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The Babylonian World - Historia Antigua

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— Introduction —<br />

who, at different periods of history, were committing the narrative to writing. David<br />

Brown’s account of <strong>Babylonian</strong> astronomy charts the development of this ‘very<br />

<strong>Babylonian</strong>’ discipline from the second millennium onwards. <strong>The</strong> careful observation<br />

of stellar phenomena and the meticulous record keeping over centuries, together with<br />

advances in mathematical computation, resulted in astonishingly exact predictions.<br />

Brown argues that this shows the methodology and intellectual aim of a true science<br />

whose real scope and significance is only beginning to be understood.<br />

Many of the astrologers and astronomers are known to us by name and they formed<br />

the apex of <strong>Babylonian</strong> intelligentsia, the subject of Paul-Alain Beaulieu’s article. He<br />

looks at the late periods of Mesopotamian civilization, a time when all the powerful<br />

empires had long ceased to exist. Some of the temples of the ancient gods continued<br />

to operate and they provided a base for scholarly activity which, as Beaulieu shows,<br />

always had a theological grounding.<br />

Finally, Part VII sets the <strong>Babylonian</strong> world within the historical context of the<br />

Ancient Near East. David Warburton takes on the other great civilization of antiquity,<br />

Egypt, and charts the interconnections between the two, practically non-existent in<br />

the beginning, to direct military confrontation in the first millennium. He also<br />

provides a detailed account of the complex rivalries between the major and minor<br />

states in the mid-second millennium, which is so vividly illuminated by the cuneiform<br />

tablets found at Amarna in Egypt. Trevor Bryce, metaphorically speaking from the<br />

Hittite capital Hattusa, covers some similar historical ground, but both writers also<br />

consider the relationship in terms of ideas, technologies and mutual influence. Petrus<br />

Vermaak introduces the notion of ‘gateways’ to understand the complicated and<br />

shifting politics in the Levant and Syria which impacted on Kassite Babylonia despite<br />

the policies of containment deployed by Kassite rulers. Assyria was always much<br />

closer and Babylonia’s fate was, for centuries, directly affected by Assyria’s ambition<br />

to be the most powerful state in the Near East, as Hannes Galter documents. Israel,<br />

by contrast, was never a major adversary as far as the <strong>Babylonian</strong>s were concerned<br />

but the Hebrew writers conveyed their situation most memorably, as demonstrated<br />

by Baruch Levine. Amélie Kuhrt straddles the camp between Assyriology and<br />

Achaemenid studies and draws on sources from both cultures, as well as classical<br />

authors to provide an account of how <strong>Babylonian</strong> fared under Persian rule.<br />

We have seen how scholars of today respond with diligence and acumen to the efforts<br />

of their colleagues in antiquity to keep their memory alive. Of all the peoples of the<br />

ancient world, the <strong>Babylonian</strong>s were by far the most insistent on addressing an<br />

audience beyond their time. <strong>The</strong> future king, coming across their tablets in the sand,<br />

is told to read them carefully and treat them with respect lest their gods avenge<br />

neglect with dreadful curses. This desire finds an echo in our time, however foolishly<br />

our ‘kings’ decry the end of history and wreak havoc among ‘the cities of the Euphrates’.<br />

9

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