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Chronology of the ancient Near East

The chronology of the ancient Near East is a framework of dates for various events, rulers and dynasties. Historical inscriptions and texts customarily record events in terms of a succession of officials or rulers: "in the year X of king Y". Comparing many records pieces together a relative chronology relating dates in cities over a wide area.

For the 3rd and 2nd millennia BC, this correlation is less certain but the following periods can be distinguished: [1]

  • Early Bronze Age: Following the rise of cuneiform writing in the preceding Uruk period and Jemdet Nasr periods came a series of rulers and dynasties whose existence is based mostly on scant contemporary sources (e.g. En-me-barage-si), combined with archaeological cultures, some of which are considered problematic (e.g. Early Dynastic II). The lack of dendrochronology, astronomical correlations, and sparsity of modern, well-stratified sequences of radiocarbon dates from Southern Mesopotamia makes it difficult to assign absolute dates to this floating chronology.[2][3]
  • Middle Bronze Age: Beginning with the Akkadian Empire around 2300 BC, the chronological evidence becomes internally more consistent. A good picture can be drawn of who succeeded whom, and synchronisms between Mesopotamia, the Levant and the more robust chronology of Ancient Egypt can be established. Unlike the previous period there are a variety of data points serving to help turn this floating chronology into a fixed one. These include astronomical events, dendrochronology, radiocarbon dating, and even a volcanic eruption. Despite this no agreement has been reached. The most commonly seen solution is to place the reign of Hammurabi from 1792 to 1750 BC, the "middle chronology", but there is far from a consensus.[4]
  • Late Bronze Age: The fall of the First Babylonian Empire was followed by a period of chaos where "Late Old Babylonian royal inscriptions are few and the year names become less evocative of political events, early Kassite evidence is even scarcer, and until recently Sealand I sources were near to non-existent".[5] Afterward came a period of stability with the Assyrian Middle Kingdom, Hittite New Kingdom, and the Third Babylon Dynasty (Kassite).
  • The Bronze Age collapse: A "Dark Age" begins with the fall of Babylonian Dynasty III (Kassite) around 1200 BC, the invasions of the Sea Peoples and the collapse of the Hittite Empire.
  • Early Iron Age: Around 900 BC, written records once again become more numerous with the rise of the Neo-Assyrian Empire, establishing relatively secure absolute dates. Classical sources such as the Canon of Ptolemy, the works of Berossus, and the Hebrew Bible provide chronological support and synchronisms. An inscription from the tenth year of Assyrian king Ashur-Dan III refers to an eclipse of the sun, and astronomical calculations among the range of plausible years date the eclipse to 15 June 763 BC. This can be corroborated by other mentions of astronomical events, and a secure absolute chronology established, tying the relative chronologies to the now-dominant Gregorian calendar.

Variant Middle Bronze Age chronologies

Due to the sparsity of sources throughout the "Dark Age", the history of the Near Eastern Middle Bronze Age down to the end of the First Babylonian Dynasty is founded on a floating or relative chronology. There have been attempts to anchor the chronology using records of eclipses and other methods such as dendrochronology and radiocarbon dating, but none of those dates is widely supported.

Currently the major schools of thought on the absolute dating of this period are separated by 56 or 64 years. This is because the key source for this analysis are the omen observations in the Venus tablet of Ammisaduqa and these are multiples of the 8-year cycle of Venus visibility from Earth. More recent work by Vahe Gurzadyan has suggested that the fundamental 8-year cycle of Venus is a better metric[6] (updated[7][8]). Some scholars discount the validity of the Venus tablet of Ammisaduqa entirely. The alternative major chronologies are defined by the date of the 8th year of the reign of Ammisaduqa, king of Babylon.

The most common Venus Tablet solutions (fall of Babylon)

  • Long Chronology (Babylon falls 1651 BC)
  • Middle Chronology (Babylon falls 1595 BC)[9][10][11][12][13]
  • Middle Low Chronology (Babylon falls 1587 BC)[14][15][16][17]
  • Short Chronology (Babylon falls 1531 BC)[18][19]
  • Ultra Short Chronology (Babylon falls 1499 BC)[6]

The following table gives an overview of the different proposals, listing some key dates and their deviation relative to the middle chronology, omitting the Supershort Chronology (Babylon falls in 1466 BC)):

Chronology Ammisaduqa Year 8 Reign of Hammurabi Fall of Babylon ±
Ultra-Low 1542 BC 1696–1654 BC 1499 BC −96 a
Short or Low 1574 BC 1728–1686 BC 1531 BC −64 a
Middle Low 1630 BC 1784–1742 BC 1587 BC −8 a
Middle 1638 BC 1792–1750 BC 1595 BC +0 a
Long or High 1694 BC 1848–1806 BC 1651 BC +56 a

Sources of chronological data

Astronomical

Venus tablet of Ammisaduqa

In the series, the conjunction of the rise of Venus with the new moon provides a point of reference, or rather three points, for the conjunction is a periodic occurrence. Identifying an Ammisaduqa conjunction with one of these calculated conjunctions will therefore fix, for example, the accession of Hammurabi as either 1848, 1792, or 1736 BC, known as the "high" ("long"), "middle", and "short (or low) chronology".

A record of the movements of Venus over roughly a 16 day period during the reign of a king, believed to be Ammisaduqa of the First Babylonian Dynasty, recorded on the omen tablet Enuma Anu Enlil 63. Twenty copies and fragments have been recovered, all Neo-Assyrian and later. [20] An example entry is "In month XI, 15th day, Venus in the west disappeared, 3 days in the sky it stayed away, and in month XI, 18th day, Venus in the east became visible: springs will open, Adad his rain, Ea his floods will bring, king to king messages of reconciliation will send."[21] Using it, various scholars have proposed dates for the fall of Babylon based on the 56/64-year cycle of Venus. It has been suggested that the fundamental 8-year cycle of Venus is a better metric, leading to the proposal of an "ultra-low" chronology.[22] Other researchers have declared the data to be too noisy for any use in fixing the chronology.[23]

Eclipses

A number of lunar and solar eclipses have been suggested for use in dating the ancient Near East. Many suffer from the vagueness of the original tablets in showing that an actual eclipse occurred. At that point, it becomes a question of using computer models to show when a given eclipse would have been visible at a site, complicated by difficulties in modeling the slowing rotation of the earth (ΔT) and uncertainty about the lengths of months. [24][25] Most calculations for dating using eclipses have assumed the Venus Tablet of Ammisaduqa to be a legitimate source.[6][26] The most notable omitted eclipses are the Mari Eponym Chronicle eclipse from the time of Shamshi-Adad I and the Sargon of Akkad eclipse (from the Legends of the Kings of Akkad and a liver omen).[27][28]

Some important examples:

  • Nineveh eclipse – found in an Assyrian limmu list q.e. "Bur-Sagale of Guzana, revolt in the city of Ashur. In the month Simanu an eclipse of the sun took place.", part of the Eponym dating system. This eclipse is considered to be solidly dated to 15 June 763 BC, approximately in the ninth year of the reign of king Ashur-dan III.[29]
  • Mursili's eclipse – a text in the 10th year of the reign of Mursili II of the Hittite Empire, "[When] I marched [to the land of A]zzi, the Sungod gave a sign.", has been interpreted as an eclipse event. Proposed dates range between 1340 BC and 1308 BC.[30][31][32][33]
  • Shulgi Eclipse – Based on a prophecy text, Enuma Anu Enlil 20 which states "If an eclipse occurs on the 14th day of Simānu ... The king of Ur, his son will wrong him, and the son who wronged his father, Šamaš will catch him. He will die in the mourning place of his father" from the end of the reign of Shulgi of the Ur III dynasty. A date of 25 July 2093 BC has been proposed. These prophecies were written after the fact to help predict future events. A second prophecy, EAE 21 (month 12), predicts the fall of Ur III in the reign of Ibbi-Sin stating "If an eclipse occurs on the 14th day of Addaru ... The prediction is given for the king of the world: The destruction of Ur".[34]
  • Babylon Eclipse – Another section in EAE 20 (month 3) refers to the fall of Babylon ie "if an eclipse occurs on the 14th day of Shabattu (month XI), and the god, in his eclipse ... The prediction is given for Babylon: the destruction of Babylon is near ...". It refers to a solar eclipse followed by a lunar eclipse. The most likely solution, 1547 BC, does not match up with Venus Tablet solutions. Note that there are textual problems with the prophecy and it has been suggested that Akkad is actually the city in question.[35]

Egyptian Lunar Observations

There are thirteen Egyptian New Kingdom lunar observations which are used to pin the chronology in that period by locking down the accession year of Ramsesses II to 1279 BC. There are a number of issues with this including a) the regnal lengths for Neferneferuaten, Seti I, and Horemheb are actually not known with accuracy, b) where the observations occurred (Memphis is usually assumed), c) what day the observations were taken (two are known to be the 1st lunar day), and d) the Egyptian calendar for this period is not fully known, especially how intercalary months were handled.[36] Since the Assyrian eponym list is accurate to 1 year only back to 1132 BC, ancient Near East chronology for the preceding century or so is anchored to Ramsesses II, based on synchronisms and the Egyptian lunar observations.[37]

