lake. After death she was adored as a goddess and
her worshippers abstained from eating fish, except sacrificially.
A golden image of a fish was suspended in her temple. Atargatis,
who was identical with Derceto, was reputed in another form of
the legend to have been born of an egg which the sacred fishes
found in the Euphrates and thrust ashore (p. <SPAN href=
"#page.anchor.28">28</SPAN>). The Greek Aphrodite was born of the
froth of the sea and floated in a sea-shell. According to
Hesiod,</p>
<blockquote class="blockquote">
<tt> The wafting waves</tt>
<tt>First bore her to Cythera the
divine:</tt>
<tt>To wave-encircled Cyprus came she
then,</tt>
<tt>And forth emerged, a goddess, in the
charms</tt>
<tt><SPAN name="page.anchor.427" name=
"page.anchor.427"></SPAN>Of awful beauty. Where her delicate
feet</tt>
<tt>Had pressed the sands, green herbage
flowering sprang.</tt>
<tt>Her Aphrodite gods and mortals
name,</tt>
<tt>The foam-born goddess; and her name is
known</tt>
<tt>As Cytherea with the blooming
wreath,</tt>
<tt>For that she touched Cythera's flowery
coast;</tt>
<tt>And Cypris, for that on the Cyprian
shore</tt>
<tt>She rose, amid the multitude of waves.
<span class="emphasis"><em>Elton's
translation</em></span>.</tt></blockquote><p>The animals sacred to Aphrodite included the sparrow, the
dove, the swan, the swallow, and the wryneck.<span class=
"sub">[<SPAN name="fnrex1477" href="#ftn.fnrex1477" id=
"fnrex1477">477</SPAN>]</span> She presided over the month of April,
and the myrtle, rose, poppy, and apple were sacred to her.</p>
<p>Some writers connect Semiramis, in her character as a dove
goddess, with Media and the old Persian mother goddess Anaitis,
and regard as arbitrary her identification with the fish goddess
Derceto or Atargatis. The dove was certainly not a popular bird
in the religious art of Babylonia and Assyria, but in one of the
hymns translated by Professor Pinches Ishtar says, "Like a lonely
dove I rest". In another the worshipper tries to touch Ishtar's
heart by crying, "Like the dove I moan". A Sumerian psalmist
makes a goddess (Gula, who presided over Larak, a part of Isin)
lament over the city after it was captured by the enemy:</p>
<blockquote class="blockquote">
<tt>My temple E-aste, temple of
Larak,</tt>
<tt>Larak the city which Bel Enlil
gave,</tt>
<tt><SPAN name="page.anchor.428" name=
"page.anchor.428"></SPAN>Beneath are turned to strangeness, above
are turned to strangeness,</tt>
<tt>With wailings on the lyre my
dwelling-place is surrendered to the stranger,</tt>
<tt><span class="emphasis"><em>The dove
cots they wickedly seized, the doves they
entrapped....</em></span></tt>
<tt>The ravens he (Enlil) caused to
fly.<span class="sub">[<SPAN name="fnrex1478" href="#ftn.fnrex1478" id="fnrex1478">478</SPAN>]</span></tt></blockquote><p>Apparently there were temple and household doves in Babylonia.
The Egyptians had their household dovecots in ancient as in
modern times. Lane makes reference to the large pigeon houses in
many villages. They are of archaic pattern, "with the walls
slightly inclining inwards (like many of the ancient Egyptian
buildings)", and are "constructed upon the roofs of the huts with
crude brick, pottery, and mud.... Each pair of pigeons occupies a
separate (earthen) pot."<span class="sub">[<SPAN name="fnrex1479"
href="#ftn.fnrex1479" name="fnrex1479">479</SPAN>]</span> It may be
that the dove bulked more prominently in domestic than in
official religion, and had a special seasonal significance.
Ishtar appears to have had a dove form. In the Gilgamesh epic she
is said to have loved the "brilliant Allalu bird" (the
"bright-coloured wood pigeon", according to Sayce), and to have
afterwards wounded it by breaking its wings.<span class=
"sub">[<SPAN name="fnrex1480" href="#ftn.fnrex1480" id=
"fnrex1480">480</SPAN>]</span> She also loved the lion and the
horse, and must therefore have assumed the forms of these
animals. The goddess Bau, "she whose city is destroyed", laments
in a Sumerian psalm:</p>
<blockquote class="blockquote">
<tt>Like a dove to its dwelling-place, how
long to my dwelling-place will they pursue me,</tt>
<tt>To my sanctuary ... the sacred place
they pursue me....</tt>
<tt>My resting place, the brick walls of my
city Isin, thou art destroyed;</tt>
<tt>My sanctuary, shrine of my temple
Galmah, thou art destroyed.</tt>
<tt> </tt>
<tt> <span class=
"emphasis"><em>Langdon's translation.</em></span></tt></blockquote><p><SPAN name="page.anchor.429" name="page.anchor.429"></SPAN>Here the
goddess appears to be identified with the doves which rest on the
walls and make their nests in the shrine. The Sumerian poets did
not adorn their poems with meaningless picturesque imagery; their
images were stern facts; they had a magical or religious
significance like the imagery of magical incantations; the
worshipper invoked the deity by naming his or her various
attributes, forms, &c.</p>
<p>Of special interest are the references in Sumerian psalms to
the ravens as well as the doves of goddesses. Throughout Asia and
Europe ravens are birds of ill omen. In Scotland there still
linger curious folk beliefs regarding the appearance of ravens
and doves after death. Michael Scott, the great magician, when on
his deathbed told his friends to place his body on a hillock.
