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The Wizard
09-11-2007, 16:31
I found this somewhere on the endless stretch of the Internets, namely the website All Empires:


This is part of the inscription of Sargon II (http://www.shsu.edu/~his_ncp/Sargon.html) in the Palace of Khorsabad:


21. I attacked and conquered KIBABA, Prefect of the town of Kharkhar, I took him and the inhabitants of his country captive, I rebuilt this city and made the inhabitants of the provinces, that my arm had conquered, live there. I placed my Lieutenant as Governor over them. I named the town Kar-Sarkin j I established the worship of the god ASSUR, my Master, there. I erected an image of my Royal self. I occupied 6 towns in the environs, and added them to his government.
22. I besieged and took the towns of Tel-Akhi-tub, Khindau, Bagai, and Anzaria; I transported the inhabitants of them to Assyria. I rebuilt them; I gave them the names of Kar-Nabu, Kar-Sin, Kar-Ben, and Kar-Istar.
23. To maintain my position in Media, I have erected fortifications in the neighbourhood of Kar-Sarkin. I occupied 34 towns in Media and annexed them to Assyria and I levied annual tributes of horses upon them.
24. I besieged and took the town of Eristana, and the surrounding towns in the country of Bait-Ili ; I carried away the spoil.I think Kharkhar is the same Khalkhal, a large city in the north west of Iran, Bagai should be Baga (modern Baku) capital of Azerbaijan, Anzaria seems to be Anzali, the largest Iranian port on the western shore of the Caspian Sea and Eristana is modern Heris/Heristan in the east of Tabriz.

http://www.allempires.com/forum/Uploads/Others/Sharrukin.JPGThere are several towns called, or once called, Kharkhar, and all of them are in Iran, as far as I know. Some are far closer to Sargon's heartland of Assyria than the Kharkhar in this map, but still -- did the Assyrians really penetrate this deeply into the Iranian plateaux? Or anywhere near this far?

Conqueror
09-12-2007, 11:10
Sargon fought wars and conquered cities as far as Samaria and Tarsus in the West and to the coast of the Persian Gulf in the South. Pure distance to the shores of the Caspian sea would hardly stop him. The mountaineous terrain would pose problems, but Sargon was successful in his war against Urartu in just such environment. So I wouldn't think it impossible for the Assyrians to reach even the towns on that map.

The Wizard
09-12-2007, 12:59
I didn't know that. Yet did he hold on to them? Seems like a weak possibility to me. No matter how advanced the Mesopotamians, this is still the 8th century BC.

Gurkhal
09-12-2007, 18:10
Depends on how you define "hold". He could've just kicked them around long enough for them to submitt and then leave them as a vassal-state without necissery holding a fixed presence.

Conqueror
09-12-2007, 19:15
Holding on to conquered territory for long periods of time seems to have been a major problem in general during this era. The Assyrians often had to subjugate the same foes over and over. The city of Babylon alone was a major hotspot of trouble for them, and the Syrians and peoples of the Levant were all too happy to revolt given half a chance (not to mention proper "encouragement" from Assyria's enemies, such as Egypt).

The Wizard
09-13-2007, 23:11
That might've been a product of their much-maligned bloody measures of repressing subversion in their empire, though. Mishandled, it could easily backfire, just like with Timur almost two milennia later.

With "hold" I meant "directly rule from Assyria," by the way. Leaving it at vassalization is getting off easy for Sargon ~;)

nokhor
09-16-2007, 21:36
didn't the assyrians basically create the concept of military garrisons? i believe they were the first culture to keep a core of troops in a conquered state's citadel in their major cities so that would have been their method of control.

Gurkhal
09-17-2007, 06:20
Never heard that the Assyrians would be the first ones with an ockupation force. What I've understood the Assyrians were more for first subjugating, and then slowly assimilate conquered areas into Assyria proper in terms of language, culture, etc.

But then I admitt I am not very strong regarding that particiler piece of history.

Watchman
09-17-2007, 09:00
Given that the same names seem to have been constantly turning up as their opponents in wars, I'd say that even if they made pioneering efforts in the field their success rate was pretty low.

