The Ancients - Ashurbanipal: The Last Great King of Assyria
Episode Date: August 21, 2025Known as the 'King of the World' and the last great king of Assyria, Ashurbanipal bestrode the ancient Mesopotamian world as a warrior but also a scholar, ruling the great Assyrian empire at the heigh...t of its power.In this episode, Tristan Hughes is joined by Assyriologist Dr Selena Wisnom to uncover the dual legacy of this fearsome conqueror and passionate intellectual. From brutal military triumphs to the vast Library of Nineveh - packed with texts on medicine, mathematics, law, and literature - they explore how Ashurbanipal turned his capital into the greatest empire and the greatest knowledge hub of the ancient Mesopotamian world.MORERise of the Assyrians:https://open.spotify.com/episode/3Y3JdYSZ1nJ3cBXa91YzrI?si=56553edc20b0406fThe Scholars of Assyria:https://open.spotify.com/episode/5sM9ODjMw2f0JqfpsKNLoD?si=ec06ab7a656548f6Presented by Tristan Hughes. Audio editor is Aidan Lonergan and the producer is Joseph Knight. The senior producer is Anne-Marie Luff.All music courtesy of Epidemic SoundsThe Ancients is a History Hit podcast.LIVE SHOW: Buy tickets for The Ancients at the London Podcast Festival here: https://www.kingsplace.co.uk/whats-on/words/the-ancients-2/Sign up to History Hit for hundreds of hours of original documentaries, with a new release every week and ad-free podcasts. Sign up at https://www.historyhit.com/subscribe. You can take part in our listener survey here: https://insights.historyhit.com/history-hit-podcast-always-on Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Welcome to this latest ancients episode,
and we're going back to Mesopotamia
and that great ruler of ancient Assyria, Ashobanapal.
Now, Ashabana Powell was much more than just a ruthless military leader.
He was also fascinated by certain rather bizarre academic pursuits,
including divination, this reading of sheep's livers
for interpreting omens and signs from the gods.
We're exploring all of that today,
this great library of Ashabana Powell,
with our guest, the wonderful Dr. Salina Wisdom
from the University of Leicester,
who's just written a book all about Ashabana Powell
and his great library at Nineveh.
Let's go.
The fearsome ruler of ancient Assyria, who described himself as king of the world, a titanic figure who saw his empire reach the zenith of its power.
He saw himself as a warrior and a conqueror, but also as a scholar.
At his capital at Nineveh, present-day Mosul in Iraq, archaeologists discovered the remains of Ashabana Pau's greatest legacy, his library.
Thousands of Kunair formed texts from it have survived, revealing how Ashabana Pau was so much more
than just a fearsome warlord.
In this episode, we're exploring the complex story of this Assyrian king.
Yes, we'll explore the military conquests that define his reign, but also his passion for academia,
his desire to gather scholars at his court to read signs from the gods,
to research texts that varied from medicine and mathematics, to law.
and literature.
Nineveh was the capital of this Assyrian superpower,
but it was also a great centre of knowledge in the ancient Mesopotamian world.
This is the story of Ashabana Pal.
The last great king of Assyria, with our guest, Dr. Salina Wisner.
Selina, what a pleasure to have you on the podcast.
be here. And talking all about Ashabana Pal. So widely regarded as this ruler who oversaw the zenith
of the Assyrian Empire, but also this empire's last great king. It's quite the contrast.
Yes, there is definitely a sense of he brings the empire right to its peak, and Assyria will never
be as powerful again as it is under him, and his reign is the setting for all kinds of extraordinary
events. And is he quite an extraordinary figure to explore the fact that he has all of these
different layers to him. He's not just a military man. He's also quite the intellectual, too, or he likes
to portray himself as such. Yes, this is a man who portrays himself as strangling lions with his bare
hands, but he has a stylus in his belt while he is doing it. So he portrays himself as somebody
who is out there fighting on behalf of Assyria. Probably he actually prefers to stay in his
library and it's reading and engaged in intellectual study. So he's both of these sides to him.
He's somebody who is obsessed with the quest for knowledge as well as a quest for territory and power
and those two things go together very much. And where was this Assyria that he ruled over?
Assyria has its heartland in northern Iraq, what's now a modern-day Kurdistan, mostly,
and the empire is based at the city of Nineveh, which is modern-day Mosul. But the empire itself expands
out and really encompasses the whole Middle East in Ashabalapal's time. It stretches right into
bits of Iran, in the east, and then in the west, bits of Turkey, and even Egypt itself,
the Assyrians rule over. So it is a huge place. And when are we talking about when Ashabana Pal
is ruling this empire? It's a 7th century, BC, early 7th century. So 2,500 years ago, was it very
much the case that Assyria, it was the Mesopotamian superpower of the time?
Yeah, absolutely. People often credit the Persian.
with being, like the world's first empire, but actually they were building on the groundwork that
was laid by the Assyrians. The Assyrians set up the system of provinces. The Assyrians build
the roads that make all of this possible, and the Persians sweep in and very neatly take
it over, and then expand on it even more. But the Assyrians got there first.
And is the story of Ashabanapal, when we consider the great length of Mesopotamian history
with names like the Sumerians and the Akkadians and so on, is he actually quite late
in the story of Mesopotamia and its ancient history?