Kudurru Symbols

A number of attempts have been made to date Kassite Kudurru by mapping the symbols to astrononomical elements, using Babylonian star catalogues such as MUL.APIN with so far very limited results.[38][39]

Inscriptional

Thousands of cuneiform tablets have been found in an area running from Anatolia to Egypt. While many are the ancient equivalent of grocery receipts, these tablets, along with inscriptions on buildings and public monuments, provide the major source of chronological information for the ancient Middle East.[40]

Underlying issues

  • State of materials

While there are some relatively pristine display-quality objects, the vast majority of recovered tablets and inscriptions are damaged. They have been broken with only portions found, intentionally defaced, and damaged by weather or soil. Many tablets were not even baked and have to be carefully handled until they can be hardened by heating.[41]

  • Provenance

The site of an item's recovery is an important piece of information for archaeologists, which can be compromised by two factors. First, in ancient times old materials were often reused as building material or fill, sometimes at a great distance from the original location. Secondly, looting has disturbed archaeological sites at least back to Roman times, making the provenance of looted objects difficult or impossible to determine. Lastly, counterfeit versions of these object are a longstanding traditional, often difficult to detect.[42]

  • Multiple versions

Key documents like the Sumerian King List were repeatedly copied and redacted over generations to suit current political needs. For this and other reasons, the SKL, once regarded as an important historical source, is now only used with caution, if at all, for the period under discussion here.[43]

  • Translation

The translation of cuneiform documents is quite difficult, especially for damaged source material. Additionally, our knowledge of the underlying languages, like Akkadian and Sumerian, has evolved over time, so a translation done now may be quite different from one done in AD 1900: there can be honest disagreement over what a document says. Worse, the majority of archaeological finds have not yet been published, much less translated. Those held in private collections may never be.

  • Political slant

Many of our important source documents, such as the Assyrian King List, are the products of government and religious establishments, with a natural bias in favor of the king or god in charge. A king may even take credit for a battle or construction project of an earlier ruler. The Assyrians in particular have a literary tradition of putting the best possible face on history, a fact the interpreter must constantly keep in mind.

King lists

Historical lists of rulers were traditional in the ancient Near East.

Covers rulers of Mesopotamia from a time "before the flood" to the fall of the Isin Dynasty, depending on the version. Its use for pre-Akkadian rulers is limited to none. It continues to have value for the Akkadian period and later.[43] The Sumerian King List omits any mention of Lagash, even though it was clearly a major power during the period covered by the list. The Royal Chronicle of Lagash appears to be an attempt to remedy that omission, listing the kings of Lagash in the form of a chronicle though some scholars believe the Lagash chronicle to be either a parody of the Sumerian King List or a complete fabrication.[44]

This list deals only with the rulers of Babylon. It has been found in two versions, denoted A and B both written in Neo-Babylonian times. The later dynasties in the list document the Kassite and Sealand periods though a number of Kassite rulers are damaged. Ruler names largely match other records but the regnal lengths are more problematic.[45] There is also a Babylonian King List of the Hellenistic Period in later part of the 1st millennium.[46]

The Assyrian King List extends back to the reign of Shamshi Adad I (1809 – c. 1776 BC), an Amorite who conquered Assur while creating a new kingdom in Upper Mesopotamia. The list extends to the reign of Shalmaneser V (727–722 BC). It is believed that the list was first constructed in the time of Ashur-uballit I (1365–1330 BC). The king list is considered to be roughly correct from that point on, less so for earlier entries which have numerous inconsistencies. Its purpose is to create a narrative of continuity and legitimacy for Assyrian kingship, blending in the kings of Amorite origin. [47] The existing source consists of 3 mostly complete tables and 2 small fragments. [48][49] Unfortunately there are differences between the tablets involving regnal lengths, names, and in one case a king being left out entirely. Not surprising given that they are noted as being copies of earlier tablets. [50]

Chronicles

Many chronicles have been recovered in the ancient Near East, most fragmentary, with a political slant, and sometimes contradictory; but when combined with other sources, they provide a rich source of chronological data.[44]

Most available chronicles stem from later Babylonian and Assyrian sources. The Dynastic Chronicle, after a Sumerian King List type beginning, involves Babylonian kings from Simbar-Šipak to Erība-Marduk. The Chronicle of Early Kings, after an early preamble, involves kings of the First Babylonian Empire ending with the First Sealand Dynasty. The Tummal Inscription relates events from the early Sumerian king Ishbi-Erra of Isin. The Chronicle of the Market Prices mentions various Babylonian rulers beginning from the period of Hammurabi. The Eclectic Chronicle relates events of the post-Kassite Babylonian kings. Other examples are the Religious Chronicle, and Nebuchadnezzar Chronicle, among others.

The Synchronistic Chronicle, found in the library of Assurbanipal in Nineveh records the diplomacy of the Assyrian empire with the Babylonian empire. While useful, the consensus is that this chronicle should not be considered reliable. Chronicle P provides the same type of information as the Assyrian Synchronistic Chronicle, but from the Babylonian point of view.[51]

Royal inscriptions

Rulers in the ancient Near East liked to take credit for public works. Temples, buildings and statues are likely to identify their royal patron. Kings also publicly recorded major deeds such as battles won, titles acquired, and gods appeased. These are very useful in tracking the reign of a ruler.

Year lists

Unlike current calendars, most ancient calendars were based on the accession of the current ruler, as in "the 5th year in the reign of Hammurabi". Each royal year was also given a title reflecting a deed of the ruler, like "the year Ur was defeated". The compilation of these years are called date lists. [52][53][54]

Eponym (limmu) lists

In Assyria, a royal official or limmu was selected in every year of a king's reign. Many copies of these lists have been found,[55] with certain ambiguities. There are sometimes too many or few limmū for the length of a king's reign, and sometimes the different versions of the eponym list disagree on a limmu, for example in the Mari Eponym Chronicle. The eponym list is considered accurate within 1 year back to 1133 BC. Before that uncertainty creeps in. There is now an Assyrian Revised Eponym List which attempts to resolve some of these issues.[56]

Trade, diplomatic, and disbursement records

As often in archaeology, everyday records give the best picture of a civilization. Cuneiform tablets were constantly moving around the ancient Near East, offering alliances (sometimes including daughters for marriage), threatening war, recording shipments of mundane supplies, or settling accounts receivable. Most were tossed away after use as one today would discard unwanted receipts, but fortunately for us, clay tablets are durable enough to survive even when used as material for wall filler in new construction.[57]

A key find was a number of cuneiform tablets from Amarna in Egypt, the city of the pharaoh Akhenaten. Mostly in Akkadian, the diplomatic language of the time, a number of them name foreign rulers including kings of Assyria and Babylon as well as Tushratta king of Mitanni and rulers of small states in the Levant. The letters date from the later stages of the reign of Amenhotep III (c. 1386–1349 BC) to the 2nd year of Tutankhamun (c. 1341–1323 BC). Assuming that the correct foreign rulers have been identified, this provides and important point of synchronization. Identification can be difficult due to the propensity for states to re-use regnal names. [58]

Classical

We have some data sources from the classical period:

Berossus, a Babylonian astronomer and historian born during the time of Alexander the Great wrote a history of Babylon which is a lost book. Portions were preserved by other classical writers mainly Josephus via Alexander Polyhistor. The surviving material is in chronicle form and covers the Neo-Babylonian Empire period from Nabopolassar (627–605 BC) to Nabonidus (556–539 BC). [59]

This book provides a list of kings starting with the Neo-Babylonian Empire and ending with the early Roman Emperors. The entries relevant to the ancient Near East run from Nabonassar (747–734 BC) to the Macedonian king Alexander IV (323–309 BC). Though mostly accepted as accurate there are known issues with the Canon. Some rulers are omitted, there are times for which no ruler is listed, and the early dates have been converted from the lunar calendar used by the Babylonians to the Egyptian solar calendar. [60][61][62]

Not having the stability of buried clay tablets, the records of the Hebrews have a great deal of ancient editorial work to sift through when used as a source for chronology. However, the Hebrew kingdoms lay at the crossroads of Babylon, Assyria, Egypt and the Hittites, making them spectators and often victims of actions in the area during the 1st millennium. Mostly concerned with regional events in the Levant, in 2 Kings 23 Hebrew: פַרְעֹה נְכֹה, romanizedPhare'oh Necho, thought to be pharaoh Necho II, is mentioned three times. Neo-Babylonian kings are mentioned in 2 Kings 20, Hebrew: בְּרֹאדַךְ בַּלְאֲדָן, romanizedBerodach Bal'adan, thought to be Marduk-apla-iddina II, in 2 Kings 24 Nebuchadnezzar II and in 2 Kings 25 Hebrew: אֱוִיל מְרֹדַךְ, romanizedEvil Merodach, thought to be Amel-Marduk. In Isaiah 38 the neo-Assyrian kings Sennacherib and Esarhaddon are mentioned.

