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Nebuchadnezzar II

Nebuchadnezzar II (Babylonian cuneiform: Nabû-kudurri-uṣur,[6][7][c] meaning "Nabu, watch over my heir";[8] Biblical Hebrew: נְבוּכַדְנֶאצַּרNəḇūḵaḏneʾṣṣar), also spelled Nebuchadrezzar II,[8] was the second king of the Neo-Babylonian Empire, ruling from the death of his father Nabopolassar in 605 BC to his own death in 562 BC. Historically known as Nebuchadnezzar the Great,[9][10] he is typically regarded as the empire's greatest king.[8][11][12] Nebuchadnezzar remains famous for his military campaigns in the Levant, for his construction projects in his capital, Babylon, and for the important part he played in Jewish history.[8] Ruling for 43 years, Nebuchadnezzar was the longest-reigning king of the Chaldean dynasty. At the time of his death, Nebuchadnezzar was among the most powerful rulers in the world.[11]

Nebuchadnezzar II
Portion of the so-called "Tower of Babel stele", depicting Nebuchadnezzar II on the right and featuring a depiction of Babylon's great ziggurat (the Etemenanki) to his left[a]
King of the Neo-Babylonian Empire
ReignAugust 605 BC – 7 October 562 BC
PredecessorNabopolassar
SuccessorAmel-Marduk
Bornc. 642 BC[b]
Uruk (?)
Died7 October 562 BC (aged c. 80)
Babylon
SpouseAmytis of Babylon (?)
Issue
Among
others
AkkadianNabû-kudurri-uṣur
DynastyChaldean dynasty
FatherNabopolassar

Possibly named after his grandfather of the same name, or after Nebuchadnezzar I (r. c. 1125–1104 BC), one of Babylon's greatest ancient warrior-kings, Nebuchadnezzar II already secured renown for himself during his father's reign, leading armies in the Medo-Babylonian war against the Assyrian Empire. At the Battle of Carchemish in 605 BC, Nebuchadnezzar inflicted a crushing defeat on an Egyptian army led by Pharaoh Necho II, and ensured that the Neo-Babylonian Empire would succeed the Neo-Assyrian Empire as the dominant power in the ancient Near East. Shortly after this victory, Nabopolassar died and Nebuchadnezzar became king. Despite his successful military career during his father's reign, the first third or so of Nebuchadnezzar's reign saw little to no major military achievements, and notably a disastrous failure in an attempted invasion of Egypt. These years of lacklustre military performance saw some of Babylon's vassals, particularly in the Levant, beginning to doubt Babylon's power, viewing the Neo-Babylonian Empire as a "paper tiger" rather than a power truly on the level of the Neo-Assyrian Empire. The situation grew so severe that people in Babylonia itself began disobeying the king, some going as far as to revolt against Nebuchadnezzar's rule.

Closeup of the portrait

After this disappointing early period as king, Nebuchadnezzar's luck turned. In the 580s BC, Nebuchadnezzar engaged in a successful string of military actions in the Levant against the vassal states in rebellion there, likely with the ultimate intent of curbing Egyptian influence in the region. In 587 BC, Nebuchadnezzar destroyed the Kingdom of Judah, and its capital, Jerusalem. The destruction of Jerusalem led to the Babylonian captivity as the city's population, and people from the surrounding lands, were deported to Babylonia. The Jews thereafter referred to Nebuchadnezzar, the greatest enemy they had faced until that point, as a "destroyer of nations". The biblical Book of Jeremiah paints Nebuchadnezzar as a cruel enemy, but also as God's appointed ruler of the world and a divine instrument to punish disobedience. Through the destruction of Jerusalem, the capture of the rebellious Phoenician city of Tyre, and other campaigns in the Levant, Nebuchadnezzar completed the Neo-Babylonian Empire's transformation into the new great power of the ancient Near East.

In addition to his military campaigns, Nebuchadnezzar is remembered as a great builder king. The prosperity ensured by his wars allowed Nebuchadnezzar to conduct great building projects in Babylon, and elsewhere in Mesopotamia. The modern image of Babylon is largely of the city as it was after Nebuchadnezzar's projects, during which he, among other work, rebuilt many of the city's religious buildings, including the Esagila and Etemenanki, repaired its current palace and constructed a brand new palace, and beautified its ceremonial centre through renovations to the city's Processional Street and the Ishtar Gate. As most of Nebuchadnezzar's inscriptions deal with his building projects, rather than military accomplishments, he was for a time seen by historians mostly as a builder, rather than a warrior.

Sources

There are very few cuneiform sources for the period between 594 BC and 557 BC, covering much of the reign of Nebuchadnezzar II, and the reigns of his three immediate successors; Amel-Marduk, Neriglissar and Labashi-Marduk.[13] This lack of sources has the unfortunate effect that even though Nebuchadnezzar had the longest reign of all of them, less is confidently known of Nebuchadnezzar's reign than of the reigns of almost all the other Neo-Babylonian kings. Though the handful of cuneiform sources recovered, notably the Babylonian Chronicle, confirm some events of his reign, such as conflicts with the Kingdom of Judah, other events, such as the 586 BC destruction of Solomon's Temple and other potential military campaigns Nebuchadnezzar conducted, are not covered in any known cuneiform documents.[14]

As such, historical reconstructions of this period generally follow secondary sources in Hebrew, Greek and Latin to determine what events transpired at the time, in addition to contract tablets from Babylonia.[13] Though using the sources written by later authors, many of them created several centuries after Nebuchadnezzar's time and often including their own cultural attitudes to the events and figures discussed,[15] presents problems in and of itself, blurring the line between history and tradition, it is the only possible approach to gain insight into Nebuchadnezzar's reign.[14]

Background

Name

 
A fired mudbrick from Babylon, stamped with the name and titles of Nebuchadnezzar

Nebuchadnezzar II's name in Akkadian was Nabû-kudurri-uṣur,[6] meaning "Nabu, watch over my heir".[8] The name was often interpreted in earlier scholarship as "Nabu, protect the boundary", given that the word kudurru can also mean 'boundary' or 'line'. Modern historians support the 'heir' interpretation over the 'boundary' interpretation in terms of this name. There is no reason to believe that the Babylonians intended the name to be difficult to interpret or to have a double meaning.[16]

Nabû-kudurri-uṣur is typically anglicised to 'Nebuchadnezzar', following how the name is most commonly rendered in Hebrew and Greek, particularly in most of the Bible. In Hebrew, the name was rendered as נְבוּכַדְנֶאצַּר (Nəḇūḵaḏneʾṣṣar) and in Greek it was rendered as Ναβουχοδονόσορ (Nabouchodonosor). Some scholars, such as Donald Wiseman, prefer the anglicisation "Nebuchadrezzar", with an "r" rather than an "n", following the assumption that "Nebuchadnezzar" is a later, corrupted form of the contemporary Nabû-kudurri-uṣur. The alternate anglicisation "Nebuchadrezzar" derives from how the name is rendered in the books of Jeremiah and Ezekiel, נְבוּכַדְרֶאצַּר (Nəḇūḵaḏreʾṣṣar), a more faithful transliteration of the original Akkadian name. The Assyriologist Adrianus van Selms suggested in 1974 that the variant with an "n" rather than an "r" was a rude nickname, deriving from an Akkadian rendition like Nabû-kūdanu-uṣur, which means 'Nabu, protect the mule', though there is no concrete evidence for this idea. Van Selms believed that a nickname like that could derive from Nebuchadnezzar's early reign, which was plagued by political instability.[17]

Nebuchadnezzar II's name, Nabû-kudurri-uṣur, was identical to the name of his distant predecessor, Nebuchadnezzar I (r. c. 1125–1104 BC), who ruled more than five centuries before Nebuchadnezzar II's time.[6] Like Nebuchadnezzar II, Nebuchadnezzar I was a renowned warrior-king, who appeared in a time of political upheaval and defeated the forces of Babylon's enemies, in Nebuchadnezzar I's case the Elamites.[18] Although theophoric names using the god Nabu are common in texts from the early Neo-Babylonian Empire, the name Nebuchadnezzar is relatively rare, only being mentioned four times with certainty. Though there is no evidence that Nabopolassar named his son after Nebuchadnezzar I, Nabopolassar was knowledgeable in history and actively worked to connect his rule to the rule of the Akkadian Empire, which preceded him by nearly two thousand years. The significance of his son and heir bearing the name of one of Babylon's greatest kings would not have been lost on Nabopolassar.[19]

If Jursa's theory concerning Nabopolassar's origin is correct, it is alternatively possible that Nebuchadnezzar II was named after his grandfather of the same name, as the Babylonians employed patronymics, rather than after the previous king.[19][20]

Ancestry and early life

 
Preserved portion of the Eanna temple at Uruk. Nebuchadnezzar was the high priest of the Eanna temple from 626/625 BC to 617 BC.

Nebuchadnezzar was the eldest son of Nabopolassar (r. 626–605 BC), the founder of the Neo-Babylonian Empire. This is confirmed by Nabopolassar's inscriptions, which explicitly name Nebuchadnezzar as his "eldest son", as well as inscriptions from Nebuchadnezzar's reign, which refer to him as the "first" or "chief son" of Nabopolassar, and as Nabopolassar's "true" or "legitimate heir".[21] The Neo-Babylonian Empire was founded through Nabopolassar's rebellion, and later war, against the Neo-Assyrian Empire, which liberated Babylonia after nearly a century of Assyrian control. The war resulted in the complete destruction of Assyria,[22] and the Neo-Babylonian Empire, which rose in its place, was powerful, but hastily built and politically unstable.[23]

As Nabopolassar never clarified his ancestry in lineage in any of his inscriptions, his origin is not entirely clear. Subsequent historians have variously identified Nabopolassar as a Chaldean,[24][25][26] an Assyrian[27] or a Babylonian.[28] Although no evidence conclusively confirms him as being of Chaldean origin, the term "Chaldean dynasty" is frequently used by modern historians for the royal family he founded, and the term "Chaldean Empire" remains in use as an alternate historiographical name for the Neo-Babylonian Empire.[24]

Nabopolassar appears to, regardless of his ethnic origin, have been strongly connected to the city of Uruk,[26][29] located south of Babylon. It is possible that he was a member of its ruling elite before becoming king[26] and there is a growing body of evidence that Nabopolassar's family originated in Uruk, for instance that Nebuchadnezzar's daughters lived in the city.[30] In 2007, Michael Jursa advanced the theory that Nabopolassar was a member of a prominent political family in Uruk, whose members are attested since the reign of Esarhaddon (r. 681–669 BC). To support his theory, Jursa pointed to how documents describe how the grave and body of "Kudurru", a deceased governor of Uruk, was desecrated due to the anti-Assyrian activities of Kudurru's two sons, Nabu-shumu-ukin and a son whose name is mostly missing. The desecration went so far as to drag Kudurru's body through the streets of Uruk. Kudurru can be identified with Nebuchadnezzar (Nabû-kudurri-uṣur, "Kudurru" simply being a common and shortened nickname), a prominent official in Uruk who served as its governor under the Assyrian king Ashurbanipal (r. 669–631 BC) in the 640s BC. In Assyrian tradition, the desecration of a dead body showed that the deceased individual and their surviving family were traitors and enemies of the state, and that they had to be completely eradicated, serving to punish them even after death. The name of the son whose name is unpreserved in the letter ended with either ahi, nâsir or uṣur, and the remaining traces can fit with the name Nabû-apla-uṣur, meaning that Nabopolassar could be the other son mentioned in the letter and thus a son of Kudurru.[2]

Strengthening this connection is that Nebuchadnezzar II is attested very early during his father's reign, from 626/625 to 617 BC, as high priest of the Eanna temple in Uruk, where he is often attested under the nickname "Kudurru".[2][3] Nebuchadnezzar must have been made high priest at a very young age, considering that his year of death, 562 BC, is 64 years after 626 BC.[4] The original Kudurru's second son, Nabu-shumu-ukin, also appears to be attested as a prominent general under Nabopolassar, and the name was also used by Nebuchadnezzar II for one of his sons, possibly honoring his dead uncle.[2]

Nebuchadnezzar as crown prince

 
The Battle of Carchemish, as depicted in Hutchinson's Story of the Nations (1900)
 
The so-called "Chronicle of Nabopolassar". The cuneiform inscriptions on this clay tablet narrate the chronicle of the years 608-605 BC. After the fall of Nineveh, Naboplolassar vied with Egypt to control Assyria's western territories. His death stopped the campaign and sent his son Nebuchadnezzar II back to Babylon to claim the throne.

Nebuchadnezzar's military career began in the reign of his father, though little information survives. Based on a letter sent to the temple administration of the Eanna temple, it appears that Nebuchadnezzar participated in his father's campaign to take the city of Harran in 610 BC.[31] Harran was the seat of Ashur-uballit II, who had rallied what remained of the Assyrian army and ruled what was left of the Neo-Assyrian Empire.[32] The Babylonian victory in the Harran campaign, and the defeat of Ashur-uballit, in 609 BC marked the end of the ancient Assyrian monarchy, which would never be restored.[33] According to the Babylonian Chronicle, Nebuchadnezzar also commanded an army in an unspecified mountainous region for several months in 607 BC.[31]

In the war against the Babylonians and Medes, Assyria had allied with Pharaoh Psamtik I of Egypt, who had been interested in ensuring Assyria's survival so that Assyria could remain as a buffer state between his own kingdom and the Babylonian and Median kingdoms.[34] After the fall of Harran, Psamtik's successor, Pharaoh Necho II, personally led a large army into former Assyrian lands to turn the tide of the war and restore the Neo-Assyrian Empire,[35] even though it was more or less a lost cause as Assyria had already collapsed.[36] As Nabopolassar was occupied with fighting the Kingdom of Urartu in the north, the Egyptians took control of the Levant largely unopposed, capturing territories as far north as the city of Carchemish in Syria, where Necho established his base of operations.[37]

Nebuchadnezzar's greatest victory from his time as crown prince came at the Battle of Carchemish in 605 BC,[31] which put an end to Necho's campaign in the Levant by inflicting a crushing defeat on the Egyptians.[38][36] Nebuchadnezzar had been the sole commander of the Babylonian army at this battle as his father had chosen to stay in Babylon,[22] perhaps on account of illness.[37] Necho's forces were completely annihilated by Nebuchadnezzar's army, with Babylonian sources claiming that not a single Egyptian escaped alive.[39] The account of the battle in the Babylonian Chronicle reads as follows:[31]

The king of Akkad[d] stayed home (while) Nebuchadnezzar, his eldest son (and) crown prince mustered [the army of Akkad]. He took his army's lead and marched to Carchemish, which is on the bank of the Euphrates. He crossed the river at Carchemish. [...] They did battle together. The army of Egypt retreated before him. He inflicted a [defeat] upon them (and) finished them off completely. In the district of Hamath the army of Akkad overtook the remainder of the army of [Egypt which] managed to escape [from] the defeat and which was not overcome. They inflicted a defeat upon them (so that) a single (Egyptian) man [did not return] home. At that time Nebuchadnezzar conquered all of Ha[ma]th.[31]

The story of Nebuchadnezzar's victory at Carchemish reverberated through history, appearing in many later ancient accounts, including in the Book of Jeremiah and the Books of Kings in the Bible. It is possible to conclude, based on subsequent geopolitics, that the victory resulted in all of Syria and Palestine coming under the control of the Neo-Babylonian Empire, a feat which the Assyrians under Tiglath-Pileser III (r. 745–727 BC) only accomplished after five years of protracted military campaigns.[31] The defeat of Egypt at Carchemish ensured that the Neo-Babylonian Empire would grow to become the major power of the ancient Near East, and the uncontested successor of the Neo-Assyrian Empire.[22][41]

Reign

Accession to the throne

 
Clay cylinder of Nabopolassar, Nebuchadnezzar's father and predecessor, from Babylon
 
"Nebuchadnezzar, King of Justice". Once in power, Nebuchadnezzar was presented as a typical Babylonian monarch; wise, pious, just, and strong. Texts such as this clay tablet, extol his greatness as a man and ruler. From Babylon, Iraq.