Yes, this is the thing. I mean, Mesopotamian history is something that a lot of people consider to be quite niche, but it covers three and a half thousand years of history. So, I mean, writing is invented in southern Iraq in the mid-fourth millennium, BC by Sumerian accountants who are keeping track of stuff going on in the temple. And Kinaeform, the writing system that they invent, continues to be written in the first century AD by Babylonian priests who are keeping watch over the stars. So it is an incredible time.
And Ashabanafus, towards the end, not at the very end, but yeah, towards the zenith of this period of power and extraordinary influence.
And I've also got in my notes the word Neo-Assyrian.
So what do we mean by that when regarding Ashabana Palo and the Assyrian Empire as Neo-Assyrian?
Oh, well, again, it's a reflection of the fact that there's just so much happening in this area over three millennia of history.
You know, there's old Assyrians, there's Middle Assyrians, and then the Neo-Assyrian Empire picks off around the 9th century BC.
So he's part of that dynasty.
People coming to power, the things happening, breaking down, shrinking again.
Then it picks up, they expand again, then it contracts.
And then when the new Assyrian Empire comes along, that's when it gets bigger than it ever has been before.
And you also mentioned that big name, that great city of Babylon and the Babylonians.
Are they also big players in the story of Ashabana Pal and the Neo-Assyrians at the time at the 7th century BC?
They absolutely are.
So the fortunes of Assyria and Babylon are rising and falling, more or less old.
Alternately, you know, Babylon is a big political power throughout the span of Mesopotamian history,
but the Assyrians have been dominant over them for the last few generations before Ashabana Pal.
Babylon is the cultural centre of the Near East. It's where many of the texts in the library were
first written. They are the ones who have thought to have developed all of this knowledge
originally, but then they are under Assyria's shadow. And the Babylonians do not like this at all.
And they frequently try and break away and rebel. And the other Assyrian kings have endless problems with this. So when Ashabanapal's father, who was called Esau Haddon, when he dies, he actually splits the kingdom. So he leaves Babylon and its surrounding area to Ashabanapelle's older brother, not to Ashabanapal. So we now have Assyria, this mighty empire, and then Babylon as an independent kingdom as well. But Ashabanapal does not like this. He will not let it go. He thinks,
he should still be king of Babylon as well as being king of Assyria. This leads to a lot of
tensions between the brothers. He tries to micromanage things going on in Babylon, which are really
not his job. The brother eventually gets fed up of this and declares war on Assyria. And then
we have this bitter civil war between these two brothers, which goes on for about four years.
Well, we'll definitely get to that civil war between the brothers. And it seems like Babylon
very much is a trophy city that they want to get their hands on. But you mentioned there,
his father, Ashabana Powell's father, Esharadan. So can you let us know a bit about the family that
Ashabana Pal is born into, the whole dynasty that he belongs to for the Neo-Assyrian Empire?
Well, I would say the story really starts with the death of Sargon. You died in battle
unexpectedly in 705 BC. And this casts a shadow over the whole dynasty because his death is a
disaster because they can't recover the body. They can't bury it. And because of that, they can't
make offerings to his ghost. And they then believe that because they can't make offerings,
the ghost is going to be driven mad with thirst in the netherworld and then may come back to
haunt them. So they then move the capital away. They've just built a brand new city and they
abandon it, move the capital back to Nineveh, and that's where the Assyrian kings have their base
from then on. But they can't really escape the shadow of Sargon. And they keep thinking,
he must have done something wrong to have brought all of these troubles down on us.
He's succeeded by Sinakarib, and Sinakarib is one who really has trouble with Babylon.
He ends up destroying Babylon, which is a terrible thing to do because of the great debt that Assyria
owes to Babylon as a sort of mother culture city, and there's all kinds of problems with the
succession on from that. Esar Haddon tries to reverse his father's damage. He tries to restore Babylon,
bring it back to its former glory.
But then Ashabana Pau ends up sort of repeating his grandfather's mistakes
in an attempt to avoid repeating his father's mistakes.
So this is this sort of grand cycle of tragedy, really, that starts there and then goes on
and on and on.
So this is four generations of rulers.
So Sargon, this Sargon is the great grandfather of Ashabana Pau.
Sanakrib is his grandfather, Eseradana is.
father, and then you have Ashabana Pau. And also, shall we also clarify this Sargon figure,
if someone mentions Sargon in Mesopotamia, you might immediately think of Sargon of Akad,
but that's not the Sargon we're talking about here.
Again, the timescale, yes. So there is an original Sargon of Akad in the third millennium
BC. And then this Assyrian Sargon names himself, probably names himself after this figure,
because he wants to lay claim to the glory of this ancient splendor associated with that name.
And so have we been seeing a general rise in the power of the Neo-Assyrian Empire
over these several generations of rulers in Ashabana Pals' family,
ultimately culminating in Ashabana Pau himself?
Yes, that's true.
The empire is getting steadily bigger, they're getting steadily more powerful,
and making powerful enemies at the same time, I may add.
And in regards to the sources, what types of sources do you have available
to learn more about Ashabana Pau's reign?
Well, a lot of it comes from this amazing library
that he assembled.
I mean, history fans are often lamenting the loss of the library of Alexandria,
but very few people know that there is this other library,
which is not lost to history, but survives.
It's sitting on the shelves of the British Museum,
33,000 documents that hardly anyone has bothered to read.
And the reason it survives is, actually ironically, because it was destroyed.
It was burned down by the Babylonians,
and the documents in it are all written on clay.
