THE CONQUEST OF BABYLON.
B.C. 544-538
Babylon--The River Euphrates--Canals--Curious
boats--Their mode of construction--Primitive
navigation--Return of the boatmen--Extent
of Babylon--Parks, gardens, palaces, etc--The
walls of Babylon--Marvelous accounts--The
ditches--Streets and gates--Palace
of the king--Temple of Belus--The
bridge--Sculptures--The hanging
gardens--Construction of the gardens--The
platform and terraces--Engine for raising
water--Floral beauties--The works
of Nitocris--Her canals and levees--The
bridge over the Euphrates--The tomb of
the queen--Cyrus plans an attack upon Babylon--Government
of Lydia--Cyrus returns eastward--Revolt
of the Lydians--Detachment of Mazares--Flight
of Pactyas--Pactyas at Cyme--The
people consult the oracle--Reply of the
oracle--Aristodicus and the birds’
nests--Capture of Pactyas--Situation
of Belshazzar--Belshazzar’s feeling
of security--Approach of Cyrus--Cyrus
draws off the water from the river--The
city captured.
In his advance toward the dominions
of Croesus in Asia Minor, Cyrus had passed to the
northward of the great and celebrated city of Babylon.
Babylon was on the Euphrates, toward the southern part
of Asia. It was the capital of a large and very
fertile region, which extended on both sides of the
Euphrates toward the Persian Gulf. The limits
of the country, however, which was subject to Babylon,
varied very much at different times, as they were
extended or contracted by revolutions and wars.
The River Euphrates was the great
source of fertility for the whole region through which
it flowed. The country watered by this river was
very densely populated, and the inhabitants were industrious
and peaceable, cultivating their land, and living
quietly and happily on its fruits. The surface
was intersected with canals, which the people had
made for conveying the water of the river over the
land for the purpose of irrigating it. Some of
these canals were navigable. There was one great
trunk which passed from the Euphrates to the Tigris,
supplying many minor canals by the way, that was navigable
for vessels of considerable burden.
The traffic of the country was, however,
mainly conducted by means of boats of moderate size,
the construction of which seemed to Herodotus very
curious and remarkable. The city was enormously
large, and required immense supplies of food, which
were brought down in these boats from the agricultural
country above. The boats were made in the following
manner: first a frame was built, of the shape
of the intended boat, broad and shallow, and with
the stem and stern of the same form. This frame
was made of willows, like a basket, and, when finished,
was covered with a sheathing of skins. A layer
of reeds was then spread over the bottom of the boat
to protect the frame, and to distribute evenly the
pressure of the cargo. The boat, thus finished,
was laden with the produce of the country, and was
then floated down the river to Babylon. In this
navigation the boatmen were careful to protect the
leather sheathing from injury by avoiding all contact
with rocks, or even with the gravel of the shores.
They kept their craft in the middle of the stream
by means of two oars, or, rather, an oar and a paddle,
which were worked, the first at the bows, and the second
at the stern. The advance of the boat was in
some measure accelerated by these boatmen, though
their main function was to steer their vessel by keeping
it out of eddies and away from projecting points of
land, and directing its course to those parts of the
stream where the current was swiftest, and where it
would consequently be borne forward most rapidly to
its destination.
These boats were generally of very
considerable size, and they carried, in addition to
their cargo and crew, one or more beasts of burden generally
asses or mules. These animals were allowed the
pleasure, if any pleasure it was to them, of sailing
thus idly down the stream, for the sake of having
them at hand at the end of the voyage, to carry back
again, up the country, the skins, which constituted
the most valuable portion of the craft they sailed
in. It was found that these skins, if carefully
preserved, could be easily transported up the river,
and would answer the purpose of a second voyage.
Accordingly, when the boats arrived at Babylon, the
cargo was sold, the boats were broken up, the skins
were folded into packs, and in this form the mules
carried them up the river again, the boatmen driving
the mules as they walked by their side.