"Three ravens and three doves would be seen flying towards it. If
the ravens were first the body was to be burned, but if the doves
were first it was to receive Christian burial. The ravens were
foremost, but in their hurry flew beyond their mark. So the
devil, who had long been preparing a bed for Michael, was
disappointed."<span class="sub">[<SPAN name="fnrex1481" href=
"#ftn.fnrex1481" name="fnrex1481">481</SPAN>]</span></p>
<p>In Indian mythology Purusha, the chaos giant, first divided
himself. "Hence were husband and wife produced." This couple then
assumed various animal forms and thus "created every living pair
whatsoever down to the ants".<span class="sub">[<SPAN name=
"fnrex1482" href="#ftn.fnrex1482" name="fnrex1482">482</SPAN>]</span>
Goddesses and fairies in the folk tales of many countries
sometimes assume bird forms. The "Fates" appear to Damayanti in
the Nala story as swans which carry love messages.<span class=
"sub">[<SPAN name="fnrex1483" href="#ftn.fnrex1483" id=
"fnrex1483">483</SPAN>]</span></p>
<p>According to Aryo-Indian belief, birds were "blessed with
fecundity". The Babylonian Etana eagle and the Egyptian vulture,
as has been indicated, were deities of <SPAN name="page.anchor.430"
name="page.anchor.430"></SPAN>fertility. Throughout Europe birds,
which were "Fates", mated, according to popular belief, on St.
Valentine's Day in February, when lots were drawn for wives by
rural folks. Another form of the old custom is referred to by the
poet Gay:--</p>
<blockquote class="blockquote">
<tt>Last Valentine, the day when birds of
kind</tt>
<tt>Their paramours with mutual chirpings
find,</tt>
<tt>I early rose....</tt>
<tt>Thee first I spied, and the first swain
we see,</tt>
<tt>In spite of fortune, shall our true
love be.</tt></blockquote><p>The dove appears to have been a sacred bird in various areas
occupied by tribes of the Mediterranean race. Models of a shrine
found in two royal graves at Mycenae are surmounted by a pair of
doves, suggesting twin goddesses like Isis and Nepthys of Egypt
and Ishtar and Belitsheri of Babylonia. Doves and snakes were
associated with the mother goddess of Crete, "typifying",
according to one view, "her connection with air and earth.
Although her character was distinctly beneficent and pacific, yet
as Lady of the Wild Creatures she had a more fearful aspect, one
that was often depicted on carved gems, where lions are her
companions."<span class="sub">[<SPAN name="fnrex1484" href=
"#ftn.fnrex1484" name="fnrex1484">484</SPAN>]</span> Discussing the
attributes and symbols of this mother goddess, Professor Burrows
says: "As the serpent, coming from the crevices of the earth,
shows the possession of the tree or pillar from the underworld,
so the dove, with which this goddess is also associated, shows
its possession from the world of the sky".<span class=
"sub">[<SPAN name="fnrex1485" href="#ftn.fnrex1485" id=
"fnrex1485">485</SPAN>]</span> Professor Robertson Smith has
demonstrated that the dove was of great sanctity among the
Semites.<span class="sub">[<SPAN name="fnrex1486" href=
"#ftn.fnrex1486" name="fnrex1486">486</SPAN>]</span> It figures in
Hittite sculptures and was probably connected with the goddess
cult in Asia <SPAN name="page.anchor.431" name=
"page.anchor.431"></SPAN>Minor. Although Egypt had no dove goddess,
the bird was addressed by lovers--</p>
<blockquote class="blockquote">
<tt>I hear thy voice, O turtle
dove--</tt>
<tt> The dawn is all aglow--</tt>
<tt>Weary am I with love, with
love,</tt>
<tt> Oh, whither shall I go?<span class=
"sub">[<SPAN name="fnrex1487" href="#ftn.fnrex1487" id=
"fnrex1487">487</SPAN>]</span></tt></blockquote><p>Pigeons, as indicated, are in Egypt still regarded as sacred
birds, and a few years ago British soldiers created a riot by
shooting them. Doves were connected with the ancient Greek oracle
at Dodona. In many countries the dove is closely associated with
love, and also symbolizes innocence, gentleness, and
holiness.</p>
<p>The pigeon was anciently, it would appear, a sacred bird in
these islands, and Brand has recorded curious folk beliefs
connected with it. In some districts the idea prevailed that no
person could die on a bed which contained pigeon feathers: "If
anybody be sick and lye a dying, if they lye upon pigeon feathers
they will be languishing and never die, but be in pain and
torment," wrote a correspondent. A similar superstition about the
feathers of different varieties of wild fowl<span class=
"sub">[<SPAN name="fnrex1488" href="#ftn.fnrex1488" id=
"fnrex1488">488</SPAN>]</span> obtained in other districts. Brand
traced this interesting traditional belief in Yorkshire,
Lancashire, Derbyshire, and some of the Welsh and Irish
counties.<span class="sub">[<SPAN name="fnrex1489" href=
"#ftn.fnrex1489" name="fnrex1489">489</SPAN>]</span> It still lingers
in parts of the Scottish Highlands. In the old ballad of "The
Bloody Gardener" the white dove appears to a young man as the
soul of his lady love who was murdered by his mother. He first
saw the bird perched on his breast and then "sitting on a myrtle
tree".<span class="sub">[<SPAN name="fnrex1490" href=
"#ftn.fnrex1490" name="fnrex1490">490</SPAN>]</span></p>
<p>The dove was not only a symbol of Semiramis, but <SPAN id=
"page.anchor.432" name="page.anchor.432"></SPAN>also of her mother
Derceto, the Phoenician fish goddess. The connection between bird
