The Richest Man In Babylon
By
George S Clason
Chapter 11 - An
Historical Sketch of Babylon
In
the pages of history there lives no city more glamorous than Babylon. It's very
name conjures visions of wealth and splendour. Its treasures of gold and jewels
were fabulous. One naturally pictures such a wealthy city as located in a
suitable setting of tropical luxury, surrounded by rich natural resources of
forests
and
mines. Such was not the case. It was located beside the Euphrates River, in a
flat, arid valley. It had no forests, no mines—not even stone for building:
It
was not even located upon a natural trade
route.
The rainfall was insufficient to raise crops.
Babylon
is an outstanding example of man's ability to achieve great objectives, using
whatever means are at his disposal.
All
of the resources supporting this large city
were
man-developed.
All
of its riches were man-made.
Babylon
possessed just two natural resources—a fertile soil and water in the river.
With
one of the greatest engineering accomplishments of this or any other day,
Babylonian engineers diverted the waters
from
the river by means of dams and immense irrigation canals. Far out across that
arid valley went these canals to pour the life-giving waters over the fertile soil.
This ranks among the first engineering feats known to history. Such abundant
crops as were the reward of this irrigation system the world had never seen
before.
Fortunately,
during its long existence, Babylon was ruled by successive lines of kings to
whom conquest and plunder were but incidental. While it engaged in many wars,
most of these were local or defensive against ambitious conquerors from other
countries who coveted the fabulous treasures of Babylon. The
outstanding
rulers of Babylon live in history because of their wisdom, enterprise and
justice.
Babylon
produced no strutting monarchs who sought to conquer the known world that all
nations might pay homage to their egotism.
As
a city, Babylon exists no more.
When
those energizing human forces that built and maintained the city for thousands
of years were withdrawn, it soon became a deserted ruin. The site of the city
is in Asia about six hundred miles east of the Suez Canal, just
north
of the Persian Gulf. The latitude is about thirty degrees above the Equator,
practically the same as that of Yuma, Arizona. It possessed a climate similar to
that of this American city, hot and dry.
Today,
this valley of the Euphrates, once a populous irrigated farming district, is
again a wind-swept arid waste. Scant grass and desert shrubs strive for existence
against the windblown sands. Gone are the
fertile
fields, the mammoth cities and the long caravans of rich merchandise. Nomadic
bands of Arabs, securing a scant living by tending small herds, are the only
inhabitants. Such it has been since about the beginning of the Christian era.
Dotting
this valley are earthen hills. For centuries, they were considered by travelers
to be nothing else.
The
attention of archaeologists was finally attracted to them because of broken
pieces of pottery and brick washed down by the occasional rainstorms.
Expeditions,
financed by European and American museums, were sent here to excavate and see
what could be
found.
Picks and shovels soon proved these hills to be ancient cities City graves,
they might well be called.
Babylon
was one of these. Over it for something like twenty centuries, the winds had
scattered the desert dust. Built originally of brick, all exposed walls had
disintegrated and gone back to earth once more. Such is Babylon, the wealthy
city, today. A heap of dirt, so long abandoned that no living person
even
knew its name until it was discovered by carefully removing the refuse of
centuries from the streets and the fallen wreckage of its noble temples and
palaces.
Many
scientists consider the civilization of Babylon and other cities in this valley
to be the oldest of which there is a definite record. Positive dates have been proved
reaching back 8000 years. An interesting fact in this connection is the means
used to determine these dates. Uncovered in the ruins of Babylon were
descriptions of an eclipse of the sun. Modern astronomers readily computed the
time when such an eclipse, visible in Babylon, occurred and thus established a
known relationship between their calendar
and
our own.
In
this way, we have proved that 8000 years ago, the Sumerites, who inhabited
Babylonia, were living in walled cities. One can only conjecture for how many
centuries previous such cities had existed.
Their
inhabitants were not mere barbarians living within protecting walls. They were
an educated and enlightened people. So far as written history goes, they were
the first engineers, the first astronomers, the first mathematicians, the first
financiers and the
first
people to have a written language.
Mention
has already been made of the irrigation systems which transformed the arid
valley into an agricultural paradise. The remains of these canals can still be
traced, although they are mostly filled with accumulated sand. Some of them
were of such size that, when empty of water, a dozen horses could be
ridden
abreast along their bottoms. In size they compare favourably with the largest
canals in Colourado and Utah.
