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A history of art in Chaldæa & Assyria, Vol. 1 (of 2)

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A comprehensive survey of ancient Mesopotamian art and architecture that outlines the region's geography, population elements, religious beliefs, and political organization before tracing technical and aesthetic developments. It analyzes materials, construction methods, structural elements such as columns and arches, decorative programs, and mechanical resources, and it treats funerary and religious building types with reconstructions of temple forms and tombs. The work also examines relief sculpture, seals, glazed bricks, ivories, and small objects, and it uses plans, sections, and numerous illustrations to relate artistic forms to ritual function, urban layout, and construction practice.

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Title: A history of art in Chaldæa & Assyria, Vol. 1 (of 2)

Author: Georges Perrot

Charles Chipiez

Translator: Sir Walter Armstrong

Release date: February 14, 2009 [eBook #28072]

Language: English

Credits: Produced by Paul Dring, Adrian Mastronardi and the Online
Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
file was produced from images generously made available
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*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A HISTORY OF ART IN CHALDÆA & ASSYRIA, VOL. 1 (OF 2) ***

A HISTORY

OF

ART IN CHALDÆA & ASSYRIA

FROM THE FRENCH
OF
GEORGES PERROT,
PROFESSOR IN THE FACULTY OF LETTERS, PARIS; MEMBER OF THE INSTITUTE,
AND
CHARLES CHIPIEZ.

ILLUSTRATED WITH FOUR HUNDRED AND FIFTY-TWO ENGRAVINGS IN THE TEXT
AND FIFTEEN STEEL AND COLOURED PLATES.

IN TWO VOLUMES.—VOL. I.

TRANSLATED AND EDITED BY
WALTER ARMSTRONG, B.A., Oxon.,
AUTHOR OF "ALFRED STEVENS," ETC.

London: CHAPMAN AND HALL, Limited.
New York: A. C. ARMSTRONG AND SON.
1884.

London:
R. Clay, Sons, and Taylor,
BREAD STREET HILL.


PREFACE.

In face of the cordial reception given to the first two volumes of MM. Perrot and Chipiez's History of Ancient Art, any words of introduction from me to this second instalment would be presumptuous. On my own part, however, I may be allowed to express my gratitude for the approval vouchsafed to my humble share in the introduction of the History of Art in Ancient Egypt to a new public, and to hope that nothing may be found in the following pages to change that approval into blame.

W. A.

October 10, 1883.


CONTENTS.

CHAPTER I.

THE GENERAL CHARACTERISTICS OF CHALDÆO-ASSYRIAN CIVILIZATION.
 PAGE
§ 1.  Situation and Boundaries of Chaldæa and Assyria1-8
§ 2.  Nature in the Basin of the Euphrates and Tigris8-13
§ 3.  The Primitive Elements of the Population13-21
§ 4.  The Wedges21-33
§ 5.  The History of Chaldæa and Assyria33-55
§ 6.  The Chaldæan Religion55-89
§ 7.  The People and Government89-113
 

CHAPTER II.

THE PRINCIPLES AND GENERAL CHARACTERISTICS OF CHALDÆO-ASSYRIAN ARCHITECTURE.
 
§ 1.  Materials114-126
§ 2.  The General Principles of Form126-146
§ 3.  Construction146-200
§ 4.  The Column200-221
§ 5.  The Arch221-236
§ 6.  Secondary Forms236-260
§ 7.  Decoration260-311
§ 8.  On the Orientation of Buildings and Foundation Ceremonies311-322
§ 9.  Mechanical Resources322-326
§ 10.  On the Graphic Processes Employed in the Representations of Buildings327-334
 

CHAPTER III.

FUNERARY ARCHITECTURE.
 
§ 1.  Chaldæan and Assyrian Notions as to a Future Life335-355
§ 2.  The Chaldæan Tomb355-363
 

CHAPTER IV.

RELIGIOUS ARCHITECTURE.
 
§ 1.  Attempts to Restore the Principal Types364-382
§ 2.  Ruins of Staged Towers382-391
§ 3.  Subordinate Types of the Temple391-398
 
 

LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS.

 
PLATES.
 