Dendrochronology

Dendrochronology attempts to use the variable growth pattern of trees, expressed in their rings, to build up a chronological timeline. At present there are no continuous chronologies for the Near East, and a floating chronology has been developed using trees in Anatolia for the Bronze and Iron Ages. Professor of archaeology at Cornell, Sturt Manning, has spearheaded efforts to use this floating chronology with radiocarbon wiggle-match to anchor the chronology.[63][64] His research has recently been included in the Oxford History of the Ancient Near East and has been cited widely in the recent academic literature.[65]

Radiocarbon dating

As in Egypt and the eastern Mediterranean, radiocarbon dates run one or two centuries earlier than the dates proposed by archaeologists.[66] Recently, radiocarbon dates from the final destruction of Ebla have been shown to definitely favour the middle chronology (with the fall of Babylon and Aleppo at c. 1595 BC), and seem to discount the ultra-low chronology (same event at c. 1499 BC), although it is emphasized that this is not presented as a decisive argument.[67]

Radiocarbon dates in literature should be discounted if they do not include the raw C14 date and the calibration method. There have also been issues with dating for charcoal samples, which may reflect much older wood the charcoal was made from. In recent years some properly calibrated radiocarbon dates have begun to appear:

  • In 1991 Two grain samples from the Middle Uruk layer of the Uruk Mound at Abu Salabikh were accelerator radiocarbon dated with calibrated dates of 3520 ± 130 BC.[68] Calibration was based on that of Pearson.[69]
  • In 2013 a bone awl from Kish from Phase 2 in the YWN area, the transition between Early Dynastic and Akkadian periods, was accelerator radiocarbon dated to 2471–2299 BC (3905 ± 27 C14 years BP).[70]
  • In 2017 charcoal sample from the base area of the Umm Al Nar fortress tower at Tell Abraq provided a radiocarbon date of 2461–2199 BC (3840±40 C14 years BP). It was calibrated with IntCal13. The Umm Al Nar period is co-temporal with the Akkadian through Ur III periods in Mesopotamia.[71]

Other emerging technical dating methods include rehydroxylation dating, luminescence dating, archaeomagnetic dating and the dating of lime plaster from structures.[72][73][74][75][76]

Synchronisms

Egypt

At least as far back as the reign of Thutmose I, Egypt took a strong interest in the ancient Near East. At times they occupied portions of the region, a favor returned later by the Assyrians. Some key synchronisms:

  • Battle of Kadesh, involving Ramses II of Egypt ("Year 5 III Shemu day 9") and Muwatalli II of the Hittite empire. This would be 12 May 1274 BC, in the usually accepted Egyptian chronology.[77] Recorded by both Egyptian (Kadesh inscriptions) and Hittite records.
  • Peace treaty (Egyptian–Hittite peace treaty) between Ramses II of Egypt, in his 21st year of reign (roughly 1259 BC) and Hattusili III of the Hittites. Hieroglyphic copies were found at the temple of Amun at Karnak and at the Ramesseumand. Fragmentary Akkadian cuneiform fragments were found at Hattusa.[78]
  • Amenhotep III (Amenophis III) marries the daughter of Shuttarna II of Mitanni. There is also a record of messages from the pharaoh to Kadashman-Enlil I of Babylon in the Amarna Letter (EA1–5). Other Amarna letters link Amenhotep III to Burnaburiash II of Babylon (EA6) and Tushratta of Mitanni (EA17–29) as well.
  • Akhenaten (Amenhotep IV) married the daughter of Tushratta of Mitanni (as did his father Amenhotep III), leaving a number of records. He also corresponded with Burna-Buriash II of Babylon (EA7–11, 15), and Ashuruballit I of Assyria (EA15–16)
  • Bay an official of the Egyptian queen Twosret, in a tablet (RS 86.2230) found at Ras Shamra, was in communication with Ammurapi, the last ruler of Ugarit. Bay was in office from approximately 1194–1190 BC. This sets an upper limit on the destruction date of Ugarit.[79][80]
  • Pottery seals of the Egyptian pharaoh Pepi I have been found in the wreckage of the city of Ebla, destroyed by Naram-Sin of Akkad.[81]

There are problems with using Egyptian chronology. Besides some minor issues of regnal lengths and overlaps, there are three long periods of poorly documented chaos in the history of ancient Egypt, the First, Second, and Third Intermediate Periods, whose lengths are doubtful. This means the Egyptian Chronology actually comprises three floating chronologies. The chronologies of Mesopotamia, the Levant and Anatolia depend significantly on the chronology of Ancient Egypt. To the extent that there are problems in the Egyptian chronology, these issues will be inherited in chronologies based on synchronisms with Ancient Egypt.[82]

Indus Valley

There is much evidence that the Bronze Age civilization of the Indus Valley traded with the Near East, including clay seals found at Ur III and in the Persian Gulf.[83] Seals and beads were also found at the site of Esnunna.[84][85] In addition, if the land of Meluhha does indeed refer to the Indus Valley, then there are extensive trade records ranging from the Akkadian Empire until the Babylonian Dynasty I.

Thera and Eastern Mediterranean

Goods from Greece made their way into the ancient Near East, directly in Anatolia and via the island of Cyprus in the rest of the region and Egypt. A Hittite king, Tudhaliya IV, even captured Cyprus as part of an attempt to enforce a blockade of the Assyrians.[86]

The eruption of the Thera volcano provides a possible time marker for the region. A large eruption, it would have sent a plume of ash directly over Anatolia and filled the sea in the area with floating pumice. This pumice appeared in Egypt, apparently via trade. Current excavations in the Levant may also add to the timeline. The exact date of the volcanic eruption has been the subject of strong debate, with dates ranging between 1628 and 1520 BC. Radiocarbon dating has placed it at between 1627 BC and 1600 BC with a 95% degree of probability.[87][88][89] Archaeologist Kevin Walsh, accepting the radiocarbon dating, suggests a possible date of 1628 and believes this to be the most debated event in Mediterranean archaeology.[90] For the ANE chronology a key problem is the lack of a linkage between the eruption and some point on the relative chronology.[original research?]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Manning, Sturt W.; Lorentzen, Brita; Welton, Lynn; Batiuk, Stephen; Harrison, Timothy P. (29 October 2020). "Beyond megadrought and collapse in the Northern Levant: The chronology of Tell Tayinat and two historical inflection episodes, around 4.2ka BP, and following 3.2ka BP". PLOS ONE. 15 (10): e0240799. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0240799. ISSN 1932-6203. PMC 7595433. PMID 33119717.
  2. ^ Wencel, Maciej Mateusz (2017). "Radiocarbon Dating of Early Dynastic Mesopotamia: Results, Limitations, and Prospects". Radiocarbon. 59 (2): 635–645. doi:10.1017/RDC.2016.60. ISSN 0033-8222. S2CID 133337438.
  3. ^ Federico Zaina, "A RADIOCARBON DATE FROM EARLY DYNASTIC KISH AND THE STRATIGRAPHY AND CHRONOLOGY OF THE YWN SOUNDING AT TELL INGHARRA", Iraq, vol. 77, pp. 225 - 234, December 2015
  4. ^ [1] V.G.Gurzadyan, "Astronomy and the Fall of Babylon", Sky & Telescope, vol. 100, no.1 (July), pp. 40-45, 2000
  5. ^ [2]Boivin, O. (2016). The First Dynasty of the Sealand in History and Tradition (Doctoral dissertation, University of Toronto (Canada)).
  6. ^ a b c Gurzadyan, V. G., On the Astronomical Records and Babylonian Chronology, Akkadica, vol. 119–120, pp. 175–184, 2000
  7. ^ Warburton, David A. (2011). "The fall of Babylon in 1499: another update". Akkadica. 132/1: 1–22.
  8. ^ Warburton, David A. (2013). "A Rejoinder in favour of an Ultra-Low Chronology". Akkadica. 134/1: 17–28.
  9. ^ Kuhrt, A. (1997). Ancient Near East c. 3000–330 BC. London: Routledge. p. 12. ISBN 978-0-415-16763-5.
  10. ^ Potts, D. T. (1999). The archaeology of Elam. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. xxix. ISBN 978-0-521-56496-0.
  11. ^ Akkermans, P. M. M .G.; Schwartz, G. M. (2003). The archaeology of Syria. From complex hunter-gatherers to early urban societies (ca. 16,000–300 BC). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 13.
  12. ^ van de Mieroop, M. (2007). A History of the Ancient Near East, ca. 3000–323 BC. Malden: Blackwell. p. 4. ISBN 978-0-631-22552-2.
  13. ^ Sagona, A.; Zimansky, P. (2009). Ancient Turkey. London: Routledge. p. 251. ISBN 978-0-415-28916-0.
  14. ^ Manning, Sturt W.; Griggs, Carol B.; Lorentzen, Brita; Barjamovic, Gojko; Ramsey, Christopher Bronk; Kromer, Bernd; Wild, Eva Maria (13 July 2016). "Integrated Tree-Ring-Radiocarbon High-Resolution Timeframe to Resolve Earlier Second Millennium BCE Mesopotamian Chronology". PLOS ONE. 11 (7): e0157144. Bibcode:2016PLoSO..1157144M. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0157144. PMC 4943651. PMID 27409585.
  15. ^ Manning, Sturt; Barjamovic, Gojko; Lorentzen, Brita (1 March 2017). "The Course of 14C Dating Does Not Run Smooth: Tree-Rings, Radiocarbon, and Potential Impacts of a Calibration Curve Wiggle on Dating Mesopotamian Chronology". Journal of Ancient Egyptian Interconnections. 13: 70–81. ISSN 1944-2815.
  16. ^ Nahm, Werner, "The Case for the Lower Middle Chronology.", Altorientalische Forschungen vol. 40, no. 2, pp. 350–72, 2013
  17. ^ [3] Teije De Jong, "Further Astronomical Fine-Tuning of the Old Assyrian and Old Babylonian Chronologies", Jaarbericht van het Vooraziatisch-Egyptisch Genootschap "Ex Oriente Lux", vol. 46, pp. 127-143 2017
  18. ^ Amanda H. Podany, "Hana and the Low Chronology", Journal of Near Eastern Studies, vol. 73, no. 1, pp. 49-71, April 2014
  19. ^ Manning, Sturt W.; Kromer, Bernd; Kuniholm, Peter Ian; Newton, Maryanne W. (21 December 2001). "Anatolian Tree Rings and a New Chronology for the East Mediterranean Bronze-Iron Ages". Science. 294 (5551): 2532–2535. doi:10.1126/science.1066112. ISSN 0036-8075. PMID 11743159. S2CID 33497945.
  20. ^ [4] Erica Reiner and David Pingree, "BM 2/1. Babylonian Planetary Omens. Part I: The Venus Tablet", Udena, 1975 ISBN 0-89003-010-3
  21. ^ [5] T. de Jong andV. Foertmeyer, "A new look at the Venus observations of Ammisaduqa: traces of the Santorini eruption in the atmosphere of Babylon?", Jaarbericht van het Vooraziatisch-Egyptisch Genootschap "Ex Oriente Lux", vol. 42, pp. 141-158, 2010
  22. ^ [6] Gurzadyan, V. G., "The Venus Tablet and Refraction", Akkadica, vol. 124, pp. 13–17, 2003
  23. ^ [7]Gasche, H.; Armstrong, J.A.; Cole, S.W.; Gurzadyan, V.G. (1998). Dating the Fall of Babylon: A Reappraisal of Second-Millennium Chronology. University of Ghent and the Oriental Institute of the University of Chicago. ISBN 978-1885923103.
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References

