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==History== {{Further|Neo-Babylonian Empire}} [[File:East-Hem 1000bc.jpg|thumb|260px|Eurasia around 1000 BC, showing [[Babylonia|Babylon]], [[Assyria]], [[Aram (region)|Aramean states]] and their neighbors]] The region that the Chaldeans eventually made their homeland was in relatively poor southeastern Mesopotamia, at the head of the Persian Gulf. They appear to have migrated into southern [[Babylonia]] from the Levant at some unknown point between the end of the reign of [[Ninurta-kudurri-usur II]] (a contemporary of [[Tiglath-Pileser II]]) circa 940 BC, and the start of the reign of [[Marduk-zakir-shumi I]] in 855 BC, although there is no historical proof of their existence prior to the late 850s BC.{{sfn|Roux|1992|p=298}} For perhaps a century or so after settling in the area, these semi-nomadic migrant Chaldean tribes had no impact on the pages of history, seemingly remaining subjugated by the native [[Akkadian language|Akkadian]] speaking kings of Babylon or by perhaps regionally influential Aramean tribes. The main players in southern Mesopotamia during this period were Babylonia and Assyria, together with [[Elam]] to the east and the [[Arameans|Aramaeans]], who had already settled in the region a century or so prior to the arrival of the Chaldeans. The very first written historical attestation of the existence of Chaldeans occurs in 852 BC,<ref>A. K. Grayson (1996). Assyrian Rulers of the Early First Millennium BC II (858β745 B.C.) (RIMA 3). Toronto University Press. pp. 31, 26β28. iv 6</ref> in the annals of the Assyrian king [[Shalmaneser III]], who mentions invading the southeastern extremes of Babylonia and subjugating one [[Mushallim-Marduk]], the chief of the [[Amukani]] tribe and overall leader of the Kaldu tribes,<ref>Door fitting from the [[Balawat]] Gates, BM 124660.</ref> together with capturing the town of [[Baqani]], extracting tribute from [[Adini]], chief of the [[Bet-Dakkuri]], another Chaldean tribe. Shalmaneser III had invaded Babylonia at the request of its own king, [[Marduk-zakir-shumi I]], who, being threatened by his own rebellious relations, together with powerful Aramean tribes pleaded with the more powerful Assyrian king for help. The subjugation of the Chaldean tribes by the Assyrian king appears to have been an aside, as they were not at that time a powerful force or a threat to the native Babylonian king. Important Kaldu tribes and their regions in southeastern Babylonia were [[Bit-YΓ’kin]] (the original area the Chaldeans settled in on the Persian Gulf), [[Bet-Dakuri]], [[Bet-Adini]], [[Bit-Amukkani|Bet-Amukkani]], and [[Bet-Shilani]].<ref name=":0" /> Chaldean leaders had by this time already adopted Assyro-Babylonian names, religion, language, and customs, indicating that they had become Akkadianized to a great degree. The Chaldeans remained quietly ruled by the native Babylonians (who were in turn subjugated by their Assyrian relations) for the next seventy-two years, only coming to historical prominence for the first time in Babylonia in 780 BC, when a previously unknown Chaldean named [[Marduk-apla-usur]] usurped the throne from the native Babylonian king [[Marduk-bel-zeri]] (790β780 BC). The latter was a vassal of the Assyrian king [[Shalmaneser IV]] (783β773 BC), who was otherwise occupied quelling a civil war in Assyria at the time. This was to set a precedent for all future Chaldean aspirations on Babylon during the [[Neo-Assyrian Empire]]; always too weak to confront a strong Assyria alone and directly, the Chaldeans awaited periods when Assyrian kings were distracted elsewhere in their vast empire, or engaged in internal conflicts, then, in alliance with other powers stronger than themselves (usually [[Elam]]), they made a bid for control over Babylonia. Shalmaneser IV attacked and defeated Marduk-apla-user, retaking northern Babylonia and forcing on him a border treaty in Assyria's favour. The Assyrians allowed him to remain on the throne, although subject to Assyria. [[Eriba-Marduk]], another Chaldean, succeeded him in 769 BC and his son, [[Nabu-shuma-ishkun]] in 761 BC, with both being dominated by the new Assyrian king [[Ashur-Dan III]] (772β755 BC). Babylonia appears to have been in a state of chaos during this time, with the north occupied by Assyria, its throne occupied by foreign Chaldeans, and continual civil unrest throughout the land. The Chaldean rule proved short-lived. A native Babylonian king named [[Nabonassar]] (748β734 BC) defeated and overthrew the Chaldean