and fish may have been given an astral significance. In "Poor
Robin's Almanack" for 1757 a St. Valentine rhyme begins:--</p>
<blockquote class="blockquote">
<tt>This month bright Phoebus enters
Pisces,</tt>
<tt>The maids will have good store of
kisses,</tt>
<tt>For always when the sun comes
there,</tt>
<tt>Valentine's day is drawing
near,</tt>
<tt>And both the men and maids
incline</tt>
<tt>To choose them each a
Valentine.</tt></blockquote><p>As we have seen, the example was set by the mating birds. The
"Almanack" poet no doubt versified an old astrological belief:
when the spring sun entered the sign of the Fishes, the love
goddess in bird form returned to earth.</p>
<p>Advocates of the Totemic theory, on the other hand, may hold
that the association of doves with snake goddesses and fish
goddesses of fertility was due to the fusion of tribes who had
various animal totems. "The Pelew Islanders believed", says
Professor Frazer, "that the souls of their forefathers lived in
certain species of animals, which accordingly they held sacred
and would not injure. For this reason one man would not kill
snakes, another would not harm pigeons, and so on; but everyone
was quite ready to kill and eat the sacred animals of his
neighbours."<span class="sub">[<SPAN name="fnrex1491" href=
"#ftn.fnrex1491" name="fnrex1491">491</SPAN>]</span> That the
Egyptians had similar customs is suggested by what Herodotus
tells us regarding their sacred animals: "Those who live near
Thebes and the lake Moeris hold the crocodile in religious
veneration.... Those who live in or near Elephantine, so far from
considering these beasts as sacred, make them an article of
food.... The hippopotamus is esteemed sacred in the <SPAN id=
"page.anchor.433" name="page.anchor.433"></SPAN>district of
Papremis, but in no other part of Egypt.... They roast and boil
... birds and fishes ... excepting those which are preserved for
sacred purposes."<span class="sub">[<SPAN name="fnrex1492" href=
"#ftn.fnrex1492" name="fnrex1492">492</SPAN>]</span> Totemic animals
controlled the destinies of tribes and families. "Grose tells
us", says Brand, "that, besides general notices of death, many
families have particular warnings or notices: some by the
appearance of a bird, and others by the figure of a tall woman,
dressed all in white.... Pennant says that many of the great
families in Scotland had their demon or genius, who gave them
monitions of future events."<span class="sub">[<SPAN name=
"fnrex1493" href="#ftn.fnrex1493" name="fnrex1493">493</SPAN>]</span>
Members of tribes which venerated the pigeon therefore invoked it
like the Egyptian love poet and drew omens from its notes, or saw
one appearing as the soul of the dead like the lover in the
ballad of "The Bloody Gardener". They refrained also from killing
the pigeon except sacrificially, and suffered agonies on a
deathbed which contained pigeon feathers, the "taboo" having been
broken.</p>
<p>Some such explanation is necessary to account for the
specialization of certain goddesses as fish, snake, cat, or bird
deities. Aphrodite, who like Ishtar absorbed the attributes of
several goddesses of fertility and fate, had attached to her the
various animal symbols which were prominent in districts or among
tribes brought into close contact, while the poppy, rose, myrtle,
&c., which were used as love charms, or for making love
potions, were also consecrated to her. Anthropomorphic deities
were decorated with the symbols and flowers of folk religion.</p>
<p>From the comparative evidence accumulated here, it will be
seen that the theory of the mythical Semiramis's Median or
Persian origin is somewhat narrow. It is possible that the dove
was venerated in Cyprus, as it certainly was in Crete, long
centuries before Assyrian and <SPAN name="page.anchor.434" name=
"page.anchor.434"></SPAN>Babylonian influence filtered westward
through Phoenician and Hittite channels. In another connection
Sir Arthur Evans shows that the resemblance between Cretan and
early Semitic beliefs "points rather to some remote common
element, the nature of which is at present obscure, than to any
definite borrowing by one side or another".<span class=
"sub">[<SPAN name="fnrex1494" href="#ftn.fnrex1494" id=
"fnrex1494">494</SPAN>]</span></p>
<p>From the evidence afforded by the Semiramis legends and the
inscriptions of the latter half of the Assyrian Middle Empire
period, it may be inferred that a renascence of "mother worship"
was favoured by the social and political changes which were
taking place. In the first place the influence of Babylon must
have been strongly felt in this connection. The fact that
Adadnirari found it necessary to win the support of the
Babylonians by proclaiming his descent from one of their ancient
royal families, suggests that he was not only concerned about the
attitude assumed by the scholars of the southern kingdom, but
also that of the masses of old Sumerian and Akkadian stocks who
continued to bake cakes to the Queen of Heaven so as to ensure
good harvests. In the second place it is not improbable that even
in Assyria the introduction of Nebo and his spouse made
widespread appeal. That country had become largely peopled by an
alien population; many of these aliens came from districts where
"mother worship" prevailed, and had no traditional respect for
Ashur, while they regarded with hostility the military
aristocracy who conquered and ruled in the name of that dreaded