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External links

  • Cuneiform Digital Library Initiative
  • Electronic Text Corpus of Sumerian Literature
  • NERD (Near East Radiocarbon Dates)

chronology, ancient, near, east, chronology, ancient, near, east, framework, dates, various, events, rulers, dynasties, historical, inscriptions, texts, customarily, record, events, terms, succession, officials, rulers, year, king, comparing, many, records, pi. The chronology of the ancient Near East is a framework of dates for various events rulers and dynasties Historical inscriptions and texts customarily record events in terms of a succession of officials or rulers in the year X of king Y Comparing many records pieces together a relative chronology relating dates in cities over a wide area For the 3rd and 2nd millennia BC this correlation is less certain but the following periods can be distinguished 1 Early Bronze Age Following the rise of cuneiform writing in the preceding Uruk period and Jemdet Nasr periods came a series of rulers and dynasties whose existence is based mostly on scant contemporary sources e g En me barage si combined with archaeological cultures some of which are considered problematic e g Early Dynastic II The lack of dendrochronology astronomical correlations and sparsity of modern well stratified sequences of radiocarbon dates from Southern Mesopotamia makes it difficult to assign absolute dates to this floating chronology 2 3 Middle Bronze Age Beginning with the Akkadian Empire around 2300 BC the chronological evidence becomes internally more consistent A good picture can be drawn of who succeeded whom and synchronisms between Mesopotamia the Levant and the more robust chronology of Ancient Egypt can be established Unlike the previous period there are a variety of data points serving to help turn this floating chronology into a fixed one These include astronomical events dendrochronology radiocarbon dating and even a volcanic eruption Despite this no agreement has been reached The most commonly seen solution is to place the reign of Hammurabi from 1792 to 1750 BC the middle chronology but there is far from a consensus 4 Late Bronze Age The fall of the First Babylonian Empire was followed by a period of chaos where Late Old Babylonian royal inscriptions are few and the year names become less evocative of political events early Kassite evidence is even scarcer and until recently Sealand I sources were near to non existent 5 Afterward came a period of stability with the Assyrian Middle Kingdom Hittite New Kingdom and the Third Babylon Dynasty Kassite The Bronze Age collapse A Dark Age begins with the fall of Babylonian Dynasty III Kassite around 1200 BC the invasions of the Sea Peoples and the collapse of the Hittite Empire Early Iron Age Around 900 BC written records once again become more numerous with the rise of the Neo Assyrian Empire establishing relatively secure absolute dates Classical sources such as the Canon of Ptolemy the works of Berossus and the Hebrew Bible provide chronological support and synchronisms An inscription from the tenth year of Assyrian king Ashur Dan III refers to an eclipse of the sun and astronomical calculations among the range of plausible years date the eclipse to 15 June 763 BC This can be corroborated by other mentions of astronomical events and a secure absolute chronology established tying the relative chronologies to the now dominant Gregorian calendar Contents 1 Variant Middle Bronze Age chronologies 2 Sources of chronological data 2 1 Astronomical 2 1 1 Venus tablet of Ammisaduqa 2 1 2 Eclipses 2 1 3 Egyptian Lunar Observations 2 1 4 Kudurru Symbols 2 2 Inscriptional 2 2 1 Underlying issues 2 2 2 King lists 2 2 3 Chronicles 2 2 4 Royal inscriptions 2 2 5 Year lists 2 2 6 Eponym limmu lists 2 2 7 Trade diplomatic and disbursement records 2 3 Classical 2 4 Dendrochronology 2 5 Radiocarbon dating 2 6 Synchronisms 2 6 1 Egypt 2 6 2 Indus Valley 2 6 3 Thera and Eastern Mediterranean 3 See also 4 Notes 5 References 6 External linksVariant Middle Bronze Age chronologies EditDue to the sparsity of sources throughout the Dark Age the history of the Near Eastern Middle Bronze Age down to the end of the First Babylonian Dynasty is founded on a floating or relative chronology There have been attempts to anchor the chronology using records of eclipses and other methods such as dendrochronology and radiocarbon dating but none of those dates is widely supported Currently the major schools of thought on the absolute dating of this period are separated by 56 or 64 years This is because the key source for this analysis are the omen observations in the Venus tablet of Ammisaduqa and these are multiples of the 8 year cycle of Venus visibility from Earth More recent work by Vahe Gurzadyan has suggested that the fundamental 8 year cycle of Venus is a better metric 6 updated 7 8 Some scholars discount the validity of the Venus tablet of Ammisaduqa entirely The alternative major chronologies are defined by the date of the 8th year of the reign of Ammisaduqa king of Babylon The most common Venus Tablet solutions fall of Babylon Long Chronology Babylon falls 1651 BC Middle Chronology Babylon falls 1595 BC 9 10 11 12 13 Middle Low Chronology Babylon falls 1587 BC 14 15 16 17 Short Chronology Babylon falls 1531 BC 18 19 Ultra Short Chronology Babylon falls 1499 BC 6 The following table gives an overview of the different proposals listing some key dates and their deviation relative to the middle chronology omitting the Supershort Chronology Babylon falls in 1466 BC Chronology Ammisaduqa Year 8 Reign of Hammurabi Fall of Babylon Ultra Low 1542 BC 1696 1654 BC 1499 BC 96 aShort or Low 1574 BC 1728 1686 BC 1531 BC 64 aMiddle Low 1630 BC 1784 1742 BC 1587 BC 8 aMiddle 1638 BC 1792 1750 BC 1595 BC 0 aLong or High 1694 BC 1848 1806 BC 1651 BC 56 aSources of chronological data EditAstronomical Edit Venus tablet of Ammisaduqa Edit In the series the conjunction of the rise of Venus with the new moon provides a point of reference or rather three points for the conjunction is a periodic occurrence Identifying an Ammisaduqa conjunction with one of these calculated conjunctions will therefore fix for example the accession of Hammurabi as either 1848 1792 or 1736 BC known as the high long middle and short or low chronology A record of the movements of Venus over roughly a 16 day period during the reign of a king believed to be Ammisaduqa of the First Babylonian Dynasty recorded on the omen tablet Enuma Anu Enlil 63 Twenty copies and fragments have been recovered all Neo Assyrian and later 20 An example entry is In month XI 15th day Venus in the west disappeared 3 days in the sky it stayed away and in month XI 18th day Venus in the east became visible springs will open Adad his rain Ea his floods will bring king to king messages of reconciliation will send 21 Using it various scholars have proposed dates for the fall of Babylon based on the 56 64 year cycle of Venus It has been suggested that the fundamental 8 year cycle of Venus is a better metric leading to the proposal of an ultra low chronology 22 Other researchers have declared the data to be too noisy for any use in fixing the chronology 23 Eclipses Edit A number of lunar and solar eclipses have been suggested for use in dating the ancient Near East Many suffer from the vagueness of the original tablets in showing that an actual eclipse occurred At that point it becomes a question of using computer models to show when a given eclipse would have been visible at a site complicated by difficulties in modeling the slowing rotation of the earth DT and uncertainty about the lengths of months 24 25 Most calculations for dating using eclipses have assumed the Venus Tablet of Ammisaduqa to be a legitimate source 6 26 The most notable omitted eclipses are the Mari Eponym Chronicle eclipse from the time of Shamshi Adad I and the Sargon of Akkad eclipse from the Legends of the Kings of Akkad and a liver omen 27 28 Some important examples Nineveh eclipse found in an Assyrian limmu list q e Bur Sagale of Guzana revolt in the city of Ashur In the month Simanu an eclipse of the sun took place part of the Eponym dating system This eclipse is considered to be solidly dated to 15 June 763 BC approximately in the ninth year of the reign of king Ashur dan III 29 Mursili s eclipse a text in the 10th year of the reign of Mursili II of the Hittite Empire When I marched to the land of A zzi the Sungod gave a sign has been interpreted as an eclipse event Proposed dates range between 1340 BC and 1308 BC 30 31 32 33 Shulgi Eclipse Based on a prophecy text Enuma Anu Enlil 20 which states If an eclipse occurs on the 14th day of Simanu The king of Ur his son will wrong him and the son who wronged his father Samas will catch him He will