Nabopolassar died just a few weeks after Nebuchadnezzar's victory at Carchemish.[31] At this point in time, Nebuchadnezzar was still away on his campaign against the Egyptians,[39] having chased the retreating Egyptian forces to the region around the city of Hamath.[42] The news of Nabopolassar's death reached Nebuchadnezzar's camp on 8 Abu (late July),[42][43] and Nebuchadnezzar quickly arranged affairs with the Egyptians and rushed back to Babylon,[39] where he was proclaimed king on 1 Ulūlu (mid-August).[42] The speed in which Nebuchadnezzar returned to Babylon might be due to the threat that one of his brothers (two are known by name: Nabu-shum-lishir[44][45] and Nabu-zer-ushabshi)[46] could claim the throne in his absence. Though Nebuchadnezzar had been recognised as the eldest son and heir by Nabopolassar, Nabu-shum-lishir,[44] Nabopolassar's second-born son,[45] had been recognised as "his equal brother", a dangerously vague title.[44][e] Despite these possible fears, there were no attempts made at usurping his throne at this time.[44]

One of Nebuchadnezzar's first acts as king was to bury his father. Nabopolassar was laid in a huge coffin, adorned with ornamented gold plates and fine dresses with golden beads, which was then placed within a small palace he had constructed in Babylon.[44] Shortly thereafter, before the end of the month in which he had been crowned, Nebuchadnezzar returned to Syria to resume his campaign. The Babylonian Chronicle records that "he marched about victoriously" (meaning that he faced little to no resistance), returning to Babylon after several months of campaigning.[42] The Syrian campaign, though it resulted in a certain amount of plunder, was not a complete success in that it did not ensure Nebuchadnezzar's grasp on the region. He had seemingly failed to inspire fear, given that none of the westernmost states in the Levant swore fealty to him and paid tribute.[12]

Early military campaigns

Though little information survives concerning them, the Babylonian Chronicle preserves brief accounts of Nebuchadnezzar's military activities in his first eleven years as king. In 604 BC, Nebuchadnezzar campaigned in the Levant once again, conquering the city of Ashkelon.[42] According to the Babylonian Chronicle, Ashkelon's king was captured and taken to Babylon, and the city was plundered and levelled to the ground. Modern excavations at Ashkelon have confirmed that the city was more or less destroyed at this point in time.[48] The Ashkelon campaign was preceded by a campaign in Syria, which was more successful than Nebuchadnezzar's first, resulting in oaths of fealty from the rulers of Phoenicia.[12]

 
Map of the Neo-Babylonian Empire under Nebuchadnezzar

In 603 BC, Nebuchadnezzar campaigned in a land whose name is not preserved in the surviving copy of the chronicle. The chronicle records that this campaign was extensive, given that the account mentions the construction of large siege towers and a siege of a city, the name of which does not survive either. Anson Rainey speculated in 1975 that the city taken was Gaza, whereas Nadav Na'aman thought in 1992 that it was Kummuh in south-eastern Anatolia. In the second half of the 5th century BC, some documents mentioned the towns Isqalanu (the name derived from Ashkelon) and Hazzatu (the name possibly derived from Gaza) near the city of Nippur, indicating that deportees from both of these cities lived near Nippur, and as such possibly that they had been captured at around the same time.[42]

In both 602 BC and 601 BC, Nebuchadnezzar campaigned in the Levant, though little information survives beyond that a "vast" amount of booty was brought from the Levant to Babylonia in 602 BC.[42] On account of the entry for 602 BC also referring to Nabu-shum-lishir, Nebuchadnezzar's younger brother, in a fragmentary and unclear context, it is possible that Nabu-shum-lishir led a revolt against his brother in an attempt to usurp the throne in that year, especially since he is no longer mentioned in any sources after 602 BC.[49] The damage to the text however makes this idea speculative and conjectural.[42]

 
Statue probably depicting Pharaoh Necho II of Egypt, who was defeated at Carchemish by Nebuchadnezzar in 605 BC, but fought off Nebuchadnezzar's invasion of Egypt in 601 BC

In the 601 BC campaign, Nebuchadnezzar departed from the Levant and then marched into Egypt. Despite the defeat at Carchemish in 605 BC, Egypt still had a great amount of influence in the Levant, even though the region was ostensibly under Babylonian rule. Thus, a campaign against Egypt was logical in order to assert Babylonian dominance, and also carried enormous economic and propagandistic benefits, but it was also risky and ambitious. The path into Egypt was difficult, and the lack of secure control of either side of the Sinai Desert could spell disaster. Nebuchadnezzar's invasion of Egypt did fail – the Babylonian Chronicle states that both the Egyptian and Babylonian armies suffered a huge number of casualties.[50] Though Egypt was not conquered, the campaign did result in momentarily curbing Egyptian interest in the Levant, given that Necho II gave up his ambitions in the region.[51] In 599 BC, Nebuchadnezzar marched his army into the Levant and then attacked and raided the Arabs in the Syrian desert. Though apparently successful, it is unclear what the achievements gained in this campaign were.[50]

In 598 BC, Nebuchadnezzar campaigned against the Kingdom of Judah, succeeding in capturing the city of Jerusalem.[52] Judah represented a prime target of Babylonian attention given that it was at the epicenter of competition between Babylon and Egypt. By 601 BC, Judah's king, Jehoiakim, had begun to openly challenge Babylonian authority, counting on that Egypt would lend support to his cause. Nebuchadnezzar's first, 598–597 BC, assault on Jerusalem is recorded in the Bible, but also in the Babylonian Chronicle,[48] which describes it as follows:[48]

The seventh year [of Nebuchadnezzar], in the month of Kislimu, the king of Akkad mustered his troops, marched to the Levant, and set up quarters facing the city of Judah [Jerusalem]. In the month of Addaru [early in 597 BC], the second day, he took the city and captured the king. He installed there a king of his choice. He colle[cted] its massive tribute and went back to Babylon.[48]

Jehoiakim had died during Nebuchadnezzar's siege and been replaced by his son, Jeconiah, who was captured and taken to Babylon, with his uncle Zedekiah installed in his place as king of Judah. Jeconiah is recorded as being alive in Babylonia thereafter, with records as late as 592 or 591 BC listing him among the recipients of food at Nebuchadnezzar's palace and still referring to him as the 'king of the land of Judah'.[48]

In 597 BC, the Babylonian army departed for the Levant again, but appears to not have engaged in any military activities as they turned back immediately after reaching the Euphrates. The following year, Nebuchadnezzar marched his army along the Tigris river to do battle with the Elamites, but no actual battle happened as the Elamites retreated out of fear once Nebuchadnezzar was a day's march away. In 595 BC, Nebuchadnezzar stayed at home in Babylon but soon had to face a rebellion against his rule there, though he defeated the rebels, with the chronicle stating that the king "put his large army to the sword and conquered his foe." Shortly thereafter, Nebuchadnezzar again campaigned in the Levant and secured large amounts of tribute. In the last year recorded in the chronicle, 594 BC, Nebuchadnezzar campaigned in the Levant yet again.[52]

There were several years without any noteworthy military activity at all. Notably, Nebuchadnezzar spent all of 600 BC in Babylon, when the chronicle excuses the king by stating that he stayed in Babylon to "refit his numerous horses and chariotry". Some of the years when Nebuchadnezzar was victorious can also hardly be considered real challenges. Raiding the Arabs in 599 BC was not a major military accomplishment and the victory over Judah and the retreat of the Elamites were not secured on the battlefield. It thus appears that Nebuchadnezzar achieved little military success after the failure of his invasion of Egypt. Nebuchadnezzar's poor military record had dangerous geopolitical consequences. According to the Bible, in Zedekiah's fourth year as king of Judah (594 BC), the kings of Ammon, Edom, Moab, Sidon and Tyre met in Jerusalem to deal with the possibility of throwing off Babylonian control.[53] Evidence that Babylonian control was beginning to unravel is also clear from contemporary Babylonian records, such as the aforementioned rebellion in Babylonia itself, as well as records of a man being executed in 594 BC at Borspippa for "breaking his oath to the king". The oath-breaking was serious enough that the judge in the trial was Nebuchadnezzar himself. It is also possible that Babylonian–Median relations were becoming strained, with records of a "Median defector" being housed in Nebuchadnezzar's palace and some inscriptions indicating that the Medes were beginning to be seen as "enemies". By 594 BC, the failure of the Egyptian invasion, and the lacklustre state of Nebuchadnezzar's other campaigns, loomed high. According to the Assyriologist Israel Ephʿal, Babylon at this time was seen by its contemporaries more like a "paper tiger" (i. e. an ineffectual threat) than a great empire, like Assyria just a few decades prior.[54]

Destruction of Jerusalem

 
19th or 20th century painting by James Tissot depicting the Babylonian forces destroying Jerusalem

From his appointment as king of Judah, Zedekiah waited for the opportune moment to throw off Babylonian control. After Pharaoh Necho II's death in 595 BC, Egyptian intervention in affairs in the Levant increased once again under his successors, Psamtik II (r. 595–589 BC) and Apries (r. 589–570 BC), who both worked to encourage anti-Babylonian rebellions.[48] It is possible that the Babylonian failure to invade Egypt in 601 BC helped inspire revolts against the Babylonian Empire.[55] The outcome of these efforts was Zedekiah's open revolt against Nebuchadnezzar's authority.[48] Unfortunately, no cuneiform sources are preserved from this time and the only known account of the fall of Judah is the biblical account.[48][56]

 
The destruction of Jerusalem and the beginning of the Babylonian captivity, as depicted in an early 20th-century Bible illustration

In 589 BC, Zedekiah refused to pay tribute to Nebuchadnezzar, and he was closely followed in this by Ithobaal III, the king of Tyre.[57] In response to Zedekiah's uprising,[48] Nebuchadnezzar conquered and destroyed the Kingdom of Judah in 586 BC,[48][56] one of the great achievements of his reign.[48][56] The campaign, which probably ended in the summer of 586 BC, resulted in the plunder and destruction of the city of Jerusalem, a permanent end to Judah, and it led to the Babylonian captivity, as the Jews were captured and deported to Babylonia.[48] Archaeological excavations confirm that Jerusalem and the surrounding area was destroyed and depopulated. It is possible that the intensity of the destruction carried out by Nebuchadnezzar at Jerusalem and elsewhere in the Levant was due to the implementation of something akin to a scorched earth-policy, aimed at stopping Egypt from gaining a foothold there.[58]

Some Jewish administration was allowed to remain in the region under the governor Gedaliah, governing from Mizpah under close Babylonian monitoring.[48] According to the Bible, and the 1st-century AD Jewish historian Flavius Josephus, Zedekiah attempted to flee after resisting the Babylonians, but was captured at Jericho and suffered a terrible fate. According to the narrative, Nebuchadnezzar wanted to make an example out of him given that Zedekiah was not an ordinary vassal, but a vassal directly appointed by Nebuchadnezzar. As such, Zedekiah was supposedly taken to Riblah in northern Syria, where he had to watch his sons being executed before having his eyes gouged out and sent to be imprisoned in Babylon.[59]

Per the Books of Kings in the Bible, the campaign against Judah was longer than typical Mesopotamian wars, with the siege of Jerusalem lasting 18–30 months (depending on the calculation), rather than the typical length of less than a year. Whether the unusual length of the siege indicates that the Babylonian army was weak, unable to break into the city for more than a year, or that Nebuchadnezzar by this time had succeeded in stabilising his rule in Babylonia and could thus wage war patiently without being pressured by time to escalate the siege, is not certain.[56]

Later military campaigns

 
Tyre besieged by Nebuchadnezzar of Babylon by Stanley Llewellyn Wood (1915)

It is possible that the Egyptians took advantage of the Babylonians being preoccupied with besieging Jerusalem. Herodotus describes Pharaoh Apries as campaigning in the Levant, taking the city of Sidon and fighting the Tyrians, which indicates a renewed Egyptian invasion of the Levant.[57] Apries is unlikely to have been as successful as Herodotus describes, given that it is unclear how the Egyptian navy would have defeated the superior navies of the Phoenician cities, and even if some cities had been taken, they must have shortly thereafter fallen into Babylonian hands again.[59] Tyre had rebelled against Nebuchadnezzar at around the same time as Judah, and Nebuchadnezzar moved to retake the city after his successful subduing of the Jews.[59]

The biblical Book of Ezekiel describes Tyre in 571 BC as if it had been recently captured by the Babylonian army.[60] The supposed length of the siege, 13 years,[61] is only given by Flavius Josephus, and is subject to debate among modern scholars.[58] Josephus's account of Nebuchadnezzar's reign is obviously not entirely historic, as he describes Nebuchadnezzar as, five years after the destruction of Jerusalem, invading Egypt, capturing the Pharaoh and appointing another Pharaoh in his place.[56] Josephus states that Nebuchadnezzar besieged Tyre in the seventh year of "his" reign, though it is unclear whether "his" in this context refers to Nebuchadnezzar or to Ithobaal III of Tyre. If it refers to Nebuchadnezzar, a siege begun in 598 BC and lasting for thirteen years, later simultaneously with the siege of Jerusalem, is unlikely to have gone unmentioned in Babylonian records. If the seventh year of Ithobaal is intended, the beginning of the siege may conjecturally be placed after Jerusalem's fall. If the siege lasting 13 years is taken at face value, the siege would then not have ended before 573 or 572 BC.[61] The supposed length of the siege can be ascribed to the difficulty in besieging the city: Tyre was located on an island 800 metres from the coast, and could not be taken without naval support. Though the city withstood numerous sieges, it would not be captured until Alexander the Great's siege in 332 BC.[62]

In the end, the siege was resolved without a need of battle and did not result in the Tyre being conquered.[58][62] It seems Tyre's king and Nebuchadnezzar came to an agreement for Tyre to continue to be ruled by vassal kings, though probably under heavier Babylonian control than before. Documents from Tyre near the end of Nebuchadnezzar's reign demonstrate that the city had become a centre for Babylonian military affairs in the region.[58] According to later Jewish tradition, it is possible that Ithobaal III was deposed and taken as a prisoner to Babylon, with another king, Baal II, proclaimed by Nebuchadnezzar in his place.[63]

It is possible that Nebuchadnezzar campaigned against Egypt in 568 BC,[64][65] given that a fragmentary Babylonian inscription, given the modern designation BM 33041, from that year records the word "Egypt" as well as possibly traces of the name "Amasis" (the name of the then incumbent Pharaoh, Amasis II, r. 570–526 BC). A stele of Amasis, also fragmentary, may also describe a combined naval and land attack by the Babylonians. The evidence for this campaign is scant however, and the readings of the relevant inscriptions are not certain. If Nebuchadnezzar did campaign against Egypt again, he was unsuccessful again, given that Egypt did not come under Babylonian rule.[64]

Nebuchadnezzar's campaigns in the Levant, most notably those directed towards Jerusalem and Tyre, completed the Neo-Babylonian Empire's transformation from a rump state of the Neo-Assyrian Empire to the new dominant power of the ancient Near East.[58] Still, Nebuchadnezzar's military accomplishments can be questioned,[12] given that the borders of his empire, by the end of his reign, had not noticeably increased in size and that he had not managed to conquer Egypt. Even after a reign of several decades, Nebuchadnezzar's greatest victory remained his victory over the Egyptians at Carchemish in 605 BC, before he even became king.[66]

Building projects

 
Babylon's Ishtar Gate, restored and beautified in the reign of Nebuchadnezzar

The Babylonian king was traditionally a builder and restorer, and as such large-scale building projects were important as a legitimizing factor for Babylonian rulers.[67] Nebuchadnezzar extensively expanded and rebuilt his capital city of Babylon and the most modern historical and archaeological interpretations of the city reflect it as it appeared after Nebuchadnezzar's construction projects.[58] The projects were made possible through the prospering economy during Nebuchadnezzar's reign, sustained by his conquests.[68] His building inscriptions record work done to numerous temples, notably the restoration of the Esagila, the main temple of Babylon's national deity Marduk, and the completion of the Etemenanki, a great ziggurat dedicated to Marduk.[58]

 
City plan of Babylon, showcasing the locations of major points of interest. The outer walls and the northern Summer Palace are not shown.