Babylon was a city of immense extent
and magnitude. In fact, the accounts given of
the space which it covered have often been considered
incredible. These accounts make the space which
was included within the walls four or five times as
large as London. A great deal of this space was,
however, occupied by parks and gardens connected with
the royal palaces, and by open squares. Then,
besides, the houses occupied by the common people
in the ancient cities were of fewer stories in height,
and consequently more extended on the ground, than
those built in modern times. In fact, it is probable
that, in many instances, they were mere ranges of
huts and hovels, as is the case, indeed, to a considerable
extent, in Oriental cities, at the present day, so
that it is not at all impossible that even so large
an area as four or five times the size of London may
have been included within the fortifications of the
city.
In respect to the walls of the city,
very extraordinary and apparently contradictory accounts
are given by the various ancient authors who described
them. Some make them seventy-five and others two
or three hundred feet high. There have been many
discussions in respect to the comparative credibility
of these several statements, and some ingenious attempts
have been made to reconcile them. It is not,
however, at all surprising that there should be such
a diversity in the dimensions given, for the walling
of an ancient city was seldom of the same height in
all places. The structure necessarily varied
according to the nature of the ground, being high wherever
the ground without was such as to give the enemy an
advantage in an attack, and lower in other situations,
where the conformation of the surface was such as
to afford, of itself, a partial protection. It
is not, perhaps, impossible that, at some particular
points as, for example, across glens and
ravines, or along steep declivities the
walls of Babylon may have been raised even to the
very extraordinary height which Herodotus ascribes
to them.
The walls were made of bricks, and
the bricks were formed of clay and earth, which was
dug from a trench made outside of the lines. This
trench served the purpose of a ditch, to strengthen
the fortification when the wall was completed.
The water from the river, and from streams flowing
toward the river, was admitted to these ditches on
every side, and kept them always full.
The sides of these ditches were lined
with bricks too, which were made, like those of the
walls, from the earth obtained from the excavations.
They used for all this masonry a cement made from a
species of bitumen, which was found in great quantities
floating down one of the rivers which flowed into
the Euphrates, in the neighborhood of Babylon.
The River Euphrates itself flowed
through the city. There was a breast-work or
low wall along the banks of it on either side, with
openings at the terminations of the streets leading
to the water, and flights of steps to go down.
These openings were secured by gates of brass, which,
when closed, would prevent an enemy from gaining access
to the city from the river. The great streets,
which terminated thus at the river on one side, extended
to the walls of the city on the other, and they were
crossed by other streets at right angles to them.
In the outer walls of the city, at the extremities
of all these streets, were massive gates of brass,
with hinges and frames of the same metal. There
were a hundred of these gates in all. They were
guarded by watch-towers on the walls above. The
watch-towers were built on both the inner and outer
faces of the wall, and the wall itself was so broad
that there was room between these watch-towers for
a chariot and four to drive and turn.
The river, of course, divided the
city into two parts. The king’s palace
was in the center of one of these divisions, within
a vast circular inclosure, which contained the palace
buildings, together with the spacious courts, and
parks, and gardens pertaining to them. In the
center of the other division was a corresponding inclosure,
which contained the great temple of Belus. Here
there was a very lofty tower, divided into eight separate
towers, one above another, with a winding staircase
to ascend to the summit. In the upper story was
a sort of chapel, with a couch, and a table, and other
furniture for use in the sacred ceremonies, all of
gold. Above this, on the highest platform of
all, was a grand observatory, where the Babylonian
astrologers made their celestial observations.
There was a bridge across the river,
connecting one section of the city with the other,
and it is said that there was a subterranean passage
under the river also, which was used as a private
communication between two public edifices palaces
or citadels which were situated near the
extremities of the bridge. All these constructions
were of the most grand and imposing character.
In addition to the architectural magnificence of the
buildings, the gates and walls were embellished with
a great variety of sculptures: images of animals,
of every form and in every attitude; and men, single
and in groups, models of great sovereigns, and representations
of hunting scenes, battle scenes, and great events
in the Babylonian history.