In
addition to irrigating the valley lands, Babylonian engineers completed another
project of similar magnitude. By means of an elaborate drainage system they
reclaimed an immense area of swampland at the mouths of the Euphrates and
Tigris Rivers and put this also under cultivation.
Herodotus,
the Greek traveler and historian, visited Babylon while it was in its prime and
has given us the only known description by an outsider. His writings give a
graphic description of the city and some of the unusual customs of its people.
He mentions the remarkable
fertility
of the soil and the bountiful harvest
of
wheat and barley which they produced.
The
glory of Babylon has faded but its wisdom has been preserved for us. For this
we are indebted to their form of records. In that distant day, the use of paper
had not been invented. Instead, they laboriously engraved their writing upon
tablets of moist clay. When completed, these were baked and became
hard
tile. In size, they were about six by eight inches, and an inch in thickness.
These
clay tablets, as they are commonly called, were used much as we use modern
forms of writing.
Upon
them were engraved legends, poetry, history, transcriptions of royal decrees,
the laws of the land, titles to property, promissory notes and even letters which
were dispatched by messengers to distant cities. From these clay tablets we are
permitted an insight into the intimate, personal affairs of the people.
For
example, one tablet, evidently from the records of a country storekeeper,
relates that upon the given date a certain named customer brought in a cow and
exchanged it for seven sacks of wheat, three being delivered at the time and
the other four to await the customer's pleasure.
Safely
buried in the wrecked cities, Archaeologists
have recovered entire libraries of these tablets, hundreds of thousands of
them.
One
of the outstanding wonders of Babylon was the immense walls surrounding the
city. The ancients ranked them with the great pyramid of Egypt as belonging
to
the "seven wonders of the world." Queen
Semiramis
is credited with having erected the first walls during the early history of the
city. Modern excavators have been unable to find any trace of the original
walls. Nor is their exact height known. From mention made by early writers, it
is estimated they were about fifty to sixty feet high, faced on the outer side
with burnt brick and further protected by a deep
moat
of water.
The
later and more famous walls were started
about
six hundred years before the time of Christ by King Nabopolassar. Upon such a
gigantic scale did he plan the rebuilding, he did not live to see the work
finished. This was left to his son, Nebuchadnezzar, whose name is familiar in
Biblical history.
The
height and length of these later walls staggers belief. They are reported upon
reliable authority to have been about one hundred and sixty feet high, the
equivalent of the height of a modern fifteen story office building. The total
length is estimated as between nine and eleven miles. So wide was the top that
a six-horse chariot could be driven around them.
Of
this tremendous structure, little now remains except portions of the
foundations and the moat. In addition to the ravages of the elements, the Arabs
completed the destruction by quarrying the brick for building purposes
elsewhere.
Against
the walls of Babylon marched, in turn, the victorious armies of almost every
conqueror of that age of wars of conquest. A host of kings laid siege to
Babylon, but always in vain. Invading armies of that day were not to be
considered lightly. Historians speak of such units as 10,000 horsemen, 25,000
chariots,
1200
regiments of foot soldiers with 1000 men to the regiment. Often two or three
years of preparation would be required to assemble war materials and depots of
food along the proposed line of march.
The
city of Babylon was organized much like a modern city. There were streets and
shops. Peddlers offered their wares through residential districts. Priests
officiated
in
magnificent temples. Within the city was an
inner
enclosure for the royal palaces. The walls about this were said to have been
higher than those about the city.
The
Babylonians were skilled in the arts. These included sculpture, painting,
weaving, gold working and the manufacture of metal weapons and agricultural
implements. Their jewelers created most artistic jewelry.
Many
samples have been recovered from the
graves
of its wealthy citizens and are now on exhibition in the leading museums of the
world.
At
a very early period when the rest of the world was still hacking at trees with
stone-headed axes, or hunting and fighting with flint-pointed spears and arrows,
the Babylonians were using axes, spears and arrows with metal heads.
The
Babylonians were clever financiers and traders.
So
far as we know, they were the original inventors of money as a means of
exchange, of promissory notes and written titles to property.
Babylon
was never entered by hostile armies until about 540 years before the birth of
Christ. Even then the walls were not captured. The story of the fall of Babylon
is most unusual. Cyrus, one of the great conquerors of that period, intended to
attack the city
and
hoped to take its impregnable walls. Advisors of Nabonidus, the King of
Babylon, persuaded him to go forth to meet Cyrus and give him battle without waiting
for the city to be besieged. In the succeeding defeat to the Babylonian army,
it fled away from the
city.