Extensive work was also conducted on civil and military structures. Among the most impressive efforts was the work done surrounding the city's northern ceremonial entrance, the Ishtar Gate. These projects included restoration work on the South Palace, inside the city walls, the construction of a completely new North Palace, on the other side of the walls facing the gate, as well as the restoration of Babylon's Processional Street, which led through the gate, and of the gate itself.[68] The ruins of Nebuchadnezzar's North Palace are poorly preserved and as such its structure and appearance are not entirely understood. Nebuchadnezzar also constructed a third palace, the Summer Palace, built some distance north of the inner city walls in the northernmost corner of the outer walls.[69]

The restored Ishtar Gate was decorated with blue and yellow glazed bricks and depictions of bulls (symbols of the god Adad) and dragons (symbols of the god Marduk). Similar bricks were used for the walls surrounding the Processional Street, which also featured depictions of lions (symbols of the goddess Ishtar).[68] Babylon's Processional Street, the only such street yet excavated in Mesopotamia, ran along the eastern walls of the South Palace and exited the inner city walls at the Ishtar Gate, running past the North Palace. To the south, this street went by the Etemenanki, turning to the west and going over a bridge constructed either under the reign of Nabopolassar or Nebuchadnezzar. Some of the bricks of the Processional Street bear the name of the Neo-Assyrian king Sennacherib (r. 705–681 BC) on their underside, perhaps indicating that construction of the street had begun already during his reign, but the fact that the upper side of the bricks all bear the name of Nebuchadnezzar suggests that construction of the street was completed under Nebuchadnezzar's reign.[70] Glazed bricks such as the ones used in the Procession Street were also used in the throne room of the South Palace, which was decorated with depictions of lions and tall, stylized palm trees.[68]

Nebuchadnezzar also directed building efforts on the city of Borsippa, with several of his inscriptions recording restoration work on that city's temple, the Ezida, dedicated to the god Nabu. Additionally, Nebuchadnezzar also restored the ziggurat of the Ezida, the E-urme-imin-anki, and also worked on the temple of Gula, Etila, as well as numerous other temples and shrines in the city. Nebuchadnezzar also repaired Borsippa's walls.[71]

Other great building projects by Nebuchadnezzar include the Nar-Shamash, a canal to bring water from the Euphrates close to the city of Sippar, and the Median Wall, a large defensive structure built to defend Babylonia against incursions from the north.[72] The Median Wall was one of two walls built to protect Babylonia's northern border. Further evidence that Nebuchadnezzar believed the north to be the most likely point of attack for his enemies comes from that he fortified the walls of northern cities, such as Babylon, Borsippa and Kish, but left the walls of southern cities, such as Ur and Uruk, as they were.[73] Nebuchadnezzar also began work on the Royal Canal, also known as Nebuchadnezzar's Canal, a great canal linking the Euphrates to the Tigris which in time completely transformed the agriculture of the region, but the structure was not completed until the reign of Nabonidus, who ruled as the last king of the Neo-Babylonian Empire from 556 to 539 BC.[72]

Death and succession

Nebuchadnezzar died at Babylon in 562 BC.[11] The last known tablet dated to Nebuchadnezzar's reign, from Uruk, is dated to the same day, 7 October, as the first known tablet of his successor, Amel-Marduk, from Sippar.[74] Amel-Marduk's administrative duties probably began before he became king, during the last few weeks or months of his father's reign when Nebuchadnezzar was ill and dying.[75] Having ruled for 43 years, Nebuchadnezzar's reign was the longest of his dynasty[18] and he would be remembered favourably by the Babylonians.[76]

Amel-Marduk's accession does not appear to have gone smoothly.[77] Amel-Marduk was not the eldest living son of Nebuchadnezzar and the reason why he was picked as crown prince is not known.[78][79] The choice is especially strange given that some sources suggest that the relationship between Nebuchadnezzar and Amel-Marduk was particularly poor, with one surviving text describing both as parties in some form of conspiracy and accusing one of them (the text is too fragmentary to determine which one) of failing in the most important duties of Babylonian kingship through exploiting Babylon's populace and desecrating its temples.[78] Amel-Marduk also at one point appears to have been imprisoned by his father, possibly on account of the Babylonian aristocracy having proclaimed him as king while Nebuchadnezzar was away.[75] It is possible that Nebuchadnezzar intended to replace Amel-Marduk as heir with another son, but died before doing so.[80]

In one of Nebuchadnezzar's late inscriptions, written more than forty years into his reign, he wrote that he had been chosen for the kingship by the gods before he was even born. Mesopotamian rulers typically only stressed divine legitimacy in this fashion when their actual legitimacy was questionable, a method often employed by usurpers. Given that Nebuchadnezzar at this point had been king for several decades and was the legitimate heir of his predecessor, the inscription is very strange, unless it was intended to help legitimize Nebuchadnezzar's successor, Amel-Marduk, who as a younger son and a former conspirator could be seen as politically problematic.[77]

Family and children

 
The Hanging Gardens of Babylon as depicted by Ferdinand Knab in 1886. According to tradition, the gardens were constructed by Nebuchadnezzar for his wife, Amytis of Babylon, so that she would feel less homesick.

No surviving contemporary Babylonian documents provide the name of Nebuchadnezzar's wife. According to Berossus, her name was Amytis, daughter of Astyages, king of the Medes. Berossus writes that '[Nabopolassar] sent troops to the assistance of Astyages, the tribal chieftain and satrap of the Medes in order to obtain a daughter of Astyages, Amyitis, as wife for his son [Nebuchadnezzar]'. Though the ancient Greek historian Ctesias instead wrote that Amytis was the name of a daughter of Astyages who had married Cyrus I of Persia, it seems more likely that a Median princess would marry a member of the Babylonian royal family, considering the good relations established between the two during Nabopolassar's reign.[46] Given that Astyages was still too young during Nabopolassar's reign to already have children, and was not yet king, it seems more probable that Amytis was Astyages's sister, and thus a daughter of his predecessor, Cyaxares.[81] By marrying his son to a daughter of Cyaxares, Nebuchadnezzar's father Nabopolassar likely sought to seal the alliance between the Babylonians and the Medes.[82] According to tradition, Nebuchadnezzar constructed the Hanging Gardens of Babylon, one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World, featuring exotic shrubs, vines and trees as well as artificial hills, watercourses and knolls, so that Amytis would feel less homesick for the mountains of Media. No archaeological evidence for these gardens has yet been found.[83]

Nebuchadnezzar had six known sons.[84] Most of the sons,[85] with the exceptions of Marduk-nadin-ahi[79] and Eanna-sharra-usur,[86] are attested very late in their father's reign. It is possible that they might have been the product of a second marriage and that they could have been born relatively late in Nebuchadnezzar's reign, possibly after his known daughters.[85] The known sons of Nebuchadnezzar are:

 
A prayer to Marduk. The Crown Prince, son of Nebuchadnezzar II, wrote this anguished poem in jail. Once freed, he attributed his rescue to god Marduk by changing his name to Amel-Marduk. From Borsippa, near Babylon, Iraq.
  • Marduk-nadin-ahi (Akkadian: Marduk-nādin-aḫi)[85] – the earliest attested of Nebuchadnezzar's children, attested in a legal document, probably as an adult as he is described as being in charge of his own land, already in Nebuchadnezzar's third year as king (602/601 BC). Presumably Nebuchadnezzar's firstborn son, if not eldest child, and thus his legitimate heir.[87] He is also attested very late in Nebuchadnezzar's reign, named as a "royal prince" in a document recording the purchase of dates by Sin-mār-šarri-uṣur, his servant, in 563 BC.[86][79]
  • Eanna-sharra-usur (Akkadian: Eanna-šarra-uṣur)[86] – named as a "royal prince" among sixteen people in a document at Uruk from 587 BC recorded as receiving barley "for the sick".[86]
  • Amel-Marduk (Akkadian: Amēl-Marduk),[75] originally named Nabu-shum-ukin (Nabû-šum-ukīn)[75] – succeeded Nebuchadnezzar as king in 562 BC. His reign was marred with intrigues and he only ruled for two years before being murdered and usurped by his brother-in-law, Neriglissar. Later Babylonian sources mostly speak ill of his reign.[84][88] Amel-Marduk is first attested, notably as crown prince, in a document 566 BC.[89] Given that Amel-Marduk had an older brother in Marduk-nadin-ahi, alive as late as 563 BC, why he was named crown prince is not clear.[90]
  • Marduk-shum-usur (Akkadian: Marduk-šum-uṣur[85] or Marduk-šuma-uṣur)[86] – named as a "royal prince" in documents from Nebuchadnezzar's 564 BC and 562 BC years, recording payments by his scribe to the Ebabbar temple in Sippar.[86]
  • Mushezib-Marduk (Akkadian: Mušēzib-Marduk)[85] – named as a "royal prince" once in a contract tablet from 563 BC.[86]
  • Marduk-nadin-shumi (Akkadian: Marduk-nādin-šumi)[86] – named as a "royal prince" once in a contract tablet from 563 BC.[86]

Three of Nebuchadnezzar's daughters are known by name:[30]

  • Kashshaya (Akkadian: Kaššaya)[91] – attested in several economic documents from Nebuchadnezzar's reign as "the king's daughter".[92] Her name is of unclear origin; it might be derived from the word kaššû (kassite).[93] Kashshaya is attested from contemporary texts as a resident of (and landowner in) Uruk.[30] Kashshaya is typically, although speculatively, identified as the daughter of Nebuchadnezzar who married Neriglissar.[85][94]
  • Innin-etirat (Akkadian: Innin-ēṭirat)[95] – attested as "the king's daughter" in a 564 BC document which records her granting mār-banûtu status[95] ("status of a free man")[96] to a slave by the name Nabû-mukkê-elip.[95] The document in question was written at Babylon, but names including the divine prefix Innin are almost unique to Uruk, suggesting that she was a resident of that city.[30]
  • Ba'u-asitu (Akkadian: Ba'u-asītu)[95] – attested as the owner of a piece of real estate in an economic document. The precise reading and meaning of her name is somewhat unclear. Paul-Alain Beaulieu, who in 1998 published the translated text which confirms her existence, believes that her name is best interpreted as meaning "Ba'u is a/the physician".[97] The document was written at Uruk, where Ba'u-asitu is presumed to have lived.[30]

It is possible that one of Nebuchadnezzar's daughters married the high official Nabonidus.[98] Marriage to a daughter of Nebuchadnezzar could explain how Nabonidus could become king, and also explain why certain later traditions, such as the Book of Daniel in the Bible, describe Nabonidus's son, Belshazzar, as Nebuchadnezzar's son (descendant).[98][99] Alternatively, these later traditions might instead derive from royal propaganda.[100] The ancient Greek historian Herodotus names the "last great queen" of the Babylonian Empire as "Nitocris", though that name (nor any other name) is not attested in contemporary Babylonian sources. Herodotus's description of Nitocris contains a wealth of legendary material that makes it difficult to determine whether he uses the name to refer to Nabonidus's wife or mother, but William H. Shea proposed in 1982 that Nitocris may tentatively be identified as the name of Nabonidus's wife and Belshazzar's mother.[101]

Legacy

Assessment by historians

Because of the scarcity of sources, assessment by historians of Nebuchadnezzar's character and the nature of his reign have differed considerably over time.[102] He has typically been regarded as the greatest and most prestigious king of the Neo-Babylonian Empire.[8][11][12]

Since military activity was not a major issue described in the inscriptions of any Neo-Babylonian king regardless of their actual military accomplishments, in sharp contrast to the inscriptions of their Neo-Assyrian predecessors, Nebuchadnezzar's own inscriptions talk very little about his wars. Out of the fifty or so known inscriptions by the king, only a single one deals with military action, and in this case only small-scale conflicts in the Lebanon region. Many Assyriologists, such as Wolfram von Soden in 1954, thus initially assumed that Nebuchadnezzar had mainly been a builder-king, devoting his energy and efforts to building and restoring his country. A major change in evaluations of Nebuchadnezzar came with the publication of the tablets of the Babylonian Chronicle by Donald Wiseman in 1956, which cover the geopolitical events of Nebuchadnezzar's first eleven years as king. From the publication of these tablets and onwards, historians have shifted to perceiving Nebuchadnezzar as a great warrior, devoting special attention to the military achievements of his reign.[102]

According to the historian Josette Elayi, writing in 2018, Nebuchadnezzar is somewhat difficult to characterise on account of the scarcity of Babylonian source material. Elayi wrote, about Nebuchadnezzar, that "He was a conqueror, even though reservations can be had about his military capabilities. There was no lack of statesmanlike qualities, given his success in building the Babylonian Empire. He was a great builder, who restored a country that for a long time had been devastated by war. That is roughly all we know about him because the Babylonian Chronicles and other texts say little about his personality."[12]

In Jewish and biblical tradition

 
Woodcut depicting Nebuchadnezzar II by 16th-century German engraver, painter and printmaker Georg Pencz, from a series of woodcuts titled Tyrants of the Old Testament

The Babylonian captivity initiated by Nebuchadnezzar came to an end with the fall of Babylon to the Achaemenid king Cyrus the Great in 539 BC. Within a year of their liberation, some captured Jews returned to their homeland. Their liberation did little to erase the memory of five decades of imprisonment and oppression. Instead, Jewish literary accounts ensured that accounts of the hardship endured by the Jews, as well as the monarch responsible for it, would be remembered for all time.[6] The Book of Jeremiah calls Nebuchadnezzar a "lion" and a "destroyer of nations".[103]

Nebuchadnezzar's story thus found its way into the Old Testament of the Bible.[6] The Bible narrates how Nebuchadnezzar destroyed the Kingdom of Judah, besieged, plundered and destroyed Jerusalem, and how he took away the Jews in captivity, portraying him as a cruel enemy of the Jewish people.[104] The Bible also portrays Nebuchadnezzar as the legitimate ruler of all the nations of the world, appointed to rule the world by God. As such, Judah, through divine ruling, should have obeyed Nebuchadnezzar and not rebelled. Nebuchadnezzar is also depicted as carrying out death sentences pronounced by God, slaying two false prophets. Nebuchadnezzar's campaigns of conquest against other nations are portrayed as being in-line with God's will for Nebuchadnezzar's dominance.[105]

Despite Nebuchadnezzar's negative portrayal, he is notably referred with the epithet 'my servant' (i.e. God's servant) in three places in the Book of Jeremiah. Nebuchadnezzar's attack on the Kingdom of Judah is theologically justified in the Book of Jeremiah on account of its populace's 'disobedience' of God, and the king is called "Nebuchadnezzar the king of Babylon, my servant". The Book of Jeremiah also states that God has made all the Earth and given it to whom it seemed proper to give it to, deciding upon giving all of the lands of the world to "Nebuchadnezzar the king of Babylon, my servant". The Book of Jeremiah also prophesises Nebuchadnezzar's victory over Egypt, stating that "Nebuchadnezzar the king of Babylon, my servant" will invade Egypt and "deliver to death those appointed for death, and to captivity those appointed for captivity, and to the sword those appointed for the sword". Given that Nebuchadnezzar was the enemy of what the Bible proclaims as God's chosen people, possibly the worst enemy they had faced until this point, there must be a special reason for referring to him with the epithet "my servant". Other uses of this epithet are usually limited to some of the most positively portrayed figures, such as the various prophets, Jacob (the symbol of the chosen people) and David (the chosen king). Klaas A. D. Smelik noted in 2004 that "in the Hebrew Bible, there is no better company conceivable than these; at the same time, there is no candidate less likely for this title of honour than the Babylonian king Nebuchadnezzar".[106] It is possible that the epithet is a later addition, as it is missing in the Septuagint version of the Old Testament, perhaps added after Nabuchadnezzar began to be seen in a slightly more favourable light than immediately after Jerusalem's destruction.[107] Alternatively, possible theological explanations include Nebuchadnezzar, despite his cruelty, being seen as an instrument in fulfilling God's universal plan, or perhaps that designating him as a "servant" of God was to show that readers should not fear Nebuchadnezzar, but his true master, God.[108]

