|  | 
            
          
        The name of Sargon of Agade, or Akkad, bulks largely in later Babylonian tradition, and his reign has been regarded by modern writers as marking the most important epoch in the early
          
          history of his country. The reference in the text of Nabonidus to the age of Naram-Sin has caused the Dynasty of Akkad to be taken as the canon, or standard, by
            
            which to measure the
              
              relative age of other dynasties or of rulers whose inscriptions have from time to time been recovered upon various early Babylonian sites. Even those historians who have refused to place reliance
                
                upon the figures of
                  
                  Nabonidus, have not, by so doing, detracted from the significance of Sargon's
                  
                  position in history; and, since tradition associated his name with the founding of his empire, the terms "Pre-Sargonic" and "Post-Sargonic" have been very generally employed as
                    
                    descriptive of the earlier and later periods in the history of Sumer and Akkad. The finding of
                      
                      early inscriptions
                        
                        of Shar-Kalli-sharri of Akkad, and of tablets dated in his reign, removed any tendency to
                          
                          discredit the historical value of the later traditions; and the identification of Shar-Kalli-sharri with the Sargon
                            
                            of the Assyrian
                              
                              and Neo-Babylonian scribes ceased to be called in question. In fact, if any one point in early Babylonian history was to be regarded as certainly established, it was the historical character of
                                
                                Sargon of Agade. But a recent discovery at Susa has introduced a fresh element into the problem, and has reopened
                                  
                                  its discussion
                                    
                                    along unfamiliar lines. Before introducing the new data, that must be explained and reconciled with the old, it will be well to refer briefly to
                                      
                                      the steps
                                        
                                        by which Sargon's name was recovered and his
                                          
                                          position in history deduced.
                                          
                                      
        Sargon's name was first met with in
          certain explanatory texts of a
          
          religious or astrological character, which had been recovered 
          from
          
          Ashurbanipal's library at Nineveh. Here we find references to 
          the name
          
          Sharrukin, or Sargon, king of Agade, from which it appeared 
          that
          
          he had played an important part in Assyrian heroic mythology. 
          In
          
          the year 1867, attention was first directed to Sargon's place 
          in history when
          
          Sir Henry Rawlinson briefly announced his discovery of the 
          famous Legend of
          
          Sargon, in which the king is represented as recounting in the 
          first
          
          person the story of his birth and boyhood, his elevation to 
          the throne and his
          
          subsequent empire. The text of the Legend was published in 
          1870, and two years later it was translated by George Smith, who added a
          translation
          
          of the Omens of Sargon and Naram-Sin, which he had just come 
          across in the
          
          collections of tablets from Kuyunjik. Smith followed Rawlinson
          in
          
          ascribing to Sargon the building of the temple E-ulmash in 
          Agade, by restoring
          
          his name as that of Naram-Sin's father in the broken cylinder 
          of Nabonidus
          
          found by Taylor at Mukayyar.
            
            
        Up to this time no original text of Shar-Kalli-sharri's reign was known.
          
          The first to be published was the beautiful cylinder-seal of Ibni-sharru, a
          
          high official in Shar-Kalli-sharri's service, of which Menant gave a
            
            description in 1877, and again in 1883. Menant read the king's name as "Shegani-shar-lukh", and he did not identify him with Sargon the elder (whom he put in the nineteenth century BC), but suggested that he was a still earlier king of Akkad. In 1882 an account was published of the Abu Habba cylinder of Nabonidus, which records his restoration of E-babbar and
              
              contains the passage concerning the date of Naram-Sin, "the son of Sargon". In the following year
                
                the British Museum acquired the famous mace-head of Shar-Kalli-sharri, which had been dedicated by him to Shamash in his great temple at Sippar; this was the first actual
                  
                  inscription of Shar-Kalli-sharri to be found. In place of Menant's reading "Shegani-shar-lukh",
                    
                    the name was read as "Shargan,", the two final syllables being cut off from it and treated as a title, and, in spite of
                      
                      some dissentients,
                        
                        the identity of Shargani of Agade with Sargon the elder was assumed as certain. Unlike Sargon, the
                          
                          historical character of Naram-Sin presented no difficulties. His name had been read upon the
                            
                            vase discovered by
                              
                              M. Fresnel at Babylon and afterwards lost in the Tigris; and, although he was there called simply "king of the four quarters", his identification with the Naram-Sin mentioned by Nabonidus on his cylinder from Ur was unquestioned. Further proof of the correctness of the identification was seen in
                                
                                the occurrence of
                                  
                                  the name of Magan upon the vase, when it was discovered that the second section of his Omens recorded his conquest of that country.
         
        
          
            
              | Mace head of pink marble; votive inscription of Shar-kali-sharri to Shamash at   Sippar (BRITISH MUSEUM).
 | 
            
              |  | 
            
          
         
        Apart
          
          from the difficulty printed by Sargon’s name, the absence of early records
          
          concerning the reign of Shar-Gani-sharri for a time led in certain quarters to
          
          a complete underrating of the historical value of the traditions preserved in
          
          the Omen-text. The mace-head from Abu Habba alone survived in proof of the
          
          latter’s existence, and it was easy to see in the later Babylonian traditions
          
          concerning Sargon valueless tales and legends of which the historian could make
          
          no use. The discovery at Nippur, close to the south-east wall of the ziggurat,
          
          or temple-tower, of brick-stamps and door-sockets bearing the name of
          
          Shar-Gani-sharri and recording his building of the temple of Enlil, proved that
          
          he had exercised authority over at least a considerable part of Babylonia. At a
          
          later period of the American excavations there was found in the structure of
          
          the ziggurat, below the crude brick platform of Ur-Engur, another pavement
          
          consisting of two courses of burned bricks, most of them stamped with the known
          
          inscription of Shar-Gani-sharri, while the rest bore the briefer inscription of
          
          Naram-Sin. The pavement had apparently been laid by Sargon and partly re-laid
          
          by Naram-Sin, who had utilized some of the former’s building materials. The
          
          fact that both kings used the same peculiar bricks, which were found in their
          
          original positions in the structure of the same pavement, was employed as an
          
          additional argument in favour of identifying Shar-Gani-sharri with Sargon I, “the
          
          father of Naram-Sin”.
          
          
        A further
          
          stage in the development of the subject was reached on the recovery at Tello of
          
          a large number of tablets inscribed with accounts of a commercial and
          
          agricultural character, some of which were dated by events in the reigns of
          
          Shar-Gani-sharri and Naram-Sin. This was at once hailed as confirming and
          
          completing the disputed traditions of the Omen-tablet, and from that time the
          
          identity of Sargon and Shar-Gani-sharri was not seriously called in question.
          
          Finally, the recent discovery of a copy of the original chronicle, from which
          
          the historical references in the Omen-tablet were taken, restored the
          
          traditions to their true setting and freed them from the augural text into
          
          which they had been incorporated. The difference in the forms of the two names
          
          was ignored or explained away, and the early texts were combined with the late
          
          Babylonian traditions. Both sources of information were regarded as referring
          
          to the same monarch, who was usually known by the title of Sargon I, or Sargon
          
          of Agade.
          
          
        The
          
          discovery which has reopened the question as to the identity of
          
          Shar-Gani-sharri with the Sargon of later tradition was made at Susa in the
          
          course of excavations carried out on that site by the Délégation en Perse. The
          
          new data are furnished by a monument, which, to judge from the published
          
          descriptions of it, may probably be regarded as one of the most valuable
          
          specimens of early Babylonian sculpture that has yet been found. Two portions
          
          of the stone have been recovered, engraved with sculptures and bearing traces
          
          of an inscription of an early Semitic king of Babylonia. The stone is roughly
          
          triangular in shape, the longest side being curved, and on all three sides
          
          reliefs are sculptured in two registers. In the upper register are battle
          
          scenes and a row of captives, and in the lower are representations of the king
          
          and his suite. On the third face of the monolith, to the right of the king in
          
          the lower register, is a scene in which vultures are represented feeding on the
          
          slain; and on a smaller detached fragment of the stone is a figure, probably
          
          that of a god, clubbing the king's enemies who are caught in a net. The details
          
          of the net and the vultures obviously recall the similar scenes on the stele of
          
          Eannatum, but the treatment of the birds and also of the figures in the battle
          
          scenes, is said to be far more varied and less conventional than in Eannatum's
          
          sculpture. That they are Semitic and not Sumerian work is proved by the Semitic
          
          inscription, of which a few phrases of the closing imprecations are still
          
          visible. The king also has the long pointed beard of the Semites, descending to
          
          his girdle, and, although his clothing has Sumerian characteristics, he is of
          
          the Semitic type. Several points of interest are suggested by details of the
          
          sculpture, and to these we will presently refer.
            
