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The Legend of
Semmiramis
This article is written
to shed a light on the saga of the mysterious, but
fascinating queen Semiramis, the ancient effigy of the
Assyrian empire. Famed for her beauty, strength, wisdom,
voluptuousness, and alluring power, she is said to have
built Babylon with its hanging gardens, erect many other
cities, conquer Egypt and much of Asia including Ethiopia,
execute war against the Medes and Chaldeans; which
eventually lead to an unsuccessful attack on India where she
nearly lost her life. As G. J. Whyfe-Melville states in his
novel of Sarchedon: A Legend of the Great Queen, "She was
beautiful no doubt, in the nameless beauty that wins, no
less than in the lofty beauty that compels. Her form was
matchless in symmetry, so that her every gesture, in the
saddle or on the throne, was womanly, dignified, and
graceful, while each dress she wore, from royal robe and
jeweled tiara to steel breast-plate and golden headpiece,
seemed that in which she looked her best. With a man's
strength of body, she possessed more than a man's power of
mind and force of will.
A shrewd observer would
have detected in those bright eyes, despite their thick
lashes and loving glance, the genius that can command an
army and found an empire; in that delicate, exquisitely
chiseled face, the lines that tell of tameless pride and
unbending resolution; in the full curves of that rosy mouth,
in the clean-cut jaw and prominence of the beautifully
molded chin, a cold recklessness that could harden on
occasion to pitiless cruelty - stern, impracticable,
immovable as fate." She built such an inuring reputation
that queen Margaret of Denmark, Sweden, and Norway
(1353-1412 A.D.) And Catherine II the Great of Russia
(1729-1796) were both labeled as the Semiramis of the North.
The only complete
significant documentation that I found intact about
Semiramis is recorded in the historical writings of Diodorus
Siculus (Library of History), a Greek historian about the
same time as Julius Caesar. Although he is listed in the
category of an elute expert on ancient history, many
scholars have come to the conclusion that much of his
writings, especially those of the narratives of Semiramis,
are plagiarized and based on historical legends colored with
elaborations of thought and disguised fantasies, and
therefore cannot be recognized as existential tangible truth
or fact.
As the story unfolds,
it begins with king Ninus (Greek: tentatively Ramman-Nirari)
of Assyria, who builds a great city in honor of his name,
and the city becomes Nineveh (Roman: Ninus) the capital of
the Assyrian empire. He was a great warrior who subdued the
greater parts of Asia, becoming the first great king, and
conqueror of the ancient world of his time, and as Diodorus
writes...there were none other before him...that of which he
knew of. If this be true then some scholars would place him
approximately about 2182 B.C., which would be in proximity
to Nimrod of the Bible, ruler of the land of Shinar as
outlined in Gen.10:10-11. The etymology of Nimrod is quite
uncertain and the Bible does not go into further detail
about him apart from these few lines written in Genesis,
except that he was the founder of Nineveh along with a
number of other well known ancient cities. The Hebrew
historian Flavius Josephus, in the Antiquities of the Jews,
depicts Nimrod as a tyrannical leader, demanding complete
dominion and control over the people.
As Josephus writes: "He
persuaded them not to ascribe it to God, as if it was
through his means they were happy, but to believe that it
was their own courage which procured that happiness. He
gradually changed the government into tyranny - seeing no
other way of turning men from the fear of God, but to bring
them into a constant dependence upon his power." He likely
rose to power by being a mighty protector over the land with
his fearless gift of hunting and killing predatory wild
animals that were a threat to human civilization, therefore
receiving the title "mighty hunter before the Lord (Gen.
10:9). In post-biblical traditions, Nimrod, the inciter of
"rebellion" who ruled Babel, was often identified as a
giant, or Nephilim (Gen. 6:4), equivalent to the Anakim of
Dueteronomy (Duet. 2:21-20;9:2). He was the chief instigator
of the tower of Babel. This was a revolt which led to
building a tower in the course of staging revenge against
God, lest He flood the world again.