 
1917 illustration of Daniel interpreting Nebuchadnezzar's dreams

In the Book of Daniel, deemed by scholars as a work of historical fiction,[109][110][111][112] Nebuchadnezzar is given a portrayal that differs considerably from his portrayal in the Book of Jeremiah. He is for the most part depicted as a merciless and despotic ruler. The king has a nightmare, and asks his wise men, including Daniel and his three companions Shadrach, Meshach and Abednego, to interpret the dream, but refuses to state the dream's contents. When the servants protest, Nebuchadnezzar sentences all of them (including Daniel and his companions) to death. By the end of the story, when Daniel successfully interpreted the dream, Nebuchadnezzar is nevertheless shown to be very grateful, showering Daniel with gifts, making him the governor of the "province of Babylon" and making him the chief of the kingdoms' wisemen. A second story again casts Nebuchadnezzar as a tyrannical and pagan king, who after Shadrach, Meshach and Abednego refuse to worship a newly erected golden statue sentences them to death through being thrown into a furnace. They are miraculously delivered, and Nebuchadnezzar then acknowledges God as the "lord of kings" and "god of gods". Though Nebuchadnezzar is also mentioned as acknowledging the God as the true god in other passages of the Book of Daniel, it is apparent that his supposed conversion to Judaism does not change his violent character, given that he proclaims that anyone who speaks amiss of God "shall be cut in pieces and their houses shall be made a dunghill". In a third story, Daniel interprets another dream as meaning that Nebuchadnezzar will lose his mind and live like an animal for seven years before being restored to his normal state (Daniel 1-4).[113] The portrayal of Nebuchadnezzar in the Book of Daniel is a fickle tyrant who is not particularly consistent in his faith, far from the typical "servants of God" in other books of the Bible.[114]

 
Nebuchadnezzar's forces at the siege of Jerusalem, as depicted in a 10th-century French manuscript

Given that Nebuchadnezzar is referred to as the father of Belshazzar in the Book of Daniel, it is probable that this portrayal of Nebuchadnezzar, especially the story of his madness, was actually based on Belshazzar's real father, Nabonidus, the last king of the Neo-Babylonian Empire (r. 556–539 BC). Separate Jewish and Hellenistic traditions exist concerning Nabonidus having been mad,[115] and it is likely that this madness was simply reattributed to Nebuchadnezzar in the Book of Daniel through conflation.[116][117] Some later traditions conflated Nebuchadnezzar with other rulers as well, such as the Assyrian Ashurbanipal (r. 669–631 BC), the Persian Artaxerxes III (r. 358–338 BC), the Seleucids Antiochus IV Epiphanes (r. 175–164 BC) and Demetrius I Soter (r. 161–150 BC) and the Armenian Tigranes the Great (r. 95–55 BC).[118] The apocryphal Book of Judith, which probably applies the name Nebuchadnezzar to Tigranes the Great of Armenia, refers to Nebuchadnezzar as a king of the Assyrians, rather than Babylonians, and demonstrates that Nebuchadnezzar was still viewed as an evil king, responsible for destroying Jerusalem, looting its temple, taking the Jews hostage in Babylon, and for the various misdeeds ascribed to him in later Jewish writings.[119]

Other

Nebuchadnezzar is referred to as Buḫt Nuṣṣur (بخت نصر) in works of the mediaeval scholar al-Ṭabarī, where he is credited with conquering Egypt, Syria, Phoenicia and Arabia. The historical Nebuchadnezzar never conquered Egypt, and it appears that al-Ṭabarī transferred to him the achievements of the Assyrian king Esarhaddon.[120] In similar fashion Strabo (citing Megasthenes) mentioned a Nabocodrosor as having led an army to the Pillars of Hercules and being revered by the Chaldaeans, in a list of mythical and semi-legendary conquerors.[121]

Titles

In most of his inscriptions, Nebuchadnezzar is typically only titled as "Nebuchadnezzar, king of Babylon, son of Nabopolassar, king of Babylon" or "Nebuchadnezzar, king of Babylon, the one who provides for Esagil and Ezida, son of Nabopolassar, king of Babylon".[122] In economic documents, Nebuchadnezzar is also ascribed the ancient title "king of the Universe",[123] and he sometimes also used the title "king of Sumer and Akkad", used by all the Neo-Babylonian kings.[124] Some inscriptions accord Nebuchadnezzar more elaborate version of his titles, including the following variant, attested in an inscription from Babylon:[122]

Nebuchadnezzar, king of Babylon, pious prince, the favorite of the god Marduk, exalted ruler who is the beloved of the god Nabû, the one who deliberates (and) acquires wisdom, the one who constantly seeks out the ways of their divinity (and) reveres their dominion, the indefatigable governor who is mindful of provisioning Esagil and Ezida daily and (who) constantly seeks out good things for Babylon and Borsippa, the wise (and) pious one who provides for Esagil and Ezida, foremost heir of Nabopolassar, king of Babylon, am I.[122]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ As the inscriptions on the stele were written by Nebuchadnezzar, he is also unquestionably the king depicted. The stele is one of only four known certain contemporary depictions of Nebuchadnezzar, with the other three being carved depictions on cliff-faces in Lebanon, in much poorer condition than the depiction in the stele. The Etemenanki ziggurat was presumably the inspiration for the Biblical Tower of Babel, hence the name 'Tower of Babel stele'.[1]
  2. ^ Nebuchadnezzar was made high priest of the Eanna temple in Uruk by his father in 626/625 BC.[2][3] It is assumed that he was made high priest at a very young age, considering his death taking place more than sixty years later.[4] It is not known at what age Babylonians became eligible for priesthood, but there are records of freshly initiated Babylonian priests aged 15 or 16.[5]
  3. ^ The cuneiform signs are AG.NÍG.DU-ÙRU
  4. ^ "Akkad" here refers to Babylonia[40] and derives from the city Akkad, the capital of the ancient Akkadian Empire that Nabopolassar worked to connect himself to.[19] The "king of Akkad" referred to here is thus Nabopolassar.[31]
  5. ^ The word translated as 'equal brother', talīmu, has also been alternatively translated as 'chosen brother', 'close brother' or 'beloved brother'. Regardless of the correct interpretation, the epithet clearly illustrates Nabopolassar's great affection for his second son. Such public affection bestowed upon the brother of the heir to the throne many times led to later conflicts and usurpations.[47]

References

  1. ^ George 2011, pp. 153–154.
  2. ^ a b c d Jursa 2007, pp. 127–134.
  3. ^ a b Popova 2015, p. 402.
  4. ^ a b Popova 2015, p. 403.
  5. ^ Waerzeggers & Jursa 2008, p. 9.
  6. ^ a b c d e Sack 2004, p. 1.
  7. ^ Porten, Zadok & Pearce 2016, p. 4.
  8. ^ a b c d e f Saggs 1998.
  9. ^ Wallis Budge 1884, p. 116.
  10. ^ Sack 2004, p. 41.
  11. ^ a b c d Mark 2018.
  12. ^ a b c d e f Elayi 2018, p. 190.
  13. ^ a b Sack 1978, p. 129.
  14. ^ a b Sack 2004, p. 9.
  15. ^ Sack 2004, p. x.
  16. ^ Wiseman 1983, p. 3.
  17. ^ Wiseman 1983, pp. 2–3.
  18. ^ a b Sack 2004, p. 2.
  19. ^ a b c Nielsen 2015, pp. 61–62.
  20. ^ Jursa 2007, pp. 127–133.
  21. ^ Wiseman 1983, p. 5.
  22. ^ a b c Sack 2004, p. 8.
  23. ^ Beaulieu 1989, p. xiii.
  24. ^ a b Beaulieu 2016, p. 4.
  25. ^ Johnston 1901, p. 20.
  26. ^ a b c Bedford 2016, p. 56.
  27. ^ The British Museum 1908, p. 10.
  28. ^ Melville 2011, p. 16.
  29. ^ Da Riva 2017, p. 78.
  30. ^ a b c d e Beaulieu 1998, p. 198.
  31. ^ a b c d e f g h Ephʿal 2003, p. 179.
  32. ^ Melville 2011, p. 20.
  33. ^ Radner 2019, p. 141.
  34. ^ Lipschits 2005, p. 16.
  35. ^ Rowton 1951, p. 128.
  36. ^ a b Sack 2004, p. 7.
  37. ^ a b Wiseman 1991, p. 182.
  38. ^ Lipschits 2005, p. 20.
  39. ^ a b c Wiseman 1991, p. 230.
  40. ^ Da Riva 2017, p. 77.
  41. ^ Wiseman 1991, p. 183.
  42. ^ a b c d e f g h Ephʿal 2003, p. 180.
  43. ^ Parker & Dubberstein 1942, p. 9.
  44. ^ a b c d e Olmstead 1925, p. 35.
  45. ^ a b Wiseman 1983, p. 7.
  46. ^ a b Wiseman 1983, p. 8.
  47. ^ Ayali-Darshan 2012, pp. 26–27.
  48. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Beaulieu 2018, p. 228.
  49. ^ Da Riva 2013, p. 198.
  50. ^ a b Ephʿal 2003, pp. 180–181.
  51. ^ Elayi 2018, p. 191.
  52. ^ a b Ephʿal 2003, p. 181.
  53. ^ "Bible Gateway passage: Jeremiah 27:1-7 - New International Version". Bible Gateway. Retrieved 16 October 2022.
  54. ^ Ephʿal 2003, pp. 181–183.
  55. ^ Elayi 2018, p. 192.
  56. ^ a b c d e Ephʿal 2003, p. 183.
  57. ^ a b Elayi 2018, p. 195.
  58. ^ a b c d e f g Beaulieu 2018, p. 229.
  59. ^ a b c Elayi 2018, p. 196.
  60. ^ Ephʿal 2003, p. 184.
  61. ^ a b Ephʿal 2003, p. 186.
  62. ^ a b Ephʿal 2003, p. 187.
  63. ^ Elayi 2018, p. 200.
  64. ^ a b Ephʿal 2003, pp. 187–188.
  65. ^ Elayi 2018, p. 201.
  66. ^ Ephʿal 2003, p. 189.
  67. ^ Porter 1993, p. 66.
  68. ^ a b c d Beaulieu 2018, p. 230.
  69. ^ Baker 2012, p. 924.
  70. ^ Baker 2012, p. 925.
  71. ^ Beaulieu 2018, pp. 230–231.
  72. ^ a b Beaulieu 2018, p. 232.
  73. ^ Baker 2012, p. 926.
  74. ^ Parker & Dubberstein 1942, p. 10.
  75. ^ a b c d Weiershäuser & Novotny 2020, p. 1.
  76. ^ Nielsen 2015, p. 63.
  77. ^ a b Ayali-Darshan 2012, p. 26.
  78. ^ a b Ayali-Darshan 2012, p. 27.
  79. ^ a b c Abraham 2012, p. 124.
  80. ^ Ayali-Darshan 2012, p. 29.
  81. ^ Lendering 1995.
  82. ^ Wiseman 1991, p. 229.
  83. ^ Polinger Foster 1998, p. 322.
  84. ^ a b Wiseman 1983, pp. 9–10.
  85. ^ a b c d e f Beaulieu 1998, p. 200.
  86. ^ a b c d e f g h i Wiseman 1983, p. 10.
  87. ^ Abraham 2012, pp. 124–125.
  88. ^ Beaulieu 1998, p. 199.
  89. ^ Popova 2015, p. 405.
  90. ^ Abraham 2012, p. 125.
  91. ^ Beaulieu 1998, p. 173.
  92. ^ Beaulieu 1998, pp. 173–174.
  93. ^ Beaulieu 1998, p. 181.
  94. ^ Wiseman 1991, p. 241.
  95. ^ a b c d Beaulieu 1998, p. 174.
  96. ^ Botta 2009, p. 33.
  97. ^ Beaulieu 1998, pp. 174–175.
  98. ^ a b Wiseman 1983, p. 11.
  99. ^ Wiseman 1991, p. 244.
  100. ^ Chavalas 2000, p. 164.
  101. ^ Shea 1982, pp. 137–138.
  102. ^ a b Ephʿal 2003, p. 178.
  103. ^ Shapiro 1982, p. 328.
  104. ^ Smelik 2014, p. 110.
  105. ^ Smelik 2014, pp. 123–124.
  106. ^ Smelik 2014, pp. 110–12.
  107. ^ Smelik 2014, pp. 118–20.
  108. ^ Smelik 2014, p. 133.
  109. ^ Laughlin 1990, p. 95.
  110. ^ Seow 2003, pp. 4–6.
  111. ^ Collins 2002, p. 2.
  112. ^ Redditt 2008, p. 180.
  113. ^ Smelik 2014, pp. 127–29.
  114. ^ Smelik 2014, p. 129.
  115. ^ Sack 1983, p. 63.
  116. ^ Beaulieu 2007, p. 137.
  117. ^ Henze 1999, p. 63.
  118. ^ Boccaccini 2012, p. 56.
  119. ^ Boccaccini 2012, pp. 63–65.
  120. ^ Retsö, Jan (2013). The Arabs in Antiquity: Their History from the Assyrians to the Umayyads. London, UK; New York City, US: Routledge. pp. 187–89. ISBN 978-1-136-87289-1 – via Archive.
  121. ^ Strabo, Geography, 15.1.6
  122. ^ a b c Babylonian royal inscriptions.
  123. ^ Stevens 2014, p. 73.
  124. ^ Da Riva 2013, p. 72.

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Nebuchadnezzar II
Born: c. 642 BC Died: 562 BC
Preceded by King of Babylon
605 – 562 BC
Succeeded by