die in the mourning place of his father from the end of the reign of Shulgi of the Ur III dynasty A date of 25 July 2093 BC has been proposed These prophecies were written after the fact to help predict future events A second prophecy EAE 21 month 12 predicts the fall of Ur III in the reign of Ibbi Sin stating If an eclipse occurs on the 14th day of Addaru The prediction is given for the king of the world The destruction of Ur 34 Babylon Eclipse Another section in EAE 20 month 3 refers to the fall of Babylon ie if an eclipse occurs on the 14th day of Shabattu month XI and the god in his eclipse The prediction is given for Babylon the destruction of Babylon is near It refers to a solar eclipse followed by a lunar eclipse The most likely solution 1547 BC does not match up with Venus Tablet solutions Note that there are textual problems with the prophecy and it has been suggested that Akkad is actually the city in question 35 Egyptian Lunar Observations Edit There are thirteen Egyptian New Kingdom lunar observations which are used to pin the chronology in that period by locking down the accession year of Ramsesses II to 1279 BC There are a number of issues with this including a the regnal lengths for Neferneferuaten Seti I and Horemheb are actually not known with accuracy b where the observations occurred Memphis is usually assumed c what day the observations were taken two are known to be the 1st lunar day and d the Egyptian calendar for this period is not fully known especially how intercalary months were handled 36 Since the Assyrian eponym list is accurate to 1 year only back to 1132 BC ancient Near East chronology for the preceding century or so is anchored to Ramsesses II based on synchronisms and the Egyptian lunar observations 37 Kudurru Symbols Edit A number of attempts have been made to date Kassite Kudurru by mapping the symbols to astrononomical elements using Babylonian star catalogues such as MUL APIN with so far very limited results 38 39 Inscriptional Edit Thousands of cuneiform tablets have been found in an area running from Anatolia to Egypt While many are the ancient equivalent of grocery receipts these tablets along with inscriptions on buildings and public monuments provide the major source of chronological information for the ancient Middle East 40 Underlying issues Edit State of materialsWhile there are some relatively pristine display quality objects the vast majority of recovered tablets and inscriptions are damaged They have been broken with only portions found intentionally defaced and damaged by weather or soil Many tablets were not even baked and have to be carefully handled until they can be hardened by heating 41 ProvenanceThe site of an item s recovery is an important piece of information for archaeologists which can be compromised by two factors First in ancient times old materials were often reused as building material or fill sometimes at a great distance from the original location Secondly looting has disturbed archaeological sites at least back to Roman times making the provenance of looted objects difficult or impossible to determine Lastly counterfeit versions of these object are a longstanding traditional often difficult to detect 42 Multiple versionsKey documents like the Sumerian King List were repeatedly copied and redacted over generations to suit current political needs For this and other reasons the SKL once regarded as an important historical source is now only used with caution if at all for the period under discussion here 43 TranslationThe translation of cuneiform documents is quite difficult especially for damaged source material Additionally our knowledge of the underlying languages like Akkadian and Sumerian has evolved over time so a translation done now may be quite different from one done in AD 1900 there can be honest disagreement over what a document says Worse the majority of archaeological finds have not yet been published much less translated Those held in private collections may never be Political slantMany of our important source documents such as the Assyrian King List are the products of government and religious establishments with a natural bias in favor of the king or god in charge A king may even take credit for a battle or construction project of an earlier ruler The Assyrians in particular have a literary tradition of putting the best possible face on history a fact the interpreter must constantly keep in mind King lists Edit Historical lists of rulers were traditional in the ancient Near East Sumerian King ListCovers rulers of Mesopotamia from a time before the flood to the fall of the Isin Dynasty depending on the version Its use for pre Akkadian rulers is limited to none It continues to have value for the Akkadian period and later 43 The Sumerian King List omits any mention of Lagash even though it was clearly a major power during the period covered by the list The Royal Chronicle of Lagash appears to be an attempt to remedy that omission listing the kings of Lagash in the form of a chronicle though some scholars believe the Lagash chronicle to be either a parody of the Sumerian King List or a complete fabrication 44 Babylonian King ListThis list deals only with the rulers of Babylon It has been found in two versions denoted A and B both written in Neo Babylonian times The later dynasties in the list document the Kassite and Sealand periods though a number of Kassite rulers are damaged Ruler names largely match other records but the regnal lengths are more problematic 45 There is also a Babylonian King List of the Hellenistic Period in later part of the 1st millennium 46 Assyrian King ListThe Assyrian King List extends back to the reign of Shamshi Adad I 1809 c 1776 BC an Amorite who conquered Assur while creating a new kingdom in Upper Mesopotamia The list extends to the reign of Shalmaneser V 727 722 BC It is believed that the list was first constructed in the time of Ashur uballit I 1365 1330 BC The king list is considered to be roughly correct from that point on less so for earlier entries which have numerous inconsistencies Its purpose is to create a narrative of continuity and legitimacy for Assyrian kingship blending in the kings of Amorite origin 47 The existing source consists of 3 mostly complete tables and 2 small fragments 48 49 Unfortunately there are differences between the tablets involving regnal lengths names and in one case a king being left out entirely Not surprising given that they are noted as being copies of earlier tablets 50 Chronicles Edit Main article Babylonian Chronicles Many chronicles have been recovered in the ancient Near East most fragmentary with a political slant and sometimes contradictory but when combined with other sources they provide a rich source of chronological data 44 Most available chronicles stem from later Babylonian and Assyrian sources The Dynastic Chronicle after a Sumerian King List type beginning involves Babylonian kings from Simbar Sipak to Eriba Marduk The Chronicle of Early Kings after an early preamble involves kings of the First Babylonian Empire ending with the First Sealand Dynasty The Tummal Inscription relates events from the early Sumerian king Ishbi Erra of Isin The Chronicle of the Market Prices mentions various Babylonian rulers beginning from the period of Hammurabi The Eclectic Chronicle relates events of the post Kassite Babylonian kings Other examples are the Religious Chronicle and Nebuchadnezzar Chronicle among others The Synchronistic Chronicle found in the library of Assurbanipal in Nineveh records the diplomacy of the Assyrian empire with the Babylonian empire While useful the consensus is that this chronicle should not be considered reliable Chronicle P provides the same type of information as the Assyrian Synchronistic Chronicle but from the Babylonian point of view 51 Royal inscriptions Edit Rulers in the ancient Near East liked to take credit for public works Temples buildings and statues are likely to identify their royal patron Kings also publicly recorded major deeds such as battles won titles acquired and gods appeased These are very useful in tracking the reign of a ruler Year lists Edit Unlike current calendars most ancient calendars were based on the accession of the current ruler as in the 5th year in the reign of Hammurabi Each royal year was also given a title reflecting a deed of the ruler like the year Ur was defeated The compilation of these years are called date lists 52 53 54 Eponym limmu lists Edit In Assyria a royal official or limmu was selected in every year of a king s reign Many copies of these lists have been found 55 with certain ambiguities There are sometimes too many or few limmu for the length of a king s reign and sometimes the different versions of the eponym list disagree on a limmu for example in the