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The Babylonian World - Historia Antigua

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— <strong>The</strong> Old <strong>Babylonian</strong> economy —<br />

the governor of Eshnunna, Shu-ilija, declared himself independent and founded a<br />

local dynasty.<br />

At the beginning of the nineteenth century BC, written documentation suddenly<br />

appears in several northern <strong>Babylonian</strong> towns, each referring to its own Amorite petty<br />

ruler (Charpin’s (2003) ‘second Amorite wave’). After only about two decades, the<br />

northern <strong>Babylonian</strong> petty kingdoms were incorporated in the expansive kingdom of<br />

Sumu-la-el of Babylon (ca. 1880–1845), who introduced concepts and institutions<br />

that were to shape the economy of the following centuries, such as the royal edicts,<br />

the ilkum duties, and the engagement of entrepreneurs to manage royal assets.<br />

During the rest of the nineteenth century, Babylonia was one of the political major<br />

powers of Syro-Mesopotamia, entertaining diplomatic relations with, and switching<br />

alliances between, its neighbours, Larsa, Eshnunna, Mari, Elam and Upper-<br />

Mesopotamia. International correspondence from this period between the rulers and<br />

their high officials illustrates how the borders of the kingdoms fluctuated and how<br />

coalitions were forged and broken (see Warburton in this volume).<br />

During the latter half of Hammurabi’s reign (ca. 1792–1750), after the disappearance<br />

of the Upper-Mesopotamian empire, he eliminated his rivals, Larsa, Eshnunna and<br />

Mari (all of whom, at a certain point, had been his allies) one after the other. In<br />

Hammurabi’s thirty-second regnal year, the <strong>Babylonian</strong> empire stretched from the<br />

Persian Gulf to Mari in the West, Assur in the North and Eshnunna in the East.<br />

However, in his eighth regnal year, Hammurabi’s son Samsuiluna had already lost<br />

control over the most southern towns of the empire. After Samsuiluna 11, all written<br />

and archaeological documentation disappears from southern Babylonia for several<br />

centuries. Apparently, a large part of the population fled to northern <strong>Babylonian</strong><br />

towns, where the cults from Uruk and Lagash were reinstalled in Kish, those from<br />

Larsa and Nippur in Babylon, and the one from Isin in Sippar. <strong>The</strong> cause of this<br />

collapse must at least partly be sought in environmental factors.<br />

In the course of his reign, Samsuiluna’s territory further shrank with the loss of<br />

northern Sumer (the region of Nippur and Isin) in his thirtieth year and the varying<br />

attachment of Eshnunna to the <strong>Babylonian</strong> kingdom, which was lost definitively in<br />

his thirty-fifth year. <strong>The</strong> political and territorial history of the ‘late Old <strong>Babylonian</strong>’<br />

rulers during the subsequent century is not well known. <strong>The</strong>ir year-names refer to<br />

votive donations rather than to military achievements and the royal correspondence<br />

concerns internal and mainly economic affairs. However, the economic texts pertaining<br />

to the royal assets hardly ever refer to assets or income from outside northern Babylonia.<br />

<strong>The</strong>refore, the Old <strong>Babylonian</strong> kingdom seems to have shrunk back to its old borders,<br />

which had been more or less stable for about a century already between the reigns<br />

of Sumu-la-el and Hammurabi.<br />

<strong>The</strong> final collapse of the Old <strong>Babylonian</strong> kingdom must be attributed to a Hittite<br />

invasion. However, an increasing social and economic weakness can be observed during<br />

the thirty-year-long reign of Samsuditana, the last king of the first dynasty of Babylon.<br />

First, there was a drastic decline in the number of texts under his reign. More precisely,<br />

only very few archives continue after the accession of Samsuditana. In a study of the<br />

collapse of the Old <strong>Babylonian</strong> kingdom (Richardson 2002), the decline has been<br />

situated in the newly founded garrison towns. Many of the inhabitants of these towns<br />

were of foreign origin, mainly Kassites, who had invaded northern Babylonia in several<br />

203

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