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  • Sept. 1, 1875
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The Masonic Magazine, Sept. 1, 1875: Page 24

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    Article ASSYRIAN HISTORY. ← Page 2 of 5 →
Page 24

Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Assyrian History.

much fuller and differing in several points from this account of Berosus , and apparently approaching closely the account in the Book of Genesis . The account of the Creation commences with a description of chaosbefore the formation of the universe .

, In order to show the style of this composition he . quoted the opening lines of the first tablet of the history of the Creation : — 1 , When on high the heavens were not raised ; 2 , and beneath on the earth a p lant had not grown ; 3 , and the deeps

had not yet produced their seeds ; 4 , the chaos Tiamat ( or the ocean ) was the begetter of the whole of them ; 5 , their waters first were established ; but 6 , a tree had not grown up , a flower had not unfolded ; 7 , then the gods had not founded anything ; 8 , a plant had not sprung up

and order did not exist : 9 , there were made the gods only ; 10 , and the demigods they caused to exist ; 11 , and to grow * *; ] 3 , and the upper expanse and the lower expanse existed ; 13 , aud a course of clays and long time passed . The account of the Creation goes on to describe in great detail

the subsequent formation of the heavens and the earth , winding up with the creation of man . The philosophy of the Babylonians and Assyrians in this respect was evidently similar to that of the writer of Genesis , for they describe man as a perfect

being at his creation and as falling from that hi gh estate . According to the Book of Genesis , man was planted iu the Garden of Eden ; and Sir Henry Rawlinson , to whom we owe so much in Assyrian decipherment , had long ago identified Eden with the Kar-Dunias or Gan-Dnnias of the

inscriptions . Kar-Dunias is one of the names of Babylonia , perhaps belonging properly to some particular part of the country , and it is said to be watered by four rivers , like Eden in Genesis . To Sir Henry Rawlinson we are also indebted for the discovery of another point in the

belief of the Bab ylonians- —viz ., the opinion that there were two distinct races of mankind , the dark race and the fair race . The grounds of this division of the human famil y are unknown , but the dark race appears to correspond to the Adamites or

sons of Adam in Genesis , while the failrace agrees with " sons of God " in the same book . At the era of the earliest contemporary monuments , long subsequent to the Semitic Conquest , the Euphrates and

Tigris " Valleys , the lecturer said , are found broken up into some seven or eight kingdoms , viz ., Sumir , near the Persian Gulf ; Akkad , the region round Babylon ; Elam , east of Akkad ; Goiin , north of Elam ; . Assuron the Tigrisnorth of Akkad ; and

, , two or three other states whose positions are obscure . A mig hty monarch now arose at Ur ( Mugheir ) , probably the birthp lace of Abram . His name is read with some hesitation Urukh . His conquests stretched from the modern Mugheir , then

called Ur , to Babylon , and some of his successors subdued and colonised Assyria . Scientifically constructed buildings , gem carving , metal work in gold , silver , bronze , and iron , bas-reliefs and sculptures in the round , embroidered dresses and personal

ornaments , as well as elegant furniture , the the art of writing , mathematical science , including the knowledge of square , and cube roots , an elaborate system of weights and measures , works on astronomy , geography , mythology , and history , regular laws , ri g hts of property , judges , and other

legal officers , a state religion and orders of priesthood , extensive commerce and shipbuilding , artificial irrigation and scientific tillage of the ground—all these were telling evidence of civilisation of those early times . After this a period of decay and ossification set inwhich lasted down to

, the reign of Sargon I ., King of Akkad , about B . C 1600 . The curious history of his preservation as an infant , in an ark of rushes , coated with bitumen , and set afloat on the Euphrates by his mother , was a striking parallel to the similar account

concerning Moses , in Exodus . Sargon ' s victories over Elam , and as far as the Mediterranean , no less than his mi ghty buildings , shed a lustre over the falling Babylonian Empire , which soon after his death succumbed to Hammurabia Syrian

, or Arab conqueror . Up to this point the text of the lecture had been Babylonia , of which Assyria was originally a colony ; its relation to the mother country seemed to BIr . George Smith something like that of Prussia to Germany . Its colonisation

took place about B . C . 2000 , and its governors were at first call patesis , or viceroys of the god Assur . After the overthrow of the early Babylonian power by Aniniurabi , the Assyrian rulers moved more freely , and gradually enlarged their dominion until , from being a strip of