The tower was a symbol
of worship and protection and became well known by many as
the ziggurat of Etemenanki, in honor of the Babylonian
supreme god Marduk; a dominant central point of worship that
spread out to many other nations that were to come
(thirty-four of these staged towers have now been located in
twenty-seven ancient cities of the Middle East - the
greatest of them all was the one at Babylon). If the name is
originally Hebrew, which is highly improbable, then it would
mean, "to rebel", and linked to the Akkadian Amarutuk he
eventually evolved into the god "Marduk", which would then
lead into the realm of ruler-worship.
However, it is probably
Mesopotamian in origin and most frequently suggested as
equivalent to the word Ninurta, though this is not without
philological difficulty or opposition. Ninurta, read
apparently Nimurta in dialectic Sumerian, is presumably a
polemic distortion of the origin of the name Nimrod, the
famous hunter of Hebrew mythology, which is incorporated in
one of the oldest Hebrew documents. If the form Ninurta is
accepted, and assumed, it would refer strictly to a mythic
god, and point to the Babylonian deity, the war-god called
"the Arrow, the mighty hero" whose cult assumed widespread
importance in Mesopotamia during the late second millennium
B.C. Nimrod would then border on the total concept of
mythology. If it refers to a historical person, the Assyrian
king Tukulti-Ninurta I (1246-1206 B.C.) could be an accurate
choice, since he was the first Assyrian monarch to rule over
Babylonia and have cultic centers in Babel, Caleh, and
others known cities of this time.
According to Speiser
(1924-1946), a leading authority on biblical lands, cultures
and excavations of important Sumerian rites in Iraq, he
notably felt Tukulti-Ninurta I served as a prototype for the
composite Greek hero Ninus, associated with Nineveh, who
became the character united with Semiramis of Diodorus
Siculus' Antiquities of Asia; however, G.J. Whyfe-Melville
in his book, Sarchedon: A Legend of the Great Queen, makes
note that Ninus is an ancestral linage of thirteen
generation down from the historical Nimrod. There also
followed an interval of subjugation to the Semitic-speaking
Akkadians (2300-2150 B.C.), so named after the city of Akkad
whose greatest rulers, Sargon and especially his grandson
Naram-Sin, may have conceivably provided the model for
Nimrod and Ashur in the Genesis story. However, if the
Cushite origin of Nimrod listed from Genesis is maintained,
the Egyptian monarch Amenophis III (1411-1375) would be
suitable according to von Rad. In the history of Sumerian
literature he could also be ranked as Etana, king of Kish
(2800 B.C.) the "man who stabilized all the land" who also
was resin to deity, or the hero Gilgamish from the
Babylonian Epic of Gilgamish. Regardless of origin, Nimrod
must have become a figure of legendary proportions in the
ancient Near East culture whose stories were extremely
fluid.
He was adopted by, and
adapted to so many titles, that many phases of ancient
cultures lived on even into medieval chronicles. He left
such an influence that the prophet Micah calls Assyria the
"land of Nimrod" (Mic. 5:6). The main draw back to this
prodigy as the conquering hero of Assyria associated with
Semiramis and the surrounding regions is the lack of
notoriety given to a queen, or spouse who would assist her
ruling husband during these early conquests; for it is noted
that all the conquering heroes of this ancient era were
predominantly male-origin only. In fact, the dominant rule
applying to leadership is, "No woman may reign over the sons
of Ashur, we only owe allegiance to a king. It is our
privilege and our law." There is definitely no mention of
Semiramis in any Hebrew documents, or Biblical texts. It
must stand to reason that the placement of Semiramis must
surely come at a much later date...a time that would be more
familiar to Diodorus since his lack of Assyrian history is
possibly to obscure for him to have full knowledge of all
the facts...And it must be understood that nearly all the
ancient accounts of Assyria and the surrounding area do not
refer to the earlier primitive cities and it's culture, but
to the later capital and residence of King Nebuchadnezzar.
Even Herodotus, another Greek writer, from his own personal
observation describes this account in the first book of his
history. Semiramis, by many opinions, is believed to be
totally fictitious and never really did exist, however,
there does remain a three-side standing wall between the
ancient old and new palace where a detailed etching of a
curious hunting-piece, in which Semiramis, on horseback is
throwing her javelin at a leopard, while her husband, Ninus
is piercing a lion. It is near this last palace that the
famous Hanging Gardens were, and so commonly celebrated by
both the Greeks and Italians.