  I.  BabilTo face page    154
 II.  Rectangular Chaldæan temple370
III.  Square double-ramped Chaldæan temple378
IV.  Square Assyrian temple380
 
FIG.  PAGE
1.  Brick from Erech24
2.  Fragment of an inscription engraved upon the back of a statue from Tello25
3.  Seal of Ourkam38
4.  Genius in the attitude of adoration42
5.  Assurbanipal at the chase45
6.  Demons61
7.  Demons62
8.  Eagle-headed divinity63
9.  Anou or Dagon64
10.  Stone of Merodach-Baladan I73
11.  Assyrian cylinder74
12.  Assyrian cylinder74
13.  Gods carried in procession75
14.  Gods carried in procession76
15.  Statue of Nebo81
16.  Terra-cotta statuette83
17.  A Chaldæan cylinder84
18.  The winged globe87
19.  The winged globe with human figure87
20.  Chaldæan cylinder95
21.  Chaldæan cylinder95
22.  The King Sargon and his Grand Vizier97
23.  The suite of Sargon99
24.  The suite of Sargon101
25.  Fragment of a bas-relief in alabaster105
26.  Bas-relief of Tiglath Pileser II106
27.  Feast of Assurbanipal107
28.  Feast of Assurbanipal108
29.  Offerings to a god109
30.  Convoy of prisoners111
31.  Convoy of prisoners112
32.  Babylonian brick118
33.  Brick from Khorsabad119
34.  Temple128
35.  Tell-Ede, in Lower Chaldæa129
36.  Haman, in Lower Chaldæa131
37.  Babil, at Babylon135
38.  A fortress138
39.  View of a town and its palaces140
40.  House in Kurdistan141
41.  Temple on the bank of a river, Khorsabad142
42.  Temple in a royal park, Kouyundjik143
43.  View of a group of buildings, Kouyundjik145
44.  Plan of angle, Khorsabad147
45.  Section of wall through AB in Fig. 44147
46.  Elevation of wall, Khorsabad148
47.  Section in perspective through the south-western part of Sargon's palace at Khorsabad149
48.  Temple at Mugheir154
49.  Upper part of the drainage arrangements of a mound159
50.  Present state of one of the city gates, Khorsabad161
51.  Fortress; from the Balawat gates, in the British Museum164
52.  The palace at Firouz-Abad170
53.  The palace at Sarbistan170
54.  Section through the palace at Sarbistan171
55.  Restoration of a hall in the harem at Khorsabad174
56.  Royal tent, Kouyundjik175
57.  Tent, Kouyundjik175
58.  Interior of a Yezidi house178
59.  Fortress180
60.  Crude brick construction181
61.  Armenian "lantern"183
62-65.  Terra-cotta cylinders in elevation, section and plan184
66.  Outside staircases in the ruins of Abou-Sharein191
67.  Interior of the royal tent193
68.  Tabernacle; from the Balawat gates194
69.  The seal of Sennacherib196
70.  Type of open architecture in Assyria197
71.  Homage to Samas or Shamas203
72.  Sheath of a cedar-wood mast, bronze205
73.  Interior of a house supported by wooden pillars; from the gates of Balawat206
74.  Assyrian capital, in perspective207
75.  Capital; from a small temple209
76.  View of a palace210
77.  Capital; from a small temple212
78.  Capital212
79.  Chaldæan tabernacle212
80.  Ivory plaque found at Nimroud212
81.  The Tree of Life213
82.  Ornamental base, in limestone214
83.  Model of a base, side view215
84.  The same, seen from in front215
85.  Winged Sphinx carrying the base of a column216
86.  Façade of an Assyrian building216
87, 88.  Bases of columns217
89.  Tomb-chamber at Mugheir222
90.  Interior of a chamber in the harem of Sargon's palace at Khorsabad225
91.  Return round the angle of an archivolt in one of the gates of Dour-Saryoukin227
92.  Drain at Khorsabad, with pointed arch229
93.  Sewer at Khorsabad, with semicircular vault232
94.  Sewer at Khorsabad, with elliptical vault233
95.  Decorated lintel238