Mari Eponym Chronicle The eponym list is considered accurate within 1 year back to 1133 BC Before that uncertainty creeps in There is now an Assyrian Revised Eponym List which attempts to resolve some of these issues 56 Trade diplomatic and disbursement records Edit As often in archaeology everyday records give the best picture of a civilization Cuneiform tablets were constantly moving around the ancient Near East offering alliances sometimes including daughters for marriage threatening war recording shipments of mundane supplies or settling accounts receivable Most were tossed away after use as one today would discard unwanted receipts but fortunately for us clay tablets are durable enough to survive even when used as material for wall filler in new construction 57 Amarna lettersA key find was a number of cuneiform tablets from Amarna in Egypt the city of the pharaoh Akhenaten Mostly in Akkadian the diplomatic language of the time a number of them name foreign rulers including kings of Assyria and Babylon as well as Tushratta king of Mitanni and rulers of small states in the Levant The letters date from the later stages of the reign of Amenhotep III c 1386 1349 BC to the 2nd year of Tutankhamun c 1341 1323 BC Assuming that the correct foreign rulers have been identified this provides and important point of synchronization Identification can be difficult due to the propensity for states to re use regnal names 58 Classical Edit We have some data sources from the classical period BerossusBerossus a Babylonian astronomer and historian born during the time of Alexander the Great wrote a history of Babylon which is a lost book Portions were preserved by other classical writers mainly Josephus via Alexander Polyhistor The surviving material is in chronicle form and covers the Neo Babylonian Empire period from Nabopolassar 627 605 BC to Nabonidus 556 539 BC 59 Canon of Ptolemy Canon of Kings This book provides a list of kings starting with the Neo Babylonian Empire and ending with the early Roman Emperors The entries relevant to the ancient Near East run from Nabonassar 747 734 BC to the Macedonian king Alexander IV 323 309 BC Though mostly accepted as accurate there are known issues with the Canon Some rulers are omitted there are times for which no ruler is listed and the early dates have been converted from the lunar calendar used by the Babylonians to the Egyptian solar calendar 60 61 62 Hebrew BibleNot having the stability of buried clay tablets the records of the Hebrews have a great deal of ancient editorial work to sift through when used as a source for chronology However the Hebrew kingdoms lay at the crossroads of Babylon Assyria Egypt and the Hittites making them spectators and often victims of actions in the area during the 1st millennium Mostly concerned with regional events in the Levant in 2 Kings 23 Hebrew פ ר ע ה נ כ ה romanized Phare oh Necho thought to be pharaoh Necho II is mentioned three times Neo Babylonian kings are mentioned in 2 Kings 20 Hebrew ב ר אד ך ב ל א ד ן romanized Berodach Bal adan thought to be Marduk apla iddina II in 2 Kings 24 Nebuchadnezzar II and in 2 Kings 25 Hebrew א ו יל מ ר ד ך romanized Evil Merodach thought to be Amel Marduk In Isaiah 38 the neo Assyrian kings Sennacherib and Esarhaddon are mentioned Dendrochronology Edit Main article Dendrochronology Dendrochronology attempts to use the variable growth pattern of trees expressed in their rings to build up a chronological timeline At present there are no continuous chronologies for the Near East and a floating chronology has been developed using trees in Anatolia for the Bronze and Iron Ages Professor of archaeology at Cornell Sturt Manning has spearheaded efforts to use this floating chronology with radiocarbon wiggle match to anchor the chronology 63 64 His research has recently been included in the Oxford History of the Ancient Near East and has been cited widely in the recent academic literature 65 Radiocarbon dating Edit Main article Radiocarbon Dating As in Egypt and the eastern Mediterranean radiocarbon dates run one or two centuries earlier than the dates proposed by archaeologists 66 Recently radiocarbon dates from the final destruction of Ebla have been shown to definitely favour the middle chronology with the fall of Babylon and Aleppo at c 1595 BC and seem to discount the ultra low chronology same event at c 1499 BC although it is emphasized that this is not presented as a decisive argument 67 Radiocarbon dates in literature should be discounted if they do not include the raw C14 date and the calibration method There have also been issues with dating for charcoal samples which may reflect much older wood the charcoal was made from In recent years some properly calibrated radiocarbon dates have begun to appear In 1991 Two grain samples from the Middle Uruk layer of the Uruk Mound at Abu Salabikh were accelerator radiocarbon dated with calibrated dates of 3520 130 BC 68 Calibration was based on that of Pearson 69 In 2013 a bone awl from Kish from Phase 2 in the YWN area the transition between Early Dynastic and Akkadian periods was accelerator radiocarbon dated to 2471 2299 BC 3905 27 C14 years BP 70 In 2017 charcoal sample from the base area of the Umm Al Nar fortress tower at Tell Abraq provided a radiocarbon date of 2461 2199 BC 3840 40 C14 years BP It was calibrated with IntCal13 The Umm Al Nar period is co temporal with the Akkadian through Ur III periods in Mesopotamia 71 Other emerging technical dating methods include rehydroxylation dating luminescence dating archaeomagnetic dating and the dating of lime plaster from structures 72 73 74 75 76 Synchronisms Edit Egypt Edit Main article Egyptian Chronology At least as far back as the reign of Thutmose I Egypt took a strong interest in the ancient Near East At times they occupied portions of the region a favor returned later by the Assyrians Some key synchronisms Battle of Kadesh involving Ramses II of Egypt Year 5 III Shemu day 9 and Muwatalli II of the Hittite empire This would be 12 May 1274 BC in the usually accepted Egyptian chronology 77 Recorded by both Egyptian Kadesh inscriptions and Hittite records Peace treaty Egyptian Hittite peace treaty between Ramses II of Egypt in his 21st year of reign roughly 1259 BC and Hattusili III of the Hittites Hieroglyphic copies were found at the temple of Amun at Karnak and at the Ramesseumand Fragmentary Akkadian cuneiform fragments were found at Hattusa 78 Amenhotep III Amenophis III marries the daughter of Shuttarna II of Mitanni There is also a record of messages from the pharaoh to Kadashman Enlil I of Babylon in the Amarna Letter EA1 5 Other Amarna letters link Amenhotep III to Burnaburiash II of Babylon EA6 and Tushratta of Mitanni EA17 29 as well Akhenaten Amenhotep IV married the daughter of Tushratta of Mitanni as did his father Amenhotep III leaving a number of records He also corresponded with Burna Buriash II of Babylon EA7 11 15 and Ashuruballit I of Assyria EA15 16 Bay an official of the Egyptian queen Twosret in a tablet RS 86 2230 found at Ras Shamra was in communication with Ammurapi the last ruler of Ugarit Bay was in office from approximately 1194 1190 BC This sets an upper limit on the destruction date of Ugarit 79 80 Pottery seals of the Egyptian pharaoh Pepi I have been found in the wreckage of the city of Ebla destroyed by Naram Sin of Akkad 81 There are problems with using Egyptian chronology Besides some minor issues of regnal lengths and overlaps there are three long periods of poorly documented chaos in the history of ancient Egypt the First Second and Third Intermediate Periods whose lengths are doubtful This means the Egyptian Chronology actually comprises three floating chronologies The chronologies of Mesopotamia the Levant and Anatolia depend significantly on the chronology of Ancient Egypt To the extent that there are problems in the Egyptian chronology these issues will be inherited in chronologies based on synchronisms with Ancient Egypt 82 Indus Valley Edit Main article Indus Valley civilisation There is much evidence that the Bronze Age civilization of the Indus Valley traded with the Near East including clay seals found at Ur III and in the Persian Gulf 83 Seals and beads were also found at the site of Esnunna 84 85 In addition if the land of Meluhha does indeed refer to the Indus Valley then there are extensive trade records ranging from the Akkadian Empire until the Babylonian Dynasty I Thera and Eastern Mediterranean Edit Goods from Greece made their way into the ancient Near East directly in Anatolia and via the island of Cyprus in the rest of the region and Egypt A Hittite king Tudhaliya IV even captured Cyprus as part of an attempt to enforce a blockade of the Assyrians 86 The eruption of the Thera volcano provides a possible time marker for