The legendary king
Ninus, a name perhaps derived from the Assyrian nunu,
meaning "fish", was the son of Belus, also known as Cronus (Belus,
originated from the Babylonian Bel, which evolved into the
Canaanite Baal, and later identified with the Greek god
Cronus). Herodotus gives us another genealogy for king Ninus,
which makes him a descendant of Heracles (Hercules) through
his grandfather Alceus who was the son of Heracles and
Omphale, but this would make Ninus several generations to
young for the historical time span noted by other Greek
writers. In any case, he was an impetuous ruler, the
inventor of warfare, and the first to assembles huge armies
to succeed in his conquest for power. He took as his ally
Ariaeus king of Arabia, and with him conquered all Asia
except for India. At the siege of Bactria, he ran against
resistance, however with the aid of one of his viziers wife,
he was able to subdue this region, and eventually marry this
woman who later became the Great Queen.
This legend that has
branched out into many other cultures, and which has found
its ruling into different mythical disguises, now seems to
be preserved under the Syrian version by Diodorus Siculus
who drew largely from Ctesias of Cnide. He tells us that in
Ascalon, a part of Syria, a certain goddess was said to live
in the lake near the town. This goddess, Derceto, sometimes
also known as Atargatis, had the upper portion of a woman
but her lower parts were that of a fish (in other versions
she was simply a beautiful priestess-maiden...total woman).
It was told that Aphrodite (Assyrian: Ashtaroth), the
goddess of love, who bore a grudge against her, made her
fall violently in love with a young Syrian called Caystrus
by whom she gave birth to a daughter. After the latter's
birth, Derceto in her shame and guilt exposed her child, did
away with the father and hid herself at the bottom of the
lake. By an act of miracles, the doves found the infant and
brought up the child, stealing the milk and, later, the
cheese which she needed from nearby shepherds.
The shepherds finally
discovered the little babe, who was of great beauty, hidden
amongst the Acacia shrubs and brought her to their chief
Simmas of the royal herds, who now took her as his own to
raise. He gave her the name Semiramis, which means in
Syrian, "the one who comes from the doves [Sumats]." As she
grew to the age of a nubility, one of the king's advisors
and general, Onnes, (other titles use Menon) was ordered to
inspect the flock's when he noticed her surpassing beauty.
Captivated by her splendor, innocence, and charm, he took
her back with him to Nineveh and immediately married her.
They had two children, supposedly twins..Hyapate and Hydaspe.
They seemed very happy and Semiramis, being very clever, had
given her husband such good advice that he succeeded in all
his endeavors.
At about this same time
King Ninus, who was ruler in Assyria, organized and
expedition against neighboring Bactria. Knowing that this
would not be an easy conquest he collected and army of
considerable size. After an initial setback he managed to
overwhelm the country by the sheer number of his troops and
only the capital, Bactra, held out against him. Needing the
aide of Onnes, he sent for him, however Onnes, missing his
beloved wife asked her to join him. As she watched the
battle and after careful study she made several remarks
about the way in which the siege was being conducted.
Noticing that the attack was being directed from the plain,
while both attackers and defenders were ignoring the
citadel, she ask to take charge of a group of mountain
soldiers, have them scale the cliffs which defended the site
and turn the flank of the enemy defenses. The besieged
soldiers were terrified and solemnly did surrender. Ninus
was magnificently engulfed with admiration for the courage
and skill Semiramis displayed. From the first moment that
Ninus perused on her winsome face and her astonishing
beauty, he had found in her a charm his heart was powerless
to resist and he was half subdued already to immediately
resolve to have her as his wife and queen. He offered to
give Onnes his own daughter Sosana in exchange for Semiramis
but Onnes refused. Ninus then threatened to destroy Onnes by
gouging his eyes out, whereupon in fear, despair and agony,
he surrendered to his kings demand and unfortunately put an
end to his life by hanging himself. Ninus then succeeded in
marrying Semiramis without difficulty and they had a son
they named Ninyas.