96.  Sill of a door, from Khorsabad240
97.  Bronze foot, from the Balawat gates, and its socket243
98, 99.  Assyrian mouldings. Section and elevation245
100.  Façade of a ruined building at Warka246
101.  Decoration of one of the harem gates, at Khorsabad247
102.  View of an angle of the Observatory at Khorsabad249
103.  Lateral façade of the palace at Firouz-Abad251
104.  Battlements from an Assyrian palace251
105.  Battlements from the Khorsabad Observatory252
106.  Battlements of Sargon's palace at Khorsabad255
107.  Altar255
108.  Altar in the Louvre256
109.  Altar in the British Museum257
110.  Stele from Khorsabad258
111.  The obelisk of Shalmaneser II. in the British Museum258
112.  Rock-cut stele from Kouyundjik259
113.  Fragment from Babylon263
114.  Human-headed lion267
115.  Bas-relief with several registers269
116.  Ornament painted upon plaster275
117.  Ornament painted upon plaster275
118.  Ornament painted upon plaster276
119.  Plan and elevation of part of a façade at Warka278
120.  Cone with coloured base279
121, 122.  Rosettes in glazed pottery290
123.  Detail of enamelled archivolt291
124.  Detail of enamelled archivolt292
125.  Enamelled brick in the British Museum293
126.  Ornament upon enamelled brick294
127.  Fragment of a glazed brick295
128.  Fragment of a glazed brick297
129.  Ivory tablet in the British Museum301
130.  Fragment of an ivory tablet301
131.  Threshold from Kouyundjik303
132.  Rosette304
133.  Bouquet of flowers and buds305
134.  Painted border306
135.  Fragment of a threshold306
136.  Door ornament307
137.  Palmette308
138.  Goats and palmette308
139.  Winged bulls and palmette309
140.  Stag upon a palmette310
141.  Winged bull upon a rosette311
142.  Stag, palmette, and rosette311
143.  Plan of a temple at Mugheir312
144.  Plan of the town and palace of Sargon at Khorsabad313
145.  General plan of the remains at Nimroud314
146.  Bronze statuette316
147.  Bronze statuette317
148.  Bronze statuette318
149.  Terra-cotta cone319
150.  Terra-cotta cylinder320
151.  The transport of a bull324
152.  Putting a bull in place326
153.  Chaldæan plan327
154.  Assyrian plan; from the Balawat gates in the British Museum329
155.  Plan and section of a fortress329
156.  Plan, section, and elevation of a fortified city330
157.  Plan and elevation of a fortified city331
158.  Fortress with its defenders333
159, 160.  Vases342
161.  Plaque of chiselled bronze. Obverse350
162.  Plaque of chiselled bronze. Reverse351
163.  Tomb at Mugheir357
164.  Tomb at Mugheir358
165.  Tomb at Mugheir358
166.  Tomb, or coffin, at Mugheir359
167.  Map of the ruins of Mugheir362
168.  View of the Birs-Nimroud367
169-171.  Longitudinal section, plan, and horizontal section of the rectangular type of Chaldæan temple370
172.  Map of Warka, with its ruins371
173.  Type of square, single-ramped Chaldæan temple375
174-176.  Transverse section, plan, and horizontal section of a square, single-ramped, Chaldæan temple377
177-179.  Transverse section, plan, and horizontal section of a square, double-ramped Chaldæan temple378
180-182.  Square Assyrian temple. Longitudinal section, horizontal section, and plan380
183.  Map of the ruins of Babylon383
184.  Actual condition of the so-called Observatory, at Khorsabad387
185.  The Observatory restored. Elevation388
186.  The Observatory restored. Plan389
187.  The Observatory. Transverse section through AB390
188.  Plan of a small temple at Nimroud393
189.  Plan of a small temple at Nimroud393
190.  Temple with triangular pediment394
 