And clay doesn't decay in the ground,
and if you set a library of clay tablets on fire, it actually bakes the tablets and preserves
it even better because it hardens the clay. So that's why we have so many sources from this
period telling us all about the history of what was happening, the knowledge that was in use
and the ways that people were thinking at the time. And we also have letters from the king's
advisors to the king talking about these political events, talking about how they're going to
solve these problems with the magical wisdom in the library even. So it gives us an extraordinary
breadth and an insight into how these people were thinking and how they were talking to each other.
So you get bigger picture documents of the empire at the time and what's going on,
academic pursuits and so on. But also, I love that. So actual communications of named
figures within the court of Ashabana Powell and Ashabana Powell himself. So there's amazing two
levels of archaeological evidence revealing more about his life and his rules.
Absolutely, yeah. And in it you see really, really human stories emerging. I particularly like, for instance, letters from the doctor of his father, Esser Haddon, when the king is really, really depressed and he won't come out and speak to anyone. And then he's telling him, you know, you've got to eat and drink something. You know, come on, look after yourself and stop being so paranoid. Yes, it's true. It's great that you defeated all the conspiracies. But like actually now that you're just seeing everybody as if they're all out to get you,
and that's not fair, so really not being afraid to call the king to account and speak some
harsh truths as well. Well, we're going to delve into all of these intellectual pursuits and
this knowledge at the centre of Ashabana Pau's reign. But before that, Salina, you mentioned
earlier this brotherly civil war that erupts during Ashabana Pau's rule against his brother.
So shall we explore the more militaristic side of Ashabana Pau first? How long is it after he succeeds
his father as king, before you have this great degradation of relations between him and his brother
that ultimately results in this four-year-long civil war?
Well, it's quite gradual, actually.
I was sort of surprised to discover that it's 17 years before things finally break.
So they seem to have been on good terms at the beginning and probably very close
because some of his inscriptions talk about his brother in very, very affectionate terms.
And then as time goes on, you see the language changing, and he suddenly starts railing against him instead, calling him an ungrateful brother, you know, everything that kingship calls for, I gave to him. I did him all of these favours and look at how he repaid my kindness, et cetera, et cetera, et cetera. And it gets the point where he can't even speak of his brother without calling him the unfaithful brother or that traitor and so on. Like, really, it's like an epithet that goes with him every single time. His name is mentioned even. So it really hardens and escalates and becomes.
very bitter. And how is his brother mentioned in the sources? I mean, in what types of texts? Are
these ones that survive from the library? That is just almost recording the day-to-day politics of the
time? Or what do we know about that? Well, we have Ashabana Pals' accounts of his wars, where he
describes the battles that he fights and his military campaigns. And then we also have got
letters that Ashabonapal writes to Babylon about the war as well. So there you can see what's
going on behind the official narrative. Things like he writes to the citizens of Babylon
directly and say, you know, my brother is leading you down a path of folly. Don't listen to him.
Everything will be worse for you if you do, trying to incite them to rebel against him.
For instance, clearly this doesn't actually work. And there's another source, which gives us yet
another side to all of this, which is actually an Aramaic papyrus written many centuries later,
that has preserved the whole saga as a kind of like a fictional tale
where it's got a whole, it's all written in a whole story format really.
And here we've got the king's sister going to Babylon to try to intercede between the brothers.
And she tries to talk him out of it as well, you know, tells the brother that he was stupid
to think that he could stand against him and if he, you know, he'd better give in now.
Otherwise, you know, again, things will be so much the worse for him
and that he may as well go and throw himself on a pyre.
burn himself in a fire with the fat of all of those useless administrators who made him think
that he could stand up to Ashabanafal and then she storms off, which is just an incredible
thing to have from the past, I think. Do we think that's an accurate account? Do you think
Ashabana Pal would have used his sister, you know, a princess as an envoy, as a diplomat in
this brotherly civil war? That is the only evidence we have for it. So ultimately, who knows?
But she was definitely a strong-minded and sassy character. So we actually have one
letter surviving that was written by her. And it is a letter written to the king's wife. And she's
complaining and scolding her for not being good enough at writing Kenoform. You know, she actually
says, why don't you write your tablet and do your homework? You know, because if you don't,
people will say, is this really the sister of Sheru Atirat? You know, is this really the wife of the
heir to the throne? As if she's bringing shame on the whole family by not having good handwriting
and knowing her kineoform, which is extraordinary. That's amazing. I love that.
that. That's such a great story. I mean, so do we also, because we've talked about Ashabana Pau's
brother and his sister, do we also get great insights into the larger family of Ashabana Pau
from the sources, from the tablets that survive? We know a lot about his father in particular.
His father, S. Aradden, was very close to a lot of court scholars. And actually most of the
correspondence from the library pertains to them. Asa Haddon, he faced down three different conspiracies.
So he was really on the lookout for anything that could help him stay on top.
So we've got denunciations pouring in as people are obeying the loyalty oath that was sworn to him when he extended the throne, which says, you know, if you know of anybody plossing against the king, you have to make it known.
And they actually do.
It works.
So there's all of that.
And then, of course, there are the letters from his advisors who are trying to help with their own supernatural ways.
So we've got queries about astrology, you know, how the gods are weighing in on this and how
they are communicating. We have lots of political queries that were put to the gods through
sacrificing sheep, magical rituals that were performed to try to help the king when he was
gravely ill, all of this kind of stuff.
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So let's finish off this civil war between Ashabana Pau and his brother.
I mean, how does that war play out? What ultimately happens?
Well, in the end, Ashabanafal perceived.