Ninus, a much older
paramour and extremely subjugating would burn with an
enormous jealous rage if ever another man by chance happen
to gaze upon her presence, lest only a priestly eunuch - or
see her face unveiled. "In Assyria all woman are beautiful;
but by the side of the Great Queen the fairest of them show
like pearls against a diamond. When she turns her eyes on
you, it is like the golden luster of noonday; and her smile
is brighter and more glorious than sunset in the desert -
sweeter, softer, lovelier, than the evening breeze amongst
the palms. To look on her face unveiled is to be the Great
Queen's slave forever more!" "I will have him flayed
alive who gainsay it," was his direct order. "I have ceased
to love most things now, from the roar of battle to the
bubble of a wine-cup. But may I burn like a log of cedar in
the fire of Belus when I cease to love my queen." A
reflection he muttered to his beautiful patrician at the
time of his approaching death. It is not known what had
happen to the children she had by Onnes, but it was for
certain that she did succeed the throne as Queen.
Her reign endured
approximately forty-two years, while others accounts assume
that this dominion was equally shared of which only the last
five years - after the death of king Ninus - Semiramis ruled
alone as queen until her son Ninyas collaborated the scepter
and took the throne from her. According to another account
Semiramis may have become bitter and vengeful, tricked her
husband by obtaining permission to rule over Asia for five
days just to avail herself the opportunity to cast the king
into a dungeon, or as is also related, to put him to death,
and thus attain the sovereign power for herself. As G.J.
Whyfe-Melville states in Sarchedon: A legend of the Great
Queen, that she forever carried an amulet at her breast (the
shape of a dove in the form of an arrow) given to her by
Onnes, and perpetually cherished as to his memory. Others
conclude that it was the Prince Ninyas she had imprisoned
shortly after the Kings death for masquerading as the queen
in public and causing social disorder and disgrace (for
their resemblance were strikingly similar). Whatever the
case, her fame threw into the shadows that of Ninus; and
later ages loved to tell of her marvelous deeds and her
heroic achievements.
She began her reign by
building a splendid mausoleum in honor of Ninus at Nineveh
itself on the Euphrates plain as outlined in the edition of
Pyramus and Thisbe (Herodotus). She then went full force on
a building campaign and decided to have a large, immaculate
city built for herself not far from Nineveh. This was the
new city Babylon. It was marked out on horseback on the
river bank of the Euphrates, and according to Diodorus,
Semiramis employed about two million workman she accumulated
from all parts of her imperial realm to complete this task.
The perimeter of the walls alone were 66 kilometers long and
the width were so wide that 6 harnessed chariots could ride
abreast along these walls. They were approximately 100
meters high, though some historians stated that their height
was greatly exaggerated and were much less. The city was
defended by 250 towers, and the Euphrates, which ran through
the middle of the city, was crossed by a bridge 900 meters
long that was lined with awesome quays for 30 kilometers.
At each end of the
bridge was built a fortified castle, and the queen's
residence. They were linked by a subterranean passage under
the river, which was diverted in order to carry this out. It
was in the citadel of the western castle that the queen had
her famous hanging gardens built. However, according to the
actual historical account this garden was built on the
request of a much later queen of Persian origin, who asked
her husband, the Chaldean ruler Nebuchadnezzar, for a
representation of the "paradises," a duplication of the vast
pleasure-gardens of her homeland in Persia. Diodorus tells
us that they were created by superimposing square terraces
one on top of the other, like the steps in and amphitheater.
Each of these terraces rested on vaulted freestone
galleries, covered with a thick layer of lead, on top of
which was put rich soil. Inside these galleries, like a
number of porticos opening onto a terrace, the royal
apartments had been laid out. A system of hydraulic machines
brought the water from the river to feed the gardens.
She later traveled
further into the land of Asia and built a vast park opposite
Mount Bagistan, a number of ornate fountains at Ecbatana,
and a reputation that far surpassed any other female warrior
for the period of this time. Semiramis was said to have been
responsible for many ancient cities on the banks of the
Euphrates and the Tigris rivers, and also for erecting many
of the most unique and wonderful monuments and sites in all
of Asia. Several of these major extraordinary works in the
Middle East, were a bit extreme and astonishing for just one
person, which became current in later ages; and the authors
being unknown, were ascribed by popular tradition to credit
these feats to this mysterious queen. Besides conquering
Media, she subdued Egypt and a great part of Ethiopia, then
quite weary she regressed home to Bactra, the site of her
first exploit. While she was in Egypt she consulted an
oracle of Ammon - exploring foreknowledge of her future.