Cyrus, thereupon, entered the open gates and took possession without
resistance.
Thereafter
the power and prestige of the city gradually waned until, in the course of a
few hundred years, it was eventually abandoned, deserted, left for the winds
and storms to level once again to that desert earth from which its grandeur had
originally been built.
Babylon had fallen, never to rise again,
but
to it civilization owes much.
The
eons of time have crumbled to dust the proud walls of its temples, but the
wisdom of Babylon endures.
Oh thank you for posting the writer's exposure of what Babylon was.
ReplyDeletealright
DeleteThis chapter shows how civilized Babylon was before it was abandoned
ReplyDeleteokay
DeleteWhat a great fall from such a historical height
ReplyDeleteWell being great both in structure and the people living in Babylon the fall can be attributed to too much knowledge.
They should have considered the protection they get from their walls and remain inside instead of exposing themselves to an experienced warrior.
"the faintest pen/ink is brighter than the sharpest brain". Even though the great Babylon is fallen to rise no more, it's recorded wisdom lives on and still sharpens our world today.
ReplyDelete
ReplyDelete1. No matter how bad a situation is, I can make it beautiful just Babylon was made great despite not having natural resources.
2. You are not defined by what is presented to you, rather by what you make out of what is presented unto you.
3. No one is infallible except with God factor.
Yinka Okoh.
Great
Delete1.There is an ability in man to achieve great objectives, using whatever means at his disposal.
ReplyDelete2.We should learn to make use of the resources available to us wisely to secure financial freedom.
3 .There is the need to tell the history of our pathway to enduring wealth to our children so that they can learn to follow such path.
Great
Delete"Babylon is an outstanding example of man's ability to achieve great objectives, using whatever means are at his disposal.
ReplyDeleteAll of the resources supporting this large city
were man-developed.
All of its riches were man-made.
Babylon possessed just two natural resources—a fertile soil and water in the river."
Babylon indeed was a great city that started from nothing and went to great heights. It only was a land in a valley but indeed it did show forth great growth at its end. Surely the wisdom of this book is enduring.
By Rose🌹bud
Great
DeleteChapter 11
ReplyDeleteuse whatever means that is at your disposal to achieve great objectives
Wisdom endures forever
Jombo Promise
Good
DeleteTo imagine that Babylon initially had only 2 great assets (fertile soil and water in the river) but it's leaders could still build a mighty city out of it was awesome! Probably if the king had stayed in the city instead of going to meet Cyrus outside, the city would have been secured.
ReplyDeleteDR. DENNIS EKWEDIKE: Nothing lasts forever except the creator of the universe-God. Babylon will always be remembered for what it taught the world; earliest civilization,great agriculture and architecture. What a great book, whatever that has a beginning must have an end!
ReplyDeleteHmm, what a great historic read.
ReplyDeleteBabylon only hard to natural resources yet flourished in every aspect. They even transited to the use of tools b4 anyone could.
I major lesson learnt is that no one is above tribulations no matter how great u are.....
Babylon is down to nothing but it wisdom endures forever.
Good
DeleteEverything has a potential of becoming another thing. Good or bad. Its just a matter of tapping into the inner recesses.
ReplyDeleteBabylon tapped into its own and came out with the good, hence,
it become something from almost nothing. Same is the case with Dubai
Wisdom helps one to flourish. That was Babylon's secret to excellence.
Babylon is a very impressive ancient civilization. The Babylonians were skilled in a lot of things. The fall of the city eventually is really thought- provoking.
ReplyDeleteSagir Muhammad
ReplyDeleteBabylon is a very impressive ancient civilization. The Babylonians were skilled in a lot of things. The fall of the city eventually is really thought- provoking.
Such is the fate of man, once to rise and again to fall but his wisdom and knowledge endures.
ReplyDeleteRecord keeping and inventory is a sure way to propagate history.
Though the Great Walls of Babylon may fall but her wisdom endured.
Out of all resources man have developed is still from Fertile soil and water. There will always be circumstances when we have to rise up anytime we fall down. Babylon is not what it was today within 24 hours, they had setbacks but were able to rise again. Let us be ready to rise again when we fall. Great book indeed.
ReplyDelete