Babelon. And the siege lasts about two years, and he starves them out, really. And we know
this is not just Ashabana Pal's rhetoric, because we know this from his own inscriptions,
but there are also real administrative documents that survive from that time,
showing that people were actually having to sell their children for food to eat because they
were starving. They were desperate. So this really happened. And then Ashabana Pahl takes the city,
but he doesn't manage to take his brother.
And that's where this insinuation
that he may have thrown himself into the flames comes from.
Goodness, I mean, but it does show also,
is it, do we see the beginnings of this roofless side of Ashabanapelle
coming out with the story of the civil war,
or is it very much already there
with how he conducts his military campaigns during his rule,
that yes, as we'll get to,
there's this extraordinary academic side of Ashabanapeau
with the library and so on.
but when it comes to the military side of ruling this empire back in the near Assyrian times,
that Ashabana Pau, even towards his own brother, he could be absolutely ruthless with ensuring that he gained victory.
Yes, so Ashabana Pell is like this with his other wars as well.
Another enemy is the Elamite in Iran, and he fights a series of campaigns against them.
They interfere in the Babylonian War, and he's quite annoyed about that in particular.
In particular, there's one Assyrian general called Nabu Belshimati, who turns against him and goes to help his brother.
And then he flees to Elam.
And Ashabanafar tries to get him back.
He tries to extradite him.
And he gets really obsessed with this.
He rages.
We've got the letters between him and the king of Elam asking, like, send this awful traitor back to me.
And they won't do it.
So he invades Elam.
And he again launches an attack on their capital city, where he blunders it, steals their gods, takes the statues of the gods back to Assyria.
devastates it so that nothing more can grow there. Also, he tells us anyway, that it's sort of
he destroys it as much as he possibly can so that they won't be a problem again. And is there also
that extraordinary wall relief which shows him in his garden, which looks very nice and quaint and a
lovely scene? And then you look above and you can see the decapitated heads of the people he's
defeated in battle. Yeah, there is an amazing scene carved on the walls of his palace from one of
these battles where the Elamite king, Teoman, is beheaded on the battlefield. And then the head
is carried back to Assyria. And you can actually follow the head around the wall as it has its
journey. You know, it's really like a narrative that shows scene by scene what's happening.
The chaos of the battlefield, a soldier cuts off his head and then parades it all the way back
to Nineveh. And in Nineveh, it ends up in the King's Garden hanging upside down from a tree
while Ashabana Pal and his queen are eating and drinking, relaxing, reclining in the garden,
and then, oh, you know, on the wall there is this trophy of the severed head of his enemy.
It's absolutely extraordinary. I mean, are there any other big military campaigns
that Ashabana Pau undertook during his rule that strengthened the Assyrian Empire
alongside fighting the Elamites and defeating his brother at Babylon?
Well, the Egyptian campaign is another big one.
Right.
So his father, Esar Haddon, was the one who conquered Egypt originally for the empire,
but then the Egyptians rebel and then Ashabanafal goes back to sort it out and bring it back
under Assyrian control.
It's a part of history that most people don't know anything about.
Everybody knows about Egypt, but nobody knows that the Assyrians had Egypt for 20 years.
It's not long, but it's longer than the Egyptians ever held Assyria.
But is it also the heavy-handedness of Ashabanapal when he's dealing with his enemies,
when he's, well, he might think he's delivering justice, but, you know, it's quite, he's quite
ruthless in how he wins his wars. Does that also breed anti-Assyrian sentiment in the empire? That
means that when he dies, it leaves the empire a little bit unstable, and maybe that's putting it
mildly. Yes, it does backfire on him. People are not very happy at being, well, moved around by
the Assyrians, because one of their big strategies is when they conquer a place, they will
break up the population, deport them, and move them to places where it's useful for the empire,
can they go to build these roads that we need, work on infrastructure and so on. Obviously,
people don't like that. I think maybe the biggest instance of backfiring is his treatment of
Elam, because eventually the people who swarm on Nineveh and burn down the library are not only
the Babylonians, but also the Meads, who are a bit further away in Iran. And because the Elamites
have been weakened, there's nobody in the way to stop the Meads from taking over and from them
to come and give Assyria its comeuppance. So, you know, weakening a state to that extent is not
actually in a Syria's interests. It may have seemed so at the time. Thank you for covering that
first of all, Salina, because I know that's not the main focus of your book, but it feels important
to highlight with Ashabana Power because many people think straight away of his brutality or his
military campaign, so it's great to cover that. But would you argue that we should not be looking
at Ashabana Powell solely for this. There's this other remarkable side of him, which is this
academic pursuit, this pursuit of knowledge and intellectualism, or at least that this was
flourishing at his court during his reign. Yes. And one other thing I want to argue is that it is true
that the Assyrian kings were pretty brutal in their military campaigns. But I don't think that
means they were necessarily worse than us, actually. They just celebrate it more. And if you think
about some of the horrible things that modern nation states have done in the service of their
interests, they just don't put it on the walls. We don't have Hiroshima on the walls of the
U.S. Capitol, for instance, but they still do these horrible things. So that has disproportionately
affected a serious reputation, I think. But it was also a place of culture and a place that has
influenced the subsequent cultures in very positive ways. And this quest for knowledge is
one of their greatest legacies, I think, you know, the creation of the library, which was also
a place for what we might think of as academic research. You know, there was medical research
going on at Ashabana Pals Court, which is something not many people know. He commissioned a new
medical encyclopedia, which aimed to bring together all of the treatments from different
traditions in the area and bring them together and work out which ones are going to be
standard and so on. They try to sort out complicated texts overlapping things and produce
authoritative additions so that they know what knowledge they can really trust. And things like
things like that were really good things. And so what were the main academic scholarly pursuits
at the time of Assyria? What were the subjects that they greatly valued? So they split it into
five official domains of knowledge. Astrology is one. Divination.