the region A large eruption it would have sent a plume of ash directly over Anatolia and filled the sea in the area with floating pumice This pumice appeared in Egypt apparently via trade Current excavations in the Levant may also add to the timeline The exact date of the volcanic eruption has been the subject of strong debate with dates ranging between 1628 and 1520 BC Radiocarbon dating has placed it at between 1627 BC and 1600 BC with a 95 degree of probability 87 88 89 Archaeologist Kevin Walsh accepting the radiocarbon dating suggests a possible date of 1628 and believes this to be the most debated event in Mediterranean archaeology 90 For the ANE chronology a key problem is the lack of a linkage between the eruption and some point on the relative chronology original research See also Edit Asia portalEarly Dynastic Period Mesopotamia Egyptian chronology Minoan chronology List of Mesopotamian dynasties List of rulers of Elam List of Neo Hittite kings List of kings of Ebla List of kings of Mari Template Rulers of the ancient Near EastNotes Edit Manning Sturt W Lorentzen Brita Welton Lynn Batiuk Stephen Harrison Timothy P 29 October 2020 Beyond megadrought and collapse in the Northern Levant The chronology of Tell Tayinat and two historical inflection episodes around 4 2ka BP and following 3 2ka BP PLOS ONE 15 10 e0240799 doi 10 1371 journal pone 0240799 ISSN 1932 6203 PMC 7595433 PMID 33119717 Wencel Maciej Mateusz 2017 Radiocarbon Dating of Early Dynastic Mesopotamia Results Limitations and Prospects Radiocarbon 59 2 635 645 doi 10 1017 RDC 2016 60 ISSN 0033 8222 S2CID 133337438 Federico Zaina A RADIOCARBON DATE FROM EARLY DYNASTIC KISH AND THE STRATIGRAPHY AND CHRONOLOGY OF THE YWN SOUNDING AT TELL INGHARRA Iraq vol 77 pp 225 234 December 2015 1 V G Gurzadyan Astronomy and the Fall of Babylon Sky amp Telescope vol 100 no 1 July pp 40 45 2000 2 Boivin O 2016 The First Dynasty of the Sealand in History and Tradition Doctoral dissertation University of Toronto Canada a b c Gurzadyan V G On the Astronomical Records and Babylonian Chronology Akkadica vol 119 120 pp 175 184 2000 Warburton David A 2011 The fall of Babylon in 1499 another update Akkadica 132 1 1 22 Warburton David A 2013 A Rejoinder in favour of an Ultra Low Chronology Akkadica 134 1 17 28 Kuhrt A 1997 Ancient Near East c 3000 330 BC London Routledge p 12 ISBN 978 0 415 16763 5 Potts D T 1999 The archaeology of Elam Cambridge Cambridge University Press p xxix ISBN 978 0 521 56496 0 Akkermans P M M G Schwartz G M 2003 The archaeology of Syria From complex hunter gatherers to early urban societies ca 16 000 300 BC Cambridge Cambridge University Press p 13 van de Mieroop M 2007 A History of the Ancient Near East ca 3000 323 BC Malden Blackwell p 4 ISBN 978 0 631 22552 2 Sagona A Zimansky P 2009 Ancient Turkey London Routledge p 251 ISBN 978 0 415 28916 0 Manning Sturt W Griggs Carol B Lorentzen Brita Barjamovic Gojko Ramsey Christopher Bronk Kromer Bernd Wild Eva Maria 13 July 2016 Integrated Tree Ring Radiocarbon High Resolution Timeframe to Resolve Earlier Second Millennium BCE Mesopotamian Chronology PLOS ONE 11 7 e0157144 Bibcode 2016PLoSO 1157144M doi 10 1371 journal pone 0157144 PMC 4943651 PMID 27409585 Manning Sturt Barjamovic Gojko Lorentzen Brita 1 March 2017 The Course of 14C Dating Does Not Run Smooth Tree Rings Radiocarbon and Potential Impacts of a Calibration Curve Wiggle on Dating Mesopotamian Chronology Journal of Ancient Egyptian Interconnections 13 70 81 ISSN 1944 2815 Nahm Werner The Case for the Lower Middle Chronology Altorientalische Forschungen vol 40 no 2 pp 350 72 2013 3 Teije De Jong Further Astronomical Fine Tuning of the Old Assyrian and Old Babylonian Chronologies Jaarbericht van het Vooraziatisch Egyptisch Genootschap Ex Oriente Lux vol 46 pp 127 143 2017 Amanda H Podany Hana and the Low Chronology Journal of Near Eastern Studies vol 73 no 1 pp 49 71 April 2014 Manning Sturt W Kromer Bernd Kuniholm Peter Ian Newton Maryanne W 21 December 2001 Anatolian Tree Rings and a New Chronology for the East Mediterranean Bronze Iron Ages Science 294 5551 2532 2535 doi 10 1126 science 1066112 ISSN 0036 8075 PMID 11743159 S2CID 33497945 4 Erica Reiner and David Pingree BM 2 1 Babylonian Planetary Omens Part I The Venus Tablet Udena 1975 ISBN 0 89003 010 3 5 T de Jong andV Foertmeyer A new look at the Venus observations of Ammisaduqa traces of the Santorini eruption in the atmosphere of Babylon Jaarbericht van het Vooraziatisch Egyptisch Genootschap Ex Oriente Lux vol 42 pp 141 158 2010 6 Gurzadyan V G The Venus Tablet and Refraction Akkadica vol 124 pp 13 17 2003 7 Gasche H Armstrong J A Cole S W Gurzadyan V G 1998 Dating the Fall of Babylon A Reappraisal of Second Millennium Chronology University of Ghent and the Oriental Institute of the University of Chicago ISBN 978 1885923103 8 B Banjevic Ancient eclipses and dating the fall of Babylon Publications of the Astronomical Observatory of Belgrade vol 80 pp 251 257 May 2006 9 Peter J Huber Third Millennium BC Chronology and Clock Time Correction Cuneiform Digital Library Preprints no 22 CDLI 8 September 2021 Mitchell Wayne A Ancient Astronomical Observations and Near Eastern Chronology JACF vol 3 pp 7 26 1990 C Michel Nouvelles donnees pour la chronologie du IIe millenaire Nouvelles Assyriologiques Breves et Utilitaires NABU 2002 issue 1 note 20 pages 17 18 10 Huber Peter Dating of Akkad Ur III and Babylon I Organization Representation and Symbols of Power in the Ancient Near East Proceedings of the 54th Rencontre Assyriologique Internationale at Wurzburg 20 25 Jul edited by Gernot Wilhelm University Park USA Penn State University Press 2022 pp 715 734 Rawlinson Henry Creswicke The Assyrian Canon Verified by the Record of a Solar Eclipse B C 763 The Athenaeum Journal of Literature Science and the Fine Arts nr 2064 pp 660 661 18 May 1867 Theo P J Van Den Hout The Purity of Kingship An Edition of CTH 569 and Related Hittite Oracle Inquiries of Tutẖaliya 1998 Gautschy R Remarks Concerning the Alleged Solar Eclipse of Mursili II Altorientalische Forschungen vol 44 no 1 pp 23 29 2017 DOI 10 1515 aofo 2017 0004 Devecchi E Miller J L 2011 Hittite Egyptian synchronisms and their consequences for ancient Near Eastern chronology in J Mynarova ed Egypt and the Near East The Crossroads Proceedings of an International Conference on the Relations of Egypt and the Near East in the Bronze Age Prague Charles University 139 176 Miller J L 2017 Political interactions between Kassite Babylonia and Assyria Egypt and Ḫatti during the Amarna Age in A Bartelmus and Katja Sternitzke eds Kardunias Babylonia Under the Kassites Berlin de Gruyter 93 11 Peter J Huber Astronomy and Ancient Chronology Akkadica 119 120 pp 159 176 2000 Khalisi Emil 2020 The Double Eclipse at the Downfall of Old Babylon arXiv 2007 07141 Gautschy Rita A REASSESSMENT OF THE ABSOLUTE CHRONOLOGY OF THE EGYPTIAN NEW KINGDOM AND ITS BROTHERLY COUNTRIES Agypten Und Levante Egypt and the Levant vol 24 2014 pp 141 58 Weidner E 1926 Die grosse Konigsliste aus Assur AfO 3 Tuman V S Astronomical Dating of the Kudurru IM 80908 Sumer vol 46 pp 98 106 1989 1990 Pizzimenti The Kudurrus And The Sky Analysis And Interpretation Of The Dog Scorpion Lamp Astral Pattern As Represented In Kassite Kudurrus Reliefs February 2016 https doi org 10 5281 zenodo 220910 Cuneiform Texts and the Writing of History Marc van de Mieroop Routledge 1999 ISBN 0 415 19532 2 11 Robert K Englund The Year Nissen returns joyous from a distant island 2003 1 CDLI ISSN 1540 8779 Michel Cecile Cuneiform Fakes A Long History from Antiquity to the Present Day Fakes and Forgeries of Written Artefacts from Ancient Mesopotamia to Modern China edited by Cecile Michel and Michael Friedrich Berlin Boston De Gruyter 2020 pp 25 60 a b Marchesi Gianni 2010 The Sumerian King List and the Early History of Mesopotamia M G Biga M Liverani Eds ana turri gimilli Studi dedicati al Padre Werner R Mayer S J da amici e allievi Vicino Oriente Quaderno 5 Roma 231 248 a b Jean Jacques Glassner Mesopotamian Chronicles 2004 ISBN 1 58983 090 3 van Koppen Frans THE OLD TO MIDDLE BABYLONIAN TRANSITION HISTORY AND CHRONOLOGY OF THE MESOPOTAMIAN DARK AGE Agypten Und Levante Egypt and the Levant vol 20 2010 pp 453 63 A J Sachs and D J Wiseman A Babylonian King List of the Hellenistic Period Iraq vol 16 no 2 pp 202 212 Autumn 1954 12 Valk Jonathan The Origins of the Assyrian King List Journal of Ancient Near Eastern History vol 6 no 1 pp 1 17 2019 Gelb Ignace J Two Assyrian King Lists Journal of Near Eastern Studies vol 13 pp 209 230 and pls XIV XVII 1954 Nassouhi Essad Grande liste des rois d Assyrie Archiv fur Orientforschung vol 4 pp 1 11 and pls I II 1927 Pruzsinszky Regine Mesopotamian Chronology of the 2nd Millennium B C An Introduction to the Textual Evidence and Related