usurpers in 748 BC, restored indigenous rule, and successfully stabilised Babylonia. The Chaldeans once more faded into obscurity for the next three decades. During this time both the Babylonians and the Chaldean and Aramean migrant groups who had settled in the land once more fell completely under the yoke of the powerful Assyrian king [[Tiglath-Pileser III]] (745β727 BC), a ruler who introduced [[Imperial Aramaic]] as the [[lingua franca]] of the empire. The Assyrian king at first made [[Nabonassar]] and his successor native Babylonian kings [[Nabu-nadin-zeri]], [[Nabu-suma-ukin II]] and [[Nabu-mukin-zeri]] his subjects, but decided to rule Babylonia directly from 729 BC. He was followed by [[Shalmaneser V]] (727β722 BC), who also ruled Babylon in person. When [[Sargon II]] (722β705 BC) ascended the throne of the Assyrian Empire in 722 BC after the death of [[Shalmaneser V]], he was forced to launch a major campaign in his subject states of [[Persia]], [[Mannea]] and [[Media (region)|Media]] in [[Ancient Iran]] to defend his territories there. He defeated and drove out the [[Scythians]] and [[Cimmerians]] who had attacked Assyria's Persian and [[Median]] vassal colonies in the region. At the same time, [[Egypt]] began encouraging and supporting the rebellion against Assyria in [[Israel]] and [[Canaan]], forcing the Assyrians to send troops to deal with the Egyptians. These events allowed the Chaldeans to once more attempt to assert themselves. While the Assyrian king was otherwise occupied defending his Iranian colonies from the [[Scythians]] and [[Cimmerians]] and driving the Egyptians from Canaan, [[Marduk-apla-iddina II]] (the Biblical [[Marduk-apla-iddina II|Merodach-Baladan]]) of Bit-YΓ’kin, allied himself with the powerful [[Elamite]] kingdom and the native Babylonians, briefly seizing control of Babylon between 721 and 710 BC. With the Scythians and Cimmerians vanquished, the Medes and Persians pledging loyalty, and the [[Egyptians]] defeated and ejected from southern Canaan, [[Sargon II]] was free at last to deal with the Chaldeans, Babylonians, and Elamites. He attacked and deposed Marduk-apla-adding II in 710 BC, also defeating his Elamite allies in the process. After defeat by the Assyrians, Merodach-Baladan fled to his protectors in Elam In 703, Merodach-Baladan very briefly regained the throne from a native Akkadian-Babylonian ruler [[Marduk-zakir-shumi II]], who was a puppet of the new Assyrian king, [[Sennacherib]] (705β681 BC). He was once more soundly defeated at [[Kish (Sumer)|Kish]], and once again fled to Elam where he died in exile after one final failed attempt to raise a revolt against Assyria in 700 BC, this time not in Babylon, but in the Chaldean tribal land of Bit-YΓ’kin. A native Babylonian king named [[Bel-ibni]] (703β701 BC) was placed on the throne as a puppet of Assyria. The next challenge to Assyrian domination came from the [[Elamites]] in 694 BC, with [[Nergal-ushezib]] deposing and murdering [[Ashur-nadin-shumi]] (700β694 BC), the Assyrian prince who was king of Babylon and son of Sennacherib. The Chaldeans and Babylonians again allied with their more powerful Elamite neighbors in this endeavour. This prompted the enraged Assyrian king [[Sennacherib]] to invade and subjugate Elam and Chaldea and to sack Babylon, laying waste to and largely destroying the city. Babylon was regarded as a sacred city by all Mesopotamians, including the Assyrians, and this act eventually resulted in Sennacherib's being murdered by his own sons while he was praying to the god [[Nisroch]] in [[Nineveh]]. [[Esarhaddon]] (681β669 BC) succeeded Sennacherib as ruler of the Assyrian Empire. He completely rebuilt Babylon and brought peace to the region. He conquered Egypt, [[Nubia]] and [[Libya]] and entrenched his mastery over the Persians, Medes, Parthians, Scythians, Cimmerians, Arameans, Israelites, Phoenicians, Canaanites, Urartians, Pontic Greeks, Cilicians, Phrygians, Lydians, Manneans and Arabs. For the next 60 or so years, Babylon and Chaldea remained peacefully under direct Assyrian control. The Chaldeans remained subjugated and quiet during this period, and the next major revolt in Babylon against the Assyrian empire was fermented not by a Chaldean, Babylonian or Elamite, but by [[Shamash-shum-ukin]], who was an Assyrian king of Babylon, and elder brother of [[Ashurbanipal]] (668β627 BC), the new ruler of the Neo-Assyrian Empire. [[Shamash-shum-ukin]] (668β648 BC) had become infused with Babylonian nationalism after sixteen years peacefully subject to his brother, and