from looking at sheep entrails is another. Then you have what we tend to translate as exorcism,
but it's so much more than that. It's really magic of all kinds. It's not only driving out demons,
but it's really a kind of reconciling people with the gods and with other supernatural entities in
all kinds of ways. Then you have medicine, as just mentioned. And finally, lamentation,
which is an art of appeasing the gods by singing sad songs to them in advance.
it's a kind of preemptive strike
where they will lament all the terrible things
that the gods have done even before they do them
because if the gods hear this
then they will not feel the need to do these things
in the first place because their power is being acknowledged
like, okay, you know that we can destroy you at any time
therefore we don't have to do it to prove ourselves to you
this sort of strange reverse psychology.
And was this big throughout Mesopotamia at the time
or was this solely focused on Assyria?
Well, this is actually a Babylonian practice,
this lamentation thing.
And it comes to Assyria, just a generation or two before Ashabanapal, the Assyrian kings,
bring Babylonian lamenters into their court and install them in the temples.
And there is a bit of attention there because, yes, their knowledge is Babylonian.
It has this pedigree of, you know, ancientness and authoritativeness.
But at the same time, we don't do this kind of stuff in Assyria.
So who are these Southerners barging in and, like, suddenly having influence and power in the temples?
and you can see that tension in the sources very much.
And you mentioned there also one of these fields was divination,
and I know this is something that you've done lots of work around.
So, Salina, can you explain to us in a bit more detail what exactly divination was and how it worked?
Well, it's a way of understanding messages from the gods, and this can go two ways.
So fundamentally, they believe the gods are always sending messages to people,
and it's the job of the scholars at the Assyrian court to keep a lookout for strange things happening
in the world, in case one of these is a message from the gods. So that can be in the form
of eclipses, lunar and solar eclipses, pretty dramatic things. You can see why they might
think the gods are trying to get their attention with stuff like that, but also odd things
happening on earth, and that could be anything from an ant infestation in your house, to
a lizard falling from the ceiling onto your right shoulder. All of these kinds of things
could also be messages from the gods. And they developed these really sophisticated systems for
reading these signs which they believe the gods are writing on the world as if they are literally
writing messages to them. But then there's the other side, which is where they can also ask
questions of the gods directly. And that's where you get things like sacrificing sheep.
That is their chance to have a direct communication with the gods. And they can ask any question
they want about past, present or the future, as long as it's got a yes or no answer. And then
they believe that the gods will write the answer to their question on the entrails of the sheep
at the moment that they sacrifice it. So then they butcher the sheep, open it up, and look at
strange markings on the entrails. And again, they have a whole system of tablets which
explains exactly how to read these and what they mean. And they have survived today. We
actually have the instructions for reading the answers from the gods. So you have an Assyrian
guide to sheep, well, looking at sheep entrails surviving from more than 2,500 years ago,
from the library that we're going to explore in a bit?
Absolutely, yeah.
That's amazing.
And was it always sheep, or do they have, or did they use different livestock animals
depending on what question they were going to ask?
It's mostly sheep.
If you can't afford a sheep, you can use a pigeon.
But Asha Balapal liked to use sheep.
King of Assyria can afford a decent sheep.
If he's king of the superpower of the time, I think he probably can afford a sheep, can't he?
Yeah, yeah.
And also, this idea of academic wisdom and its importance,
to Mesopotamian rulers. Of course we see it with Ashabana Powell, but did we also see it with
his predecessors, with the likes of Esah Haddon, Sinakrib, Sargon. Were they also interested in
academic pursuits? Did they also have their own library equivalents? Yes, they did actually.
So Ashabana Pal, he made the library what it was. We probably didn't start it. So we have all of
these texts from advisers of previous kings, which show that there was all of this scholarly
activity going on. We actually have a writing board which has got celestial omens on it from the time
of King Sargon, who we spoke about before. That survives from a different city, found down a well
strangely. But anyway, the other kings were interested in this knowledge, for sure. It was Ashabanapal
who tried to make it a systematic collection and drafted people in to copy tablets so that he made
sure he had a copy of absolutely everything.
So was it very much this quest for knowledge and finding texts from other cities nearby
that he was wanted to make sure was also in his library itself?
So do we know much about that, about when in Ashabana Pau's reign, he decides to extend
this library to extend the amount of knowledge at his capital at Nineveh, and how this whole
library was ultimately structured?
We don't know when exactly it starts.
We do know that Ashabana Pau had an interest in scholarship all of his life, because
there is a text that talks about his life before he came to power, and he says how he was trained
in all of the ancient law of the scholars. He says that, you know, he learned how to do difficult
mathematics, calculations that don't come out evenly, how he's adept in the very dead language
of Sumerian, how he can discuss the obscure commentaries on divination with his advisors, that he can
debate them on their own terms. So he really stresses that this is something he is trained to do
very, very well. Now, in terms of when the library was expanded, that we don't know, but we do
know a lot about how he acquired tablets during the war against Babylon, because after he defeated
the city, he then confiscated the collections of various important scholars and brought them back
to Assyria and had his scholars copy them. And he also kidnapped some of the scholars themselves
and got them to write it out. And again, we have an amazing letter that talks about this,
that talks about the different jobs that are being assigned to different scholars in the library
and mentions one of them better be put back in chains when he's finished copying this series.