          
        
          
          The point
            
            which now concerns us is the name of the king to whom we owe this remarkable
            
            monument. Although the main inscription has unfortunately been hammered out,
            
            the king's name has been preserved in a cartouche in front of him, where he is
            
            termed "Sharru-Gi, the king". Now Sharru-Gi is practically identical
            
            with Sharru-Gi-NA, one of the two forms under which Sargon's name is written in
            
            Assyrian and Neo-Babylonian texts; for the sign NA  in the latter name is merely
            
            a phonetic complement to the ideogram and could be dropped in writing without
            
            affecting in any way the pronunciation of the name. Hitherto, as we have seen,
            
            Sargon, the traditional father of Naram-Sin, has been identified with
            
            Shar-Gani-sharri of Akkad. The question obviously suggests itself: Can we
            
            identify the Sharru-Gi of the new monument with Shar-Gani-sharri? Can we
            
            suppose that a contemporary scribe invented this rendering of
            
            Shar-Gani-sharri's name, and thus gave rise to the form which we find preserved
            
            in later Babylonian and Assyrian tradition? Pere Scheil, who was the first to
            
            offer a solution of the problem, is clearly right in treating Sharru-Gi and
            
            Shar-Gani- sharri as different personages; the forms are too dissimilar to be
            
            regarded as variants of the same name. It has also been noted that Sharru-Gi
            
            and Naram-Sin are both mentioned on a tablet from Tello. On these grounds Pere
            
            Scheil suggested that Sharru-Gi, whose name he would render as Sharru-ukin (=
            
            Sargon), was the father of Naram-Sin, as represented in the late tradition;
              
              Shar-Gani-sharri he would regard as another sovereign of Akkad, of the same
              
              dynasty as Sargon and Naram-Sin and one of their successors on the throne.
        
          
          It may be
            
            admitted that this explanation is one that at first sight seems to commend
            
            itself, for it appears to succeed in reconciling the later tradition with the
            
            early monuments. But difficulties in the way of its acceptance were at once
            
            pointed out. The occurrence of the proper name Sharru-Gi-ili, "
            
            Sharru-Gi is my god", on the Obelisk of Manishtusu clearly proves that a
            
            king bearing the name of Sharru-Gi, and presumably identical with the Sharru-Gi
            
            of the new stele, preceded Manishtusu, king of Kish, for the deification of a
            
            king could obviously only take place during his lifetime or after his
            
            death. Similar evidence has already been cited to prove that Urumush of
            
            Kish was anterior to Shar-Gani-sharri and Naram-Sin, though his reign may not
            
            have been separated from theirs by any long interval. Granting these
            
            conclusions, if Naram-Sin had been the son of Sharru-Gi, as suggested by Pere
            
            Scheil, Urumush would have been separated from Manishtusu by the Dynasty of
            
            Akkad, a combination that is scarcely probable. Moreover, the context of the
            
            passage on the tablet from Tello, on which the names of Sharru-Gi and Naram-Sin
            
            are mentioned, though of doubtful interpretation, does not necessarily imply
            
            that they were living at the same time; they may have been separated by
            
            several generations. These reasons in themselves make it probable that
            
            Sharru-Gi was not the founder of Naram-Sin's dynasty, but was a predecessor of
            
            Manishtusu and Urumush upon the throne of Kish.
            
          
        
          
          It has
            
            been further pointed out that in an inscription preserved in the Imperial
            
            Ottoman Museum at Constantinople the name of a king of Kish is mentioned,
            
            which, to judge from the traces still visible, may probably be restored as that
            
            of Sharru-Gi. The fragmentary nature of the text, which was found at Abu
            
            Habba during the excavations conducted by the Turkish Government upon that
            
            site, rendered any deductions that might be drawn from it uncertain; but it
            
            sufficed to corroborate the suggestion that Sharru-Gi was not a king of Akkad,
            
            but a still earlier king of Kish. Since then I have recognized a duplicate text
            
            of the Constantinople inscription, also from Abu Habba, which enables us to
            
            supplement and to some extent correct the conclusions based upon it. The
            
            duplicate consists of a cruciform stone object, inscribed on its twelve sides
            
            with a votive text recording a series of gifts to the Sun-god Shamash and his
            
            consort Aa in the city of Sippar, and the early part of its text corresponds to
            
            the fragmentary inscription at Constantinople. Unfortunately the beginning of
            
            the text is wanting, as is the case with the Constantinople text, so that we
            
            cannot decide with certainty the name of the king who had the monument
            
            engraved. But the duplicate furnishes fresh data on which to base a conclusion.
            
          
        
          
          Although
          
          the king's name is wanting, it is possible to estimate the amount of text that
          
          is missing at the head of the first column, and it is now clear that the name
          
          of Sharru-Gi does not occur at the beginning of the inscription, but some lines
          
          down the column; in other words, its position suggests a name in a genealogy
          
          rather than that of the writer of the text. Moreover, in a broken passage in
          
          the second column the name Sharru-Gi occurs again, and the context proves
          
          definitely that he was not the writer of the text, who speaks in the first
          
          person, though he may not improbably have been his father. But, although the
          
          monument can no longer be ascribed to Sharru-Gi, the titles "the mighty
          
          king, the king of Kish", which occur in the first column of the text, are
          
          still to be taken as applying to him, while the occurrence of the name in the
          
          second column confirms its suggested restoration in the genealogy. It may
          
          therefore be regarded as certain that Sharru-Gi was an early king of Kish, and,
          
          it would seem, the father of the king who had the cruciform monument
          
          inscribed
            
            and deposited as a votive offering in the temple of Shamash at Sippar. In the
            
            last chapter reference has been made to Manishtusu's activity in Sippar and his
            
            devotion to the great temple of the Sun-god in that city. For various
            
            epigraphical reasons, based on a careful study of its text, I would
            
            provisionally assign the cruciform monument to Manishtusu. According to this
            
            theory, Sharru-Gi would be Manishtusu's father, and the earliest king of Kish
            
            of this period whose name has yet been recovered.
            
          
        
          
          The proof
            
            that Sharru-Gi, or, according to the later interpretation of the name, Sargon,
            
            was not identical with Shar-Gani-sharri, King of Akkad, nor was even a member
            
            of his dynasty, would seem to bring once more into discredit the later
            
            traditions which gathered round his name. To the Assyrian and Neo-Babylonian
            
            scribes Sargon appears as a king of Agade, or Akkad, and the father of Naram-Sin,
            
            who succeeded him upon his throne. It is clear, therefore, that the name of the
            
            earlier king of Kish has been borrowed for the king of Akkad, whose real name,
            
            Shar-Gani-sharri, has disappeared in the tradition. Are we to imagine that the
            
            great achievements, which later ages ascribed to Sargon of Akkad, were also
            
            borrowed along with his name from the historical Sargon of Kish? Or is it
            
            possible that the traditional Sargon is representative of his period, and
            
            combines in his one person the attributes of more than one king? In the
            
            cruciform monument, which we have seen may probably be assigned to Manishtusu,
            
            the king prefaces the account of his conquest of Anshan by stating that it took
            
            place at a time "when all the lands . . . revolted against me", and
            
            the phrase employed recalls the similar expression in the Neo-Babylonian
            
            chronicle, which states that in Sargon's old age "all the lands revolted
            
            against him". The parallelism in the language of the early text and the
            
            late chronicle might perhaps be cited in support of the view that facts as well
            
            as names had been confused in the later tradition.
            