despite being Assyrian himself, declared that the city of Babylon and not [[Nineveh]] or [[Assur]] should be the seat of the empire. In 652 BC, he raised a powerful coalition of peoples resentful of their subjugation to Assyria against his own brother [[Ashurbanipal]]. The alliance included the Babylonians, [[Persia]]ns, Chaldeans, [[Medes]], [[Elamites]], Sultans, Arameans, [[Israelites]], [[Arabs]] and [[Canaanites]], together with some disaffected elements among the Assyrians themselves. After a bitter struggle lasting five years, the Assyrian king triumphed over his rebellious brother in 648 BC, Elam was utterly destroyed, and the Babylonians, Persians, Medes, Chaldeans, Arabs, and others were savagely punished. An Assyrian governor named [[Kandalanu]] was then placed on the throne of Babylon to rule on behalf of Ashurbanipal. The next 22 years were peaceful, and neither the Babylonians nor Chaldeans posed a threat to the dominance of Ashurbanipal. However, after the death of the mighty [[Ashurbanipal]] (and Kandalanu) in 627 BC, the [[Neo-Assyrian Empire]] descended into a series of bitter internal dynastic civil wars that were to be the cause of its downfall. [[File:East-Hem 600bc.jpg|thumb|260px|Eurasia around 600 BC, showing [[Neo-Babylonian Empire]] (Chaldean Empire) and its neighbors]] [[Ashur-etil-ilani]] (626β623 BC) ascended to the throne of the empire in 626 BC but was immediately engulfed in a torrent of fierce rebellions instigated by rival claimants. He was deposed in 623 BC by an Assyrian general (''[[turtanu]]'') named [[Sin-shumu-lishir]] (623β622 BC), who was also declared king of Babylon. [[Sin-shar-ishkun]] (622β612 BC), the brother of Ashur-etil-ilani, took back the throne of empire from Sin-shumu-lishir in 622 BC, but was then himself faced with unremitting rebellion against his rule by his own people. Continual conflict among the Assyrians led to a myriad of subject peoples, from [[Cyprus]] to Persia and [[The Caucasus]] to Egypt, quietly reasserting their independence and ceasing to pay tribute to Assyria. [[Nabopolassar]], a previously obscure and unknown Chaldean chieftain, followed the opportunistic tactics laid down by previous Chaldean leaders to take advantage of the chaos and anarchy gripping Assyria and Babylonia and seized the city of Babylon in 620 BC with the help of its native Babylonian inhabitants. [[Sin-shar-ishkun]] amassed a powerful army and marched into Babylon to regain control of the region. Nabopolassar was saved from likely destruction because yet another massive Assyrian rebellion broke out in Assyria proper, including the capital Nineveh, which forced the Assyrian king to turn back in order to quell the revolt. Nabopolassar took advantage of this situation, seizing the ancient city of [[Nippur]] in 619 BC, a mainstay of pro-Assyrianism in Babylonia, and thus Babylonia as a whole. However, his position was still far from secure, and bitter fighting continued in the Babylonian heartlands from 620 to 615 BC, with Assyrian forces encamped in Babylonia in an attempt to eject Nabopolassar. Nabopolassar attempted a counterattack, marched his army into Assyria proper in 616 BC, and tried to besiege Assur and [[Arrapha]] (modern [[Kirkuk]]), but was defeated by Sin-shar-ishkun and chased back into Babylonia after being driven from Idiqlat (modern [[Tikrit]]) at the southernmost end of Assyria. A stalemate seemed to have ensued, with Nabopolassar unable to make any inroads into Assyria despite its greatly weakened state, and Sin-shar-ishkun unable to eject Nabopolassar from Babylonia due to constant rebellions and civil war among his own people. Nabopolassar's position, and the fate of the Assyrian empire, was sealed when he entered into an alliance with another of Assyria's former vassals, the [[Medes]], the now dominant people of what was to become Persia. The Median [[Cyaxares]] had also recently taken advantage of the anarchy in the Assyrian Empire, while officially still a vassal of Assyria, he took the opportunity to meld the [[Iranian peoples]]; the [[Medes]], [[Persian people|Persians]], [[Sagartians]] and [[Parthia]]ns, into a large and powerful Median-dominated force. The Medes, Persians, Parthians, Chaldeans and Babylonians formed an alliance that also included the [[Scythians]] and [[Cimmerians]] to the north. While Sin-shar-ishkun was fighting both the rebels in Assyria and the Chaldeans and Babylonians in southern Mesopotamia, [[Cyaxares]] (hitherto a vassal of Assyria), in alliance with the Scythians and Cimmerians