So he's definitely making use of his prisoners of war in that sense.
But there are more peaceful ways as well.
So he does also send out letters to different cities asking them to copy all of the tablets in their possession
and send them to him.
So he's taking a comprehensive approach.
Do we have any idea from the archaeology, from the discovery of these tablets, how the library was structured?
I mean, were there the ancient Assyrian equivalent of clerks?
And maybe one section was to do with the epic poems and another section was to do with handbooks and manuals on divination and another on political matters of the day.
Do we know much about that side of the library?
I really wish we did, but unfortunately we don't because the library doesn't survive as a physical place.
In fact, when the invading armies ransacked it, they ended up throwing tablets all over the place in different rooms.
So one of the first big caches of tablets to be discovered, which the Victorian excavators called the Chamber of Records, turned out to be a bathroom next to the throne room.
It's just somehow all ended up there.
So we can't see how it was organised, but two labels have survived somehow.
We've got a little label that says, you know, celestial omens here and omens from things happening on Earth.
here. So they must have been organized in some way like that. We have got other libraries
from different parts of Mesopotamia from similar times, which are organized in like a grid-like
fashion. It's a little bit like those IKEA bookcases you can get, which are lots of squares
next to each other. And they're really, really deep niches. So they seem to have been places
that could store a lot of tablets in a very small, compact space, maybe a little bit like a storage
stack. So you have the storage, you have the storage compartment surviving, but that's an
amazing piece of evidence in its own right to get rid completely of this idea of kind of
binded books or scrolls being rolled up, this idea that it would have just been stacks and
stacks of these clay tablets placed together in one of these little storage squares that went
back quite a long way. Yeah, and you can fit in quite an amazing number of tablets in a small
space like that. So it's very, very densely packed together. And do we think from the amount
of tablets that have survived, do we find any that could potentially have been written by
Ashabana Powell himself? Yes, we do. So we actually have some tablets from, probably from the
time of his training when he was learning to write. There is an adorable tiny little tablet,
which is written in really clumsy handwriting. Like the signs are really, really big.
They're not joined up properly. He can't do joined up handwriting yet where he writes to the
king and it's got his name on it, which is also spelled in a really simplistic way.
That survives. And we've got texts copied out at later points in his training, which are
much more advanced. So there's prayers to the gods and even some quite technical texts like
glass making recipe and lists of important medicinal plants and things like that, which
claimed to have been written by Ashabana Pal himself. So I think it shows that he did have
an active interest. This is not all exaggeration and big talk, but he is sincerely interested.
interested in some quite obscure things.
But do we think then that, let's take with divination, because he said he was big into divination
as well, that if he wanted to understand something from the gods, would he have been the
active participant? Would he have been the one who was reading the sheep's liver and stuff
like that rather than getting one of his scholars to do it for him?
Well, that's a good question. I mean, I think he wouldn't have got his hands dirty himself,
but he can certainly challenge them and interpret what.
what the meaning of these things would be. So the reports are usually sent to the king rather
than him being there himself. Also, I just think about the sheer amount of work that will be
required him to do it all himself. When you do a sheep liver divination, you have to stay up all
night. And the number of queries that survive, you know, I think he's not going to be getting
very much sleep if he's really doing all of this himself. So better to leave the hard work
to his scholars and then he can just read the results. But at the same time, because we have that
correspondent surviving, he can read the account of the scholar who's made that,
who's done the work and has made the assumption. And then, do we get cases where Ashabana pal
says, I think you've got this completely wrong. I interpret this a different way because of this
or that. Unfortunately, we don't because we don't have very many letters the other way around
from Ashabana pal to the scholars. So there isn't much direct evidence of that, but I can't
help but think it must have happened for somebody who has that background and is that steeped
in all of this knowledge.
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And so how much does Ashabana Powell boast of his academic expertise in the source evidence we have surviving?
Well, there's this sort of often called Ashabana Pell's biography where he talks about all of the ranges of texts that he has studied.
And we also see it in his depictions of war as well.
I mean, some of the battles that we've already talked about being portrayed on the walls are full of literary allusions.
So things like when the head of this Elamite king is cut off and paraded around the battlefield,
taking back to Assyria, that visually echoes stories about, well, from the epic of Gilgamesh,
where this great hero king of Mesopotamia goes and cuts off the head of an evil monster in the forest
and brings it back to his city.
There are also allusions to omens in these reliefs.
So when this Elamite king is falling out of his chariot and his hat falls off,
anybody who knows the Omen series about bad things that can happen when you're in a chariot
will know that this means something very bad is going to happen.
So you can even read the signs from the gods in the visual narratives that he provides for us.
So everything he does is suffused with the scholarship.
