Det assyriske/kaldeiske/syriske folk:
Assyria
Assyria’s Timeline
War and Hunt
Assyrian Art
Assyrian Costumes
Assyrian Palace
Assyrian Religion
Ninevhe
Shalmeneser III
The Fall of Ninevhe 612 BC
Assyrian Writing
Assyria:

Assyria’s Timeline:
Ancient Assyria’s timeline spans from 5000 BCE, when its first sites were inhabited, to 609 BCE when Ashur-Uballit II, the last Assyrian king, retreated in defeat at Harran.
Ancient Assyria is the term used to describe a region on the Upper Tigris River, named for its original capital, the ancient city of Assur. According to some Judeo-Christian traditions, the city of Ashur was founded by Ashur the son of Shem, who was deified by later generations as the city’s patron god.
The upper Tigris River valley seems to have been ruled from Sumer, Akkad, and northern Babylonia in its earliest stages, and was part of Sargon the Great’s empire.
Assyria proper was located in a mountainous region, extending along the Tigris as far as the high Gordiaean or Carduchian mountain range of Armenia, sometimes called the “Mountains of Ashur.”
Later, as a nation and Empire, it also came to include roughly the northern half of Mesopotamia. (The southern half being Babylonia).
Through history, The Assyrian kings controlled large kingdoms at three different times. These are called:
- The Old Kingdom – (2000 to 1500 BCE)
- The Middle Kingdom (1500 to 1000 BCE)
- The Neo-Assyrian Kingdom (1000 to 609 BCE)
The Assyrians were passionate about the subjects of Astronomy, Astrology, History, Mythology, and Science and their Metaphysical implications to daily life.
For example, one Assyrian king, Assurbanipal, who ruled in the seventh century BCE from 668 BCE to 625 BCE, was famous for assembling a great library of cuneiform tablets in Nineveh on the subjects of Astrology, History, Mythology and Science.
Using Astrology, for the interpretation of omens, some of Assurbanipal’s astrologers, such as Rammanu-sumausar and Nabu-musisi, became so adept at interpreting omens from daily movements of the planets that a system of making periodical reports to the king came into being.
Receiving swift messengers detailing ‘all occurrences in heaven and earth’ throughout his kingdom, and the results of his astrologer’s examinations of them, Assurbanipal used the information as a political weapon, for the practical day-to-day running of his kingdom.
After his death, the Assyrian city of Nineveh fell to the Medians and the Chaldean Babylonians, and Assurbanipal’s library was destroyed or dispersed.
Millennia later, there is ongoing discussion over the nature of the Nimrud lens. A piece of rock crystal unearthed in 1850 from the Nimrud palace complex in northern Iraq. Some believe that it is evidence for the existence of ancient Assyrian telescopes, which could explain the great accuracy of Assyrian Astronomy.
War and Hunt:
Assyrian Art:

Assyrian Costumes:
Assyrian Palace:
Assyrian Religion:
Ninevhe:

Shalmeneser III:
The Fall of Ninevhe 612 BC:
Assyrian Writing: