Babylon Nebuchadnezzars city
World Architecture
Babylon Nebuchadnezzars city
Iraq
The city of Babylon Gate of God once stood on the banks of the Euphrates River, 56 miles 90
kilometers south of Baghdad, Iraq. It was the capital of Babylonia in the second and first millennia
b.c. In a.d. 1897 the German archeologist Robert Koldewey commenced a major excavation. During
the next twenty years he unearthed, among many other structures, a processional avenue to the temple
of Marduk and the legendary fortified city wall, which once enjoyed a place among the seven
wonders of the ancient world. It was not until the sixth century a.d. that its place was usurped by the
so-called Hanging Gardens.
Babylon entered the pages of history as the site of a temple around 2200 b.c. At first it was subject to
Ur, an adjacent city-state, but gained its independence in 1894 b.c., when the Sumu-abum established
the dynasty that reached its zenith under Hammurabi, known asthe Lawgiver. The Hittites overran
the city 330 years later. It was governed by the Kassite dynasty, which extended its borders and made
it the capital of the country of Babylonia, with southern Mesopotamia under its control. When the
Kassites yielded to pressure from the Elamites in 1155 b.c., Babylon was governed by a succession of
ephemeral dynasties and became part of the Assyrian Empire in the late eighth century b.c. In turn,
the Assyrians were driven out by Nabopolassar, who founded the Neo-Babylonian dynasty around
615 b.c. His son Nebuchadnezzar II ca. 604 561 b.c. built the kingdom into an empire that covered
most of southwest Asia.
Babylon, now Nebuchadnezzars imperial capital, underwent a huge rebuilding programnew
temples and palace buildings, defensive walls and gates, and a splendid processional wayto make it
the largest city in the known world, covering some 2,500 acres 1,000 hectares. It must have
impressed visitors, because the myth sprang up, perhaps from the assertion of the Greek historian
Herodotus, that it was 200 square miles 510 square kilometers in area, with 330-foot-high 99meter walls, 80 feet 25 meters thick. Of his achievement, Nebuchadnezzar boasted,Is not this
great Babylon that I have built for the house of my kingdom by the might of my power, and for the
honor of my majesty?
The Euphrates River divided the city into two unequal sectors. Theold quarter, including most of
the palaces and temples, stood on the east bank Nebuchadnezzars new city was on the west. The
whole was surrounded by an 11-mile-long 17-kilometer outer wall enclosing suburbs and the kings
summer palace. The inner wall, penetrated by eight fortified gates leading to the outlying regions of
Babylonia, was wide enough to allow two chariots to be driven abreast on its top. Most prominent
among the portals was the northern Ishtar Gate, dedicated to the queen of heaven: a defensible turreted
building with double towers and a barbican, faced with blue glazed brick and richly ornamented with
500 bulls, dragons, and other animals in colored brick relief.
Through the Ishtar Gate passed the north-south processional way, which ran past the royal palace and was used in the New Year festival. It was paved with limestone slabs, about 3.5 feet 1 meter square
the flanking footpaths were of breccia stones about 2 feet 600 millimeters square. Joints were
beveled and the gaps filled with asphalt. The road was contained by 27-foot-thick 8-meter turreted
walls, behind which citadels were strategically placed. The faces of the walls were decorated with
lions in low relief. Much of the significance of the road lies in the exotic and doubtless expensive
materials employed. The land between the rivers had little naturally occurring stone, and except for
their faces, the city walls and gatehouses and even the kings palace were constructed of sun-dried
brick.
Inside the Ishtar Gate, at the northwest corner of the old city, stood Nebuchadnezzars extensive
palace with its huge throne room, and the fabled Hanging Gardens of Babylon. It is more likely that
they wereoverhanging gardens. Described by one first century b.c. visitor asvaulted terraces
raised one above another, they were irrigated with water pumped from the Euphrates. Another early
description says that this 400-foot-square 122-meter artificial mountain was more than 80 feet 25
meters high and built of stone. It was planted with all manner of vegetation, including large trees.
There is a romantic legend that the Hanging Gardens were built for Nebuchadnezzars wife, Amytis, a
Mede who missed the green mountains of her motherland. Beside the palace stood the rebuilt temple
of the citys patron god, Marduk, replete with gold ornament. In a sacred precinct north of the temple
stood a seven-story ziggurat stepped pyramid some descriptions put its height at 300 feet 90
meters.
Nebuchadnezzar was Babylons last great ruler. Because his successors were comparatively weak, the
Neo-Babylonian Empire quickly passed. In 539 b.c. the Persian Cyrus II took the city by stealth, overthrew Nebuchadnezzars grandson Belshazzar, and subsumed Babylon into his empire. The city
became the official residence of the crown prince, but following a revolt in 482 b.c., Xerxes I
demolished the temples and ziggurat, thoroughly destroying the statue of Marduk. Alexander the
Great captured the city in 330 b.c. but he died before be could carry out his intention to refurbish it as
the capital of his empire. For a few years after 312 b.c., the Seleucid dynasty used Babylon as a
capital until the seat of government was moved with most of the population to the new city of
Seleucia on the Tigris. Babylon the Great became insignificant, and by the foundation of Islam in the
seventh century a.d., it had almost disappeared.
Now Babylon is being rebuilt. In April 1989 the New York Times International reported that, under
Iraqi President Saddam Hussein,walls of yellow brick, 40 feet [12 meters] high and topped with
pointed crenellations, have replaced the mounds that once marked [Nebuchadnezzars] Palace
foundations. And as Babylons walls rise again, the builders insert inscribed bricks recording how [it]
was