[The Religion of Babylonia and Assyria by Morris Jastrow]@TWC D-Link book
The Religion of Babylonia and Assyria

PREFACE
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Conclusion 690 [Illustration: MAP OF BABYLONIA AND ASSYRIA.
(From a drawing by Mr.J.HORACE FRANK.)] THE RELIGION OF BABYLONIA AND ASSYRIA.
CHAPTER I .-- INTRODUCTION.
SOURCES AND METHODS OF STUDY.
I.
Until about the middle of the 19th century, our knowledge of the religion of the Babylonians and Assyrians was exceedingly scant.

No records existed that were contemporaneous with the period covered by Babylonian-Assyrian history; no monuments of the past were preserved that might, in default of records, throw light upon the religious ideas and customs that once prevailed in Mesopotamia.

The only sources at command were the incidental notices--insufficient and fragmentary in character--that occurred in the Old Testament, in Herodotus, in Eusebius, Syncellus, and Diodorus.

Of these, again, only the two first-named, the Old Testament and Herodotus, can be termed direct sources; the rest simply reproduce extracts from other works, notably from Ctesias, the contemporary of Xenophon, from Berosus, a priest of the temple of Bel in Babylonia, who lived about the time of Alexander the Great, or shortly after, and from Apollodorus, Abydenus, Alexander Polyhistor, and Nicolas of Damascus, all of whom being subsequent to Berosus, either quote the latter or are dependent upon him.
Of all these sources it may be said, that what information they furnish of Babylonia and Assyria bears largely upon the political history, and only to a very small degree upon the religion.

In the Old Testament, the two empires appear only as they enter into relations with the Hebrews, and since Hebrew history is not traced back beyond the appearance of the clans of Terah in Palestine, there is found previous to this period, barring the account of the migrations of the Terahites in Mesopotamia, only the mention of the Tigris and Euphrates among the streams watering the legendary Garden of Eden, the incidental reference to Nimrod and his empire, which is made to include the capitol cities of the Northern and Southern Mesopotamian districts, and the story of the founding of the city of Babylon, followed by the dispersion of mankind from their central habitation in the Euphrates Valley.


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