The Wizard
09-17-2007, 10:55
That's not much different from Tamerlane, really. Brilliant general with, arguably, the best army of its time, using the same terror tactics as Chingis Khan and the Assyrians -- but he still spent a huge amount of his time backtracking to crush former enemies who had risen in his rear while he was occupied with other things. That is how, for instance, he came to sack Baghdad twice.

Gurkhal
09-17-2007, 12:40
Forgive me for asking Baba Ga'on but are you refeering to Sargon II specifically or the Assyrians in general?

The Wizard
09-17-2007, 15:56
Well, when I originally saw this post on the website mentioned, I wondered if it was true, or even possible at all for the Assyrians. Plus, it's an interesting subject overall, so I brought it here. So yeah, I was referring to the Assyrians in general.

Boyar Son
09-23-2007, 22:39
I read somewhere that there are still people in the mid east reffered to as "Assyrians":dizzy2:

in wiki I believe.

EDIT: funny what we find on the net?

Watchman
09-23-2007, 22:54
Yup (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Assyrian_people). Gotta give the peeps brownie points for having maintained their identity that long.

Boyar Son
09-23-2007, 23:43
hm I wonder what would happen if they had their own country...

they dont seem like their ancestors at all...

Watchman
09-24-2007, 00:08
Around the only folks who do are us sorry backwoods hicks whose swamps nobody ever particularly wanted, so... *shrug*

The Wizard
09-24-2007, 21:45
I'd say the language you speak is more important than the ancestors you have in determining what nation you're a part of.

Boyar Son
09-24-2007, 23:20
I speak english, does that mean im from England?

Watchman
09-24-2007, 23:51
"Nation" is a damn complicated and troublesome concept anyway. Especially after some bright mind thought up the idea of nationalism a century or two back, which like most "isms" has been nothing but trouble.

Gurkhal
09-25-2007, 08:47
Isn't nation a people who feel that they are the same? While a state, which is to my knowledge often confused with a nation is a political ententity. For example, the Kurds are a nation, but there is no Kurdish state. While a national-state is a state based on the idea that every nation should have their own state.

Martok
09-26-2007, 00:35
they dont seem like their ancestors at all...
I'm of mostly Nordic descent; but aside from physical resemblance (blonde hair & blue eys), I'm fairly certain I'm otherwise nothing like the Vikings of old. (Sorry, I couldn't resist!) ~D

Boyar Son
09-26-2007, 02:20
I'm of mostly Nordic descent; but aside from physical resemblance (blonde hair & blue eys), I'm fairly certain I'm otherwise nothing like the Vikings of old. (Sorry, I couldn't resist!) ~D

Nonsense!

I know you have urges at times to attack and pillage monastaries etc.

Furious Mental
09-26-2007, 05:30
Who doesn't?

Gurkhal
09-26-2007, 06:59
Someone probably, although I haven't met one for real.

The Wizard
09-26-2007, 22:41
I speak english, does that mean im from England?You certainly have a bigger connection to that country than a person who was raised speaking Dutch. Besides that, American Standard is different from the English dialect(s)... So, while you do make a point (it's more complicated than just language), language certainly is one of the most important elements pertaining to ethnic, cultural and national identity.

Watchman
09-26-2007, 22:56
Uh... I speak English too. They kinda teach it in school here.

The Wizard
09-26-2007, 22:59
As your mother tongue?

But true, let me illustrate his point to show the other side of the coin: I'm bilingual myself, and I speak the American Standard dialect of English besides Dutch. So what does that make me? Dutch or American? I've never lived in America, but I think in English... et cetera.

Watchman
09-26-2007, 23:00
Langue maternelle is obviously another thing, but you might perhaps want to define it as such then. I mean, I can three languages well enough that I can think in them without translation, and only one is my mother tongue...

The Wizard
09-26-2007, 23:03
And it only gets harder when you were raised with two languages. Which illustrates how language isn't the only thing that determines your (national/ethnic/cultural) identity.

Watchman
09-26-2007, 23:17
My point exactly. And let's not even go into the tangled history of reasonably-standardized "national" languages...