Instead, the oracle gave her the prediction about the time
of her unusual departure. The oracle replied that she would
come to her end when her son Ninyas would conspire against
her and try to take her life.
When she returned back
to Bactra she began making plans to invade India, and for
several years she made elaborate preparations, only to
become the most grievous mistake of her notorious but
flamboyant reign. She raised a gigantic army and succeeded
in crossing the Indus, but her troops were soon put to
flight and herself suffered an injury that nearly cost her,
her life. It was just too insidious of this strategy to
match horse and chariots in battle with the size of
ferocious, angry war-elephants. During the activity of
battle she was severely wounded in one arm by an arrow, and
a javelin that pierced through her back from the mighty king
Stabrobates of India. She just scarcely managed to escape by
crossing the Indus river, drawing her sword and destroying
the bridge she had ordered to assemble, since her enemies
would not dare pursue after her across the river.
It was not long after
her recovery that her son Ninyas along with the eunuchs of
the palace plotted against her. Ninyas had always been a
troublesome burden for the queen, as in her confession she
mentions that she had done so much for him, and received
nothing in return. "I was a good mother to him, as any
sun-burned peasant who brings her babe into the vineyard on
her back; and will you believe, he cared more for a rough
word or a rude jest from the Great King than for my fondest
caress, my smile, my tears. When I have pleaded with him,
even to his own advantage, he has turned his back on me, and
laughed outright. He loved the meanest dancing-girl out of
the market better than the mother to whom he owed his life,
his beauty, his favor with the Great King." As the legend
follows, Semiramis reigned an approximate of 42 years then
turned the sovereignty of her rule over to her son Ninyas
and clandestinely disappeared (at the age of 62 years).
Legends were told and flourished throughout the ages that
she took flight towards heaven in the form of a dove from
which the fabulous nature of this narrative is apparent.
That Semiramis became affiliated with the Syrian goddess
associated with the name of Astarte of Ascalon, Anaitis of
Persia, or Astoreth of Canaan, which were handed down from
the earlier renditions of the Semitic Ishtar of Babylon;
originating from the earlier profile of the goddess Innana
of Sumer - to whom the dove was sacred. Another story that
began circulating in Armenia about the "Khaldis-gods" was
the mysterious Saris, an abbreviated form of the old
Babylonian Ishtar, for it is said that Saris masquerades as
Semiramis in the early legends of Indo-Armenia.
Moses of Khorene tells
us how the Armenian king Ara was wooed by the Assyrian queen
Semiramis. Ara refused her offers and eventually Semiramis
marched into Armenia at the head of an army to force him to
accept her. A fierce battle was fought, in which Ara was
slain, and the Assyrian queen flung herself on the corpse in
an agony of grief calling upon the gods to restore his life.
And the story went that the gods of Aralez did restore his
life. This tale is very similar to the Sumerian Gilgamish
refusing Ishtar's affections in the Epic of Gilgamish, or
the slaying, death and resurrection of Tammuz and the
intervention of Ishtar to rescue him from death in the
Babylonian elegy. A story that originated out of the early
fertility rites, and lamentation worship of Innana and
Damuzi from the ancient Sumerian legend..
Although Semiramis may
have similar characteristics to the ancient goddesses' of
these earlier cults, it is a known fact that her legend
should be placed separate, in reality, she is not a mythical
goddess, since her story never mentions her ranked as an
icon of worship. Semiramis was attired with such
magnificence which enhanced her own unrivaled beauty that
she seemed to front her splendor as more than just mere
human, but at the same time her reputation was portrayed
more as a powerful, Syrian semi-divine/human heroine...a
female prototype of Hercules. Unlike Hercules
(Greek:Heracles) and Ninus, both fictitious characters
originating from the minds of Greek folklore...Semiramis, is
the Greek name, originating from a real canonized queen
"Sammu-ramat", who was the mother of the Assyrian king
Adad-Nirari III (reigned 810-783 B.C.) and wife of
Shamshi-Adad V (823-811B.C.) who was the son of Shalmaneser
III (859-824 B.C.). Her stela (memorial stone shaft) has
been found at Ashur, while an inscription at Calah (Nimrud)
shows her to have been dominant there after the death of her
husband, before the rule of her son. Her regency was assumed
roughly between 810-805 B.C., in the minority of her son
Adad-Nirari III.