deity. Perhaps, too, the influence of the Aramaeans, who in
Babylonia wrecked the temples of the sun god, tended to revive
the ancient religion of the Mediterranean race. Jehu's religious
revolt in Israel, which established once again the cult of
Ashtoreth, occurred after he came under <SPAN name="page.anchor.435"
name="page.anchor.435"></SPAN>the sway of Damascus, and may have not
been unconnected with the political ascendancy elsewhere of the
goddess cult.</p>
<p>Nebo, whom Adad-nirari exalted at Kalkhi, was more than a
local god of Borsippa. "The most satisfactory view", says
Jastrow, "is to regard him as a counterpart of Ea. Like Ea, he is
the embodiment and source of wisdom.... The study of the heavens
formed part of the wisdom which is traced back to Nebo, and the
temple school at Borsippa became one of the chief centres for the
astrological, and, subsequently, for the astronomical lore of
Babylonia.... Like Nebo, Ea is also associated with the
irrigation of the fields and with their consequent fertility. A
hymn praises him as the one who fills the canals and the dikes,
who protects the fields and brings the crops to maturity." Nebo
links with Merodach (Marduk), who is sometimes referred to as his
father. Jastrow assumes that the close partnership between Nebo
and Merodach "had as a consequence a transfer of some of the
father Marduk's attributes as a solar deity to Nebo,<span class=
"sub">[<SPAN name="fnrex1495" href="#ftn.fnrex1495" id=
"fnrex1495">495</SPAN>]</span> his son, just as Ea passed his traits
on to his son, Marduk".<span class="sub">[<SPAN name="fnrex1496"
href="#ftn.fnrex1496" name="fnrex1496">496</SPAN>]</span></p>
<p>As the "recorder" or "scribe" among the gods, Nebo resembles
the Egyptian god Thoth, who links with Khonsu, the lunar and
spring sun god of love and fertility, and with Osiris. In
Borsippa he had, like Merodach in Babylon, pronounced Tammuz
traits. Nebo, in fact, appears to be the Tammuz of the new age,
the son of the ancient goddess, who became "Husband of his
Mother". If Nebo had no connection with Great Mother worship, it
is unlikely that his statue would have <SPAN name="page.anchor.436"
name="page.anchor.436"></SPAN>borne an inscription referring to King
Adad-nirari and Queen Sammu-rammat on equal terms. The Assyrian
spouse of Nebo was called Tashmit. This "goddess of supplication
and love" had a lunar significance. A prayer addressed to her in
association with Nannar (Sin) and Ishtar, proceeds:</p>
<blockquote class="blockquote">
<tt>In the evil of the eclipse of the moon
which ... has taken place,</tt>
<tt>In the evil of the powers, of the
portents, evil and not good, which are in my palace and my
land,</tt>
<tt>(I) have turned towards
thee!...</tt>
<tt>Before Nabu (Nebo) thy spouse, thy
lord, the prince, the first-born of E-sagila, intercede for
me!</tt>
<tt>May he hearken to my cry at the word of
thy mouth; may he remove my sighing, may he learn my
supplication!</tt></blockquote><p>Damkina is similarly addressed in another prayer:</p>
<blockquote class="blockquote">
<tt>O Damkina, mighty queen of all the
gods,</tt>
<tt>O wife of Ea, valiant art
thou,</tt>
<tt>O Ir-nina, mighty queen of all the gods
...</tt>
<tt>Thou that dwellest in the Abyss, O lady
of heaven and earth!...</tt>
<tt>In the evil of the eclipse of the moon,
etc.</tt></blockquote><p>Bau is also prayed in a similar connection as "mighty lady
that dwellest in the bright heavens", i.e. "Queen of
heaven".<span class="sub">[<SPAN name="fnrex1497" href=
"#ftn.fnrex1497" name="fnrex1497">497</SPAN>]</span></p>
<p>Tashmit, whose name signifies "Obedience", according to
Jastrow, or "Hearing", according to Sayce, carried the prayers of
worshippers to Nebo, her spouse. As Isis interceded with Osiris,
she interceded with Nebo, on behalf of mankind. But this did not
signify that she was the least influential of the divine pair. A
goddess played many parts: she was at once mother, daughter, and
wife of the god; the servant of one god or the "mighty queen of
all the gods". The Great Mother <SPAN name="page.anchor.437" name=
"page.anchor.437"></SPAN>was, as has been indicated, regarded as the
eternal and undecaying one; the gods passed away, son succeeding
father; she alone remained. Thus, too, did Semiramis survive in
the popular memory, as the queen-goddess of widespread legends,
after kings and gods had been forgotten. To her was ascribed all
the mighty works of other days in the lands where the indigenous
peoples first worshipped the Great Mother as Damkina, Nina, Bau,
Ishtar, or Tashmit, because the goddess was anciently believed to
be the First Cause, the creatrix, the mighty one who invested the
ruling god with the powers he possessed--the god who held sway
because he was her husband, as did Nergal as the husband of
Eresh-ki-gal, queen of Hades.</p>
<p>The multiplication of well-defined goddesses was partly due to
the tendency to symbolize the attributes of the Great Mother, and
partly due to the development of the great "Lady" in a particular
district where she reflected local phenomena and where the
political influence achieved by her worshippers emphasized her
greatness. Legends regarding a famous goddess were in time
attached to other goddesses, and in Aphrodite and Derceto we
appear to have mother deities who absorbed the traditions of more
than one local "lady" of river and plain, forest and mountain.