          
        
          
          
        
          
            
              | CRUCIFORM
                STONE OBJECT INSCRIBED ON TWELVE SIDES WITH A VOTIVE TEXT OF AN EARLY 
                SEMITIC KING OF KISH, RECORDING A SERIES OF GIFTS TO SHAMASH THE SUN-GOD
                AND HIS WIFE AA IN THE CITY OF SIPPAR. (British Museum). | 
            
              |  | 
            
          
        Fortunately
          
          
          we have not to decide the question as a point of literary 
          criticism, nor even
          
          upon grounds of general probability, for we have the means of 
          testing
          
          the
          
          traditions in detail by comparison with contemporary 
          documents. Reference has
          
          already been made to tablets dated in the reigns of 
          Shar-Gani-sharri and
          
          Naram-Sin, and the date-formulae occurring upon them refer, in
          accordance with
          
          the custom of the period, to events of public interest after 
          which the years
          
          were named. In the case of tablets dated in Shar-Gani-sharri's
          reign, we find
          
          three date-formulae which have a direct bearing upon the point
          at issue, and
          
          refer to incidents which correspond in a remarkable degree to 
          achievements
          
          ascribed to Sargon in the Omen-tablet and the Neo-Babylonian 
          Chronicle. The
          
          conquest of Amurru, the "Western Land" on the coast of Syria, 
          is
          
          referred to in four sections of the Omens, probably 
          representing separate
          
          expeditions thither. The third section records a decisive 
          victory for Sargon,
          
          and apparently the deportation of the king of Amurru to Akkad;
          while in the
          
          fourth Sargon is recorded to have set up his images in Amurru,
          that is to say,
          
          he carved his image upon the rocks near the Mediterranean 
          coast, or in the
          
          Lebanon, as a lasting memorial of his conquest of the country.
          Now one of the
          
          tablets of accounts from Tello is dated "in the year in which 
          Shar-Gani-sharri conquered Amurru in Basar". It is therefore certain 
          that the
          
          conquest of Amurru, ascribed by tradition to Sargon of Akkad, 
          is to be referred
          
          to Shar- Gani-sharri and treated as historically true.
          
          
        
          
          We obtain
            
            a very similar result when we employ the same method of testing Sargon's
            
            Elamite campaigns. The Omen-tablet opens with the record of Sargon's invasion
            
            of the country, followed by his conquest of the Elamites, whom he is related to
            
            have afflicted grievously by cutting off their food supplies. This would
            
            appear to have been in the nature of a successful raid into Elamite territory.
            
            On the other hand, one of the early account-tablets is dated in the year when
            
            Shar-Gani-sharri overcame the expedition which Elam and Zakhara had sent
            
            against Opis and Sakli. It is clear that the date, although it records a
            
            success against the Elamites, can hardly refer to the same event as the
            
            Omen-text, since the latter records an invasion of Elam by Sargon, not a raid
            
            into Babylonian territory by the Elamites. But the contemporary document at
            
            least proves that Shar-Gani-sharri was successful in his war with Elam, and it
            
            is not unlikely that the attack on Opis by the Elamites provoked his invasion
            
            of their country. Such a raid as the Omens describe fully accords with the
            
            practice of this period, when the kings of Kish and Akkad used to invade Elam
            
            and return to their own country laden with spoil. The date-formula which
            
            confirms a third point in the late tradition refers to the year in which
            
            Shar-Gani-sharri laid the foundations of the temple of Anunitu and the temple
            
            of Amal in Babylon, proving not only that the city of Babylon was in
            
            existence at this period, but also that Sargon devoted himself to its adornment
            
                by building temples there. The late Chronicle records that Sargon removed the
            
            soil from the trenches of Babylon, and a broken passage in the Omens
            
            appears to state that he increased the might of Babylon. On this point the
            
            early date-formula and the late tradition confirm and supplement each other.
        
          
        
          
          Thus,
            
            wherever we can test the achievements ascribed to Sargon of Akkad by comparison
            
            with contemporary records of Shar-Gani-sharri's reign, we find a complete
            
            agreement between them. Another feature in the traditional picture of Sargon
            
            admirably suits the founder of a dynasty at Akkad, whereas it would have little
            
            suitability to a king of Kish. This is the support which the goddess Ishtar is
            
            stated to have given Sargon, both in raising him to the throne and in guiding
            
            his arms to victory. For Akkad, which Shar-Gani-sharri made his capital, was
            
            an important seat of her worship. When, therefore, the late tradition records
            
            that Sargon conquered Subartu and Kazallu, we may ascribe these victories to
            
            Shar-Gani-sharri, although they are unrecorded in the contemporary monuments
            
            that have as yet been recovered. At any time it may happen that the name of
            
            Kashtubila of Kazallu may be found in a text of Shar-Gani-sharri's reign, as
            
            that of Mannu-dannu of Magan has been recovered on a statue of Naram-Sin.
            
            Such an attitude of expectancy is justified by the striking instances in which
            
            the late tradition has already been confirmed by the early texts; and the
            
            parallelism in the language of Manishtusu's monument and the late Chronicle of
            
            Sargon, to which reference has been made, must be treated as fortuitous. Having
            
            regard to the insecure foundations upon which these early empires were based,
            
            Shar-Gani-sharri, like Manishtusu, may well have had to face a revolt of the
            
            confederation of cities he had subjected to his rule. In such a case the scribe
            
            of Shar-Gani-sharri would probably have employed phraseology precisely similar
            
            to that in Manishtusu's text, for conventional forms of expression constantly
            
            recur in monumental inscriptions of the same period.
            
          
        
          
          Our
            
            conclusion, therefore, is that in the later texts Shar-Gani-sharri has adopted
            
            Sharru-Gi's name, but nothing more. In view of the general accuracy of the late
            
            traditions concerning the conquests of these early rulers, it may seem strange
            
            that such a change of names should have taken place; but it is not difficult to
            
            suggest causes for the confusion. Both kings were great conquerors, both
            
            belonged to the same epoch, and founded dynasties in Northern Babylonia,
            
            and both bore names which, in part, are not dissimilar. Moreover, the
            
            suggestion has been made that the words "Gani" and "Gi",
            
            which form components of the names, may possibly have both been divine
            
            titles, though we find no trace of them in the later periods of history.
            
            But whether this was so or not, and whatever renderings of the names we adopt,
            
            it is clear that Sargon's traditional achievements may be credited to
            
            Shar-Gani-Sharri, who, as king of Agade or Akkad, succeeded to the earlier
            
            empire of the kings of Kish.
        
          
          We
            have
            
            already seen reason to believe that the kings of Kish were 
            separated by no long
            
            interval from the empire of Akkad, and this view is supported,
            not only by
            
            a study of their inscriptions, but also by the close 
            connection that may be
            
            traced between the artistic achievements of the two periods. 
            Epigraphic
            
            evidence has been strikingly reinforced by the discovery of 
            Sharru-Gi's
            
            monolith; for the sculptures upon it share to some extent the 
            high artistic
            
            qualities which have hitherto been regarded as the exclusive 
            possession of the
            
            Dynasty of Akkad. The modelling of the figures on Naram-Sin's 
            stele of
            
            victory, their natural pose and spirited attitudes, have long 
            been
            
            recognized as belonging to a totally different category from 
            the squat and
            
            conventional representations upon the Stele of the Vultures. 
            The cylinder-seals
            
            of the period are marked by the same
            
            degree of
            
            excellence, but between the sculptures of Eannatum and those 
            of Naram-Sin there
            
            has hitherto been a gap in the orderly stages of development. A
            single example
            
            of engraved metal-work had indeed been recovered, but the date
            of this was, and
            
            still is, to some extent uncertain. The object consists of the
            copper head of a
            
            colossal votive lance, some thirty-one and a half inches long.
            On one of its
            
            faces is engraved in spirited outline the figure of a lion 
            rampant, and on the
            
            neck of the blade is the name of a king of Kish beginning with
            the sign "Sharru". A slight indication of date is afforded by the fact 
            that it was
            
            found at Tello, near the eastern corner of Ur-Nina's building,
            but at a rather
            
            higher level. If the second line of the inscription, which is 
            illegible
            
            through oxidization, contained a title and not part of the 
            name, it is
            
            probable that we may restore the name in the first line as 
            that of Sharru-Gi
            
            himself. Otherwise we must assign the lance to some other king
            of Kish, but
            
            whether we should place him before or after Sharru-Gi it is 
            difficult to say.
            