This is proven by the
inscription detailed in the Cambridge Ancient History, part
3, The Assyrian Empire which says: "In 818 B.C.,
Shamshi-Adad began a war with Marduk-Balatsu-Ikbi, king of
Babylon, which lasted intermittently for eight years. It is
possible that the cause of dispute was the territory of
Gannanate, for the Assyrians followed the eastern bank of
the Tigris to the neighborhood of this city, taking
Me-Turnat, Di'bina, Date-ebir, and Isduya by assault. The
inhabitants of the district took refuge in a fortress which
withstood only a short siege. Shamshi-Adad fell upon
Dur-Papsukal, an island city which was defended by
Bau-Akh-Iddin. The capture of this city brought immense
loot, but Marduk-Balatsu-Ikbi had gathered considerable
forces to face the invader, and had been joined by
contingents from Chaldaea, Elan and Namri, as well as by the
Aramanean tribes on the east bank of the Tigris. A battle
was fought beneath the walls of Dur-Papsukal, and resulted
in the rout of the Babylonian forces with a loss of 5000
killed and 2000 prisoners. Of the campaigns conducted in 812
and 811 the notices in the Eponym Canon 'against Chaldaea'
and 'against Babylon,' supply the only record, but it is to
be presumed that Shamshi-Adad entered the enemy's capital in
the latter year, for the 'Synchronous History' speaks of his
offering sacrifices in Babylon, Cuthah and Borsippa.
The extension, then, of
the Assyrian borders continued during the thirteen years of
Shamshi-Adad's V reign, to the east and southeast; it is
clear that Adad-Nirari III succeeded in 811 to an authority
unimpaired by the civil strife which had marked the last
years of Shalmaneser IV (783-774 B.C.). The government of
Assyria from 811 to 808 was actually conducted by the
queen-mother, Sammu-ramat. Inscription show that she
occupied an exceptional position in ancient history. On a
stele found in a corner of the wall of the city of Ashur,
where stood two rows of slabs recording the names of
monarchs and royal officials, her name is recorded as the
wife of Shamshi-Adad V, the mother of Adad-Nirari III, the
daughter-in-law of Shalmaneser III. In the ruins of the
temple of Ninurta at Kalakh, two statues of the god Nabu
(son of Babylonian god Marduk) were discovered in a
mutilated condition; but the inscriptions on them show that
they were dedicated by the city-governor, Bel-Tarsi-Iluma,
with a petition for the preservation of the king
Adad-Nirari, the queen Sammu-ramat, and himself, and a later
inscription of Adad-Nirari shows that the first three years
were not reckoned part of his reign. It is apparently within
reason to believe that the name Sammu-ramat is the archetype
of Semiramis the Greek legend, and is in fact, the
exaggerated accounts of the achievements of Semiramis and
Ninus; there may be an echo of the times of the regency of
Sammu-ramat and of the reign of her son.
There is also an
annexation to this story, and to address further detail to
these events the Illustrated Dictionary & Concordance of the
Bible; the Jerusalem Publishing house Ltd. Gives us a fair
definition of the histories of "Shalmaneser". It is the name
of five kings who ruled Assyria, only two of whom seem to be
connected with the Hebrew Old Testament. Shalmaneser I, son
of Adad-Nirari II, ruled from 1274-1245 B.C. Shalmaneser II,
was the successor to Tiglath-Pileser II, ruled 1031-1020
B.C. Shalmaneser III, son of Ashurnasirpal, ruled 859-824
B.C. He continued his father's expansionist policies,
extending Assyria's frontiers from Urartu to Persia, from
Media to the Mediterranean coast including Asia Minor. He
invaded Babylon and secured her complete subjection. He
consolidated Assyrian domination over his conquests by
establishing a sophisticated imperial structure, vassals,
annual tribute, autonomy, trade relations and alliances and
military campaigns, thus laying the foundations for the
neo-Assyrian empire. He was the first Assyrian king to come
into contact with the kings of Israel, in 853 B.C. he fought
at Karkar on the Orontes River against a formidable
anti-Assyrian coalition of 12 kings headed by Ben-Hadad of
Aram-Damascus. While the Bible does not mention this
incident, his "Monolith Inscription" testifies to the
prominence of Ahab, the king of Israel, who fielded the
largest armored force of chariots - 2000, as well as 10,000
foot soldiers. Although Shalmaneser claims a great victory,
the fact that he avoided Syria for several years afterwards,
suggests that his victory was indecisive.