Semiramis, on the other hand, survived as a link between the old
world and the new, between the country from which emanated the
stream of ancient culture and the regions which received it. As
the high priestess of the cult, she became identified with the
goddess whose bird name she bore, as Gilgamesh and Etana became
identified with the primitive culture-hero or patriarch of the
ancient Sumerians, and Sargon became identified with Tammuz. No
doubt the fame of Semiramis was specially emphasized because of
her close association, as Queen <SPAN name="page.anchor.438" name=
"page.anchor.438"></SPAN>Sammu-rammat, with the religious
innovations which disturbed the land of the god Ashur during the
Middle Empire period.</p>
<p>Adad-nirari IV, the son or husband of Sammu-rammat, was a
vigorous and successful campaigner. He was the Assyrian king who
became the "saviour" of Israel. Although it is not possible to
give a detailed account of his various expeditions, we find from
the list of these which survives in the Eponym Chronicle that he
included in the Assyrian Empire a larger extent of territory than
any of his predecessors. In the north-east he overcame the Median
and other tribes, and acquired a large portion of the Iranian
plateau; he compelled Edom to pay tribute, and established his
hold in Babylonia by restricting the power of the Chaldaeans in
Sealand. In the north he swayed--at least, so he claimed--the
wide domains of the Nairi people. He also confirmed his supremacy
over the Hittites.</p>
<p>The Aramaean state of Damascus, which had withstood the attack
of the great Shalmaneser and afterwards oppressed, as we have
seen, the kingdoms of Israel and Judah, was completely
overpowered by Adad-nirari. The old king, Hazael, died when
Assyria's power was being strengthened and increased along his
frontiers. He was succeeded by his son Mari, who is believed to
be identical with the Biblical Ben-Hadad III.<span class=
"sub">[<SPAN name="fnrex1498" href="#ftn.fnrex1498" id=
"fnrex1498">498</SPAN>]</span></p>
<p>Shortly after this new monarch came to the throne, Adad-nirari
IV led a great army against him. The Syrian ruler appears to have
been taken by surprise; probably his kingdom was suffering from
the three defeats which had been previously administered by the
revolting Israelites.<span class="sub">[<SPAN name="fnrex1499" href=
"#ftn.fnrex1499" name="fnrex1499">499</SPAN>]</span> At any rate Mari
was unable to gather together an army of allies to resist the
Assyrian advance, and took <SPAN name="page.anchor.439" name=
"page.anchor.439"></SPAN>refuge behind the walls of Damascus. This
strongly fortified city was closely invested, and Mari had at
length to submit and acknowledge Adad-nirari as his overlord. The
price of peace included 23,000 talents of silver, 20 of gold,
3000 of copper, and 5000 of iron, as well as ivory ornaments and
furniture, embroidered materials, and other goods "to a countless
amount". Thus "the Lord gave Israel a saviour, so that they went
out from under the hand of the Syrians: and the children of
Israel dwelt in their tents, as beforetime". This significant
reference to the conquest of Damascus by the Assyrian king is
followed by another which throws light on the religious phenomena
of the period: "Nevertheless they departed not from the sins of
the house of Jeroboam, who made Israel sin, but walked therein:
and there remained the grove also in Samaria".<span class=
"sub">[<SPAN name="fnrex1500" href="#ftn.fnrex1500" id=
"fnrex1500">500</SPAN>]</span> Ashtoreth and her golden calf
continued to be venerated, and doves were sacrificed to the local
Adonis.</p>
<p>It is not certain whether Adad-nirari penetrated farther than
Damascus. Possibly all the states which owed allegiance to the
king of that city became at once the willing vassals of Assyria,
their protector. The tribute received by Adad-nirari from Tyre,
Sidon, the land of Omri (Israel), Edom, and Palastu (Philistia)
may have been gifted as a formal acknowledgment of his suzerainty
and with purpose to bring them directly under Assyrian control,
so that Damascus might be prevented from taking vengeance against
them.</p>
<p>Meagre details survive regarding the reign of the next king,
Shalmaneser IV (781-772 B.C). These are, however, supplemented by
the Urartian inscriptions. Although Adad-nirari boasted that he
had subdued the kingdom of Urartu in the north, he appears to
have <SPAN name="page.anchor.440" name="page.anchor.440"></SPAN>done no
more than limit its southern expansion for a time.</p>
<p>The Urarti were, like the Mitanni, a military
aristocracy<span class="sub">[<SPAN name="fnrex1501" href=
"#ftn.fnrex1501" name="fnrex1501">501</SPAN>]</span> who welded
together by conquest the tribes of the eastern and northern
Highlands which several Assyrian monarchs included in their
Empire. They acquired the elements of Assyrian culture, and used
the Assyrian script for their own language. Their god was named
Khaldis, and they called their nation Khaldia. During the reign
of Ashur-natsir-pal their area of control was confined to the
banks of the river Araxes, but it was gradually extended under a
succession of vigorous kings towards the south-west until they
became supreme round the shores of Lake Van. Three of their early
kings were Lutipris, Sharduris I, and Arame.</p>
<p>During the reign of Shamshi-Adad the Assyrians came into
conflict with the Urarti, who were governed at the time by
"Ushpina of Nairi" (Ishpuinis, son of Sharduris II). The Urartian
kingdom had extended rapidly and bordered on Assyrian territory.