nebuchadnezzar, nebuchadnezzar, redirects, here, other, kings, babylon, same, name, other, uses, nebuchadnezzar, disambiguation, babylonian, cuneiform, nabû, kudurri, uṣur, meaning, nabu, watch, over, heir, biblical, hebrew, בו, אצ, nəḇūḵaḏneʾṣṣar, also, spell. Nebuchadnezzar redirects here For the other kings of Babylon of the same name or other uses see Nebuchadnezzar disambiguation Nebuchadnezzar II Babylonian cuneiform Nabu kudurri uṣur 6 7 c meaning Nabu watch over my heir 8 Biblical Hebrew נ בו כ ד נ אצ ר Neḇuḵaḏneʾṣṣar also spelled Nebuchadrezzar II 8 was the second king of the Neo Babylonian Empire ruling from the death of his father Nabopolassar in 605 BC to his own death in 562 BC Historically known as Nebuchadnezzar the Great 9 10 he is typically regarded as the empire s greatest king 8 11 12 Nebuchadnezzar remains famous for his military campaigns in the Levant for his construction projects in his capital Babylon and for the important part he played in Jewish history 8 Ruling for 43 years Nebuchadnezzar was the longest reigning king of the Chaldean dynasty At the time of his death Nebuchadnezzar was among the most powerful rulers in the world 11 Nebuchadnezzar IIKing of BabylonKing of Sumer and AkkadKing of the UniversePortion of the so called Tower of Babel stele depicting Nebuchadnezzar II on the right and featuring a depiction of Babylon s great ziggurat the Etemenanki to his left a King of the Neo Babylonian EmpireReignAugust 605 BC 7 October 562 BCPredecessorNabopolassarSuccessorAmel MardukBornc 642 BC b Uruk Died7 October 562 BC aged c 80 BabylonSpouseAmytis of Babylon IssueAmongothersKashshayaAmel MardukNitocris AkkadianNabu kudurri uṣurDynastyChaldean dynastyFatherNabopolassarPossibly named after his grandfather of the same name or after Nebuchadnezzar I r c 1125 1104 BC one of Babylon s greatest ancient warrior kings Nebuchadnezzar II already secured renown for himself during his father s reign leading armies in the Medo Babylonian war against the Assyrian Empire At the Battle of Carchemish in 605 BC Nebuchadnezzar inflicted a crushing defeat on an Egyptian army led by Pharaoh Necho II and ensured that the Neo Babylonian Empire would succeed the Neo Assyrian Empire as the dominant power in the ancient Near East Shortly after this victory Nabopolassar died and Nebuchadnezzar became king Despite his successful military career during his father s reign the first third or so of Nebuchadnezzar s reign saw little to no major military achievements and notably a disastrous failure in an attempted invasion of Egypt These years of lacklustre military performance saw some of Babylon s vassals particularly in the Levant beginning to doubt Babylon s power viewing the Neo Babylonian Empire as a paper tiger rather than a power truly on the level of the Neo Assyrian Empire The situation grew so severe that people in Babylonia itself began disobeying the king some going as far as to revolt against Nebuchadnezzar s rule Closeup of the portrait After this disappointing early period as king Nebuchadnezzar s luck turned In the 580s BC Nebuchadnezzar engaged in a successful string of military actions in the Levant against the vassal states in rebellion there likely with the ultimate intent of curbing Egyptian influence in the region In 587 BC Nebuchadnezzar destroyed the Kingdom of Judah and its capital Jerusalem The destruction of Jerusalem led to the Babylonian captivity as the city s population and people from the surrounding lands were deported to Babylonia The Jews thereafter referred to Nebuchadnezzar the greatest enemy they had faced until that point as a destroyer of nations The biblical Book of Jeremiah paints Nebuchadnezzar as a cruel enemy but also as God s appointed ruler of the world and a divine instrument to punish disobedience Through the destruction of Jerusalem the capture of the rebellious Phoenician city of Tyre and other campaigns in the Levant Nebuchadnezzar completed the Neo Babylonian Empire s transformation into the new great power of the ancient Near East In addition to his military campaigns Nebuchadnezzar is remembered as a great builder king The prosperity ensured by his wars allowed Nebuchadnezzar to conduct great building projects in Babylon and elsewhere in Mesopotamia The modern image of Babylon is largely of the city as it was after Nebuchadnezzar s projects during which he among other work rebuilt many of the city s religious buildings including the Esagila and Etemenanki repaired its current palace and constructed a brand new palace and beautified its ceremonial centre through renovations to the city s Processional Street and the Ishtar Gate As most of Nebuchadnezzar s inscriptions deal with his building projects rather than military accomplishments he was for a time seen by historians mostly as a builder rather than a warrior Contents 1 Sources 2 Background 2 1 Name 2 2 Ancestry and early life 2 3 Nebuchadnezzar as crown prince 3 Reign 3 1 Accession to the throne 3 2 Early military campaigns 3 3 Destruction of Jerusalem 3 4 Later military campaigns 3 5 Building projects 3 6 Death and succession 4 Family and children 5 Legacy 5 1 Assessment by historians 5 2 In Jewish and biblical tradition 5 3 Other 6 Titles 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 9 1 Bibliography 9 2 Web sourcesSources EditThere are very few cuneiform sources for the period between 594 BC and 557 BC covering much of the reign of Nebuchadnezzar II and the reigns of his three immediate successors Amel Marduk Neriglissar and Labashi Marduk 13 This lack of sources has the unfortunate effect that even though Nebuchadnezzar had the longest reign of all of them less is confidently known of Nebuchadnezzar s reign than of the reigns of almost all the other Neo Babylonian kings Though the handful of cuneiform sources recovered notably the Babylonian Chronicle confirm some events of his reign such as conflicts with the Kingdom of Judah other events such as the 586 BC destruction of Solomon s Temple and other potential military campaigns Nebuchadnezzar conducted are not covered in any known cuneiform documents 14 As such historical reconstructions of this period generally follow secondary sources in Hebrew Greek and Latin to determine what events transpired at the time in addition to contract tablets from Babylonia 13 Though using the sources written by later authors many of them created several centuries after Nebuchadnezzar s time and often including their own cultural attitudes to the events and figures discussed 15 presents problems in and of itself blurring the line between history and tradition it is the only possible approach to gain insight into Nebuchadnezzar s reign 14 Background EditName Edit A fired mudbrick from Babylon stamped with the name and titles of Nebuchadnezzar Nebuchadnezzar II s name in Akkadian was Nabu kudurri uṣur 6 meaning Nabu watch over my heir 8 The name was often interpreted in earlier scholarship as Nabu protect the boundary given that the word kudurru can also mean boundary or line Modern historians support the heir interpretation over the boundary interpretation in terms of this name There is no reason to believe that the Babylonians intended the name to be difficult to interpret or to have a double meaning 16 Nabu kudurri uṣur is typically anglicised to Nebuchadnezzar following how the name is most commonly rendered in Hebrew and Greek particularly in most of the Bible In Hebrew the name was rendered as נ בו כ ד נ אצ ר Neḇuḵaḏneʾṣṣar and in Greek it was rendered as Naboyxodonosor Nabouchodonosor Some scholars such as Donald Wiseman prefer the anglicisation Nebuchadrezzar with an r rather than an n following the assumption that Nebuchadnezzar is a later corrupted form of the contemporary Nabu kudurri uṣur The alternate anglicisation Nebuchadrezzar derives from how the name is rendered in the books of Jeremiah and Ezekiel נ בו כ ד ר אצ ר Neḇuḵaḏreʾṣṣar a more faithful transliteration of the original Akkadian name The Assyriologist Adrianus van Selms suggested in 1974 that the variant with an n rather than an r was a rude nickname deriving from an Akkadian rendition like Nabu kudanu uṣur which means Nabu protect the mule though there is no concrete evidence for this idea Van Selms believed that a nickname like that could derive from Nebuchadnezzar s early reign which was plagued by political instability 17 Nebuchadnezzar II s name Nabu kudurri uṣur was identical to the name of his distant predecessor Nebuchadnezzar I r c 1125 1104 BC who ruled more than five centuries before Nebuchadnezzar II s time 6 Like Nebuchadnezzar II Nebuchadnezzar I was a renowned warrior king who appeared in a time of political upheaval and defeated the forces of Babylon s enemies in Nebuchadnezzar I s case the Elamites 18 Although theophoric names using the god Nabu are common in texts from the early Neo Babylonian Empire the name Nebuchadnezzar is relatively rare only being mentioned four times with certainty Though there is no evidence that Nabopolassar named his son after Nebuchadnezzar I Nabopolassar was knowledgeable in history and actively worked to connect his rule to the rule of the Akkadian Empire which preceded him by nearly two thousand years The significance of his son and heir bearing the name of one of Babylon s greatest kings would not have been lost on Nabopolassar 19 If Jursa s theory concerning Nabopolassar s origin is correct it is alternatively possible that Nebuchadnezzar II was named after his grandfather of the same name as the Babylonians employed patronymics rather than after the previous king 19 20 Ancestry and early life Edit Preserved portion of the Eanna temple at Uruk Nebuchadnezzar was the high priest of the Eanna temple from 626 625 BC to 617 BC Nebuchadnezzar was the eldest son of Nabopolassar r 626 605 BC the founder of the Neo Babylonian Empire This is confirmed by Nabopolassar s inscriptions which explicitly name Nebuchadnezzar as his eldest son as well as inscriptions from Nebuchadnezzar s reign which refer to him as the first or chief son of Nabopolassar and as Nabopolassar s true or legitimate heir 21 The Neo Babylonian Empire was founded through Nabopolassar s rebellion and later war against the Neo Assyrian Empire which liberated Babylonia after nearly a century of Assyrian control The war resulted in the complete destruction of Assyria 22 and the Neo Babylonian Empire which rose in its place was powerful but hastily built and politically unstable 23 As Nabopolassar never clarified his ancestry in lineage in any of his inscriptions his origin is not entirely clear Subsequent historians have variously identified Nabopolassar as a Chaldean 24 25 26 an Assyrian 27 or a Babylonian 28 Although no evidence conclusively confirms him as being of Chaldean origin the term Chaldean dynasty is frequently used by modern historians for the royal family he founded and the term Chaldean Empire remains in use as an alternate historiographical name for the Neo Babylonian Empire 24 Nabopolassar appears to regardless of his ethnic origin have been strongly connected to the city of Uruk 26 29 located south of Babylon It is possible that he was a member of its ruling elite before becoming king 26 and there is a growing body of evidence that Nabopolassar s family originated in Uruk for instance that Nebuchadnezzar s daughters lived in the city 30 In 2007 Michael Jursa advanced the theory that Nabopolassar was a member of a prominent political family in Uruk whose members are attested since the reign of Esarhaddon r 681 669 BC To support his theory Jursa pointed to how documents describe how the grave and body of Kudurru a deceased governor of Uruk was desecrated due to the anti Assyrian activities of Kudurru s two sons Nabu shumu ukin and a son whose name is mostly missing The desecration went so far as to drag Kudurru s body through the streets of Uruk Kudurru can be identified with Nebuchadnezzar Nabu kudurri uṣur Kudurru simply being a common and shortened nickname a prominent official in Uruk who served as its governor under the Assyrian king Ashurbanipal r 669 631 BC in the 640s BC In Assyrian tradition the desecration of a dead body showed that the deceased individual and their surviving family were traitors and enemies of the state and that they had to be completely eradicated serving to punish them even after death The name of the son whose name is unpreserved in the letter ended with either ahi nasir or uṣur and the remaining traces can fit with the name Nabu apla uṣur meaning that Nabopolassar could be the other son mentioned in the letter and thus a son of Kudurru 2 Strengthening this connection is that Nebuchadnezzar II is attested very early during his father s reign from 626 625 to 617 BC as high priest of the Eanna temple in Uruk where he is often attested under the nickname Kudurru 2 3 Nebuchadnezzar must have been made high priest at a very young age considering that his year of death 562 BC is 64 years after 626 BC 4 The original Kudurru s second son Nabu shumu ukin also appears to be attested as a prominent general under Nabopolassar and the name was also used by Nebuchadnezzar II for one of his sons possibly honoring his dead uncle 2 Nebuchadnezzar as crown prince Edit The Battle of Carchemish as depicted in Hutchinson s Story of the Nations 1900 The so called Chronicle of Nabopolassar The cuneiform inscriptions on this clay tablet narrate the chronicle of the years 608 605 BC After the fall of Nineveh Naboplolassar vied with Egypt to control Assyria s western territories His death stopped the campaign and sent his son Nebuchadnezzar II back to Babylon to claim the throne Nebuchadnezzar s military career began in the reign of his father though little information survives Based on a letter sent to the temple administration of the Eanna temple it appears that Nebuchadnezzar participated in his father s campaign to take the city of Harran in 610 BC 31 Harran was the seat of Ashur uballit II who had rallied what remained of the Assyrian army and ruled what was left of the Neo Assyrian Empire 32 The Babylonian victory in the Harran campaign and the defeat of Ashur uballit in 609 BC marked the end of the ancient Assyrian monarchy which would never be restored 33 According to the Babylonian Chronicle Nebuchadnezzar also commanded an army in an unspecified mountainous region for several months in 607 BC 31 In the war against the Babylonians and Medes Assyria had allied with Pharaoh Psamtik I of Egypt who had been interested in ensuring Assyria s survival so that Assyria could remain as a buffer state between his own kingdom and the Babylonian and Median kingdoms 34 After the fall of Harran Psamtik s successor Pharaoh Necho II personally led a large army into former Assyrian lands to turn the tide of the war and restore the Neo Assyrian Empire 35 even though it was more or less a lost cause as Assyria had already collapsed 36 As Nabopolassar was occupied with fighting the Kingdom of Urartu in the north the Egyptians took control of the Levant largely unopposed capturing territories as far north as the city of Carchemish in Syria where Necho established his base of operations 37 Nebuchadnezzar s greatest victory from his time as crown prince came at the Battle of Carchemish in 605 BC 31 which put an end to Necho s campaign in the Levant by inflicting a crushing defeat on the Egyptians 38 36 Nebuchadnezzar had been the sole commander of the Babylonian army at this battle as his father had chosen to stay in Babylon 22 perhaps on account of illness 37 Necho s forces were completely annihilated by Nebuchadnezzar s army with Babylonian sources claiming that not a single Egyptian escaped alive 39 The account of the battle in the Babylonian Chronicle reads as follows 31 The king of Akkad d stayed home while Nebuchadnezzar his eldest son and crown prince mustered the army of Akkad He took his army s lead and marched to Carchemish which is on the bank of the Euphrates He crossed the river at Carchemish They did battle together The army of Egypt retreated before him He inflicted a defeat upon them and finished them off completely In the district of Hamath the army of Akkad overtook the remainder of the army of Egypt which managed to escape from the defeat and which was not overcome They inflicted a defeat upon them so that a single Egyptian man did not return home At that time Nebuchadnezzar conquered all of Ha ma th 31 The story of Nebuchadnezzar s victory at Carchemish reverberated through history appearing in many later ancient accounts including in the Book of Jeremiah and the Books of Kings in the Bible It is possible to conclude based on subsequent geopolitics that the victory resulted in all of Syria and Palestine coming under the control of the Neo Babylonian Empire a feat which the Assyrians under Tiglath Pileser III r 745 727 BC only accomplished after five years of protracted military campaigns 31 The defeat of Egypt at Carchemish ensured that the Neo Babylonian Empire would grow to become the major power of the ancient Near East and the uncontested successor of the Neo Assyrian Empire 22 41 Reign EditAccession to the throne Edit Clay cylinder of Nabopolassar Nebuchadnezzar s father and predecessor from Babylon Nebuchadnezzar King of Justice Once in power Nebuchadnezzar was presented as a typical Babylonian monarch wise pious just and strong Texts such as this clay tablet extol his greatness as a man and ruler From Babylon Iraq Nabopolassar died just a few weeks after Nebuchadnezzar s victory at Carchemish 31 At this point in time Nebuchadnezzar was still away on his campaign against the Egyptians 39 having chased the retreating Egyptian forces to the region around the city of