The "Black Obelisk"
found in Nimrud records his military achievements against
the western kings, and depicts the payment of tribute by
Jehu, king of Israel, humbly prostrating himself before him
- an incident also passed over in silence in the Bible.
Despite his boasts as "the mighty king, ruler of the
universe", he died amid revolts which broke out throughout
the empire, with which his brother and successor had to
contend. In this account the "brother" would have to be
Shamshi-Adad V, husband of Sammu-ramat, mother of
Adad-Nirari III.
Shalmaneser IV, the son
of Adad-Nirari III, ruled 783-774 B.C. then Shalmaneser V,
successor of Tiglath-Pileser III, ruled 727-722 B.C.; he
laid siege for three years against Samaria when Hoshea, king
of Israel, backed by Egypt, rebelled against Assyria. At the
end of the siege, Samaria capitulated and Hoshea was taken
prisoner (2 Kgs. 17:1-6; 18:9-10). Apparently Shalmaneser V
died or was murdered during the siege and his successor
Sargon completed the conquest of the city.
If there were any
famous journeys or exploits of queen Sammu-ramat during her
short reign, it would seem possible that historians and
scholars would amplify her reputation more than what we know
about her at this day and age. As to this fact, there is not
a shred of evidence as to her influential power, nor the
extent of her legacy that anyone, including Diodorus, could
bring to light as factual; let alone create an antiquity
solid enough to expand upon the audacious narrative of this
episode of Semiramis. And if his writings of Semiramis are
examined very closely, it would seem that they match the
conquering adventures of Alexander the Great and King
Nebuchadnezzar, combined with the exploits of Shalmaneser
III, Shamshi-Adad V and his wife, which in turn intertwine
with the many mysteries of the ancient fertility deities;
and implementing the excitement and flamboyancy of Greek
rhetoric composition to form this Assyrian female
counterpart. All this in order to give the reader the
intense drama of mystery, animation and glamor, for it is a
conclusive contingency that Sammu-ramat could have had a
likeness to the qualities of beauty, wit and charm in order
to expound this Greek legend into this effect. It is a
puzzling question that an ancient historian of stature and
qualifications like Diodorus, would write a document that is
built around a rather fictitious and frugal character with
very little, or in that matter, of any authentic exploitable
structure, unless there was something lost in the
fragmentation of Diodorus' writings that we at present are
not familiar with.
Is it possible that he
was at the advent of creating a document, or rather a novel
with all the mortal characteristics that combine all the
attributes of composite human nature; that of beauty,
innocence, romance, desire, and love, along with alluring
power, lust, manipulation, seduction, greed, betrayal, and
eventually a moral twist that leads to an adherent saddening
end? In any case Semiramis, the most beautiful chastely
maiden that arose to become the all powerful, nobelist
monarch in the mysterious Land of Shinar is quite a
compelling, courageous saga that should be enjoyed by many.
So how do we end this pr้cis? In our imaginative minds,
Semiramis can be elevated as the perfect dream of beauty and
admiration, to an icon of ascendancy for trepidation and
scorn. So how do we end this pr้cis? By just the beautiful
name "Semiramis" alone, for it seems to have a sense of
irresistibility that carries with it the impaction of
cryptic appearance, disguised in beauty and desire, that
unquestionably leads to the consequential repercussion into
devastation for tampering with forbidden fruit.... There are
women whom it is very dangerous to love, as in Eden there
stood a tree that it was death to taste. But the forbidden
fruit was gathered nevertheless; and these beauties seem to
allure more than their share of victims, to win more than
their natural meed of triumph." |