The most remarkable, however, of all
the wonders of Babylon though perhaps not
built till after Cyrus’s time were
what were called the hanging gardens. Although
called the hanging gardens, they were not suspended
in any manner, as the name might denote, but were supported
upon arches and walls. The arches and walls sustained
a succession of terraces, rising one above another,
with broad flights of steps for ascending to them,
and on these terraces the gardens were made. The
upper terrace, or platform, was several hundred feet
from the ground; so high, that it was necessary to
build arches upon arches within, in order to attain
the requisite elevation. The lateral thrust of
these arches was sustained by a wall twenty-five feet
in thickness, which surrounded the garden on all sides,
and rose as high as the lowermost tier of arches,
upon which would, of course, be concentrated the pressure
and weight of all the pile. The whole structure
thus formed a sort of artificial hill, square in form,
and rising, in a succession of terraces, to a broad
and level area upon the top. The extent of this
grand square upon the summit was four hundred feet
upon each side.
The surface which served as the foundation
for the gardens that adorned these successive terraces
and the area above was formed in the following manner:
Over the masonry of the arches there was laid a pavement
of broad flat stones, sixteen feet long and four feet
wide. Over these there was placed a stratum of
reeds, laid in bitumen, and above them another flooring
of bricks, cemented closely together, so as to be
impervious to water. To make the security complete
in this respect, the upper surface of this brick flooring
was covered with sheets of lead, overlapping each
other in such a manner as to convey all the water
which might percolate through the mold away to the
sides of the garden. The earth and mold were
placed upon this surface, thus prepared, and the stratum
was so deep as to allow large trees to take root and
grow in it. There was an engine constructed in
the middle of the upper terrace, by which water could
be drawn up from the river, and distributed over every
part of the vast pile.
The gardens, thus completed, were
filled to profusion with every species of tree, and
plant, and vine, which could produce fruit or flowers
to enrich or adorn such a scene. Every country
in communication with Babylon was made to contribute
something to increase the endless variety of floral
beauty which was here literally enthroned. Gardeners
of great experience and skill were constantly employed
in cultivating the parterres, pruning the fruit-trees
and the vines, preserving the walks, and introducing
new varieties of vegetation. In a word, the hanging
gardens of Babylon became one of the wonders of the
world.
The country in the neighborhood of
Babylon, extending from the river on either hand was
in general level and low, and subject to inundations.
One of the sovereigns of the country, a queen named
Nitocris, had formed the grand design of constructing
an immense lake, to take off the superfluous water
in case of a flood, and thus prevent an overflow.
She also opened a great number of lateral and winding
channels for the river, wherever the natural disposition
of the surface afforded facilities for doing so, and
the earth which was taken out in the course of these
excavations was employed in raising the banks by artificial
terraces, such as are made to confine the Mississippi
at New Orleans, and are there called levees.
The object of Nitocris in these measures was two-fold.
She wished, in the first place, to open all practicable
channels for the flow of the water, and then to confine
the current within the channels thus made. She
also wished to make the navigation of the stream as
intricate and complicated as possible, so that, while
the natives of the country might easily find their
way, in boats, to the capital, a foreign enemy, if
he should make the attempt, might be confused and lost.
These were the rivers of Babylon on the banks of which
the captive Jews sat down and wept when they remembered
Zion.
This queen Nitocris seems to have
been quite distinguished for her engineering and architectural
plans. It was she that built the bridge across
the Euphrates, within the city; and as there was a
feeling of jealousy and ill will, as usual in such
a case, between the two divisions of the town which
the river formed, she caused the bridge to be constructed
with a movable platform or draw, by means of which
the communication might be cut off at pleasure.
This draw was generally up at night and down by day.
Herodotus relates a curious anecdote
of this queen, which, if true, evinces in another
way the peculiar originality of mind and the ingenuity
which characterized all her operations. She caused
her tomb to be built, before her death, over one of
the principal gates of the city. Upon the façade
of this monument was a very conspicuous inscription
to this effect: “If any one of the sovereigns,
my successors, shall be in extreme want of money,
let him open my tomb and take what he may think proper;
but let him not resort to this resource unless the
urgency is extreme.”