TAIL-PIECES, &c.
 
Lion's head, gold (French National Library)Title-page
Lion's head, glazed earthenware (Louvre)113
Two rabbits' heads, ivory (Louvre)334
Cow's head, ivory (British Museum)363
Eagle, from a bas-relief (British Museum)398

A HISTORY OF ART

IN

CHALDÆA AND ASSYRIA

CHAPTER I.

THE GENERAL CHARACTERISTICS OF CHALDÆO-ASSYRIAN CIVILIZATION.

§ 1.—Situation and Boundaries of Chaldæa and Assyria.

The primitive civilization of Chaldæa, like that of Egypt, was cradled in the lower districts of a great alluvial basin, in which the soil was stolen from the sea by long continued deposits of river mud. In the valley of the Tigris and Euphrates, as in that of the Nile, it was in the great plains near the ocean that the inhabitants first emerged from barbarism and organized a civil life. As the ages passed away, this culture slowly mounted the streams, and, as Memphis was older by many centuries than Thebes, in dignity if not in actual existence, so Ur and Larsam were older than Babylon, and Babylon than Nineveh. The manners and beliefs, the arts and the written characters of Egypt were carried into the farthest recesses of Ethiopia, partly by commerce but still more by military invasion; so too Chaldaic civilization made itself felt at vast distances from its birthplace, even in the cold valleys and snowy plateaux of Armenia, in districts which are separated by ten degrees of latitude from the burning shores where the fish god Oannes showed himself to the rude fathers of the race, and taught them "such things as contribute to the softening of life."[1] In Egypt progressive development took place from north to south, while in Chaldæa its direction was reversed. The apparent contrast is, however, but a resemblance the more. The orientation, if such a term may be used, of the two basins, is in opposite directions, but in each the spread of religion with its rites and symbols, of written characters with their adaptation to different languages, and of all those arts and processes which, when taken together, make up what we call civilization, advanced from the seaboard to the river springs.

In these two countries the conscience of man seems to have been first awakened to his innate power of bettering his own condition by well directed observation, by the elaboration of laws, and by forethought for the future. Between Egypt on the one hand, and Chaldæa with that Assyria which was no more than its offshoot and prolongation, on the other, there are strong analogies, as will be clearly seen in the course of our study, but there are also differences that are not less appreciable. Professor Rawlinson shows this very clearly in a page of descriptive geography which he will allow us to quote as it stands. It will not be the last of our borrowings from his excellent work, The Five Great Monarchies of the Ancient Eastern World, a book that has done so much to popularize the discoveries of modern scholars.[2]

"The broad belt of desert which traverses the eastern hemisphere, in a general direction from west to east (or, speaking more exactly, of W.S.W. to N.E.E.) reaching from the Atlantic on the one hand nearly to the Yellow Sea on the other, is interrupted about its centre by a strip of rich vegetation, which at once breaks the continuity of the arid region, and serves also to mark the point where the desert changes its character from that of a plain at a low level to that of an elevated plateau or table-land. West of the favoured district, the Arabian and African wastes are seas of land seldom raised much above, often sinking below the level of the ocean; while east of the same, in Persia, Kerman, Seistan, Chinese Tartary, and Mongolia, the desert consists of a series of plateaux, having from 3,000 to nearly 10,000 feet of elevation. The green and fertile region which is thus interposed between the 'highland' and 'lowland' deserts,[3] participates, curiously enough, in both characters. Where the belt of sand is intersected by the valley of the Nile, no marked change of elevation occurs; and the continuous low desert is merely interrupted by a few miles of green and cultivable surface, the whole of which is just as smooth and as flat as the waste on either side of it. But it is otherwise at the more eastern interruption. Then the verdant and productive country divides itself into two tracts, running parallel to each other, of which the western presents features, not unlike those that characterize the Nile valley, but on a far larger scale; while the eastern is a lofty mountain region, consisting for the most part of five or six parallel ranges, and mounting in many places far above the level of perpetual snow.

"It is with the western or plain tract that we are here concerned. Between the outer limits of the Syro-Arabian desert and the foot of the great mountain range of Kurdistan and Luristan intervenes a territory long famous in the world's history, and the chief site of three out of the five empires of whose history, geography, and antiquities, it is proposed to treat in the present volumes. Known to the Jews as Aram-Naharaim, or 'Syria of the two rivers'; to the Greeks and Romans as Mesopotamia, or 'the between-river country'; to the Arabs as Al-Jezireh, or 'the island,' this district has always taken its name from the streams which constitute its most striking feature, and to which, in fact, it owes its existence. If it were not for the two great rivers—the Tigris and Euphrates—with their tributaries, the more northern part of the Mesopotamian lowland would in no respect differ from the Syro-Arabian desert on which it adjoins, and which, in latitude, elevation, and general geological character, it exactly resembles. Towards the south the importance of the rivers is still greater; for of Lower Mesopotamia it may be said, with more truth than of Egypt,[4] that it is 'an acquired land,' the actual 'gift' of the two streams which wash it on either side; being as it is, entirely a recent formation—a deposit which the streams have made in the shallow waters of a gulf into which they have flowed for many ages.[5]

"The division, which has here forced itself upon our notice, between the Upper and the Lower Mesopotamian country, is one very necessary to engage our attention in connection with ancient Chaldæa. There is no reason to think that the term Chaldæa had at any time the extensive signification of Mesopotamia, much less that it applied to the entire flat country between the desert and the mountains. Chaldæa was not the whole, but a part, of the great Mesopotamian plain; which was ample enough to contain within it three or four considerable monarchies. According to the combined testimony of geographers and historians,[6] Chaldæa lay towards the south, for it bordered upon the Persian Gulf, and towards the west, for it adjoined Arabia. If we are called upon to fix more accurately its boundaries, which, like those of most countries without strong natural frontiers, suffered many fluctuations, we are perhaps entitled to say that the Persian Gulf on the south, the Tigris on the east, the Arabian desert on the west, and the limit between Upper and Lower Mesopotamia on the north, formed the natural bounds, which were never greatly exceeded, and never much infringed upon. These boundaries are for the most part tolerably clear, though the northern only is invariable. Natural causes, hereafter to be mentioned more particularly, are perpetually varying the course of the Tigris, the shore of the Persian Gulf and the line of demarcation between the sands of Arabia and the verdure of the Euphrates valley. But nature has set a permanent mark, half way down the Mesopotamian lowland, by a difference of a geological structure, which is very conspicuous. Near Hit on the Euphrates, and a little below Samarah on the Tigris,[7] the traveller who descends the streams, bids adieu to a somewhat waving and slightly elevated plain of secondary formation, and enters on the dead flat and low level of the new alluvium. The line thus formed is marked and invariable; it constitutes the only natural division between the upper and lower portions of the valley; and both probability and history point to it as the actual boundary between Chaldæa and her northern neighbour."[8]

Whether the two States had independent and separate life, or whether, as in after years, one of the two had, by its political and military superiority reduced the other to the condition of a vassal, the line of demarcation was constant, a line traced in the first instance by nature and rendered more rigid and ineffaceable by historical developments. Even when Chaldæa became nominally a mere province of Assyria, the two nationalities remained distinct. Chaldæa was older than Assyria. The centres of her civil life were the cities built upon the alluvial lands between the thirty-first and thirty-third degree of latitude. The most famous of these cities was Babylon. Those whom we call Assyrians, a people who rose to power and glory at a much more recent date, drew the seeds of their civilization from their more precocious neighbour.

These expressions, Assyria and Chaldæa, are now employed in a sense far more precise than they ever had in antiquity. For Herodotus Babylonia was a mere district of Assyria;[9] in his time both States were comprised in the Persian Empire, and had no distinct existence of their own. Pliny calls the whole of Mesopotamia Assyria.[10] Strabo carries the western frontier of Assyria as far as Syria.[11] To us these variations are of small importance. The geographical and historical nomenclature of the ancients was never clearly defined. It was always more or less of a floating quantity, especially for those countries which to Herodotus or Diodorus, to Pliny or to Tacitus, were dimly perceptible on the extreme limits of their horizon.

It would, however, be easy to show that in assigning a more definite value to the terms in question—a proceeding in which we have the countenance of nearly every modern historian—we do not detach them from their original acceptation; at most we give them more constancy and precision than the colloquial language of the Greeks and Romans demanded.[12] The expressions Khasdim and Chaldæi were used in the Bible and by classic authors mainly to denote the inhabitants of Babylon and its neighbourhood; and we find Strabo attaching with precision the name Aturia, which is nothing but a variant upon Assyria, to that district watered and bounded by the Tigris in which Nineveh was situated.[13] Our only aim is to adopt, once for all, such terms as may be easily understood by our readers, and may render all confusion impossible between the two kingdoms, between the people of the north and those of the south.