launched a surprise attack on civil-war-beleaguered Assyria in 615 BC, sacking [[Kalhu]] (the Biblical [[Calah]]/[[Nimrud]]) and taking [[Arrapkha]] (modern [[Kirkuk]]). Nabopolassar, still pinned down in southern Mesopotamia, was not involved in this major breakthrough against Assyria. From this point however, the alliance of Medes, Persians, Chaldeans, Babylonians, Sagartians, Scythians and Cimmerians fought in unison against Assyria. Despite the sorely depleted state of Assyria, bitter fighting ensued. Throughout 614 BC the alliance of powers continued to make inroads into Assyria itself, although in 613 BC the Assyrians somehow rallied to score a number of counterattacking victories over the Medes-Persians, Babylonians-Chaldeans and Scythians-Cimmerians. This led to a coalition of forces ranged against it to unite and launch a massive combined attack in 612 BC, finally besieging and sacking Nineveh in late 612 BC, killing [[Sin-shar-ishkun]] in the process. A new Assyrian king, [[Ashur-uballit II]] (612β605 BC), took the crown amidst the house-to-house fighting in Nineveh, and refused a request to bow in vassalage to the rulers of the alliance. He managed to fight his way out of Nineveh and reach the northern Assyrian city of [[Harran]], where he founded a new capital. Assyria resisted for another seven years until 605 BC, when the remnants of the Assyrian army and the army of the [[Ancient Egypt|Egyptian]]s, whose [[Twenty-sixth Dynasty of Egypt|26th Dynasty]] had formed a brief allied coalition with the Assyrians, were defeated at [[Karchemish]]. Nabopolassar and his Median, Scythian and Cimmerian allies were now in possession of much of the huge [[Neo-Assyrian Empire]]. The Egyptians had belatedly come to the aid of Assyria, which they would have hoped to support as a secure buffer between Egypt and the new powers of Babylon, Medes and Persians, having already been raided by the Scythians. The Chaldean king of Babylon now ruled all of southern [[Mesopotamia]] (Assyria in the north was ruled by the Medes),<ref>Ran Zadok (1984), Assyrians in Chaldean and Achaemenians Babylonia. Page 2.</ref> and the former Assyrian possessions of [[Aram (biblical region)|Aram]] ([[Syria]]), [[Phoenicia]], [[Israel]], [[Cyprus]], [[Edom]], [[Philistia]], and parts of [[Arabia]], while the Medes took control of the former Assyrian colonies in [[Ancient Iran]], [[Asia Minor]] and the [[Caucasus]]. Nabopolassar was not able to enjoy his success for long, dying in 604 BC, only one year after the victory at Karchemish. He was succeeded by his son, who took the name [[Nebuchadnezzar II]], after the unrelated 12th century BC native Akkadian-Babylonian king [[Nebuchadnezzar I]], indicating the extent to which the migrant Chaldeans had become infused with native Mesopotamian culture. [[Nebuchadnezzar II]] and his allies may well have been forced to deal with remnants of Assyrian resistance based in and around [[Dur-Katlimmu]], as Assyrian imperial records continue to be dated in this region between 604 and 599 BC.<ref>Assyria 1995: Proceedings of the 10th Anniversary Symposium of the Neo-Assyrian Text Corpus Project / Helsinki, September 7β11, 1995.</ref> In addition, the Egyptians remained in the region an attempt to revive the Asian colonies of the ancient Egyptian Empire. Nebuchadnezzar II was to prove himself to be the greatest of the Chaldean rulers, rivaling another non-native ruler, the 18th century BC [[Amorite]] king [[Hammurabi]], as the greatest king of Babylon. He was a patron of the cities and a spectacular builder, rebuilding all of Babylonia's major cities on a lavish scale. His building activity at Babylon, expanding on the earlier major and impressive rebuilding of the Assyrian king [[Esarhaddon]], helped to turn it into the immense and beautiful city of legend. Babylon covered more than {{convert|3|sqmi|km2|0|order=flip|abbr=on}}, surrounded by moats and ringed by a double circuit of walls. The Euphrates flowed through the center of the city, spanned by a beautiful stone bridge. At the center of the city rose the giant [[ziggurat]] called [[Etemenanki]], "House of the Frontier Between Heaven and Earth," which lay next to the Temple of [[Marduk]]. He is also believed by many historians to have built [[The Hanging Gardens of Babylon]] (although others believe these gardens were built much earlier by an Assyrian king in Nineveh) for his wife, a [[Medes|Median]] princess from the green mountains, so that she would feel at home. A capable leader, Nebuchadnezzar II conducted successful military