Hamath 42 The news of Nabopolassar s death reached Nebuchadnezzar s camp on 8 Abu late July 42 43 and Nebuchadnezzar quickly arranged affairs with the Egyptians and rushed back to Babylon 39 where he was proclaimed king on 1 Ululu mid August 42 The speed in which Nebuchadnezzar returned to Babylon might be due to the threat that one of his brothers two are known by name Nabu shum lishir 44 45 and Nabu zer ushabshi 46 could claim the throne in his absence Though Nebuchadnezzar had been recognised as the eldest son and heir by Nabopolassar Nabu shum lishir 44 Nabopolassar s second born son 45 had been recognised as his equal brother a dangerously vague title 44 e Despite these possible fears there were no attempts made at usurping his throne at this time 44 One of Nebuchadnezzar s first acts as king was to bury his father Nabopolassar was laid in a huge coffin adorned with ornamented gold plates and fine dresses with golden beads which was then placed within a small palace he had constructed in Babylon 44 Shortly thereafter before the end of the month in which he had been crowned Nebuchadnezzar returned to Syria to resume his campaign The Babylonian Chronicle records that he marched about victoriously meaning that he faced little to no resistance returning to Babylon after several months of campaigning 42 The Syrian campaign though it resulted in a certain amount of plunder was not a complete success in that it did not ensure Nebuchadnezzar s grasp on the region He had seemingly failed to inspire fear given that none of the westernmost states in the Levant swore fealty to him and paid tribute 12 Early military campaigns Edit Though little information survives concerning them the Babylonian Chronicle preserves brief accounts of Nebuchadnezzar s military activities in his first eleven years as king In 604 BC Nebuchadnezzar campaigned in the Levant once again conquering the city of Ashkelon 42 According to the Babylonian Chronicle Ashkelon s king was captured and taken to Babylon and the city was plundered and levelled to the ground Modern excavations at Ashkelon have confirmed that the city was more or less destroyed at this point in time 48 The Ashkelon campaign was preceded by a campaign in Syria which was more successful than Nebuchadnezzar s first resulting in oaths of fealty from the rulers of Phoenicia 12 Map of the Neo Babylonian Empire under Nebuchadnezzar In 603 BC Nebuchadnezzar campaigned in a land whose name is not preserved in the surviving copy of the chronicle The chronicle records that this campaign was extensive given that the account mentions the construction of large siege towers and a siege of a city the name of which does not survive either Anson Rainey speculated in 1975 that the city taken was Gaza whereas Nadav Na aman thought in 1992 that it was Kummuh in south eastern Anatolia In the second half of the 5th century BC some documents mentioned the towns Isqalanu the name derived from Ashkelon and Hazzatu the name possibly derived from Gaza near the city of Nippur indicating that deportees from both of these cities lived near Nippur and as such possibly that they had been captured at around the same time 42 In both 602 BC and 601 BC Nebuchadnezzar campaigned in the Levant though little information survives beyond that a vast amount of booty was brought from the Levant to Babylonia in 602 BC 42 On account of the entry for 602 BC also referring to Nabu shum lishir Nebuchadnezzar s younger brother in a fragmentary and unclear context it is possible that Nabu shum lishir led a revolt against his brother in an attempt to usurp the throne in that year especially since he is no longer mentioned in any sources after 602 BC 49 The damage to the text however makes this idea speculative and conjectural 42 Statue probably depicting Pharaoh Necho II of Egypt who was defeated at Carchemish by Nebuchadnezzar in 605 BC but fought off Nebuchadnezzar s invasion of Egypt in 601 BC In the 601 BC campaign Nebuchadnezzar departed from the Levant and then marched into Egypt Despite the defeat at Carchemish in 605 BC Egypt still had a great amount of influence in the Levant even though the region was ostensibly under Babylonian rule Thus a campaign against Egypt was logical in order to assert Babylonian dominance and also carried enormous economic and propagandistic benefits but it was also risky and ambitious The path into Egypt was difficult and the lack of secure control of either side of the Sinai Desert could spell disaster Nebuchadnezzar s invasion of Egypt did fail the Babylonian Chronicle states that both the Egyptian and Babylonian armies suffered a huge number of casualties 50 Though Egypt was not conquered the campaign did result in momentarily curbing Egyptian interest in the Levant given that Necho II gave up his ambitions in the region 51 In 599 BC Nebuchadnezzar marched his army into the Levant and then attacked and raided the Arabs in the Syrian desert Though apparently successful it is unclear what the achievements gained in this campaign were 50 In 598 BC Nebuchadnezzar campaigned against the Kingdom of Judah succeeding in capturing the city of Jerusalem 52 Judah represented a prime target of Babylonian attention given that it was at the epicenter of competition between Babylon and Egypt By 601 BC Judah s king Jehoiakim had begun to openly challenge Babylonian authority counting on that Egypt would lend support to his cause Nebuchadnezzar s first 598 597 BC assault on Jerusalem is recorded in the Bible but also in the Babylonian Chronicle 48 which describes it as follows 48 The seventh year of Nebuchadnezzar in the month of Kislimu the king of Akkad mustered his troops marched to the Levant and set up quarters facing the city of Judah Jerusalem In the month of Addaru early in 597 BC the second day he took the city and captured the king He installed there a king of his choice He colle cted its massive tribute and went back to Babylon 48 Jehoiakim had died during Nebuchadnezzar s siege and been replaced by his son Jeconiah who was captured and taken to Babylon with his uncle Zedekiah installed in his place as king of Judah Jeconiah is recorded as being alive in Babylonia thereafter with records as late as 592 or 591 BC listing him among the recipients of food at Nebuchadnezzar s palace and still referring to him as the king of the land of Judah 48 In 597 BC the Babylonian army departed for the Levant again but appears to not have engaged in any military activities as they turned back immediately after reaching the Euphrates The following year Nebuchadnezzar marched his army along the Tigris river to do battle with the Elamites but no actual battle happened as the Elamites retreated out of fear once Nebuchadnezzar was a day s march away In 595 BC Nebuchadnezzar stayed at home in Babylon but soon had to face a rebellion against his rule there though he defeated the rebels with the chronicle stating that the king put his large army to the sword and conquered his foe Shortly thereafter Nebuchadnezzar again campaigned in the Levant and secured large amounts of tribute In the last year recorded in the chronicle 594 BC Nebuchadnezzar campaigned in the Levant yet again 52 There were several years without any noteworthy military activity at all Notably Nebuchadnezzar spent all of 600 BC in Babylon when the chronicle excuses the king by stating that he stayed in Babylon to refit his numerous horses and chariotry Some of the years when Nebuchadnezzar was victorious can also hardly be considered real challenges Raiding the Arabs in 599 BC was not a major military accomplishment and the victory over Judah and the retreat of the Elamites were not secured on the battlefield It thus appears that Nebuchadnezzar achieved little military success after the failure of his invasion of Egypt Nebuchadnezzar s poor military record had dangerous geopolitical consequences According to the Bible in Zedekiah s fourth year as king of Judah 594 BC the kings of Ammon Edom Moab Sidon and Tyre met in Jerusalem to deal with the possibility of throwing off Babylonian control 53 Evidence that Babylonian control was beginning to unravel is also clear from contemporary Babylonian records such as the aforementioned rebellion in Babylonia itself as well as records of a man being executed in 594 BC at Borspippa for breaking his oath to the king The oath breaking was serious enough that the judge in the trial was Nebuchadnezzar himself It is also possible that Babylonian Median relations were becoming strained with records of a Median defector being housed in Nebuchadnezzar s palace and some inscriptions indicating that the Medes were beginning to be seen as enemies By 594 BC the failure of the Egyptian invasion and the lacklustre state of Nebuchadnezzar s other campaigns loomed high According to the Assyriologist Israel Ephʿal Babylon at this time was seen by its contemporaries more like a paper tiger i e an ineffectual threat than a great empire like Assyria just a few decades prior 54 Destruction of Jerusalem Edit Main article Siege of Jerusalem 587 BC 19th or 20th century painting by James Tissot depicting the Babylonian forces destroying Jerusalem From his appointment as king of Judah Zedekiah waited for the opportune moment to throw off Babylonian control After Pharaoh Necho II s death in 595 BC Egyptian intervention in affairs in the Levant increased once again under his successors Psamtik II r 595 589 BC and Apries r 589 570 BC who both worked to encourage anti Babylonian rebellions 48 It is possible that the Babylonian failure to invade Egypt in 601 BC helped inspire revolts against the Babylonian Empire 55 The outcome of these efforts was Zedekiah s open revolt against Nebuchadnezzar s authority 48 Unfortunately no cuneiform sources are preserved from this time and the only known account of the fall of Judah is the biblical account 48 56 The destruction of Jerusalem and the beginning of the Babylonian captivity as depicted in an early 20th century Bible illustration In 589 BC Zedekiah refused to pay tribute to Nebuchadnezzar and he was closely followed in this by Ithobaal III the king of Tyre 57 In response to Zedekiah s uprising 48 Nebuchadnezzar conquered and destroyed the Kingdom of Judah in 586 BC 48 56 one of the great achievements of his reign 48 56 The campaign which probably ended in the summer of 586 BC resulted in the plunder and destruction of the city of Jerusalem a permanent end to Judah and it led to the Babylonian captivity as the Jews were captured and deported to Babylonia 48 Archaeological excavations confirm that Jerusalem and the surrounding area was destroyed and depopulated It is possible that the intensity of the destruction carried out by Nebuchadnezzar at Jerusalem and elsewhere in the Levant was due to the implementation of something akin to a scorched earth policy aimed at stopping Egypt from gaining a foothold there 58 Some Jewish administration was allowed to remain in the region under the governor Gedaliah governing from Mizpah under close Babylonian monitoring 48 According to the Bible and the 1st century AD Jewish historian Flavius Josephus Zedekiah attempted to flee after resisting the Babylonians but was captured at Jericho and suffered a terrible fate According to the narrative Nebuchadnezzar wanted to make an example out of him given that Zedekiah was not an ordinary vassal but a vassal directly appointed by Nebuchadnezzar As such Zedekiah was supposedly taken to Riblah in northern Syria where he had to watch his sons being executed before having his eyes gouged out and sent to be imprisoned in Babylon 59 Per the Books of Kings in the Bible the campaign against Judah was longer than typical Mesopotamian wars with the siege of Jerusalem lasting 18 30 months depending on the calculation rather than the typical length of less than a year Whether the unusual length of the siege indicates that the Babylonian army was weak unable to break into the city for more than a year or that Nebuchadnezzar by this time had succeeded in stabilising his rule in Babylonia and could thus wage war patiently without being pressured by time to escalate the siege is not certain 56 Later military campaigns Edit See also Siege of Tyre 586 573 BC Tyre besieged by Nebuchadnezzar of Babylon by Stanley Llewellyn Wood 1915 It is possible that the Egyptians took advantage of the Babylonians being preoccupied with besieging Jerusalem Herodotus describes Pharaoh Apries as campaigning in the Levant taking the city of Sidon and fighting the Tyrians which indicates a renewed Egyptian invasion of the Levant 57 Apries is unlikely to have been as successful as Herodotus describes given that it is unclear how the Egyptian navy would have defeated the superior navies of the Phoenician cities and even if some cities had been taken they must have shortly thereafter fallen into Babylonian hands again 59 Tyre had rebelled against Nebuchadnezzar at around the same time as Judah and Nebuchadnezzar moved to retake the city after his successful subduing of the Jews 59 The biblical Book of Ezekiel describes Tyre in 571 BC as if it had been recently captured by the Babylonian army 60 The supposed length of the siege 13 years 61 is only given by Flavius Josephus and is subject to debate among modern scholars 58 Josephus s account of Nebuchadnezzar s reign is obviously not entirely historic as he describes Nebuchadnezzar as five years after the destruction of Jerusalem invading Egypt capturing the Pharaoh and appointing another Pharaoh in his place 56 Josephus states that Nebuchadnezzar besieged Tyre in the seventh year of his reign though it is unclear whether his in this context refers to Nebuchadnezzar or to Ithobaal III of Tyre If it refers to Nebuchadnezzar a siege begun in 598 BC and lasting for thirteen years later simultaneously with the siege of Jerusalem is unlikely to have gone unmentioned in Babylonian records If the seventh year of Ithobaal is intended the beginning of the siege may conjecturally be placed after Jerusalem s fall If the siege lasting 13 years is taken at face value the siege would then not have ended before 573 or 572 BC 61 The supposed length of the siege can be ascribed to the difficulty in besieging the city Tyre was located on an island 800 metres from the coast and could not be taken without naval support Though the city withstood numerous sieges it would not be captured until Alexander the Great s siege in 332 BC 62 In the end the siege was resolved without a need of battle and did not result in the Tyre being conquered 58 62 It seems Tyre s king and Nebuchadnezzar came to an agreement for Tyre to continue to be ruled by vassal kings though probably under heavier Babylonian control than before Documents from Tyre near the end of Nebuchadnezzar s reign demonstrate that the city had become a centre for Babylonian military affairs in the region 58 According to later Jewish tradition it is possible that Ithobaal III was deposed and taken as a prisoner to Babylon with another king Baal II proclaimed by Nebuchadnezzar in his place 63 It is possible that Nebuchadnezzar campaigned against Egypt in 568 BC 64 65 given that a fragmentary Babylonian inscription given the modern designation BM 33041 from that year records the word Egypt as well as possibly traces of the name Amasis the name of the then incumbent Pharaoh Amasis II r 570 526 BC A stele of Amasis also fragmentary may also describe a combined naval and land attack by the Babylonians The evidence for this campaign is scant however and the readings of the relevant inscriptions are not certain If Nebuchadnezzar did campaign against Egypt again he was unsuccessful again given that Egypt did not come under Babylonian rule 64 Nebuchadnezzar s campaigns in the Levant most notably those directed towards Jerusalem and Tyre completed the Neo Babylonian Empire s transformation from a rump state of the Neo Assyrian Empire to the new dominant power of the ancient Near East 58 Still Nebuchadnezzar s military accomplishments can be questioned 12 given that the borders of his empire by the end of his reign had not noticeably increased in size and that he had not managed to conquer Egypt Even after a reign of several decades Nebuchadnezzar s greatest victory remained his victory over the Egyptians at Carchemish in 605 BC before he even became king 66 Building projects Edit Babylon s Ishtar Gate restored and beautified in the reign of Nebuchadnezzar The Babylonian king was traditionally a builder and restorer and as such large scale building projects were important as a legitimizing factor for Babylonian rulers 67 Nebuchadnezzar extensively expanded and rebuilt his capital city of Babylon and the most modern historical and archaeological interpretations of the city reflect it as it appeared after Nebuchadnezzar s construction projects 58 The projects were made possible through the prospering economy during Nebuchadnezzar s reign sustained by his conquests 68 His building inscriptions record work done to numerous temples notably the restoration of the Esagila the main temple of Babylon s national deity Marduk and the completion of the Etemenanki a great ziggurat dedicated to Marduk 58 City plan of Babylon showcasing the locations of major points of interest The outer walls and the northern Summer Palace are not shown Extensive work was also conducted on civil and military structures Among the most impressive efforts was the work done surrounding the city s northern ceremonial entrance the Ishtar Gate These projects included restoration work on the South Palace inside the city walls the construction of a completely new North Palace on the other side of the walls facing the gate as well as the restoration