…Nineveh, which, like the other principal cities …
Years: 1341BCE - 1198BCE
…Nineveh, which, like the other principal cities of Assyria, is situated in the Tigris River valley.
The goddess’s cult statue at Nineveh had been sent to Pharaoh Amenhotep III of Egypt by orders of the king of Mitanni; the city had remained one of Mitanni's vassals until its seizure by Ashur-uballit.
With the rise of Assyrian power in the late second millennium, Nineveh becomes a royal residence.
At the end of the Bronze Age, Nineveh is much smaller than Babylon, but still one of the world's major cities (population is about thirty-three thousand).
All free male citizens are obliged to serve in the army for a time, a system called the ilku-service.
The Assyrian law code, notable for its repressive attitude towards women in their society, is compiled during this period.
Assyrian law is very similar to Sumerian and Babylonian law, however, notably more brutal than its predecessors.
Three Assyrian law collections have been found to date.
Such punishments as cutting of ears and noses are common, as in the Code of Hammurabi composed several centuries earlier.
In the case of murder, the victim’s family is allowed to decide the death penalty for the murderer.
Assyria has difficulties with keeping the trade routes open.
Unlike the situation in the Old Assyrian period, the Hittites and the Hurrians effectively dominate the Anatolian metal trade.
These people now control the Mediterranean ports, while the Kassites control the river route south to the Persian Gulf.
The Middle Assyrian kingdom is well organized, and in the firm control of the king, who functions as the High Priest of Ashur, the state god.
He has certain obligations to fulfill in the cult, and has to provide resources for the temples.
The priesthood becomes a major power in Assyrian society.
Conflicts with the priesthood are thought to have been behind the murder of king Tukulti-Ninurta I in 1207.
Locations
People
Groups
- Mesopotamia
- Hurrians
- Babylonian Kingdom of the Kassites
- Mitanni (Hanigalbat), Kingdom of
- Hittites (Hittite Empire), (New) Kingdom of the
- Assyria, (Middle) Kingdom of