To the west were the tribes known as the Mannai, the northern
enemies of the Medes, a people of Indo-European speech.</p>
<p>When Adad-nirari IV waged war against the Urarti, their king
was Menuas, the son of Ishpuinis. Menuas was a great war-lord,
and was able to measure his strength against Assyria on equal
terms. He had nearly doubled by conquest the area controlled by
his predecessors. Adad-nirari endeavoured to drive his rival
northward, but all along the Assyrian frontier from the Euphrates
to the Lower Zab, Menuas forced the outposts of Adad-nirari to
retreat southward. The Assyrians, in short, were unable to hold
their own.</p>
<p><SPAN name="page.anchor.441" name="page.anchor.441"></SPAN>Having
extended his kingdom towards the south, Menuas invaded Hittite
territory, subdued Malatia and compelled its king to pay tribute.
He also conquered the Mannai and other tribes. Towards the north
and north-west he added a considerable area to his kingdom, which
became as large as Assyria.</p>
<p>Menuas's capital was the city of Turushpa or Dhuspas (Van),
which was called Khaldinas<span class="sub">[<SPAN name="fnrex1502"
href="#ftn.fnrex1502" name="fnrex1502">502</SPAN>]</span> after the
national god. For a century it was the seat of Urartian
administration. The buildings erected there by Menuas and his
successors became associated in after-time with the traditions of
Semiramis, who, as Queen Sammu-rammat of Assyria, was a
contemporary of the great Urartian conqueror. Similarly a
sculptured representation of the Hittite god was referred to by
Herodotus as a memorial of the Egyptian king Sesostris.</p>
<p>The strongest fortification at Dhuspas was the citadel, which
was erected on a rocky promontory jutting into Lake Van. A small
garrison could there resist a prolonged siege. The water supply
of the city was assured by the construction of subterranean
aqueducts. Menuas erected a magnificent palace, which rivalled
that of the Assyrian monarch at Kalkhi, and furnished it with the
rich booty brought back from victorious campaigns. He was a lover
of trees and planted many, and he laid out gardens which bloomed
with brilliant Asian flowers. The palace commanded a noble
prospect of hill and valley scenery on the south-western shore of
beautiful Lake Van.</p>
<p>Menuas was succeeded by his son Argistis, who ascended the
throne during the lifetime of Adad-nirari of Assyria. During the
early part of his reign he conducted military expeditions to the
north beyond the river <SPAN name="page.anchor.442" name=
"page.anchor.442"></SPAN>Araxes. He afterwards came into conflict
with Assyria, and acquired more territory on its northern
frontier. He also subdued the Mannai, who had risen in
revolt.</p>
<p>For three years (781-778 B.C.) the general of Shalmaneser IV
waged war constantly with Urartu, and again in 776 B.C. and 774
B.C. attempts were made to prevent the southern expansion of that
Power. On more than one occasion the Assyrians were defeated and
compelled to retreat.</p>
<p>Assyria suffered serious loss of prestige on account of its
inability to hold in check its northern rival. Damascus rose in
revolt and had to be subdued, and northern Syria was greatly
disturbed. Hadrach was visited in the last year of the king's
reign.</p>
<p>Ashur-dan III (771-763 B.C.) occupied the Assyrian throne
during a period of great unrest. He was unable to attack Urartu.
His army had to operate instead on his eastern and southern
frontiers. A great plague broke out in 765 B.C., the year in
which Hadrach had again to be dealt with. On June 15, 763 B.C.,
there was a total eclipse of the sun, and that dread event was
followed by a revolt at Asshur which was no doubt of priestly
origin. The king's son Adad-nirari was involved in it, but it is
not certain whether or not he displaced his father for a time. In
758 B.C. Ashur-dan again showed signs of activity by endeavouring
to suppress the revolts which during the period of civil war had
broken out in Syria.</p>
<p>Adad-nirari V came to the throne in 763 B.C. He had to deal
with revolts in Asshur in other cities. Indeed for the greater
part of his reign he seems to have been kept fully engaged
endeavouring to establish his authority within the Assyrian
borders. The Syrian provinces regained their independence.</p>
<p>During the first four years of his successor Ashurnirari
<SPAN name="page.anchor.443" name="page.anchor.443"></SPAN>IV (753-746
B.C.) the army never left Assyria. Namri was visited in 749-748
B.C., but it is not certain whether he fought against the
Urartians, or the Aramaeans who had become active during this
period of Assyrian decline. In 746 B.C. a revolt broke out in the
city of Kalkhi and the king had to leave it. Soon afterwards he
died--perhaps he was assassinated--and none of his sons came to
the throne. A year previously Nabu-natsir, known to the Greeks as
Nabonassar, was crowned king of Babylonia.</p>
<p>Ashur-nirari IV appears to have been a monarch of somewhat
like character to the famous Akhenaton of Egypt--an idealist for
whom war had no attractions. He kept his army at home while his
foreign possessions rose in revolt one after another. Apparently
he had dreams of guarding Assyria against attack by means of
treaties of peace. He arranged one with a Mesopotamian king,
Mati-ilu of Agusi, who pledged himself not to go to war without
the consent of his Assyrian overlord, and it is possible that
there were other documents of like character which have not
survived to us. During his leisure hours the king engaged himself
in studious pursuits and made additions to the royal library. In
the end his disappointed soldiers found a worthy leader in one of
its generals who seized the throne and assumed the royal name of
Tiglath-pileser.</p>
<p>Ashur-nirari IV was the last king of the Middle Empire of
Assyria. He may have been a man of high character and refinement
and worthy of our esteem, although an unsuitable ruler for a
predatory State.</p>
<br/>
<hr width="100" align="left" />
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex1464" href="#fnrex1464" id=
"ftn.fnrex1464">464</SPAN>]</span> <span class="emphasis"><em>The
Land of the Hittites</em></span>, J. Garstang, p. 354.