“The Masonic Magazine: 1875-09-01, Page 24” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 8 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01091875/page/24/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
Monthy Masonic Summary. Article 2
THE MINUTE BOOK OF THE LODGE OF INDUSTRY, GATESHEAD. Article 3
MASONIC ODDS AND ENDS. Article 6
DRAGONI'S DAUGHTER. Article 8
SAINT HILDA'S BELLS. Article 11
HUMAN NATURE. Article 12
OYSTERS. Article 14
THE AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF AN OLD CHURCH WINDOW. Article 16
FREEMASONRY : ITS ORIGIN, ITS HISTORY, AND ITS DESIGN. Article 19
ASSYRIAN HISTORY. Article 23
THE DUVENGER CURSE. Article 27
THE PAST. Article 30
WHAT FREEMASONRY HAS DONE. Article 31
DR. DASSIGNY'S ENQUIRY. Article 32
JUDGE MASONS BY THEIR ACTS Article 35
A DOUBT. Article 36
THE FREEMASONS AND ARCHITECTURE IN ENGLAND. Article 37
MASONRY TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO. Article 40
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Assyrian History.

much fuller and differing in several points from this account of Berosus , and apparently approaching closely the account in the Book of Genesis . The account of the Creation commences with a description of chaosbefore the formation of the universe .

, In order to show the style of this composition he . quoted the opening lines of the first tablet of the history of the Creation : — 1 , When on high the heavens were not raised ; 2 , and beneath on the earth a p lant had not grown ; 3 , and the deeps

had not yet produced their seeds ; 4 , the chaos Tiamat ( or the ocean ) was the begetter of the whole of them ; 5 , their waters first were established ; but 6 , a tree had not grown up , a flower had not unfolded ; 7 , then the gods had not founded anything ; 8 , a plant had not sprung up

and order did not exist : 9 , there were made the gods only ; 10 , and the demigods they caused to exist ; 11 , and to grow * *; ] 3 , and the upper expanse and the lower expanse existed ; 13 , aud a course of clays and long time passed . The account of the Creation goes on to describe in great detail

the subsequent formation of the heavens and the earth , winding up with the creation of man . The philosophy of the Babylonians and Assyrians in this respect was evidently similar to that of the writer of Genesis , for they describe man as a perfect

being at his creation and as falling from that hi gh estate . According to the Book of Genesis , man was planted iu the Garden of Eden ; and Sir Henry Rawlinson , to whom we owe so much in Assyrian decipherment , had long ago identified Eden with the Kar-Dunias or Gan-Dnnias of the

inscriptions . Kar-Dunias is one of the names of Babylonia , perhaps belonging properly to some particular part of the country , and it is said to be watered by four rivers , like Eden in Genesis . To Sir Henry Rawlinson we are also indebted for the discovery of another point in the

belief of the Bab ylonians- —viz ., the opinion that there were two distinct races of mankind , the dark race and the fair race . The grounds of this division of the human famil y are unknown , but the dark race appears to correspond to the Adamites or

sons of Adam in Genesis , while the failrace agrees with " sons of God " in the same book . At the era of the earliest contemporary monuments , long subsequent to the Semitic Conquest , the Euphrates and

Tigris " Valleys , the lecturer said , are found broken up into some seven or eight kingdoms , viz ., Sumir , near the Persian Gulf ; Akkad , the region round Babylon ; Elam , east of Akkad ; Goiin , north of Elam ; . Assuron the Tigrisnorth of Akkad ; and

, , two or three other states whose positions are obscure . A mig hty monarch now arose at Ur ( Mugheir ) , probably the birthp lace of Abram . His name is read with some hesitation Urukh . His conquests stretched from the modern Mugheir , then

called Ur , to Babylon , and some of his successors subdued and colonised Assyria . Scientifically constructed buildings , gem carving , metal work in gold , silver , bronze , and iron , bas-reliefs and sculptures in the round , embroidered dresses and personal

ornaments , as well as elegant furniture , the the art of writing , mathematical science , including the knowledge of square , and cube roots , an elaborate system of weights and measures , works on astronomy , geography , mythology , and history , regular laws , ri g hts of property , judges , and other

legal officers , a state religion and orders of priesthood , extensive commerce and shipbuilding , artificial irrigation and scientific tillage of the ground—all these were telling evidence of civilisation of those early times . After this a period of decay and ossification set inwhich lasted down to

, the reign of Sargon I ., King of Akkad , about B . C 1600 . The curious history of his preservation as an infant , in an ark of rushes , coated with bitumen , and set afloat on the Euphrates by his mother , was a striking parallel to the similar account

concerning Moses , in Exodus . Sargon ' s victories over Elam , and as far as the Mediterranean , no less than his mi ghty buildings , shed a lustre over the falling Babylonian Empire , which soon after his death succumbed to Hammurabia Syrian

, or Arab conqueror . Up to this point the text of the lecture had been Babylonia , of which Assyria was originally a colony ; its relation to the mother country seemed to BIr . George Smith something like that of Prussia to Germany . Its colonisation

took place about B . C . 2000 , and its governors were at first call patesis , or viceroys of the god Assur . After the overthrow of the early Babylonian power by Aniniurabi , the Assyrian rulers moved more freely , and gradually enlarged their dominion until , from being a strip of

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