The tomb remained for some time after
the queen’s death quite undisturbed. In
fact, the people of the city avoided this gate altogether,
on account of the dead body deposited above it, and
the spot became well-nigh deserted. At length,
in process of time, a subsequent sovereign, being
in want of money, ventured to open the tomb.
He found, however, no money within. The gloomy
vault contained nothing but the dead body of the queen,
and a label with this inscription: “If
your avarice were not as insatiable as it is base,
you would not have intruded on the repose of the dead.”
It was not surprising that Cyrus,
having been so successful in his enterprises thus
far, should now begin to turn his thoughts toward
this great Babylonian empire, and to feel a desire
to bring it under his sway. The first thing,
however, was to confirm and secure his Lydian conquests.
He spent some time, therefore, in organizing and arranging,
at Sardis, the affairs of the new government which
he was to substitute for that of Croesus there.
He designated certain portions of his army to be left
for garrisons in the conquered cities. He appointed
Persian officers, of course, to command these forces;
but, as he wished to conciliate the Lydians, he appointed
many of the municipal and civil officers of the country
from among them. There would appear to be no
danger in doing this, as, by giving the command of
the army to Persians, he retained all the real power
directly in his own hands.
One of these civil officers, the most
important, in fact, of all, was the grand treasurer.
To him Cyrus committed the charge of the stores of
gold and silver which came into his possession at Sardis,
and of the revenues which were afterward to accrue.
Cyrus appointed a Lydian named Pactyas to this trust,
hoping by such measures to conciliate the people of
the country, and to make them more ready to submit
to his sway. Things being thus arranged, Cyrus,
taking Croesus with him, set out with the main army
to return toward the East.
As soon as he had left Lydia, Pactyas
excited the Lydians to revolt. The name of the
commander-in-chief of the military forces which Cyrus
had left was Tabalus. Pactyas abandoned the city
and retired toward the coast where he contrived to
raise a large army, formed partly of Lydians and partly
of bodies of foreign troops, which he was enabled
to hire by means of the treasures which Cyrus had put
under his charge. He then advanced to Sardis,
took possession of the town, and shut up Tabalus,
with his Persian troops, in the citadel.
When the tidings of these events came
to Cyrus, he was very much incensed, and determined
to destroy the city. Croesus, however, interceded
very earnestly in its behalf. He recommended that
Cyrus, instead of burning Sardis, should send a sufficient
force to disarm the population, and that he should
then enact such laws and make such arrangements as
should turn the minds of the people to habits of luxury
and pleasure. “By doing this,” said
Croesus, “the people will, in a short time,
become so enervated and so effeminate that you will
have nothing to fear from them.”
Cyrus decided on adopting this plan.
He dispatched a Median named Mazares, an officer of
his army, at the head of a strong force, with orders
to go back to Sardis, to deliver Tabalus from his danger,
to seize and put to death all the leaders in the Lydian
rebellion excepting Pactyas. Pactyas was to be
saved alive, and sent a prisoner to Cyrus in Persia.
Pactyas did not wait for the arrival
of Mazares. As soon as he heard of his approach,
he abandoned the ground, and fled northwardly to the
city of Cyme, and sought refuge there. When Mazares
had reached Sardis and re-established the government
of Cyrus there, he sent messengers to Cyme, demanding
the surrender of the fugitive.
The people of Cyme were uncertain
whether they ought to comply. They said that
they must first consult an oracle. There was a
very ancient and celebrated oracle near Miletus.
They sent messengers to this oracle, demanding to
know whether it were according to the will of the
gods or not that the fugitive should be surrendered.
The answer brought back was, that they might surrender
him.
They were accordingly making arrangements
for doing this, when one of the citizens, a very prominent
and influential man, named Aristodicus, expressed
himself not satisfied with the reply. He did not
think it possible, he said, that the oracle could
really counsel them to deliver up a helpless fugitive
to his enemies. The messengers must have misunderstood
or misreported the answer which they had received.