In order to define Assyria exactly we should have to determine its frontiers, and that we can only do approximately. As the nation grew its territory extended in certain directions. To the east, however, where the formidable rampart of the Zagros forbade all progress, no such extension took place. Those lofty and precipitous chains which we now call the mountains of Kurdistan, were only to be crossed in two or three places, and by passes which during their few months of freedom from snow and floods gave access to the high-lying plains of Media. These narrow defiles might well be traversed by an army in a summer campaign, but neither dwellings nor cultivated lands could invade such a district with success; at most they could take possession of the few spots of fertile soil which lay at the mouth of the lateral valleys; such, for example, was the plain of Arbeles which was watered by the great Zab before its junction with the Tigris. Towards the south there was no natural barrier, but in that direction all development was hindered by the density of the Chaldee population which was thickly spread over the country above Babylon and about the numerous towns and villages which looked towards that city as their capital. To the north, on the other hand, the wide terraces which mounted like steps from the plains of Mesopotamia to the mountains of Armenia offered an ample field for expansion. To the west there was still more room. Little by little rural and urban life overflowed the valley of the Tigris into that of the Chaboras or Khabour, the principal affluent of the Euphrates, until at last it reached the banks of the great western river itself. In all Northern Mesopotamia, between the hills of the Sinjar and the last slopes of Mount Masius, the Assyrians encountered only nomad tribes whom they could drive when they chose into the Syrian desert. Over all that region the remains of artificial mounds have been found which must at one time have been the sites of palaces and cities. In some cases the gullies cut in their flanks by the rain discover broken walls and fragments of sculpture whose style is that of the Ninevitish monuments.[14]

In the course of their victorious career the Assyrians annexed several other states, such as Syria and Chaldæa, Cappadocia and Armenia, but those countries were never more than external dependencies, than conquered provinces. Taking Assyria proper at its greatest development, we may say that it comprised Northern Mesopotamia and the territories which faced it from the other bank of the Tigris and lay between the stream and the lower slopes of the mountains. The heart of the country was the district lying along both sides of the river between the thirty-fifth and thirty-seventh degree of latitude, and the forty-first and forty-second degree of longitude, east. The three or four cities which rose successively to be capitals of Assyria were all in that region, and are now represented by the ruins of Khorsabad, of Kouyundjik with Nebbi-Younas, of Nimroud, and of Kaleh-Shergat. One of these places corresponds to Ninos, as the Greeks call it, or Nineveh, the famous city which classic writers as well as Jewish prophets looked upon as the centre of Assyrian history.

To give some idea of the relative dimensions of these two states Rawlinson compares the surface of Assyria to that of Great Britain, while that of Chaldæa must, he says, have been equal in extent to the kingdom of Denmark.[15] This latter comparison seems below the mark, when, compass in hand, we attempt to verify it upon a modern map. The discrepancy is caused by the continual encroachments upon the sea made by the alluvial deposits from the two great rivers. Careful observations and calculations have shown that the coast line must have been from forty to forty-five leagues farther north than it is at present when the ancestors of the Chaldees first appeared upon the scene.[16] Instead of flowing together as they do now to form what is called the Shat-el-Arab, the Tigris and Euphrates then fell into the sea at points some twenty leagues apart in a gulf which extended eastwards as far as the last spurs thrown out by the mountains of Iran, and westwards to the foot of the sandy heights which terminate the plateau of Arabia. "The whole lower part of the valley has thus been made, since the commencement of the present geological period, by deposits from the Tigris, the Euphrates, and such minor streams as the Adhem, the Gyndes, the Choaspes, streams which, after having long enjoyed an independent existence and having contributed to drive back the waters into which they fell, have ended by becoming mere feeders of the Tigris."[17] We see, therefore, that when Chaldæa received its first inhabitants it was sensibly smaller than it is to-day, as the district of which Bassorah is now the capital and the whole delta of the Shat-el-Arab were not yet in existence.

NOTES: