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The Babylonian World - Historia Antigua

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— David A. Warburton —<br />

contrast, was based on discourse and communication: even the imagery was intended<br />

to convey easily understandable messages. <strong>The</strong> result is that very few traces of Egyptian<br />

thought ever penetrated into other systems of thought whereas traces of <strong>Babylonian</strong><br />

astronomy survived in Greek science and traces of <strong>Babylonian</strong> myth survived in the<br />

Christian religion (to mention but two examples).<br />

<strong>The</strong> boundaries of ancient Egypt were not effective at keeping others out (as demonstrated<br />

by the invasions of the Hyksos, the Sea Peoples, the Libyans, the Nubians,<br />

the Assyrians, the Persians, the Greeks, the Romans, and the Arabs), but they were<br />

effective at providing an incubation chamber in which ideas could be nurtured.<br />

However, those ideas were not destined for a long life once they slipped across the<br />

borders – even if the visual forms remained attractive, the Egyptian content was<br />

usually lost.<br />

<strong>The</strong> frailty of the unprotected Egyptian ideas must be set beside the resilience of<br />

<strong>Babylonian</strong> thought, and placed in the context of the political environments in which<br />

these flourished. Nor indeed, however, can the frailty of the <strong>Babylonian</strong> temples be<br />

compared with the durability of the Egyptian tombs. <strong>The</strong> power and durability of<br />

the Egyptian empire differed fundamentally in every way from the power and durability<br />

of the Mesopotamian kingdoms.<br />

CONCLUSIONS:<br />

HISTORICAL AND ANALYTICAL<br />

During the Bronze Age several empires shared the stage and none succeeded in the<br />

type of hegemony that characterised the enormous empires of the Iron Age. During<br />

the Bronze Age, Egypt may have been unsuccessful in a policy of expansion in Western<br />

Asia, but it was the greatest power, and Egyptian activity had an influence throughout<br />

the Near East. During the Iron Age, by contrast, Egypt was a marginal entity, and<br />

the Egyptians were largely reduced to reacting to the movements of others. For<br />

Babylon this meant that in the Bronze Age there was little direct activity linking<br />

the two powers, while the direct contact between Egypt and Babylonia in the Iron<br />

Age was almost peripheral for both.<br />

Until the collapse of the Indus Civilisation in the east, Elam had been exposed to<br />

a threat on its eastern flank as well as the Mesopotamian threat on its western flank.<br />

With Assyria weakened and the Indus gone, the Elamites posed a threat to Babylon,<br />

and thus diminished any potential <strong>Babylonian</strong> threat to the Hittites. <strong>The</strong>refore,<br />

although there was no direct connection between Hatti and Elam, Elamite activity<br />

did have an influence on Babylonia activity vis-à-vis Mitanni and Assyria.<br />

Certainly, there can be no doubt about the fate of Babylon, which was sacked by<br />

the Elamites shortly after Hatti was eliminated: the Elamite sack of Babylon coincided<br />

with the period of Assyrian weakness that preceded the expansion under Tukulti-<br />

Ninurta I towards the west. Evidently, the forces that eliminated Babylon will have<br />

freed the Assyrians to move towards the coast. With the Assyrians occupied at the<br />

Mediterranean, the <strong>Babylonian</strong> renaissance was thus initiated with the conquest of<br />

Elam. This era also coincided with the debut of a millennium of conflict during<br />

which the Assyrians would repeatedly destroy Babylon.<br />

Although the Mycenean states at Ephesus and Miletus were less important to the<br />

other major states of the Near East, they were decisive for the kings of Hatti, and<br />

500

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