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The Babylonian World - Historia Antigua

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— Trevor Bryce —<br />

Figure 35.1 <strong>The</strong> restored ramparts of the Hittite capital Hattusa.<br />

(German Institute of Archaeology, Bogazköy-Hattusa Excavations.)<br />

over conquered territory which lay so far to the south-east of his own homeland.<br />

Particularly in this early period of their history, the Hittites had neither the resources<br />

nor the administrative machinery necessary to fulfil such a prospect. We can only<br />

assume that, flushed with his success against Aleppo, Mursili sought both to enhance<br />

his own reputation as a great warlord, and to provide even greater material rewards<br />

for his troops and his kingdom’s royal coffers by despoiling and destroying what had<br />

been one of the greatest and wealthiest cities of the Near Eastern world.<br />

Perhaps he had a strategic motive as well. One of the most serious menaces<br />

confronting his kingdom came from the Hurrian peoples who had spread through<br />

much of northern Mesopotamia and northern Syria, and from there westwards into<br />

Anatolia. <strong>The</strong>y had already threatened the Hittite homeland in the reign of Mursili’s<br />

grandfather Hattusili. And on their homeward trek after their conquest of Babylon,<br />

Mursili’s troops were harassed by Hurrian forces. It has been suggested that Mursili<br />

made some form of agreement with the Kassites, who were to fill the political vacuum<br />

in Babylonia left by the overthrow of Hammurabi’s dynasty by creating a new ruling<br />

dynasty there. Perhaps, the suggestion goes, the Kassites had done a deal with Mursili,<br />

promising him a share of the spoils of Babylon, and possibly also a Kassite alliance<br />

to offset the ever-present threat of Hurrian political and military expansion, both in<br />

Syria and Anatolia (see Gurney 1973: 250). This is a very speculative line of reasoning,<br />

and probably assumes too high a degree of sophistication in the field of international<br />

504

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