Chronological Issues Vienna Austrian Academy of Sciences Press 2009 Albert Kirk Grayson Assyrian and Babylonian Chronicles Locust Valley N Y J J Augustin 1975 ISBN 978 1575060491 13 Marcel Sigrist and Peter Damerow Mesopotamian Year Names Neo Sumerian and Old Babylonian Date Formulae CDLI at UCLA Baqir Taha Date formulae and date lists from Harmal Sumer vol 5 no 1 pp 34 86 January 1949 de Boer Rients Studies on the Old Babylonian Kings of Isin and Their Dynasties with an Updated List of Isin Year Names Zeitschrift fur Assyriologie und Vorderasiatische Archaologie vol 111 no 1 2021 pp 5 27 The Eponyms of the Assyrian Empire 910 612 B C by Alan Millard State Archives of Assyria Studies 11 Helsinki Neo Assyrian Text Corpus Project 1994 xvi 153 pp 20 plates Gojko Barjamovic Thomas Hertel and Mogens T Larsen Ups and Downs at Kanesh Chronology History and Society in the Old Assyrian Period Leiden Nederlands Instituut voor het Nabije Oosten 2012 Trevor Bryce Letters of the Great Kings of the Ancient Near East Routledge 2003 ISBN 0 415 25857 X Moran William L 1992 The Amarna Letters Baltimore Johns Hopkins University Press p xiv ISBN 0 8018 4251 4 14 R J Bert van der Spek Berossus as a Babylonian chronicler and Greek historian in R J van der Spek et al eds Studies in Ancient Near Eastern World View and Society presented to Marten Stol on the occasion of his 65th birthday 10 November 2005 and his retirement from the Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam pp 277 318 Bethesda MD CDL Press 2008 A Brinkman A Political History of Post Kassite Babylonia 1158 722 BC Analecta Orientalia vol 43 Rome 1968 A K Grayson Assyrian and Babylonian Chronicles Texts from Cuneiform Sources vol 5 Locust Valley N Y 1975 Eisenbrauns reprint ISBN 978 1575060491 15 Leo Depuydt More Valuable than All Gold Ptolemy s Royal Canon and Babylonian Chronology Journal of Cuneiform Studies vol 47 pp 97 117 1995 Manning Sturt W Wacker Lukas Buntgen Ulf Bronk Ramsey Christopher Dee Michael W Kromer Bernd Lorentzen Brita Tegel Willy 17 August 2020 Radiocarbon offsets and old world chronology as relevant to Mesopotamia Egypt Anatolia and Thera Santorini Scientific Reports 10 1 13785 doi 10 1038 s41598 020 69287 2 ISSN 2045 2322 PMC 7431540 PMID 32807792 S2CID 221136701 Manning Sturt W Griggs Carol B Lorentzen Brita Barjamovic Gojko Ramsey Christopher Bronk Kromer Bernd Wild Eva Maria 13 July 2016 Integrated Tree Ring Radiocarbon High Resolution Timeframe to Resolve Earlier Second Millennium BCE Mesopotamian Chronology PLOS ONE 11 7 e0157144 doi 10 1371 journal pone 0157144 ISSN 1932 6203 PMC 4943651 PMID 27409585 Hoflmayer Felix 18 August 2022 Establishing an Absolute Chronology of the Middle Bronze Age The Oxford History of the Ancient Near East Volume II pp 1 46 doi 10 1093 oso 9780190687571 003 0011 ISBN 978 0190687571 Hoflmayer Felix Radiocarbon Dating and Egyptian Chronology From the Curve of Knowns to Bayesian Modeling The Oxford Handbook of Topics in Archaeology online edn Oxford Academic 2 Oct 2014 https doi org 10 1093 oxfordhb 9780199935413 013 64 accessed 23 Dec 2022 Matthiae P 2007 The Destruction of Old Syrian Ebla In Matthiae P Pinnock F Nigro L and Peyronel L eds From relative chronology to absolute chronology The second millennium BC in Syria Palestine Contributi del Centro Linceo Interdisciplinare Beniamino Segre N 117 Roma pp 5 32 Susan Pollock Caroline Steele and Melody Pope Investigations on the Uruk Mound Abu Salabikh 1990 Iraq vol 53 pp 59 68 1991 Pearson G W et al 1986 High precision 14C measurement of Irish oaks to show the natural 14C variation from a d 1840 to 5210 b c Radiocarbon 28 pp 911 34 1986 Zaina F A Radiocarbon date from Early Dynastic Kish and the Stratigraphy and Chronology of the YWN sounding at Tell Ingharra Iraq vol 77 1 pp 225 234 2015 Magee Peter et al Tell Abraq during the second and first millennia BC Site layout spatial organisation and economy Arabian Archaeology and Epigraphy 28 2 pp 209 237 2017 Wilson Moira A Carter Margaret A 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1906 Ancient Records of Egypt Historical Documents from the Earliest Times to the Persian Conquest Ancient Records Second Series vol III Chicago University of Chicago Press LCCN 06005480 Surenhagen Dietrich Forerunners of the Hattusili Ramesses treaty British Museum Studies in Ancient Egypt and Sudan BMSAES vol 6 pp 59 67 2006 17 Freu J La tablette RS 86 2230 et la phase finale du Royaume d Ugarit Syria vol 65 pp 395 398 1988 18 Kaniewski D Van Campo E Van Lerberghe K Boiy T Vansteenhuyse K et al The Sea Peoples from Cuneiform Tablets to Carbon Dating PLoS ONE 6 6 e20232 2011 doi 10 1371 journal pone 0020232 A Victory over Mari and the Fall of Ebla Alfonso Archi Maria Giovanna Biga Journal of Cuneiform Studies vol 55 pp 1 44 2003 19 Felix Hoflmayer 2021 Tel Nami Cyprus and Egypt Radiocarbon Dates and Early Middle Bronze Age Chronology Palestine Exploration Quarterly DOI 10 1080 00310328 2020 1866329 Gadd C J Seals of Ancient Indian Style Found at Ur Proceedings of the British Academy 18 1932 191 210 Henri Frankfort The Indus civilization and the Near East Annual Bibliography of Indian Archaeology for 1932 Leyden VI pp 1 12 1934 20 J MarkKenoyer et al A new approach to tracking connections between the Indus Valley and Mesopotamia initial results of strontium isotope analyses from Harappa and Ur Journal of Archaeological Science vol 40 iss 5 pp 2286 2297 May 2013 Urbanism on Late Bronze Age Cyprus LC II in Retrospect Ora Negbi Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research iss 337 pp 1 45 Feb 2005 Friedrich Walter L Kromer B Friedrich M Heinemeier J Pfeiffer T Talamo S 2006 Santorini Eruption Radiocarbon Dated to 1627 1600 B C Science American Association for the Advancement of Science 312 5773 548 doi 10 1126 science 1125087 PMID 16645088 S2CID 35908442 Retrieved 10 March 2007 Manning Sturt W Ramsey CB Kutschera W Higham T Kromer B Steier P Wild EM 2006 Chronology for the Aegean Late Bronze Age 1700 1400 B C Science American Association for the Advancement of Science 312 5773 565 569 Bibcode 2006Sci 312 565M doi 10 1126 science 1125682 PMID 16645092 S2CID 21557268 Retrieved 10 March 2007 Manning SW 2003 Clarifying the high v low Aegean Cypriot chronology for the mid second millennium BC assessing the evidence interpretive frameworks and current state of the debate PDF In Bietak M Czerny E eds The Synchronisation of Civilisations in the Eastern Mediterranean in the Second Millennium B C III Proceedings of the SCIEM 2000 2nd EuroConference Vienna 28th of May 1st of June 2003 Vienna Austria pp 101 137 Walsh Kevin 2013 The Archaeology of Mediterranean Landscapes Human Environment Interaction from the Neolithic to the Roman Period Cambridge University Press p 20 ISBN 978 0521853019 References Edit 21 Johannes van der Plicht1 and Hendrik J Bruins Radiocarbon Dating in Near Eastern Contexts Confusion and Quality Control Radiocarbon vol 43 no 3 pp 1155 1166 January 2006 22 Sturt W Manning et al Radiocarbon offsets and old world chronology as relevant to Mesopotamia Egypt Anatolia and Thera Santorini Nature Scientific Reports vol 10 17 August 2020 https doi org 10 1038 s41598 020 69287 2 23 Neocleous A Azzopardi G amp Dee M W 2019 Identification of possible d14C anomalies since 14 ka BP A computational intelligence approach Science of the Total Environment vol 663 pp 162 169 https doi org 10 1016 j scitotenv 2019 01 251 Bryce Trevor 2005 The Kingdom of the Hittites New ed Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 928132 9 Albrecht Goetze The Kassites and Near Eastern Chronology Journal of Cuneiform Studies vol 18 no 4 pp 97 101 1964 Leick Gwendolyn 2003 Mesopotamia The Invention of the City Penguin ISBN 978 0 14 026574 3 van de Mieroop Marc 2006 A History of the Ancient Near East ca 3000 323 BC Wiley Blackwell ISBN 978 1 4051 4911 2 24 Walther Sallaberger and Ingo Schrakam Associated Regional Chronologies for the Ancient Near East and the Eastern Mediterranean History and Philology Arcane Brepols Publishers 4 March 2015 ISBN 978 2503534947 Glenn Schwartz Problems of Chronology Mesopotamia Anatolia and the Syro Levantine Region in Beyond Babylon Art Trade and Diplomacy in the Second Millennium B C pp 450 452 Metropolitan Museum of Art 2008 ISBN 978 0300141436 H Weiss et al The Genesis and Collapse of Third Millennium North Mesopotamian Civilization Science vol 261 iss 5124 pp 995 1004 20 August 1993External links EditCuneiform Digital Library Initiative Electronic Text Corpus of Sumerian Literature NERD Near East Radiocarbon Dates Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Chronology of the ancient Near East amp oldid 1140722994 Variant Middle Bronze Age chronologies, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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