          
        
          
          It was
          
          clear that the art of the later period was ultimately based 
          upon the formal
          
          though decorative conventions of the earlier Sumerian time, 
          but, with the
          
          doubtful exception of the copper lance-head and the rude
          
          statues of Manishtusu, no example had previously
          
          been found of the intermediate  period. The missing link
          
          between the earliersculpture of Lagash and that of Akkad has 
          now been supplied by the monolith of Sharru-Gi. Its points of
          
          resemblance to the Vulture Stele, both in design and 
          treatment, prove direct continuity
          
          with early Sumerian art. The divine net and the vultures were 
          obviously
          
          borrowed from the Tello monument, while the guards attending 
          upon Sharru-Gi
          
          display the squat and heavy appearance which
          
          characterizes
            
            the warriors of Eannatum. At the same time, a new element is introduced in the
            
            battle scenes, where the designs and grouping are more varied and less
            
            conventional. Here the sculptor has allowed his fancy freer play, and has
            
            attempted a naturalistic treatment in his delineation of the combatants. He has
            
            not fully attained the masterly qualities which characterize the stele of
            
            Naram-Sin, but his work is its direct forerunner. To judge from the striking
            
            evidence furnished by a single monument, the art of Kish must have been closely
            
            related to that of Akkad. The latter inaugurated no totally new departure, but
            
            was dependent on its predecessor, whose most striking qualities it adopted and
            
            improved.
            
          
        
          
          As in the
            
            sphere of art, so, too, in that of politics and government, the Dynasty of
            
            Akkad did not originate, but merely expanded and developed its inheritance
            
            along lines already laid down. Even with Sharru-Gi, it is clear that we have
            
            not reached the beginning of the Semitic movement in Northern Babylonia, and
            
            that in this respect the kingdom of Kish resembled the later empire of Akkad.
            
            The battle scenes upon his monuments prove that Sharru-Gi was a great
            
            conqueror, but the traces of the text supply no details of his campaigns. It is
            
            significant, however, that his enemies are bearded Semites, not Sumerians,
            
            proving that the Semitic immigration into Northern Babylonia and the
            
            surrounding districts was no new thing; we may infer that kindred tribes had
            
            long been settled in this portion of Western Asia, and were prepared to defend
            
            their territory from the encroachments of one of their own race. Yet details
            
            of Sharru-Gi's sculpture prove that with him we are appreciably nearer to the
            
            time of Sumerian domination in the north. The shaven faces of the king's suite
            
            or bodyguard suggest Sumerians, and their clothing, which the king himself
            
            shares, is also of that type. In such details we may see evidence of strong
            
            Sumerian influence, either in actual life or in artistic convention. Such a
            
            mixture of Sumerian and Semitic characteristics would be quite foreign to the
            
            Dynasty of Akkad, and it is probable that the earlier rulers of Kish had not
            
            yet proved themselves superior to Sumerian tutelage.
            
          
        
          
          Some
            
            
            account has already been given in the last chapter of the 
            campaigns of
            
            Manishtusu and Urumush, which paved the way for the conquests 
            of Shar-Gani-sharri. We there saw that Manishtusu claims to have 
            defeated a confederation of
            
            thirty-two cities, and, if we are right in assigning the 
            cruciform monument
            
            to him, we have definite proof that his successes were not 
            confined to Akkad
            
            and Sumer, but were carried beyond the Elamite border. Since 
            the fragments of
            
            his stelae, like the cruciform monument itself, were found at 
            Sippar, where
            
            they had been dedicated in the great temple of the Sun-god, it
            is quite
            
            possible that they should be employed to supplement each other
            as having
            
            commemorated the same campaign. In that case, the kings of the
            thirty-two cities
            
            are to be regarded as having inaugurated "the revolt of all 
            the
            
            lands", which the cruciform monument tells us preceded the 
            conquest of
            
            Anshan. The leader of the revolt was clearly the king of 
            Anshan, since the
            
            cruciform monument and its duplicate particularly record his 
            defeat and
            
            deportation. On his return from the campaign, laden with gifts
            and tribute,
            
            Manishtusu led the king as his captive into the presence of 
            Shamash, whose
            
            temple he lavishly enriched in gratitude for his victory. His 
            boast that he ruled,
            
            as well as conquered, Anshan was probably based on the 
            exaction of tribute;
            
            the necessity for the reconquest of Elam by Urumush, and later
            on by
            
            Shar-Gani- sharri would seem to indicate that the authority of
            these early
            
            Semitic kings in Elam was acknowledged only so long as their 
            army was in
            
            occupation of the country.
        
          
          Already,
            
            in the reign of Manishtusu, Akkad and her citizens had enjoyed a position of
            
            great influence in the kingdom of Kish, and it is not surprising that in the
            
            course of a few generations she should have obtained the hegemony in Babylonia.
            
            We do not know the immediate cause of the change of capital, nor whether it was
            
            the result of a prolonged period of antagonism between the rival cities. On
            
            this point the later tradition is silent, merely recording that Sargon
            
            obtained "the kingdom" through Ishtar's help. That Shar-Gani-sharri
            
            was the actual founder of his dynasty is clear from the inscription upon his
            
            gate-sockets found at Nippur, which ascribe no title to his father, Dati-
            
            Enlil, proving that his family had not even held the patesiate or
            
            governorship of Akkad under the suzerainty of Kish. Indeed, tradition related
            
            that Sargon's native city was Azupiranu, and it loved to contrast his humble
            
            birth and upbringing with the subsequent splendour of his reign. The legend of
            
            his committal to the river in an ark of bulrushes, and of his rescue and
            
            adoption by Akki, the gardener, would make its appeal to every later
            
            generation, and it undoubtedly ensured for Sargon the position of a national
            
            hero in the minds of the people. The association of the story with his name,
            
            while tending to preserve his memory, need not be held to discredit the
            
            traditions of his conquests, which, as we have already seen, are confirmed in
            
            several important details by the inscriptions of his reign.
            
          
        
          
          On the
            
            transference of power from Kish to Akkad an expansion of Semitic authority from
            
            Northern Babylonia appears to have taken place throughout a considerable
            
            portion of Western Asia. Elam no longer claims the principal share of attention
            
            from the rulers of Akkad and Sumer, and Shar-Gani-sharri seems to have devoted
            
            his energies to extending his influence northwards and, more particularly, in
            
            the west. Kutu, which lay to the north-east of Akkad, in the hilly country on
            
            the east of the Lower Zab, was conquered in the same year that Shar-Gani-sharri
            
            laid the foundations of the temples of Anunitu and Amal in Babylon, and
            
            Sharlak, its king, was taken captive. The reference to this event in the
            
            official title of the year during which it took place is some indication of the
            
            importance ascribed to the campaign. Unfortunately, we possess no classified
            
            date-list for the Dynasty of Akkad, such as we have recovered for the later
            
            Dynasties of Ur and Babylon, and the dated tablets of this period are too few
            
            to enable us to attempt any chronological classification of them by their
            
            contents. We are thus without the means of arranging Shar-Gani-sharri's
            
            conquests in the order in which they took place, or of tracing the steps by
            
            which he gradually increased his empire. But if the order of the sections on
            
            the Omen-tablet has any significance, it would seem that his most important
            
            conquest, that of Amurru or "the Western Land", took place in the
            
            earlier years of his reign.
            
