Babylon emerges under the Kassites as the …

Years: 1485BCE - 1342BCE

Babylon emerges under the Kassites as the dominant city of central and southern Mesopotamia.

Following the treaty confirming the boundary between Assyria and Babylonia, Kurigalzu I of Babylonia and Ashur-bel-nisheshu of Assyria conclude a further treaty in the late fifteenth century.

The Enuma Elish, a Babylonian creation epic, is probably composed at Babylon in the Kassite period to celebrate Babylon's victory over the Sealand, around 1450 BCE (though it only exists in later copies).

The text, consisting of seven tablets, borrows many of the mythological motifs in the story from earlier Canaanite myths about Baal.

In the tale, Marduk, the chief god of Babylon, is elected king of the gods to defeat Tiamat, possibly the personified sea representing chaotic evil.

After dispatching her, Marduk splits her in two, fashions the world from her corpse, and stations the various gods in their appropriate spheres.

He then creates the human race from the blood of Tiamat’s consort, the rebel god Kingu, to be the slaves of the gods.

Finally, he establishes Babylon, and the text closes with the gods praising Marduk by reciting his fifty names.

During the Dark Age in Mesopotamia that has ensued from the Hittite sack and the Kassite takeover, the language of the Amorites disappears from Babylonia and the mid-Euphrates; in Syria and Palestine, however, it becomes dominant.

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