of Babylon s Processional Street which led through the gate and of the gate itself 68 The ruins of Nebuchadnezzar s North Palace are poorly preserved and as such its structure and appearance are not entirely understood Nebuchadnezzar also constructed a third palace the Summer Palace built some distance north of the inner city walls in the northernmost corner of the outer walls 69 The restored Ishtar Gate was decorated with blue and yellow glazed bricks and depictions of bulls symbols of the god Adad and dragons symbols of the god Marduk Similar bricks were used for the walls surrounding the Processional Street which also featured depictions of lions symbols of the goddess Ishtar 68 Babylon s Processional Street the only such street yet excavated in Mesopotamia ran along the eastern walls of the South Palace and exited the inner city walls at the Ishtar Gate running past the North Palace To the south this street went by the Etemenanki turning to the west and going over a bridge constructed either under the reign of Nabopolassar or Nebuchadnezzar Some of the bricks of the Processional Street bear the name of the Neo Assyrian king Sennacherib r 705 681 BC on their underside perhaps indicating that construction of the street had begun already during his reign but the fact that the upper side of the bricks all bear the name of Nebuchadnezzar suggests that construction of the street was completed under Nebuchadnezzar s reign 70 Glazed bricks such as the ones used in the Procession Street were also used in the throne room of the South Palace which was decorated with depictions of lions and tall stylized palm trees 68 Nebuchadnezzar also directed building efforts on the city of Borsippa with several of his inscriptions recording restoration work on that city s temple the Ezida dedicated to the god Nabu Additionally Nebuchadnezzar also restored the ziggurat of the Ezida the E urme imin anki and also worked on the temple of Gula Etila as well as numerous other temples and shrines in the city Nebuchadnezzar also repaired Borsippa s walls 71 Other great building projects by Nebuchadnezzar include the Nar Shamash a canal to bring water from the Euphrates close to the city of Sippar and the Median Wall a large defensive structure built to defend Babylonia against incursions from the north 72 The Median Wall was one of two walls built to protect Babylonia s northern border Further evidence that Nebuchadnezzar believed the north to be the most likely point of attack for his enemies comes from that he fortified the walls of northern cities such as Babylon Borsippa and Kish but left the walls of southern cities such as Ur and Uruk as they were 73 Nebuchadnezzar also began work on the Royal Canal also known as Nebuchadnezzar s Canal a great canal linking the Euphrates to the Tigris which in time completely transformed the agriculture of the region but the structure was not completed until the reign of Nabonidus who ruled as the last king of the Neo Babylonian Empire from 556 to 539 BC 72 Death and succession Edit Nebuchadnezzar died at Babylon in 562 BC 11 The last known tablet dated to Nebuchadnezzar s reign from Uruk is dated to the same day 7 October as the first known tablet of his successor Amel Marduk from Sippar 74 Amel Marduk s administrative duties probably began before he became king during the last few weeks or months of his father s reign when Nebuchadnezzar was ill and dying 75 Having ruled for 43 years Nebuchadnezzar s reign was the longest of his dynasty 18 and he would be remembered favourably by the Babylonians 76 Amel Marduk s accession does not appear to have gone smoothly 77 Amel Marduk was not the eldest living son of Nebuchadnezzar and the reason why he was picked as crown prince is not known 78 79 The choice is especially strange given that some sources suggest that the relationship between Nebuchadnezzar and Amel Marduk was particularly poor with one surviving text describing both as parties in some form of conspiracy and accusing one of them the text is too fragmentary to determine which one of failing in the most important duties of Babylonian kingship through exploiting Babylon s populace and desecrating its temples 78 Amel Marduk also at one point appears to have been imprisoned by his father possibly on account of the Babylonian aristocracy having proclaimed him as king while Nebuchadnezzar was away 75 It is possible that Nebuchadnezzar intended to replace Amel Marduk as heir with another son but died before doing so 80 In one of Nebuchadnezzar s late inscriptions written more than forty years into his reign he wrote that he had been chosen for the kingship by the gods before he was even born Mesopotamian rulers typically only stressed divine legitimacy in this fashion when their actual legitimacy was questionable a method often employed by usurpers Given that Nebuchadnezzar at this point had been king for several decades and was the legitimate heir of his predecessor the inscription is very strange unless it was intended to help legitimize Nebuchadnezzar s successor Amel Marduk who as a younger son and a former conspirator could be seen as politically problematic 77 Family and children Edit The Hanging Gardens of Babylon as depicted by Ferdinand Knab in 1886 According to tradition the gardens were constructed by Nebuchadnezzar for his wife Amytis of Babylon so that she would feel less homesick No surviving contemporary Babylonian documents provide the name of Nebuchadnezzar s wife According to Berossus her name was Amytis daughter of Astyages king of the Medes Berossus writes that Nabopolassar sent troops to the assistance of Astyages the tribal chieftain and satrap of the Medes in order to obtain a daughter of Astyages Amyitis as wife for his son Nebuchadnezzar Though the ancient Greek historian Ctesias instead wrote that Amytis was the name of a daughter of Astyages who had married Cyrus I of Persia it seems more likely that a Median princess would marry a member of the Babylonian royal family considering the good relations established between the two during Nabopolassar s reign 46 Given that Astyages was still too young during Nabopolassar s reign to already have children and was not yet king it seems more probable that Amytis was Astyages s sister and thus a daughter of his predecessor Cyaxares 81 By marrying his son to a daughter of Cyaxares Nebuchadnezzar s father Nabopolassar likely sought to seal the alliance between the Babylonians and the Medes 82 According to tradition Nebuchadnezzar constructed the Hanging Gardens of Babylon one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World featuring exotic shrubs vines and trees as well as artificial hills watercourses and knolls so that Amytis would feel less homesick for the mountains of Media No archaeological evidence for these gardens has yet been found 83 Nebuchadnezzar had six known sons 84 Most of the sons 85 with the exceptions of Marduk nadin ahi 79 and Eanna sharra usur 86 are attested very late in their father s reign It is possible that they might have been the product of a second marriage and that they could have been born relatively late in Nebuchadnezzar s reign possibly after his known daughters 85 The known sons of Nebuchadnezzar are A prayer to Marduk The Crown Prince son of Nebuchadnezzar II wrote this anguished poem in jail Once freed he attributed his rescue to god Marduk by changing his name to Amel Marduk From Borsippa near Babylon Iraq Marduk nadin ahi Akkadian Marduk nadin aḫi 85 the earliest attested of Nebuchadnezzar s children attested in a legal document probably as an adult as he is described as being in charge of his own land already in Nebuchadnezzar s third year as king 602 601 BC Presumably Nebuchadnezzar s firstborn son if not eldest child and thus his legitimate heir 87 He is also attested very late in Nebuchadnezzar s reign named as a royal prince in a document recording the purchase of dates by Sin mar sarri uṣur his servant in 563 BC 86 79 Eanna sharra usur Akkadian Eanna sarra uṣur 86 named as a royal prince among sixteen people in a document at Uruk from 587 BC recorded as receiving barley for the sick 86 Amel Marduk Akkadian Amel Marduk 75 originally named Nabu shum ukin Nabu sum ukin 75 succeeded Nebuchadnezzar as king in 562 BC His reign was marred with intrigues and he only ruled for two years before being murdered and usurped by his brother in law Neriglissar Later Babylonian sources mostly speak ill of his reign 84 88 Amel Marduk is first attested notably as crown prince in a document 566 BC 89 Given that Amel Marduk had an older brother in Marduk nadin ahi alive as late as 563 BC why he was named crown prince is not clear 90 Marduk shum usur Akkadian Marduk sum uṣur 85 or Marduk suma uṣur 86 named as a royal prince in documents from Nebuchadnezzar s 564 BC and 562 BC years recording payments by his scribe to the Ebabbar temple in Sippar 86 Mushezib Marduk Akkadian Musezib Marduk 85 named as a royal prince once in a contract tablet from 563 BC 86 Marduk nadin shumi Akkadian Marduk nadin sumi 86 named as a royal prince once in a contract tablet from 563 BC 86 Three of Nebuchadnezzar s daughters are known by name 30 Kashshaya Akkadian Kassaya 91 attested in several economic documents from Nebuchadnezzar s reign as the king s daughter 92 Her name is of unclear origin it might be derived from the word kassu kassite 93 Kashshaya is attested from contemporary texts as a resident of and landowner in Uruk 30 Kashshaya is typically although speculatively identified as the daughter of Nebuchadnezzar who married Neriglissar 85 94 Innin etirat Akkadian Innin eṭirat 95 attested as the king s daughter in a 564 BC document which records her granting mar banutu status 95 status of a free man 96 to a slave by the name Nabu mukke elip 95 The document in question was written at Babylon but names including the divine prefix Innin are almost unique to Uruk suggesting that she was a resident of that city 30 Ba u asitu Akkadian Ba u asitu 95 attested as the owner of a piece of real estate in an economic document The precise reading and meaning of her name is somewhat unclear Paul Alain Beaulieu who in 1998 published the translated text which confirms her existence believes that her name is best interpreted as meaning Ba u is a the physician 97 The document was written at Uruk where Ba u asitu is presumed to have lived 30 It is possible that one of Nebuchadnezzar s daughters married the high official Nabonidus 98 Marriage to a daughter of Nebuchadnezzar could explain how Nabonidus could become king and also explain why certain later traditions such as the Book of Daniel in the Bible describe Nabonidus s son Belshazzar as Nebuchadnezzar s son descendant 98 99 Alternatively these later traditions might instead derive from royal propaganda 100 The ancient Greek historian Herodotus names the last great queen of the Babylonian Empire as Nitocris though that name nor any other name is not attested in contemporary Babylonian sources Herodotus s description of Nitocris contains a wealth of legendary material that makes it difficult to determine whether he uses the name to refer to Nabonidus s wife or mother but William H Shea proposed in 1982 that Nitocris may tentatively be identified as the name of Nabonidus s wife and Belshazzar s mother 101 Legacy EditAssessment by historians Edit Because of the scarcity of sources assessment by historians of Nebuchadnezzar s character and the nature of his reign have differed considerably over time 102 He has typically been regarded as the greatest and most prestigious king of the Neo Babylonian Empire 8 11 12 Since military activity was not a major issue described in the inscriptions of any Neo Babylonian king regardless of their actual military accomplishments in sharp contrast to the inscriptions of their Neo Assyrian predecessors Nebuchadnezzar s own inscriptions talk very little about his wars Out of the fifty or so known inscriptions by the king only a single one deals with military action and in this case only small scale conflicts in the Lebanon region Many Assyriologists such as Wolfram von Soden in 1954 thus initially assumed that Nebuchadnezzar had mainly been a builder king devoting his energy and efforts to building and restoring his country A major change in evaluations of Nebuchadnezzar came with the publication of the tablets of the Babylonian Chronicle by Donald Wiseman in 1956 which cover the geopolitical events of Nebuchadnezzar s first eleven years as king From the publication of these tablets and onwards historians have shifted to perceiving Nebuchadnezzar as a great warrior devoting special attention to the military achievements of his reign 102 According to the historian Josette Elayi writing in 2018 Nebuchadnezzar is somewhat difficult to characterise on account of the scarcity of Babylonian source material Elayi wrote about Nebuchadnezzar that He was a conqueror even though reservations can be had about his military capabilities There was no lack of statesmanlike qualities given his success in building the Babylonian Empire He was a great builder who restored a country that for a long time had been devastated by war That is roughly all we know about him because the Babylonian Chronicles and other texts say little about his personality 12 In Jewish and biblical tradition Edit Woodcut depicting Nebuchadnezzar II by 16th century German engraver painter and printmaker Georg Pencz from a series of woodcuts titled Tyrants of the Old Testament The Babylonian captivity initiated by Nebuchadnezzar came to an end with the fall of Babylon to the Achaemenid king Cyrus the Great in 539 BC Within a year of their liberation some captured Jews returned to their homeland Their liberation did little to erase the memory of five decades of imprisonment and oppression Instead Jewish literary accounts ensured that accounts of the hardship endured by the Jews as well as the monarch responsible for it would be remembered for all time 6 The Book of Jeremiah calls Nebuchadnezzar a lion and a destroyer of nations 103 Nebuchadnezzar s story thus found its way into the Old Testament of the Bible 6 The Bible narrates how Nebuchadnezzar destroyed the Kingdom of Judah besieged plundered and destroyed Jerusalem and how he took away the Jews in captivity portraying him as a cruel enemy of the Jewish people 104 The Bible also portrays Nebuchadnezzar as the legitimate ruler of all the nations of the world appointed to rule the world by God As such Judah through divine ruling should have obeyed Nebuchadnezzar and not rebelled Nebuchadnezzar is also depicted as carrying out death sentences pronounced by God slaying two false prophets Nebuchadnezzar s campaigns of conquest against other nations are portrayed as being in line with God s will for Nebuchadnezzar s dominance 105 Despite Nebuchadnezzar s negative portrayal he is notably referred with the epithet my servant i e God s servant in three places in the Book of Jeremiah Nebuchadnezzar s attack on the Kingdom of Judah is theologically justified in the Book of Jeremiah on account of its populace s disobedience of God and the king is called Nebuchadnezzar the king of Babylon my servant The Book of Jeremiah also states that God has made all the Earth and given it to whom it seemed proper to give it to deciding upon giving all of the lands of the world to Nebuchadnezzar the king of Babylon my servant The Book of Jeremiah also prophesises Nebuchadnezzar s victory over Egypt stating that Nebuchadnezzar the king of Babylon my servant will invade Egypt and deliver to death those appointed for death and to captivity those appointed for captivity and to the sword those appointed for the sword Given that Nebuchadnezzar was the enemy of what the Bible proclaims as God s chosen people possibly the worst enemy they had faced until this point there must be a special reason for referring to him with the epithet my servant Other uses of this epithet are usually limited to some of the most positively portrayed figures such as the various prophets Jacob the symbol of the chosen people and David the chosen king Klaas A D Smelik noted in 2004 that in the Hebrew Bible there is no better company conceivable than these at the same time there is no candidate less likely for this title of honour than the Babylonian king Nebuchadnezzar 106 It is possible that the epithet is a later addition as it is missing in the Septuagint version of the Old Testament perhaps added after Nabuchadnezzar began to be seen in a slightly more favourable light than immediately after Jerusalem s destruction 107 Alternatively possible theological explanations include Nebuchadnezzar despite his cruelty being seen as an instrument in fulfilling God s universal plan or perhaps that designating him as a servant of God was to show that readers should not fear Nebuchadnezzar but his true master God 108 1917 illustration of Daniel interpreting Nebuchadnezzar s dreams In the Book of Daniel deemed by scholars as a work of historical fiction 109 110 111 112 Nebuchadnezzar is given a portrayal that differs considerably from his portrayal in the Book of Jeremiah He is for the most part depicted as a merciless and despotic ruler The king has a nightmare and asks his wise men including Daniel and his three companions Shadrach Meshach and Abednego to interpret the dream but refuses to state the dream s contents When the servants protest Nebuchadnezzar sentences all of them including Daniel and his companions to death By the end of the story when Daniel successfully interpreted the dream Nebuchadnezzar is nevertheless shown to be very grateful showering Daniel with gifts making him the governor of the province of Babylon