campaigns; cities like [[Tyre, Lebanon|Tyre]], [[Sidon]] and [[Damascus]] were subjugated. He also conducted numerous campaigns in [[Asia Minor]] against the [[Scythians]], [[Cimmerians]], and [[Lydians]]. Like their Assyrian relations, the Babylonians had to campaign yearly in order to control their colonies. In 601 BC, Nebuchadnezzar II was involved in a major but inconclusive battle against the [[Egyptians]]. In 599 BC, he invaded Arabia and routed the Arabs at [[Qedar]]. In 597 BC, he invaded [[Kingdom of Judah|Judah]], captured [[Jerusalem]] after the [[siege of Jerusalem (597 BC)]] and deposed its king [[Jehoiachin]], carrying the Israelites into [[Babylonian captivity|captivity in Babylon]]. Egyptian and Babylonian armies fought each other for control of the Near East throughout much of Nebuchadnezzar's reign, and this encouraged king [[Zedekiah]] of Judah to revolt. After an eighteen-month siege, Jerusalem was captured in 587 BC, thousands of Jews were deported to Babylon, and Solomon's Temple was razed to the ground. Nebuchadnezzar successfully fought the Pharaohs [[Psammetichus II]] and [[Apries]] throughout his reign, and during the reign of Pharaoh [[Amasis II|Amasis]] in 568 BC it is rumoured that he may have briefly invaded Egypt itself. By 572, Nebuchadnezzar was in full control of Babylonia, Chaldea, [[Aramea]] ([[Syria]]), [[Phonecia]], Israel, [[Kingdom of Judah|Judah]], [[Philistia]], [[Samarra]], [[Jordan]], northern Arabia, and parts of [[Asia Minor]]. Nebuchadnezzar died of illness in 562 BC after a one-year co-reign with his son, [[Amel-Marduk]], who was deposed in 560 BC after a reign of only two years. ===End of the Chaldean dynasty=== [[Neriglissar]] succeeded Amel-Marduk. It is unclear as to whether he was in fact an ethnic Chaldean or a native Babylonian nobleman, as he was not related by blood to Nabopolassar's descendants, having married into the ruling family. He conducted successful military campaigns against the [[Greeks|Hellenic]] inhabitants of [[Cilicia]], which had threatened Babylonian interests. Neriglissar reigned for only four years and was succeeded by the youthful [[Labashi-Marduk]] in 556 BC. Again, it is unclear whether he was a Chaldean or a native Babylonian. Labashi-Marduk reigned only for a matter of months, being deposed by [[Nabonidus]] in late 556 BC. Nabonidus was certainly not a Chaldean, but an Assyrian from [[Harran]], the last capital of Assyria, and proved to be the final native Mesopotamian king of Babylon. He and his son, the regent [[Belshazzar]], were deposed by the Persians under [[Cyrus the Great]] in 539 BC. When the Babylonian Empire was absorbed into the Persian [[Achaemenid Empire]], the name "Chaldean" lost its meaning in reference to a particular ethnicity or land, but lingered for a while as a term solely and explicitly used to describe a societal class of astrologers and astronomers in southern Mesopotamia. The original Chaldean tribe had long ago became Akkadianized, adopting Akkadian culture, religion, language and customs, blending into the majority native population, and eventually wholly disappearing as a distinct race of people, as had been the case with other preceding migrant peoples, such as the Amorites, Kassites, Suteans and Arameans of Babylonia. The Persians considered this ''Chaldean societal class'' to be masters of reading and writing, and especially versed in all forms of [[incantation]], sorcery, [[witchcraft]], and the magical arts. They spoke of astrologists and astronomers as ''Chaldeans'', and it is used with this specific meaning in the [[Book of Daniel]] (Dan. i. 4, ii. 2 et seq.) and by classical writers, such as [[Strabo]]. The disappearance of the Chaldeans as an ethnicity and Chaldea as a land is evidenced by the fact that the Persian rulers of the [[Achaemenid Empire]] (539β330 BC) did not retain a province called "Chaldea", nor did they refer to "Chaldeans" as a race of people in their written annals. This is in contrast to Assyria, and for a time Babylonia also, where the Persians retained the names Assyria and Babylonia as designations for distinct [[geo-political]] entities within the Achaemenid Empire. In the case of the Assyrians in particular, Achaemenid records show Assyrians holding important positions within the empire, particularly with regards to military and civil administration.<ref>"Assyrians after Assyria". Nineveh.com. 4 September 1999. Archived from the original on 14 July 2011. Retrieved 19 June 2011.</ref>
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