So if we now go to Ashabana Powerless Court,
and given his interest in scholarship, can we paint a picture of the people who surrounded
him? Can we imagine that Ashipana Powell is sitting on his throne and you would have all of
these different scholars, experts in these different fields that you've already mentioned,
almost jostling to get his ear and to tell him about what they've learned from their recent
academic doings? Absolutely, yeah. And you can really see how some of them are closer to him
than others. I mean, some of them have been close to him for years, I mean, such as
his chief astrologer taught him to write as a boy and is still there giving him advice all these
years later, but then you have other people who've fallen out of favour and who are desperate
to be reinstated. There's a trail of letters from one exorcist in particular called
Urad Gula, who used to be very close to the king, and then something went wrong. We're not
sure what. It might be that he was involved in a royal childbirth that went wrong, and maybe he was
blamed for it, but then suddenly he's not in the circle anymore, and he complains about how he's
falling into poverty. He doesn't have any means of transport anymore. He doesn't have enough
money to buy a new pair of sandals and he was getting more and more desperate and he wants
the king to take him back. But there is a very conspicuous silence. And do we get a sense that
maybe there were rival academics at court, that they're great, this factional strife,
academic factional strife between certain scholars who want the ear of Ashibana power and that maybe
do they slag each other off? I think is the question I want to ask.
Yes, they do. And that is also something amazing that we can see in the letters.
There's one case in particular where this king's chief astrology gets really, really angry
that somebody has told the king the wrong interpretation of an omen, or he says that Venus has become visible.
But the planet Venus has not become visible. He confused it with Mercury.
And this is a really idiotic mistake. I mean, for those of us who are not very well versed in astrology,
we might not see what the big fuss is about. But if you know what you're doing, this is quite obvious.
and, in fact, the Assyrians had the knowledge to predict this for a very long time already.
It's like an elementary mistake.
And now the king is really worried because, you know, Venus rising at the wrong time is a bad omen.
So he's, you know, he's anxious about it.
And then Balasi, the scholar, comes in and just rages about what an idiot his colleague is for making such a ridiculous mistake.
Call himself a scholar. How on earth could he get this wrong?
Is this a tablet where he labels his, well, the companion he's angry.
at, well, the fellow academic, an ignoramus.
Yeah, that's the one.
That's the one.
We talked to Dr. Mudi al-Rashid all about that,
and that was absolutely fascinating to learn about that.
And are there any other particular tablets or figures
that would have surrounded Ashabana Pau?
For instance, are there any famous diviners
that you'd really like to mention before we move on?
Because I appreciate there are so many tablets,
there must be so many stories,
so many accounts of these different academic fields from the library,
that surely there must be some great stories we've missed.
There's one story I would like to mention, which is it's more of a controversy about omens than a particular diviner.
But we know that there was a guy called Seen Eresh, who was wrapped up in a controversy over the birth of a calf.
Now, he found out that a calf was born that looked a bit like a lion.
And in response to this, first of all, he kills the calf, then he eats it to destroy the evidence.
and then he makes sure the evidence doesn't get out by killing the farmer who owned the calf.
But he still doesn't manage to contain the story because the farmer's servants see what he's done
and are willing to testify against him. And we know about this because one of the king's astrologers
mentions it to the king. So, I mean, this to us seems absolutely crazy. I mean, how could a calf
that looks a bit like a lion lead to intrigue and murder? But again, it's one of these signs.
from the gods who are putting unusual things in the world as a message to the king that
something is wrong or something bad is going to happen. So it probably means that something
very bad was about to happen to the king and they were trying to cover it up. And I think
that's a really good example of, A, how seriously they took these omens and these weird things
happening in the world and also of the kinds of intrigue that can be going on at the court
surrounding that. It's amazing the combination of the worlds. Does it also show how with the academic
pursuits of the time, and with Ashabana Powell, if he's focusing a lot on scholarly pursuit,
a big part of his job was hearing these reports of how the people around him were interpreting
signs from the gods. I mean, it's not just sitting down and learning all about certain mathematical
equations. He's receiving tablets after tablet about how certain academics are reading signs,
whether it's in the celestial realm above,
looking at the stars and the planets,
or interpreting a sheep's thither and the like.
That was such a big part of Ashabana Pals reign.
Yes, and it shows that the knowledge in this library
is not just esoteric and abstract,
but it's really practical.
It is stuff that would have helped him to rule his empire,
stuff that would have helped him solve problems,
not only his own personal problems,
but political issues as well.
And it was all really applicable to his everyday life.
And as Ashabana Pau's reign goes on, I mean, is Helena, how long does Ashabana Pau reign for?
So Ashabana Pau rules for about 38 years.
It's complicated by the fact we don't know when exactly he dies.
He sort of fades out from the record, but there's no mention of him after that point.
So we have to assume he's probably gone.
I mean, do we know much about what happened to him during his later reign?
Do we have many texts surviving from the library that we can say probably were written down or were created later?
Or is it a bit more mysterious those last years?
It's all very mysterious pretty much after the destruction of Babylon,
after he defeats his brother, and then he goes after the Elamites again.
And then it all goes suspiciously quiet.
And I guess that's why he's often referred to as one of the last great kings of Assyria,
because those are the peak dramatic events.
And I have in my notes that there is this Greco-Roman legend
of a last king of Assyria called Sard.
I'm going to get this so wrong.
Sardinaphalus.
Sardinapolis.
Thank you, Selina.
Can you explain what this legend is
and how this might align with the fall of the Assyrians
and the decline after Ashabana Pal?
Well, the Greeks have a story about the last king of Assyria,
Sardinapolis, as somebody who was not interested in ruling his empire,
but instead living a life of luxury and decadence
and lounging around with his concubines
until the city is surrounded and, you know, it's all over.
Now that, I think, is a confusion with the story about what happened to his brother, who did die in this fire, most likely.
Sardinapolis is also purported to have, you know, died in this great blaze.
The Greeks do sometimes confuse stories about Babylon and Assyria, and maybe that's what happened.
But it's also very ironic because this is not at all how Ashabana Pal would want himself to be remembered.
You know, it's very, very different from this great scholar and incredibly powerful military.
man. It might also show that there were other stories circulating about him that he didn't
like so much. And one thing it reminds me of a little bit is in one of the wars against
Elam, he actually says in his account of it that he did not go to the battlefield. He says,
the goddess Ishtar specifically told me not to go to the war, but to stay in this other city
and celebrate a festival. So that's what I did. And you think, hmm, why is he apologising?
for this. I mean, there are many, many complex reasons why he might have wanted to say that.
But, you know, maybe there are hints of stories that he was actually not quite the warrior
that he said he was. Do we see him aligning with any particular gods? You mentioned there,
Ishtar, which seems a pretty well-known deity from Mesopotamia. But do we know if he aligned
with any particular deities when he ruled? Yeah, well, Asher is the state god of Assyria,
who is always there on the battlefield with the Assyrian kings. Ishtar also goes with
him into battle or goes into battle for him, as we've just mentioned. But the god of scribes
is also a favourite of Ashabana Pals. And he dedicates tablets from the library to the god of scribes,
which is something that scholars would do during their training to align themselves with the
god of scribal wisdom. Interesting. So he also aligns it there with the divine. I mean,
do you think there is any potential that I appreciate it's murky, so it must all be theory,
But that as Ashabana Pau's reign went on and he got older,
could he have devoted himself more to academic pursuits and this idea that he stayed in his royal palace or maybe in his gardens?
And he just listened to the scholars surrounding him and all about the omens and the other fields that he was interested in
and just got more and more dedicated to that and less and less to going around his empire.
I appreciate that must just all be theory.
Yeah, we don't know, but I can certainly imagine it.
it would be consistent with what we do know about him.
There is one text which is called, we refer to as Ashabana Pals Lament,
where he complains about how miserable he is actually.
And says, you know, I did everything right.
I did all I could to listen to the gods.
And yet, you know, all of this strife is still coming after me.
And what's interesting about that is this is a very, very literary creation as well.
It's got allusions to some of the great traditional Babylonian poets.
about righteous sufferers who've done everything they can to a piece of goals and yet still
don't seem to see any benefit from it. And it switches from prose to verse halfway through,
I think. So even when he's complaining about how rubbish life is, he's doing it in a literary way.
So you can still see the scholarly undertone there, even at that time. I mean, so do we know
what state Ashabana Powell left the Assyrian Empire when he does ultimately done?
Well, the people who take over from him don't do an awful lot.
It takes a while for the empire to fall.
It's 612 BC when the Babylonians and the Medes round on Nineveh and Burn it down.
He's followed by a succession of kings who don't really make their mark in the same way, that's for sure.
So that covers the story of Ashabana Paul, Selina.
How would you argue we should envisage Ashabana about today?
How should we remember him?
Well, I think Ashrabanapal would have wanted to be remembered as a scholar and a military man
and that these things go together, actually.
It's easy for us to think that they are two completely different worlds,
that the intellectual would have nothing to do with fighting a war.
But in Assyria, they are both used in service of the other.
There actually would have been exorcists on the battlefield,
performing magic spells to help the king get the advantage.
You would have had diviners looking at the insides of sheep to try to deter.
is now the right time to go to war. What do we do? So even though they may seem very separate,
they are really entwined. And I think the side of scholarship is the one that we know less about.
And it deserves to be celebrated for that reason. This was an incredible library. It made a huge
contribution to knowledge. And it reverberated throughout the centuries afterwards. You know,
when the library burned down, it wasn't all forgotten. Much of the knowledge in it.
It was translated into other languages.
It turns up in, say, echoes in Hebrew texts.
It has influenced Greek and Roman culture.
It's, of course, influenced the Middle East itself in the other direction.
These omens were carried to India, Central Asia, maybe even China.
That's a controversial one.
But it had a huge reach.
And I think that is the main thing that we have to remember that this was a powerhouse of knowledge.
and it had a legacy for thousands of years to come.
So do we think some of the wisdom,
some of the knowledge in the library at Nineveh in Ashabana Pals Library
will ultimately end up centuries later
in the famous Library of Alexandria in Egypt?
Quite probably, yes,
because there are texts that survive from Egypt,
which are very, very similar to the Mesopotamian ones that we know.
When Alexander the Great conquered Babylon, for instance,
this is a moment where now the Greek world and the Mesopotamian world,
they are in the same empire.
And the scholars must have talked to each other and shared knowledge
because all of the data that has been collected by the Babylonian astrologers
gets taken back to the Greek world
and forms the basis of Greek astronomy and Greek mathematics.
And they use the Babylonian calculations.
The astronomer Ptolemy tells us he had access to eclipse records
stretching back to the 8th century BC, thanks to the Mesopotamian.
scholars. So yes, it had a very direct impact and I'm sure would have been known in some form
to the scholars of that later library. Well, Selena, this has been brilliant. Last but certainly not
least, you have written a book all about Ashabana Powell and his library, which is called
The Library of Ancient Wisdom, Mesopotamia and the Making of History. Selina, thank you so much
for coming on the podcast today. Thanks very much. It's been great.
Well, there you go. There was Dr. Selina Wisdom on the show to talk through the story of Ashabana Pal,
his military conquests, but also his fascinating life as a scholar with Nineveh and his library
being the centre of knowledge in the ancient Mesopotamian world. I hope you enjoyed the episode.
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That's enough from me.
I'll see you in the next episode.