and making him the chief of the kingdoms wisemen A second story again casts Nebuchadnezzar as a tyrannical and pagan king who after Shadrach Meshach and Abednego refuse to worship a newly erected golden statue sentences them to death through being thrown into a furnace They are miraculously delivered and Nebuchadnezzar then acknowledges God as the lord of kings and god of gods Though Nebuchadnezzar is also mentioned as acknowledging the God as the true god in other passages of the Book of Daniel it is apparent that his supposed conversion to Judaism does not change his violent character given that he proclaims that anyone who speaks amiss of God shall be cut in pieces and their houses shall be made a dunghill In a third story Daniel interprets another dream as meaning that Nebuchadnezzar will lose his mind and live like an animal for seven years before being restored to his normal state Daniel 1 4 113 The portrayal of Nebuchadnezzar in the Book of Daniel is a fickle tyrant who is not particularly consistent in his faith far from the typical servants of God in other books of the Bible 114 Nebuchadnezzar s forces at the siege of Jerusalem as depicted in a 10th century French manuscript Given that Nebuchadnezzar is referred to as the father of Belshazzar in the Book of Daniel it is probable that this portrayal of Nebuchadnezzar especially the story of his madness was actually based on Belshazzar s real father Nabonidus the last king of the Neo Babylonian Empire r 556 539 BC Separate Jewish and Hellenistic traditions exist concerning Nabonidus having been mad 115 and it is likely that this madness was simply reattributed to Nebuchadnezzar in the Book of Daniel through conflation 116 117 Some later traditions conflated Nebuchadnezzar with other rulers as well such as the Assyrian Ashurbanipal r 669 631 BC the Persian Artaxerxes III r 358 338 BC the Seleucids Antiochus IV Epiphanes r 175 164 BC and Demetrius I Soter r 161 150 BC and the Armenian Tigranes the Great r 95 55 BC 118 The apocryphal Book of Judith which probably applies the name Nebuchadnezzar to Tigranes the Great of Armenia refers to Nebuchadnezzar as a king of the Assyrians rather than Babylonians and demonstrates that Nebuchadnezzar was still viewed as an evil king responsible for destroying Jerusalem looting its temple taking the Jews hostage in Babylon and for the various misdeeds ascribed to him in later Jewish writings 119 Other Edit Nebuchadnezzar is referred to as Buḫt Nuṣṣur بخت نصر in works of the mediaeval scholar al Ṭabari where he is credited with conquering Egypt Syria Phoenicia and Arabia The historical Nebuchadnezzar never conquered Egypt and it appears that al Ṭabari transferred to him the achievements of the Assyrian king Esarhaddon 120 In similar fashion Strabo citing Megasthenes mentioned a Nabocodrosor as having led an army to the Pillars of Hercules and being revered by the Chaldaeans in a list of mythical and semi legendary conquerors 121 Titles EditSee also Akkadian royal titulary In most of his inscriptions Nebuchadnezzar is typically only titled as Nebuchadnezzar king of Babylon son of Nabopolassar king of Babylon or Nebuchadnezzar king of Babylon the one who provides for Esagil and Ezida son of Nabopolassar king of Babylon 122 In economic documents Nebuchadnezzar is also ascribed the ancient title king of the Universe 123 and he sometimes also used the title king of Sumer and Akkad used by all the Neo Babylonian kings 124 Some inscriptions accord Nebuchadnezzar more elaborate version of his titles including the following variant attested in an inscription from Babylon 122 Nebuchadnezzar king of Babylon pious prince the favorite of the god Marduk exalted ruler who is the beloved of the god Nabu the one who deliberates and acquires wisdom the one who constantly seeks out the ways of their divinity and reveres their dominion the indefatigable governor who is mindful of provisioning Esagil and Ezida daily and who constantly seeks out good things for Babylon and Borsippa the wise and pious one who provides for Esagil and Ezida foremost heir of Nabopolassar king of Babylon am I 122 See also EditList of biblical figures identified in extra biblical sources Nebuchadnezzar Blake famous 19th century painting depicting the biblical story of Nebuchadnezzar s madness Nabucco 19th century opera by Giuseppe Verdi based loosely on the biblical story of NebuchadnezzarNotes Edit As the inscriptions on the stele were written by Nebuchadnezzar he is also unquestionably the king depicted The stele is one of only four known certain contemporary depictions of Nebuchadnezzar with the other three being carved depictions on cliff faces in Lebanon in much poorer condition than the depiction in the stele The Etemenanki ziggurat was presumably the inspiration for the Biblical Tower of Babel hence the name Tower of Babel stele 1 Nebuchadnezzar was made high priest of the Eanna temple in Uruk by his father in 626 625 BC 2 3 It is assumed that he was made high priest at a very young age considering his death taking place more than sixty years later 4 It is not known at what age Babylonians became eligible for priesthood but there are records of freshly initiated Babylonian priests aged 15 or 16 5 The cuneiform signs are AG NIG DU URU Akkad here refers to Babylonia 40 and derives from the city Akkad the capital of the ancient Akkadian Empire that Nabopolassar worked to connect himself to 19 The king of Akkad referred to here is thus Nabopolassar 31 The word translated as equal brother talimu has also been alternatively translated as chosen brother close brother or beloved brother Regardless of the correct interpretation the epithet clearly illustrates Nabopolassar s great affection for his second son Such public affection bestowed upon the brother of the heir to the throne many times led to later conflicts and usurpations 47 References Edit George 2011 pp 153 154 a b c d Jursa 2007 pp 127 134 a b Popova 2015 p 402 a b Popova 2015 p 403 Waerzeggers amp Jursa 2008 p 9 a b c d e Sack 2004 p 1 Porten Zadok amp Pearce 2016 p 4 a b c d e f Saggs 1998 Wallis Budge 1884 p 116 Sack 2004 p 41 a b c d Mark 2018 a b c d e f Elayi 2018 p 190 a b Sack 1978 p 129 a b Sack 2004 p 9 Sack 2004 p x Wiseman 1983 p 3 Wiseman 1983 pp 2 3 a b Sack 2004 p 2 a b c Nielsen 2015 pp 61 62 Jursa 2007 pp 127 133 Wiseman 1983 p 5 a b c Sack 2004 p 8 Beaulieu 1989 p xiii a b Beaulieu 2016 p 4 Johnston 1901 p 20 a b c Bedford 2016 p 56 The British Museum 1908 p 10 Melville 2011 p 16 Da Riva 2017 p 78 a b c d e Beaulieu 1998 p 198 a b c d e f g h Ephʿal 2003 p 179 Melville 2011 p 20 Radner 2019 p 141 Lipschits 2005 p 16 Rowton 1951 p 128 a b Sack 2004 p 7 a b Wiseman 1991 p 182 Lipschits 2005 p 20 a b c Wiseman 1991 p 230 Da Riva 2017 p 77 Wiseman 1991 p 183 a b c d e f g h Ephʿal 2003 p 180 Parker amp Dubberstein 1942 p 9 a b c d e Olmstead 1925 p 35 a b Wiseman 1983 p 7 a b Wiseman 1983 p 8 Ayali Darshan 2012 pp 26 27 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Beaulieu 2018 p 228 Da Riva 2013 p 198 a b Ephʿal 2003 pp 180 181 Elayi 2018 p 191 a b Ephʿal 2003 p 181 Bible Gateway passage Jeremiah 27 1 7 New International Version Bible Gateway Retrieved 16 October 2022 Ephʿal 2003 pp 181 183 Elayi 2018 p 192 a b c d e Ephʿal 2003 p 183 a b Elayi 2018 p 195 a b c d e f g Beaulieu 2018 p 229 a b c Elayi 2018 p 196 Ephʿal 2003 p 184 a b Ephʿal 2003 p 186 a b Ephʿal 2003 p 187 Elayi 2018 p 200 a b Ephʿal 2003 pp 187 188 Elayi 2018 p 201 Ephʿal 2003 p 189 Porter 1993 p 66 a b c d Beaulieu 2018 p 230 Baker 2012 p 924 Baker 2012 p 925 Beaulieu 2018 pp 230 231 a b Beaulieu 2018 p 232 Baker 2012 p 926 Parker amp Dubberstein 1942 p 10 a b c d Weiershauser amp Novotny 2020 p 1 Nielsen 2015 p 63 a b Ayali Darshan 2012 p 26 a b Ayali Darshan 2012 p 27 a b c Abraham 2012 p 124 Ayali Darshan 2012 p 29 Lendering 1995 Wiseman 1991 p 229 Polinger Foster 1998 p 322 a b Wiseman 1983 pp 9 10 a b c d e f Beaulieu 1998 p 200 a b c d e f g h i Wiseman 1983 p 10 Abraham 2012 pp 124 125 Beaulieu 1998 p 199 Popova 2015 p 405 Abraham 2012 p 125 Beaulieu 1998 p 173 Beaulieu 1998 pp 173 174 Beaulieu 1998 p 181 Wiseman 1991 p 241 a b c d Beaulieu 1998 p 174 Botta 2009 p 33 Beaulieu 1998 pp 174 175 a b Wiseman 1983 p 11 Wiseman 1991 p 244 Chavalas 2000 p 164 Shea 1982 pp 137 138 a b Ephʿal 2003 p 178 Shapiro 1982 p 328 Smelik 2014 p 110 Smelik 2014 pp 123 124 Smelik 2014 pp 110 12 Smelik 2014 pp 118 20 Smelik 2014 p 133 Laughlin 1990 p 95 Seow 2003 pp 4 6 Collins 2002 p 2 Redditt 2008 p 180 Smelik 2014 pp 127 29 Smelik 2014 p 129 Sack 1983 p 63 Beaulieu 2007 p 137 Henze 1999 p 63 Boccaccini 2012 p 56 Boccaccini 2012 pp 63 65 Retso Jan 2013 The Arabs in Antiquity Their History from the Assyrians to the Umayyads London UK New York City US Routledge pp 187 89 ISBN 978 1 136 87289 1 via Archive Strabo Geography 15 1 6 a b c Babylonian royal inscriptions Stevens 2014 p 73 Da Riva 2013 p 72 Bibliography Edit Abraham Kathleen 2012 A Unique Bilingual and Biliteral Artifact from the Time of Nebuchadnezzar II in the Moussaieff Private Collection In Lubetski Meir Lubetski Edith eds New Inscriptions and Seals Relating to the Biblical World Atlanta Society of Biblical Literature ISBN 978 1589835566 Ayali Darshan Noga 2012 A Redundancy in Nebuchadnezzar 15 and Its Literary Historical Significance JANES 32 21 29 Baker Heather D 2012 The Neo Babylonian Empire In Potts D T ed A Companion to the Archaeology of the Ancient Near East Blackwell Publishing Ltd pp 914 930 doi 10 1002 9781444360790 ch49 ISBN 9781405189880 Beaulieu Paul Alain 1989 Reign of Nabonidus King of Babylon 556 539 BC Yale University Press doi 10 2307 j ctt2250wnt ISBN 9780300043143 JSTOR j ctt2250wnt OCLC 20391775 Beaulieu Paul Alain 1998 Ba u asitu and Kassaya Daughters of Nebuchadnezzar II Orientalia 67 2 173 201 JSTOR 43076387 Beaulieu Paul Alain 2007 Nabonidus the Mad King A Reconsideration of His Steles from Harran and Babylon In Heinz Marlies Feldman Marian H eds Representations of Political Power Case Histories from Times of Change and Dissolving Order in the Ancient Near East Eisenbrauns ISBN 978 1575061351 Beaulieu Paul Alain 2016 Neo Babylonian Chaldean Empire The Encyclopedia of Empire John Wiley amp Sons Ltd pp 1 5 doi 10 1002 9781118455074 wbeoe220 ISBN 978 1118455074 Beaulieu Paul Alain 2018 A History of Babylon 2200 BC AD 75 Pondicherry Wiley ISBN 978 1405188999 Bedford Peter R 2016 Assyria s Demise as Recompense A Note on Narratives of Resistance in Babylonia and Judah In Collins John J Manning J G eds Revolt and Resistance in the Ancient Classical World and the Near East In the Crucible of Empire Brill Publishers ISBN 978 9004330184 Boccaccini Gabriele 2012 Tigranes the Great as Nebuchadnezzar in the Book of Judith In Xeravits Geza G ed A Pious Seductress Studies in the Book of Judith Gottingen Walter de Gruyter ISBN 978 3110279986 Botta Alejandro F 2009 The Aramaic and Egyptian Legal Traditions at Elephantine An Egyptological Approach T amp T Clark International ISBN 978 0567045331 Chavalas Mark W 2000 Belshazzar In Freedman David Noel Myers Allen C eds Eerdmans Dictionary of the Bible Eerdmans ISBN 978 9053565032 Collins John J 2002 Current Issues in the Study of Daniel In Collins John J Flint Peter W VanEpps Cameron eds The Book of Daniel Composition and Reception Vol I BRILL ISBN 978 0391041271 Elayi Josette 2018 The History of Phoenicia Lockwood Press doi 10 2307 j ctv11wjrh ISBN 978 1937040819 JSTOR j ctv11wjrh S2CID 198105413 Ephʿal Israel 2003 Nebuchadnezzar the Warrior Remarks on his Military Achievements Israel Exploration Journal 53 2 178 191 JSTOR 27927044 Da Riva Rocio 2013 Nebuchadnezzar II s Prism ES 7834 A New Edition Zeitschrift fur Assyriologie 103 2 196 229 doi 10 1515 za 2013 0005 S2CID 163482606 Da Riva Rocio 2017 The Figure of Nabopolassar in Late Achaemenid and Hellenistic Historiographic Tradition BM 34793 and CUA 90 Journal of Near Eastern Studies 76 1 75 92 doi 10 1086 690464 S2CID 222433095 George Andrew R 2011 A Stele of Nebuchadnezzar II CUSAS 17 153 169 Henze Matthias 1999 The Madness of King Nebuchadnezzar The Ancient Near Eastern Origins and Early History of Interpretation of Daniel 4 Leiden BRILL ISBN 978 9004114210 Johnston Christopher 1901 The Fall of Nineveh Journal of the American Oriental Society 22 20 22 doi 10 2307 592409 JSTOR 592409 Jursa Michael 2007 Die Sohne Kudurrus und die Herkunft der neubabylonischen Dynastie The Sons of Kudurru and the Origins of the New Babylonian Dynasty Revue d assyriologie et d archeologie orientale in German 101 1 125 136 doi 10 3917 assy 101 0125 Laughlin John C 1990 Belshazzar In Mills Watson E Bullard Roger Aubrey eds Mercer Dictionary of the Bible Mercer University Press ISBN 9780865543737 Lipschits Oled 2005 The Fall and Rise of Jerusalem Judah under Babylonian Rule Eisenbrauns ISBN 978 1575060958 Melville Sarah C 2011 The Last Campaign the Assyrian Way of War and the Collapse of the Empire In Lee Wayne E ed Warfare and Culture in World History New York New York University Press ISBN 978 0814752784 Nielsen John P 2015 I Overwhelmed the King of Elam Remembering Nebuchadnezzar I in Persian Babylonia In Silverman Jason M Waerzeggers Caroline eds Political Memory in and After the Persian Empire SBL Press ISBN 978 0884140894 Olmstead A T 1925 The Chaldaean Dynasty Hebrew Union College Annual 2 29 55 JSTOR 23502505 Parker Richard A Dubberstein Waldo H 1942 Babylonian Chronology 626 B C A D 45 PDF Chicago The University of Chicago Press OCLC 2600410 Polinger Foster Karen 1998 Gardens of Eden Exotic Flora and Fauna in the Ancient Near East PDF Yale F amp ES Bulletin 1998 320 329 Archived from the original PDF on 28 August 2006 Popova Olga 2015 The Royal Family and its Territorial Implantation during the Neo Babylonian Period KASKAL 12 12 401 410 doi 10 1400 239747 Porten Bezalel Zadok Ran Pearce Laurie 2016 Akkadian Names in Aramaic Documents from Ancient Egypt Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research 375 375 1 12 doi 10 5615 bullamerschoorie 375 0001 JSTOR 10 5615 bullamerschoorie 375 0001 S2CID 163575000 Porter Barbara N 1993 Images Power and Politics Figurative Aspects of Esarhaddon s Babylonian Policy American Philosophical Society ISBN 9780871692085 Radner Karen 2019 Last Emperor or Crown Prince Forever Assur uballiṭ II of Assyria according to Archival Sources State Archives of Assyria Studies 28 135 142 Redditt Paul L 2008 Introduction to the Prophets Eerdmans ISBN 978 0 8028 2896 5 Rowton M B 1951 Jeremiah and the Death of Josiah Journal of Near Eastern Studies 2 10 128 130 doi 10 1086 371028 S2CID 162308322 Sack Ronald H 1978 Nergal sarra uṣur King of Babylon as seen in the Cuneiform Greek Latin and Hebrew Sources Zeitschrift fur Assyriologie und Vorderasiatische Archaologie 68 1 129 149 doi 10 1515 zava 1978 68 1 129 S2CID 161101482 Sack Ronald H 1983 The Nabonidus Legend Revue d Assyriologie et d archeologie orientale 77 1 59 67 JSTOR 23282496 Sack Ronald H 2004 Images of Nebuchadnezzar The Emergence of a Legend 2nd Revised and Expanded ed Selinsgrove Susquehanna University Press ISBN 1 57591 079 9 Seow C L 2003 Daniel Westminster John Knox Press ISBN 9780664256753 Shapiro David S 1982 The Seven Questions of Amos Tradition A Journal of Orthodox Jewish Thought 20 4 327 331 JSTOR 23260505 Shea William H 1982 Nabonidus Belshazzar and the Book of Daniel an Update Andrews University Seminary Studies 20 2 133 149 Smelik Klaas A D 2014 My Servant Nebuchadnezzar The Use of the Epithet My Servant for the Babylonian King Nebuchadnezzar in the Book of Jeremiah Vetus Testamentum 64 1 109 134 doi 10 1163 15685330 12301142 JSTOR 43894101 Stevens Kahtryn 2014 The Antiochus Cylinder Babylonian Scholarship and Seleucid Imperial Ideology PDF The Journal of Hellenic Studies 134 66 88 doi 10 1017 S0075426914000068 JSTOR 43286072 The British Museum 1908 A Guide to the Babylonian and Assyrian Antiquities London British Museum OCLC 70331064 Waerzeggers Caroline Jursa Michael 2008 On the Initiation of Babylonian Priests Zeitschrift fur Altorientalische und Biblische Rechtsgeschichte 14 1 38 Wallis Budge Ernest Alfred 1884 Babylonian Life and History London Religious Tract Society OCLC 3165864 Weiershauser Frauke Novotny Jamie 2020 The Royal Inscriptions of Amel Marduk 561 560 BC Neriglissar 559 556 BC and Nabonidus 555 539 BC Kings of Babylon PDF Eisenbrauns ISBN 978 1646021079 Wiseman Donald J 1983 Nebuchadrezzar and Babylon The Schweich Letters Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0197261002 Wiseman Donald J 2003 1991 Babylonia 605 539 B C In Boardman John Edwards I E S Hammond N G L Sollberger E Walker C B F eds The Cambridge Ancient History III Part 2 The Assyrian and Babylonian Empires and Other States of the Near East from the Eighth to the Sixth Centuries B C 2nd ed Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 22717 8 Web sources Edit Inscriptions by Babylonian kings Open Richly Annotated Cuneiform Corpus Archived from the original on 27 May 2021 Retrieved 25 May 2021 Lendering Jona 1995 Cyaxares Livius Archived from the original on 27 May 2021 Retrieved 23 May 2021 Mark Joshua J 2018 Nebuchadnezzar II World History Encyclopedia Archived from the original on 27 May 2021 Retrieved 17 December 2019 Saggs Henry W F 1998 Nebuchadnezzar II Encyclopaedia Britannica Archived from the original on 18 January 2020 Retrieved 27 February 2020 Nebuchadnezzar IIChaldean dynastyBorn c 642 BC Died 562 BCPreceded byNabopolassar King of Babylon605 562 BC Succeeded byAmel Marduk Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Nebuchadnezzar II amp oldid 1144706474, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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