He finally persuaded his countrymen to send a second
embassy: he himself was placed at the head of
it. On their arrival, Aristodicus addressed the
oracle as follows:
“To avoid a cruel death from
the Persians, Pactyas, a Lydian, fled to us for refuge.
The Persians demanded that we should surrender him.
Much as we are afraid of their power, we are still
more afraid to deliver up a helpless suppliant for
protection without clear and decided directions from
you.”
The embassy received to this demand
the same reply as before.
Still Aristodicus was not satisfied;
and, as if by way of bringing home to the oracle somewhat
more forcibly a sense of the true character of such
an action as it seemed to recommend, he began to make
a circuit in the grove which was around the temple
in which the oracle resided, and to rob and destroy
the nests which the birds had built there, allured,
apparently, by the sacred repose and quietude of the
scene. This had the desired effect. A solemn
voice was heard from the interior of the temple, saying,
in a warning tone,
“Impious man! how dost thou
dare to molest those who have placed themselves under
my protection?”
To this Aristodicus replied by asking
the oracle how it was that it watched over and guarded
those who sought its own protection, while it directed
the people of Cyme to abandon and betray suppliants
for theirs. To this the oracle answered,
“I direct them to do it, in
order that such impious men may the sooner bring down
upon their heads the judgments of heaven for having
dared to entertain even the thought of delivering
up a helpless fugitive.”
When this answer was reported to the
people of Cyme, they did not dare to give Pactyas
up, nor, on the other hand, did they dare to incur
the enmity of the Persians by retaining and protecting
him. They accordingly sent him secretly away.
The emissaries of Mazares, however, followed him.
They kept constantly on his track, demanding him successively
of every city where the hapless fugitive sought refuge,
until, at length, partly by threats and partly by a
reward, they induced a certain city to surrender him.
Mazares sent him, a prisoner, to Cyrus. Soon
after this Mazares himself died, and Harpagus was
appointed governor of Lydia in his stead.
In the mean time, Cyrus went on with
his conquests in the heart of Asia, and at length,
in the course of a few years, he had completed his
arrangements and preparations for the attack on Babylon.
He advanced at the head of a large force to the vicinity
of the city. The King of Babylon, whose name
was Belshazzar, withdrew within the walls, shut the
gates, and felt perfectly secure. A simple wall
was in those days a very effectual protection against
any armed force whatever, if it was only high enough
not to be scaled, and thick enough to resist the blows
of a battering ram. The artillery of modern times
would have speedily made a fatal breach in such structures;
but there was nothing but the simple force of man,
applied through brazen-headed beams of wood, in those
days, and Belshazzar knew well that his walls would
bid all such modes of demolition a complete defiance.
He stationed his soldiers, therefore, on the walls,
and his sentinels in the watch towers, while he himself,
and all the nobles of his court, feeling perfectly
secure in their impregnable condition, and being abundantly
supplied with all the means that the whole empire could
furnish, both for sustenance and enjoyment, gave themselves
up, in their spacious palaces and gardens, to gayety,
festivity, and pleasure.
Cyrus advanced to the city. He
stationed one large detachment of his troops at the
opening in the main walls where the river entered into
the city, and another one below, where it issued from
it. These detachments were ordered to march into
the city by the bed of the river, as soon as they
should observe the water subsiding. He then employed
a vast force of laborers to open new channels, and
to widen and deepen those which had existed before,
for the purpose of drawing off the waters from their
usual bed. When these passages were thus prepared,
the water was let into them one night, at a time previously
designated, and it soon ceased to flow through the
city. The detachments of soldiers marched in
over the bed of the stream, carrying with them vast
numbers of ladders. With these they easily scaled
the low walls which lined the banks of the river, and
Belshazzar was thunderstruck with the announcement
made to him in the midst of one of his feasts that
the Persians were in complete and full possession
of the city.