          
        
          
          A
            discrepancy
            
            occurs in the later accounts of this conquest, which have come
            down to us upon
            
            the Omen-tablet and the Neo-Babylonian Chronicle. While in the
            former the
            
            complete subjugation of Amurru is recorded to have taken place
            "in the
            
            third year", the latter states that this event occurred "in 
            the
            
            eleventh year". It is quite possible to reconcile the two 
            traditions;
            
            the former statement may imply that it took three years to 
            subdue the country,
            
            the latter that the conquest was achieved in the eleventh year
            of Shar-Gani-sharri's reign. Indeed, the fact that four sections of the
            Omens refer to
            
            Amurru would seem to imply that it required several 
            expeditions to bring the
            
            whole region into complete subjection. By the extension of his
            authority to the
            
            Mediterranean coast Shar-Gani-sharri made a striking advance 
            upon the ideals
            
            of empire possessed by his predecessors on the throne of Kish.
            But even in this
            
            achievement he was only following in the steps of a still 
            earlier ruler. A
            
            passage in Lugal-zaggisi's text would seem to imply that, in 
            the course of an
            
            expedition along the Euphrates, he had succeeded in 
            penetrating to the Syrian
            
            coast. But Shar-Gani-sharri's conquest appears to have been of
            a more
            
            permanent character than Lugal-zaggisi's raid. The position of
            his capital
            
            rendered it easier to maintain permanent relations
            
            with the West, and to despatch punitive
            
            expeditions
            
            thither in the event of his authority being called in 
            question.
            
          
        
          
          It
            has
            
            been claimed on behalf of Shar-Gani-sharri that he did not 
            stop at the coast,
            
            but crossed the Mediterranean to Cyprus, which he is said to 
            have included
            
            within the limits of his empire. It would seem, however, that 
            while the island
            
            may have been subject indirectly to Babylonian influence at an
            early period,
            
            there is no indication of any direct or vigorous Semitic 
            influence upon the
            
            native Cypriote culture at this time. But traces of such an 
            influence we
            
            should expect to find, if the island had been politically 
            subject to
            
            Shar-Gani-sharri, and had shared the elaborate system of 
            communication which he
            
            established between the distant parts of his empire. In itself
            the
            
            archaeological evidence would scarcely have been cited to 
            prove a definite
            
            occupation of the island, had not a statement occurred upon 
            Sargon's Omen-tablet to the effect that "he crossed the Sea of the 
            West". But the
            
            newly discovered chronicle proves that the true reading should
            be "the
            
            Sea in the East", which without doubt indicates the Persian 
            Gulf.
            
          
        
          
          From the
            
            Chronicle we gather that in the original composition this passage was not cast
            
            in the form of a consecutive narrative. It is a poetical summary of Sargon's
            
            might, elaborating in greater detail the preceding phrase that "he
            
            poured out his glory over the world". In it the clauses are balanced in
            
            antithesis, and the Western Land and the Eastern Sea, that is Syria and the
            
            Persian Gulf, are mentioned together as having formed the extreme limits of
            
            Sargon's empire. On the Omen-tablet the original text has been cut up into
            
            sections and applied piecemeal to different augural phenomena. In its new
            
            setting as a consecutive narrative of events the mention of the Persian Gulf
            
            was obviously inconsistent with the conquest of Amurru, and hence it was
            
            natural for a copyist to amend the text to the form in which it has reached us
            
            on the Omen-tablet.
            
            The Omens still retained the reference to the despoiling of the Country of the
            
            Sea, i.e. the littoral of the Persian Gulf, which Shar-Gani-sharri doubtless
            
            included within the southern border of his empire. With this record we may
            
            connect the tradition, reproduced in the Legend of Sargon, that he conquered
            
            Dilmun, an island in the Persian Gulf, and with his maritime enterprise in this
            
            region we may compare that of Sennacherib at a later date who crossed the Gulf
            
            in the course of his conquest of Elam. From the earliest periods we know that
            
            the rivers and canals of Babylonia were navigated, and the Persian Gulf was
            
            a natural outlet for the trade of the Sumerian cities in the south. In
            
            organizing a naval expedition for the conquest of the coast and the islands,
            
            Shar-Gani-sharri would have had native ships and sailors at his disposal, whose
            
            knowledge of the Gulf had been acquired in the course of their regular coastal
            
            trading.
            
          
        
          
          In
            the
            
            internal administration of his empire Shar-Gani-sharri appears
            to have
            
            inaugurated, or at any rate to have organized, a regular 
            system of
            
            communication between the principal cities and the capital. 
            The references to
            
            separate cities, which occur in the contemporary inscriptions 
            of his reign,
            
            are not numerous. From the texts found at Nippur, we know that
            he rebuilt
            
            E-kur, the great temple of Enlil, and many of the bricks which
            formed his
            
            temple-platform and that of Naram-Sin have been found in 
            place. The mace-head from Abu Habba is an indication that, like his 
            predecessors on the
            
            throne of Kish, he devoted himself to enriching the great 
            temple of the Sun-god
            
            in Northern Babylonia; while one of his date-formulae supports
            the tradition of
            
            his building activity in Babylon. But such votive texts and 
            records throw no
            
            light upon his methods of government, or upon the means he 
            took to retain his
            
            hold upon the more outlying districts of his empire. Some 
            striking evidence
            
            upon this point has, however, been recovered at Tello, and 
            this is furnished,
            
            not by any formal record or carefully inscribed monument, but 
            by some rough
            
            lumps of clay, which had been broken and thrown on one side as
            useless debris
            
            during the reigns of Shar-Gani-sharri himself and his 
            successor.
            
          
        
          
          Along
            
            
            with the dated tablets of this period there were found at 
            Tello, in a mound to
            
            the S.S.E. of the "Tell of Tablets", a number of sun-dried 
            lumps of
            
            clay, most of them broken in pieces, but bearing traces of 
            seal-impressions
            
            upon their upper surface. A careful comparison and examination
            of them showed
            
            that on their under sides impressions of cords and knots were 
            still visible,
            
            and it was evident that the clay had been used for sealing 
            bales or bundles of
            
            objects, which had been tied up and secured with cords. Some 
            of the seal-impressions bear short inscriptions, consisting of the name 
            of the king and
            
            that of some high functionary or officer of state, such as 
            "Shar-Gani-sharri, the mighty, the king of Akkad : Lugal-ushumgal, 
            patesi of
            
            Lagash, thy servant"; here the king is addressed in the second
            person by
            
            the officer whose name and title were engraved upon the seal. 
            Similar
            
            inscriptions occur upon impressions from the seals of the 
            shakkanakku or grand
            
            vizir, the magician of the royal household, and the king's 
            cupbearer. The seals
            
            were obviously employed by the officials whose names occur in 
            the second part
            
            of each inscription, the name of the king being also included 
            to give them the
            
            royal authority. The right to use the royal name was evidently
            a privilege
            
            enjoyed only by the higher officials of the court.
            
          
        
          
          From the
            
            fact that the broken lumps of clay were found at Tello, it is clear that the
            
            sealed bundles had been
            
            despatched thither from Akkad, and we have in them incontestable evidence of a
            
            service of convoys between Akkad and Lagash, under the direct control of the
            
            king's officers. We may note that in addition to the seal-impressions several
            
            of the clay fragments were inscribed in a cursive hand with the name of an
            
            official, or private person, for whom the sealed packet was intended. Thus a
            
            sealed bundle from the grand vizir was addressed "To Alla", that
            
            from Dada, the magician, "To Lugal-ushumgal", whose name occurs in
            
            the seal on other fragments; while one sent in Naram-Sin's reign appears to have
            
            been addressed simply "To Lagash", indicating the packet's place of
            
            destination. Apart from the fact that, with the exception of Lugal-ushumgal,
            
            the high court-officials mentioned on the seals would naturally be living in
            
            Akkad, not in Lagash, the addresses on the different fragments, particularly
            
            the one last referred to, definitely prove that the sealings were employed on
            
            bundles actually despatched from city to city and not stored in any archive or
            
            repository. It is therefore certain that, during the reigns of Shar- Gani-sharri
            
            and Naram-Sin, a regular system of communication was kept up between Lagash
            
            and the court, and it may legitimately be inferred that the capital was linked
            
            up in a similar way to the other great cities of the empire.
            
          
        
          
          In
            
            addition to the system of official convoys, the commercial tablets of this
            
            period that have been found at Tello bear witness to an active interchange of
            
            goods and produce between Lagash, Akkad, and other cities in the empire. Thus
            
            in some we read of the despatch of gold to Akkad, or of herds of oxen, or
            
            flocks of sheep, lambs and goats. In return we find Akkad sent grain and dates
            
            southwards, and probably garments and woven stuffs; the importance of the
            
            first two exports is indicated by the frequent occurrence of the expressions
            
            "grain of Akkad" and "dates of Akkad" in the commercial
            
            texts. Moreover, a study of the proper names occurring on the tablets suggests
            
            that, in consequence of these commercial relations, a considerable Semitic
            
            immigration now took place from Akkad and the north. Among southern Sumerian
            
            cities Erech and Umma, Ninni-esh and Adab had particularly close relations with
            
            Lagash, while goods despatched from Kish, Nippur, and Ur are invoiced in the
            
            lists. The conquests of Shar-Gani-sharri and Naram-Sin were also reflected in
            
            the articles of commerce that reached the market of Lagash, where contributions
            
            from Magan, Melukhkha, and Elam were not infrequently met with, and we even
            
            find the sale of slaves from such distant countries as Gutiu and Amurru
            
            recorded. To regulate the trade relations between the different cities, and to
            
            instruct his local officials on details of their administration, it is
            
            probable that the kings of Akkad, like those of the First Dynasty of Babylon,
            
            wrote letters and despatches which were delivered by royal messengers. Though
            
            no royal letters have been found inscribed with the regular epistolary
            
            formulas, a few tablets of the period contain what are obviously directions
            
            from the king.
            
          
        
          
          It was
            
            probably due to his encouragement of official and commercial intercourse
            
            between the scattered cities over which he ruled, that Shar-Gani-sharri was
            
            enabled to establish an efficient control over an empire which was more
            
            extensive than that of any earlier ruler. A study of the names upon the Obelisk
            
            of Manishtusu makes it clear that, already under the kings of Kish, the
            
            barriers which had previously surrounded and isolated each city-state had begun
            
            to disappear under the influence of a central administration. This process was
            
            accelerated in Shar- Gani-sharri's reign, and, although under the kings of Ur
            
            and Isin a conservative reaction appears to have set in, the great cities never
            
            returned to their former state of isolation even in the south. Another factor,
            
            which may have contributed to this process of centralization, may probably be
            
            traced in Manishtusu's text itself, and echoes of it may perhaps be detected in
            
            some of the later traditions of Sargon's reign. It will be remembered that the
            
            obelisk records the purchase by the king of some large landed estates in the
            
            neighbourhood of Kish and three other cities in Northern Babylonia, on which he
            
            intended to settle certain citizens of Akkad and their adherents. This
            
            wholesale transference of a large section of the population of a city may well
            
            have been dictated by political motives, and it is possible that it was part of
            
            a general system, inaugurated by the kings of Kish with the object of
            
            substituting national feeling in place of the local patriotism of the
                 
            city-state. According to this theory, Manishtusu's object would have been to
            
            weaken Akkad by the deportation of many of her principal citizens to the
            
            neighbourhood of Kish.
            
          
        
          
          The high
            
            social standing of several of the immigrants, whose names are enumerated on the
            
            obelisk, suggests a comparison with the late traditions concerning Sargon's
            
            high-handed treatment of "the sons of his palace". The
            
            Neo-Babylonian Chronicle relates that Sargon caused "the sons of his
            
            palace", that is his relatives and personal attendants, to settle for five kasgid around, and it adds that over the hosts of the world he reigned supreme.
            
            The Omen-tablet represents certain nobles, or powerful adherents of the king,
            
            as having been dispossessed of their dwellings in consequence of additions
            
            made to the royal palace; and they are recorded to have appealed to Sargon to
            
            tell them where they should go. It is quite possible that these episodes in the
            
            Assyrian and Neo-Babylonian texts had some such historical basis as that
            
            suggested in the preceding paragraph. Shar-Gani-sharri may have adopted
            
            Manishtusu's policy and carried it out on a more extensive scale. The
            
            deportations from Akkad, referred to in the late tradition, may have been
            
            intended to strengthen the loyal elements in the provinces. In the course of
            
            centuries the motive which prompted the movement would be forgotten or
            
            misunderstood, and it would be ascribed to some such material cause as an
            
            increase in the size of the royal palace. If this was only part of a settled
            
            policy, we may conjecture that similar transfers were effected in the
            
            population of other parts of the empire.
            
          
        
          
          The
            
            effect of such a policy would undoubtedly have been to weaken the power of
            
            resistance formerly possessed by self-contained city-states against the
            
            hegemony of any one of their number. In this respect the kings of Kish and
            
            Akkad would only have been
            
            carrying
              
              out, on a less ambitious scale and over a smaller area, the policy which the
              
              later Assyrian kings so ruthlessly enforced throughout the whole of Western
              
              Asia. But, although successful for a time, no state could be permanently
              
              established upon such a basis. The forces of discontent were bound to come to a
              
              head, and in Shar-Gani-sharri's own case we may perhaps trace to this cause the
              
              revolt of all the lands, which is recorded to have taken place in his old age.
              
              It is perhaps significant, too, that Urumush is related to have met his end in
              
              a palace revolution.
            
          
        
          
          Tradition
            
            does not speak with any certain voice concerning the fate of Shar-Gani-sharri.
            
            Both the Omen-tablet and the Chronicle relate that he was besieged in the city
            
            of Akkad, and that he sallied forth and signally defeated his enemies. But the
            
            latter text ends its account of Sargon's reign with a record of disaster.
            
            "Because of the evil which he had committed," the text runs,
            
            "the great god Marduk was angry and he destroyed his people by famine.
            
            From the rising of the sun unto the setting of the sun they opposed him and
            
            gave him no rest." The expedition against Erech and Naksu, recorded in
            
            dates upon certain tablets inscribed during the patesiate of Lugal-ushumgal,
            
            may perhaps be referred to this period of unrest during the latter part of
            
            Sargon's reign. The reference to Sargon's closing years on the Neo-Babylonian
            
            tablet is quite in the manner of the Hebrew books of Chronicles. The writer
            
            traces Sargon's misfortunes to his own evil deeds, in consequence of which the
            
            god Marduk sent troubles upon him as a punishment. It may seem strange that
            
            such an ending should follow the account of a brilliant and victorious reign.
            
            But it is perhaps permissible to see in the evil deeds ascribed to Sargon a
            
            reference to his policy of deportation, which may have raised him bitter
            
            enemies among the priesthood and the more conservative elements in the
            
            population of the country.
            
          
        
          
          There can
            
            be little doubt that Shar-Gani-sharri was succeeded on the throne of Akkad by
            
            Naram-Sin, whom we may regard with considerable confidence as his son as well
            
            as his successor. In the later tradition Naram-Sin is represented as the son of
            
            Sargon, and, although in his own inscriptions he never mentions his father's
            
            name, we have contemporary proof that his reign and that of Shar-Gani-sharri
            
            were very close to one another. The relation of Shar-Gani-sharri's pavement in
            
            the temple of Ekur to that of Naram-Sin and the similar character of their
            
            building materials suggest that the structures were laid with no long interval
            
            between them, and the fact that Lugal-ushum- gal, patesi of Lagash, was the
            
            contemporary of both Shar-Gani-sharri and Naram-Sin supports the
            
            presumption that the latter was Shar-Gani-sharri's successor on the throne.
            
            Hence such evidence as we possess is in favour of accepting the later tradition
            
            of their relationship to one another.
            
          
        
          
          Naram-Sin's
            
            fame as a great conqueror, like that of his father, survived into later times,
            
            and the Omen-tablet and the Neo-Babylonian Chronicle relate his siege of the
            
            city of Apirak and the defeat of its governor and of Rish-Adad its king. Both
            
            texts also briefly record his successful expedition against the land of Magan.
            
            In the Omen-tablet the name of the king is wanting, but the lately recovered
            
            Chronicle has supplied it as Mannu-dannu. On this point the later tradition has
            
            been strikingly confirmed by the discovery at Susa of the base of a diorite
            
            statue of the king, on which it is recorded that he conquered Magan and slew
            
            Man i[. . .j, its prince or " lord". The precise position of the
            
            land of Magan is still unsettled, some setting it in the Sinaitic peninsula,
            
            others regarding it as a portion of Eastern Arabia. In favour of the latter
            
            view it may be noted that from Southern Babylonia it would be easy of access by
            
            way of the Persian Gulf, and the transport of heavy blocks of diorite, which
            
            Naram-Sin, and at a rather later period Gudea, brought from Magan, would be
            
            more easily effected by water than overland. In that case Naram-Sin's invasion
            
            of Magan was in direct continuation of Shar-Gani-sharri's policy of extending
            
            his empire southwards to include the shores of the Persian Gulf.
            
          
        
          
          In the
            
            inscription upon this same statue, which Naram-Sin records was fashioned from
            
            diorite brought to Akkad for that purpose from the mountains of Magan, he
            
            claims the proud title of "king of the four quarters (of the
            
            world)". Shar-Gani-sharri, in addition to his usual titles of "the mighty
            
            one, the king of Akkad", describes himself in one of the texts upon his
            
            gate-sockets from Nippur as "king of Enlil's realm", but in none of
            
            his inscriptions that have been recovered does he employ the title "king
            
            of the four quarters". This may be merely a coincidence, and no inference
            
            should perhaps be drawn from the absence of the title from his texts. On the
            
            other hand, it is possible that its assumption by Naram-Sin was based on a
            
            definite claim to a world-wide empire, the full extent of which his predecessor
            
            had not enjoyed. However this may be, we have ample evidence of Naram-Sin's
            
            military activity. In the introductory lines on the statue already referred to
            
            he claims to have been the victor in nine separate battles, forced upon him by
            
            the attack of hostile forces, in the course of a single year. Conquests
            
            recorded in other inscriptions of Naram-Sin are that of Armanu, and of Satuni,
            
            king of Lulubu. The latter region lay to the east of Akkad, in the
            
            mountainous region to the north-east of Elam, and its king appears to have
            
            formed a confederacy of the neighbouring districts to oppose the advance of
            
            Akkadian influence in that direction.
            
          
        
          
          The
            
            monument, which Naram-Sin set up and dedicated
            
            in the
              
              temple of his god in commemoration of this latter victory, is one of the finest
              
              pieces of Babylonian sculpture that has yet been recovered. It is a stele of
              
              victory, and the face is sculptured with a representation of the king
              
              conquering Satuni and his other enemies in a mountainous country. The king,
              
              whose figure is on a larger scale than the others, is nearly at the summit of a
              
              high mountain. He wears a helmet adorned with the horns of a bull, and he carries
              
              a battle-axe and a bow and arrow. Up the mountain side and along paths through
              
              the trees which clothe the lower slopes, the king's allies and warriors climb
              
              after him, bearing standards and weapons in their hands. Some of the king's
              
              foes are fleeing before him, and they turn in their flight to sue for mercy,
              
              while one still grasps a broken spear. Another has been shot by the king and
              
              crouches on the ground, seeking to draw the arrow from his throat. Two others
              
              lie prone before Naram-Sin, who has planted his foot upon the breast of one of
              
              them. The peak of the mountain rises to the stars.
            
          
        
          
          
        
          
            
              | Victory Stele of Naram-Sin, King
                
                of Akkad | 
            
              |  | 
            
          
         
        The fact
          
          that the stele was found at Susa has been employed as an argument in favour of
          
          regarding Elam as a dependency of Akkad during his reign. But, in addition to
          
          Naram-Sin's own text, the stele bears a later inscription of the Elamite king
          
          Shutruk-Nakh-khunte, from which we may infer that it was captured in Northern
          
          Babylonia and carried off to Susa as a trophy of war. But it is not unlikely
          
          that Naram-Sin, like Shar-Gani-sharri and the kings of Kish, achieved successes
          
          against Elam. Apirak, his conquest of which tradition records, was a country
          
          within the Elamite region, and its capture may well have taken place during a
          
          successful raid. Mention has been made of two early Elamite patesis, whose
          
          names have been recovered upon a tablet from Tello and an archaic text from
          
          Susa. The patesi of Susa, whose name may be read as Ilishma, belongs to a
          
          period when that city acknowledged the suzerainty of Akkad. But this single
          
          name does not prove that Elam, however closely connected
          
          with
          
          Akkad by commercial ties, formed a regular province of the Akkadian empire.
          
          Ilishma may have been appointed to the throne of Susa by the king of Akkad
          
          during an invasion of that country, which reached its culmination in the
          
          deportation of the native king, as Shar-Gani-sharri deported the kings of Kutu
          
          and Amurru, and Manishtusu the king of Anshan. The available evidence suggests
          
          that, during the Dynasty of Akkad, Susa and Elam generally enjoyed their
          
          independence, subject to occasional periods of interruption.
          
          
        
          
          Within
            
            the limits of Sumer and Akkad Naram-Sin appears to have followed his father's
            
            policy of materially benefiting the provincial cities, while keeping their
            
            administration under his immediate control. Thus he continued the service of
            
            convoys, and at the same time devoted himself to the erection of temples to the
            
            gods. His rebuilding of the temples of Enlil at Nippur and of Shamash at Sippar
            
            has been already referred to, while his votive onyx vases found at Tello
            
            prove that he did not neglect the shrines of Lagash. Another Sumerian city in
            
            which he undertook building operations was Ninni-esh, for there he rebuilt the
            
            temple dedicated to the goddess Ninni in the same year that he laid the
            
            foundation of the temple at Nippur.
        
          
          
        
          
            
              | Stele
                
                sculptured with the figure of Naram-Sin, King of Akkad, which was found at Pir
                
                Hussein near Diarbekr. On
                
                being discovered by the villagers no particular value was attached to it, and,
                
                as it was too large for them to use, it was left lying for three years on the
                
                spot where it was found. It was then brought to Diarbekr by the owner of the
                
                village, Chialy Effendi, who built it into the edging of a fountain in the
                
                court of his house on the left bank of the Tigris outside the city. On his
                
                death, about fourteen years ago, Natik Effendi sent it to the Museum at
                
                Constantinople.  | 
            
              |  | 
            
          
        But by
          
          far the most interesting of his building records is the stele sculptured with
          
          the figure of himself, which is usually known as the Diarbekr stele. When
          
          first brought to the Museum at Constantinople it was said to have been found at
          
          Mardin, and later on, certainly with greater accuracy, to have come from
          
          Diarbekr. As a matter of fact, it was discovered at Pir Hussein, a small
          
          village built beside a low tell, and situated about four and a half hours to
          
          the N.N.E. of Diarbekr, on the Ambar Su, a stream which rises in the lower
          
          slopes of the Taurus, and, after running parallel to the Sebene Su, joins the
          
          Tigris below Diarbekr. It was found by the villagers some nineteen years ago
          
          when they were digging for building materials
          
          on the
          
          site of the ancient city below the tell. There is no doubt that the stele was
          
          found in situ, and it
          
          furnishes
          
          remarkable evidence of the extent of Naram- Sin's influence northwards. The
          
          inscription upon the stone is broken, but it contains a reference to the defeat
          
          of the king's enemies by the god Enki, or Ea, within the four quarters of the
          
          world. That Naram-Sin and his army should have penetrated to the upper reaches
          
          of the Tigris is remarkable enough in itself, but that he should have erected a
          
          stele of victory, and possibly a building, in at least one of the towns he
          
          subdued during the campaign, suggests that his occupation of this region was
          
          effective for some time.
          
          
        
          
          Of
            
            Naram-Sin's successors upon the throne of Akkad we know little. The name of
            
            Bin-Gani-sharri, one of his sons, has been recovered upon a seal, and on a
            
            seal-impression from Tello, but his name has not been found with the royal
            
            title, so that we do not know whether he succeeded his father upon the throne.
            
            Another son of Naram-Sin, the reading of whose name is uncertain, held the post
            
            of patesi of Tutu, for his name and title have been preserved on a perforated
            
            plaque from Tello, engraved by Lipush-Iau, who describes herself as his
            
            daughter and lyre-player to the Moon-god, Sin. The famous seal of Kalki,
            
            the scribe, who was in the service of Ubil-Ishtar, "the king's
            
            brother", is also to be assigned to this period, but to which reign we
            
            cannot tell. The scene engraved upon the seal gives an interesting picture
            
            of one of these early Semitic princes attended by his suite. The central
            
            figure, who carries an axe over his left shoulder, is probably Ubil-Ishtar, and
            
            he is followed by a Sumerian servant, whom we may identify with the scribe
            
            Kalki, the holder of the seal. The other attendants, consisting of the prince's
            
            huntsman, his steward with his staff of office, and a soldier, are all
            
            bearded
            
            Semites. The shaven head and fringed garment of the Sumerians are here retained
            
            by the scribe, suggesting that, though the Sumerians were employed by their
            
            conquerors, little racial amalgamation had taken place. 
        
          
          
        
          
            
              | IMPRESSION OF THE CYLINDER-SEAL OF KHASHKHAMER, VASSAL OF
                
                UR-ENGUR, KING OF UR.  | 
            
              |  | 
            
          
        
          
            
              | Sumerian Relief of seated Annunaki  | 
            
              |  | 
            
          
         
        To the
          
          time of the kings of Akkad must also be assigned the Stele of Victory, two
          
          fragments of which have been found at Tello, sculptured on both faces with
          
          bas-reliefs, arranged in registers, above an inscription. The sculptor has
          
          represented his battle-scenes as a series of hand-to-hand conflicts, and here
          
          we see bearded Semitic warriors, armed with spear, axe, or bow and arrows,
          
          smiting their enemies. The inscription is very broken, but enough is preserved
          
          to indicate that it enumerates a number of estates or tracts of land, some, if
          
          not all of them, situated in the neighbourhood of Lagash, which have been
          
          assigned to different high officials. The summary at the end of the text is
          
          partly preserved, and states that the list comprised seventeen chief cities and
          
          eight chief places, and it ends with a record that may probably be restored to
          
          read : "Besides Akkad, the kingdom, which he had received, [was the
          
          patesiate of Lagash given to . . . ]." It would thus seem that the stele
          
          was set up in Lagash to commemorate its acquisition by a king of Akkad, who at
          
          the same time rewarded his own courtiers and officials by assigning them parts
          
          of the conquered territory. The name of the king is wanting in the text, and we
          
          must depend on conjecture to decide the reign or period to which it belongs.
          
          
        
          
          A
            
            comparison of the monument with Naram-Sin's Stele of Victory will show that,
            
            though the attitudes of the figures are natural and vigorous, the sculptor does
            
            not display quite the same high qualities of composition and artistic
            
            arrangement. This fact might conceivably be employed in favour of assigning the
            
            stele to a period of decadence when the dynasty of Shar-Gani-sharri may have
            
            fallen before the onset of some fresh wave of Semitic hordes. But the
            
            impression given by the monument is that of a vigorous art struggling towards
            
            perfection rather than the rude imitation of a more perfect style, and it is
            
            probable that we must date it in an early, rather than in a late, period during
            
            this epoch of Semitic domination.
        
          
          The
            
            reference to "Akkad, the kingdom", in the summary at the end of the
            
            text, renders it difficult to assign it to an early king of Kish such as
            
            Sharru-Gi, for we should then have to assume that Shar-Gani-sharri's dynasty
            
            was not the earliest one to rule in Akkad, and
            
            that
              
              still earlier Semitic kings reigned in that city before the rise of Kish. But
              
              in view of the total absence of other evidence in support of such a conclusion,
              
              it is preferable to assign the Tello stele provisionally to Shar-Gani-sharri
              
              himself. It will have been noted that the foes sculptured upon the monument are
              
              Semites, not Sumerians, and, if our assumption is correct, we may see in them
              
              the men of Kish, on whose defeat by Shar-Gani-sharri the whole of Sumer,
              
              including the city of Lagash, would have fallen under the rule of Akkad. In
              
              that case the stele may well have commemorated the decisive victory by which
              
              Shar-Gani-sharri put an end to the domination of Kish and founded his own
              
              empire.
            
          
        
          
          The
            
            absence of Sumerians from the battle-scenes in the reliefs of the period that
            
            we possess is significant of their political annihilation before the Semitic
            
            onslaught.
            
            In the
              
              scenes engraved upon the stele of Sharru-Gi the king's enemies are Semites, so
              
              that even in his time we have the picture of different Semitic clans or tribes
              
              contending among themselves for the possession of the countries they had
              
              overrun. That the racial movement was not confined to Akkad and Sumer is proved
              
              by
            
            Semitic
                
                inscriptions of the rulers of other districts. Lasirab, King of Gutiu, has left
                
                us a ceremonial mace-head, which was found at Abu Habba. Whether it was
                
                carried to Sippar as spoil of war, or deposited there by Lasirab himself, we
                
                cannot say; but its text proves that Gutiu was ruled by Semitic monarchs. The
                
                neighbouring district of Lulubu was similarly governed, and Anu-banini, one of
                
                its kings, has left us sculptured images of himself and his goddess Ninni, or
                
                Ishtar, upon the face of a cliff near Ser-i-Pul-i-Zohab. Here the river
                
                Hulvan flows through a natural rift in a low range of limestone hills that rise
                
                abruptly from the plain. The track runs through the rift in the hills beside
                
                the stream, and on to the foot of the Zagros pass and through the mountains
                
                into Elam. Road, river, and cliff form a striking combination, and not only
                
                Anu-banini but other monarchs who passed that way have left their records on
                
                the rock. One of these, on the further bank of the stream, was set there by
                
                another early Semitic king, whose sculpture was influenced by that of
                
            Anu-banini.[
        
          
          Among the
            
            various Semitic kingdoms and small principalities which were founded and
            
            endured for a time in this portion of Western Asia, that of Akkad won the preeminent
            
            place. In the mountainous regions to the east and north of Elam the immigrants
            
            doubtless dominated the country, but they found a population in a state of
            
            culture little more advanced than their own, and, if subject to no other
            
            influence, they must have remained in a condition of semi- barbarity. But in
            
            Babylonia the case was different. Here the vigorous nature of the nomad found a
            
            rich soil to support its growth and development. The ancient culture of the
            
            Sumerians was adopted by their conquerors, at whose hands it underwent a
            
            gradual change. The sculptor slowly freed himself from the stiff conventions of
            
            his Sumerian teachers, and, while borrowing their technical skill, he
            
            transformed the work of their hands. Such a cylinder-seal as that of Ibni-sharru,
            
            Shar-Ganni-sharri's scribe, with its design of kneeling heroes watering oxen,
            
            is a marvellous product of the engraver's art; while the delicate modelling of
            
            the figures upon Naram-Sin's stele, their natural attitudes, and the decorative
            
            arrangement of the composition as a whole, are not approached on any earlier
            
            monument. The later sculptures of Lagash owe much to the influence of Akkadian
            
            work.
            
          
        
          
          In the
            
            political sphere the Dynasty of Akkad attained a similar position. Not only did
            
            her kings secure the hegemony in Akkad and Sumer, but they pushed their
            
            influence beyond the limits of Babylonia, and consolidated an empire in the
            
            strict sense of the term. His rule over the four quarters of the world may have
            
            led Naram-Sin to add to his titles, and the growth of their power probably
            
            increased the tendency of these early monarchs to assume the attributes and
            
            privileges of gods. Of the kings of Kish we have evidence that some were
            
            deified, and the divine determinative is set before the name of
            
            Shar-Gani-sharri in two inscriptions that have come down to us. In nearly every
            
            text of Naram-Sin the determinative for deity precedes his name, and in some of
            
            the contemporary seal-inscriptions he is even termed "the god of
            
            Akkad". Under the later kings of Ur the cult of the reigning monarch was
            
            diligently practised, and his worship was continued after death. There is no
            
            evidence that this custom obtained among the earlier Sumerian kings and
            
            patesis, and we may with some confidence set its origin in this period of
            
            Semitic supremacy. That the kings of Akkad should have claimed divine honours
            
            during their own lifetime may probably be connected with the increase in their
            
            dominion, based upon conquests which extended from the Persian Gulf to the
            
            Mediterranean, and from Arabia to the mountains of Kurdistan.
            
          
        
           
          
        CHAPTER
          
          IX