1,200 BC to 400
BC
The invasion of the "Sea Peoples" around 1200
BC changed the political landscape of Syria and Palestine
dramatically. The Hittite empire was no more, Egypt's power was greatly
reduced, and the Aramaeans, who had settled in Syria and along the banks
of the Euphrates, were keeping the Assyrians from spreading into the
region. This allowed a number of smaller kingdoms to grow both in
strength and culture.
One of these smaller kingdoms would lay the foundation of some of today's
largest religions, including Judaism, Christianity and Islam; Israel. The
Israelites established themselves as a power in Palestine around 1250 BC after defeating local Canaanite and
Amorite tribes. Israel reached it's point of greatest influence under
it's two best known leaders, king David, who subdued the Philistines, and
king Solomon. On the death of Solomon in 922
BC the Israelite kingdom was split in two; Israel to the north
and Judah to the south.
The Philistines, who had been a part of the raiding "Sea Peoples", had
settled along the shores of Palestine around 1200 BC and had come into immediate conflict
with the Canaanites and Israelites. To the north in Syria the Aramaeans
held the land from Syria to the banks of the Euphrates, and the
Phoenicians, a Canaanite people who are credited with the development of
the alphabet, held the land on the shores of the Mediterranean. The
Assyrian king Tiglath-Pileser I, who began his reign in 1115 BC, crossed the Euphrates and fought his
way through Aramaean resistance to set up trade routes with the
Phoenician cities, but these trade routes were quickly closed by the
Aramaeans after Tiglath-Pileser's death.
After a period of instability in Assyria, king Assurdan II re-established
political and economic stability from 945
BC. By 745 BC, after
another period of instability, the Assyrians defeated the Urartu, who had
been applying pressure to their northern borders for over a century, and
the Aramaeans. The Aramaeans, now no longer a military power, quickly
turned their energies to trade, becoming so successful that their
language, Aramaic, became the common language for trade throughout the
Near East.
The Assyrians were known for both their brutality and their policy of
redistributing conquered people throughout their empire. In 671 BC the Assyrian army marched 15 days
across Sinia and captured the Egyptian capital of Memphis. Civil war
broke out nineteen years later between king Ashurbanipal and his brother
Shamash-Shumi-Ukin, ending in Shamash-Shumi-Ukin's death after a three
year siege of Babylon.
A year after the death of the Assyrian king Ashurbanipal in 652 BC, the Chaldean chief Nabopolassar seized
the Babylonian throne. In 612 BC the
Chaldeans, with the aid of the Medes and Scythians, laid a three month
siege of the Assyrian capital Nineveh, bringing an end to the Assyrian
empire. In 604 BC, the great Chaldean
king Nebuchadnezzar II began his reign. He set about reconquering the
land taken by the Medians and establishing the Babylonian empire,
rebuilding Babylon and capturing land in Syria and Palestine that had
come under Egyptian influence.
By 550 BC, king Cyrus the Great of
Persia had conquered the Medians. Eleven years later he marched his
armies against Babylon, capturing the city and bringing an end to the
Babylonian empire. The Persians went on to capture Egypt in 525 BC, reaching the height of their power
some seven years later. By 500 BC the
Persians had unsuccessfully attempted to invade Greece, and with internal
conflicts causing problems, they would face a long decline in power
before eventually being defeated by the Macedonian leader Alexander the
Great in 330 BC.
|