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex1465" href="#fnrex1465" id=
"ftn.fnrex1465">465</SPAN>]</span> <span class="emphasis"><em>The
Old Testament in the Light of the Historical Records and Legends
of Assyria and Babylonia,</em></span> T.G. Pinches, p. 343.
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex1466" href="#fnrex1466" id=
"ftn.fnrex1466">466</SPAN>]</span> <span class="emphasis"><em>Nat.
Hist</em></span>., v, 19 and <span class=
"emphasis"><em>Strabo</em></span> xvi, 1-27.
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex1467" href="#fnrex1467" id=
"ftn.fnrex1467">467</SPAN>]</span> <span class="emphasis"><em>The
Mahabharata</em></span>: <span class="emphasis"><em>Adi
Parva</em></span>, sections lxxi and lxxii (Roy's translation,
pp. 213 216, and <span class="emphasis"><em>Indian Myth and
Legend</em></span>, pp. 157 <span class="emphasis"><em>et
seq</em></span>.
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex1468" href="#fnrex1468" id=
"ftn.fnrex1468">468</SPAN>]</span> That is, without ceremony but
with consent.
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex1469" href="#fnrex1469" id=
"ftn.fnrex1469">469</SPAN>]</span> <span class="emphasis"><em>The
Golden Bough</em></span> (<span class="emphasis"><em>The
Scapegoat</em></span>), pp. 369 <span class="emphasis"><em>et
seq.</em></span>, (3rd edition). Perhaps the mythic Semiramis and
legends connected were in existence long before the historic
Sammu-rammat, though the two got mixed up.
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex1470" href="#fnrex1470" id=
"ftn.fnrex1470">470</SPAN>]</span> <span class=
"emphasis"><em>Herodotus</em></span>, i, 184.
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex1471" href="#fnrex1471" id=
"ftn.fnrex1471">471</SPAN>]</span> <span class="emphasis"><em>De dea
Syria</em></span>, 9-14.
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex1472" href="#fnrex1472" id=
"ftn.fnrex1472">472</SPAN>]</span> <span class=
"emphasis"><em>Strabo</em></span>, xvi, 1, 2.
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex1473" href="#fnrex1473" id=
"ftn.fnrex1473">473</SPAN>]</span> <span class=
"emphasis"><em>Diodorus Siculus</em></span>, ii, 3.
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex1474" href="#fnrex1474" id=
"ftn.fnrex1474">474</SPAN>]</span> <span class=
"emphasis"><em>Herodotus</em></span>, i, 105.
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex1475" href="#fnrex1475" id=
"ftn.fnrex1475">475</SPAN>]</span> <span class=
"emphasis"><em>Diodorus Siculus</em></span>, ii, 4.
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex1476" href="#fnrex1476" id=
"ftn.fnrex1476">476</SPAN>]</span> <span class="emphasis"><em>De dea
Syria</em></span>, 14.
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex1477" href="#fnrex1477" id=
"ftn.fnrex1477">477</SPAN>]</span> This little bird allied to the
woodpecker twists its neck strangely when alarmed. It may have
symbolized the coquettishness of fair maidens. As love goddesses
were "Fates", however, the wryneck may have been connected with
the belief that the perpetrator of a murder, or a death spell,
could be detected when he approached his victim's corpse. If
there was no wound to "bleed afresh", the "death thraw" (the
contortions of death) might indicate who the criminal was. In a
Scottish ballad regarding a lady, who was murdered by her lover,
the verse occurs:
<blockquote class="blockquote">
<tt>'Twas in the middle o' the
night</tt>
<tt> The cock began to craw;</tt>
<tt>And at the middle o' the
night</tt>
<tt> The corpse began to thraw.</tt></blockquote>
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex1478" href="#fnrex1478" id=
"ftn.fnrex1478">478</SPAN>]</span> Langdon's <span class=
"emphasis"><em>Sumerian and Babylonian Psalms</em></span>, pp.
133, 135.
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex1479" href="#fnrex1479" id=
"ftn.fnrex1479">479</SPAN>]</span> Introduction to Lane's
<span class="emphasis"><em>Manners and Customs of the Modern
Egyptians.</em></span>
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex1480" href="#fnrex1480" id=
"ftn.fnrex1480">480</SPAN>]</span> Tammuz is referred to in a
Sumerian psalm as "him of the dovelike voice, yea, dovelike". He
may have had a dove form. Angus, the Celtic god of spring, love,
and fertility, had a swan form; he also had his seasonal period
of sleep like Tammuz.
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex1481" href="#fnrex1481" id=
"ftn.fnrex1481">481</SPAN>]</span> Campbell's <span class=
"emphasis"><em>Superstitions of the Scottish
Highlands</em></span>, p. 288.
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex1482" href="#fnrex1482" id=
"ftn.fnrex1482">482</SPAN>]</span> <span class="emphasis"><em>Indian
Myth and Legend</em></span>, p. 95.
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex1483" href="#fnrex1483" id=
"ftn.fnrex1483">483</SPAN>]</span> <span class=
"emphasis"><em>Ibid</em></span>., pp. 329-30.
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex1484" href="#fnrex1484" id=
"ftn.fnrex1484">484</SPAN>]</span> <span class="emphasis"><em>Crete,
the Forerunner of Greece</em></span>, C.H. and H.B. Hawes, p.
139
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex1485" href="#fnrex1485" id=
"ftn.fnrex1485">485</SPAN>]</span> <span class="emphasis"><em>The
Discoveries in Crete</em></span>, pp. 137-8.
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex1486" href="#fnrex1486" id=
"ftn.fnrex1486">486</SPAN>]</span> <span class=
"emphasis"><em>Religion of the Semites</em></span>, p. 294.
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex1487" href="#fnrex1487" id=
"ftn.fnrex1487">487</SPAN>]</span> <span class=
"emphasis"><em>Egyptian Myth and Legend</em></span>, p. 59.
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex1488" href="#fnrex1488" id=
"ftn.fnrex1488">488</SPAN>]</span> Including the goose, one of the
forms of the harvest goddess.
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex1489" href="#fnrex1489" id=
"ftn.fnrex1489">489</SPAN>]</span> <span class=
"emphasis"><em>Brand's Popular Antiquities</em></span>, vol. ii,
230-1 and vol. iii, 232 (1899 ed.).
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex1490" href="#fnrex1490" id=
"ftn.fnrex1490">490</SPAN>]</span> <span class=
"emphasis"><em>Ibid</em></span>., vol. iii, 217. The myrtle was
used for love charms.
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex1491" href="#fnrex1491" id=
"ftn.fnrex1491">491</SPAN>]</span> <span class="emphasis"><em>The
Golden Bough</em></span> (<span class="emphasis"><em>Spirits of
the Corn and of the Wild</em></span>), vol. ii, p. 293 (3rd
ed.).
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex1492" href="#fnrex1492" id=
"ftn.fnrex1492">492</SPAN>]</span> <span class=
"emphasis"><em>Herodotus</em></span>, ii, 69, 71, and 77.
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex1493" href="#fnrex1493" id=
"ftn.fnrex1493">493</SPAN>]</span> <span class=
"emphasis"><em>Brand's Popular Antiquities</em></span>, vol. iii,
p. 227.
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex1494" href="#fnrex1494" id=
"ftn.fnrex1494">494</SPAN>]</span> Cited by Professor Burrows in
<span class="emphasis"><em>The Discoveries in Crete</em></span>,
p. 134.
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex1495" href="#fnrex1495" id=
"ftn.fnrex1495">495</SPAN>]</span> Like the Egyptian Horus, Nebo had
many phases: he was connected with the sun and moon, the planet
Mercury, water and crops; he was young and yet old--a mystical
god.
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex1496" href="#fnrex1496" id=
"ftn.fnrex1496">496</SPAN>]</span> <span class=
"emphasis"><em>Aspects of Religious Belief and Practice in
Babylonia and Assyria</em></span>, pp. 94 <span class=
"emphasis"><em>et seq.</em></span>
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex1497" href="#fnrex1497" id=
"ftn.fnrex1497">497</SPAN>]</span> <span class=
"emphasis"><em>Babylonian Magic and Sorcery</em></span>, L.W.
King, pp. 6-7 and 26-7.
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex1498" href="#fnrex1498" id=
"ftn.fnrex1498">498</SPAN>]</span> <span class="emphasis"><em>2
Kings</em></span>, xiii, 3.
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex1499" href="#fnrex1499" id=
"ftn.fnrex1499">499</SPAN>]</span> <span class="emphasis"><em>2
Kings</em></span>, xiii, 14-25.
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex1500" href="#fnrex1500" id=
"ftn.fnrex1500">500</SPAN>]</span> <span class="emphasis"><em>3
Kings</em></span>, xiii, 5, 6.
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex1501" href="#fnrex1501" id=
"ftn.fnrex1501">501</SPAN>]</span> The masses of the Urartian folk
appear to have been of Hatti stock--"broad heads", like their
descendants, the modern Armenians.
<span class="footnote">[<SPAN name=
"ftn.fnrex1502" href="#fnrex1502" id=
"ftn.fnrex1502">502</SPAN>]</span> It is uncertain whether this city
or Kullani in north Syria it the Biblical Calno. <span class=
"emphasis"><em>Isaiah</em></span>, x, 9.
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />