Ctesias, the only extant Greek author besides He-rodotus who saw ancient Babylon, gives the circumf The triaugles were connected by a wooden bridgeon stone piers. one-quarter of a mile in circumference, a temple of eight towers(stages), surrounded by a spiral ramp, and containing the shrine andimage of Marduk. II.-9 130 ^l*>^^^ AFTER THE FALL OF ASSYRIA. The diagonal formed by theEuphrates - if treated as a straight line, 170 stadia or nearly 20miles in length - divided the square into two triangles, in one ofwhich stood the royal city in the other, within a sacred precinct of Vol. Herodotus, who tells us that he visited Baby-lon, gives as the circumference of the outmost wall (which alreadyin his day had been in places destroyed by the Persians) 480 stadia,or a little over bo miles, stating that it had 250 towers and 100gates of bronze (cased with bronze). Even to this day theextraction of bricks from the ruins for export is a lively industry.The royal city had also its special walls, and of these the eastern PLAN OF RUINSOF CITY Of BABYLON tlLQMETE Nothing is now left of these walls but smallrubbish-mounds, for as they gradually sunk into decay, the trencheswere filled up whence the clay for the bricks had been dug whileseveral cities were built from the material. 129 parapet-walls (completed by Nabonidus), through which gatesopened on the water. The stream was flanked on both sides by NEBUCHADNEZZARS BABYLON. Double walls begun byNabopalassar and completed by Nebuchadnezzar-named in the in-scriptions Imgur-Bel (* Bel blesses) and Nimitti-Bel (protectionof Bel) -surrounded the section in which a group of three palacesstood, and walls, forts, towers, and gates protected other portionsof the city as well. By him it was made to assume the character of a small fortifiedstate, rather than that of a city (Fig. Text Appearing Before Image: cjuite anotherscale. View Book Page: Book Viewer About This Book: Catalog Entry View All Images: All Images From BookĬlick here to view book online to see this illustration in context in a browseable online version of this book. Title: A history of all nations from the earliest times being a universal historical library Year: 1905 ( 1900s)Īuthors: Wright, John Henry, 1852-1908 Subjects: World history Publisher: [Philadelphia, New York : Lea Brothers & company Contributing Library: University of California Libraries Digitizing Sponsor: Internet Archive Description Plan of Ruins of Babylon 1905.jpg
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