Site Navigation
Categories:
Assyria
History of Iraq
Civilizations
Former countries in the Middle East
Hebrew Bible places
Geography of Iraq
WikiProject Ancient Near East articles

Summary Of: Assyria

Assyria reduced to vassal states... Assyria then consisted of a number of city states and small... Assyria now faced the rising power of Babylon in the south... Assyria reduced to vassal states... Assyria reduced to vassal states... probably because the goods of Assyria were now being traded with the Babylonians... Assyria was ruled by... Assyria paid tribute to Hanilgalbat until Mitanni power collapsed from... to again make Assyria an independent and conquering power at the expense of... Another weak period for Assyria followed when Babylon revolted against Tukulti... and later even made Assyria tributary during the reigns of the Babylonian kings Melishipak II and Marduk... Babylon and Assyria began to vie for... Assyria had difficulties with keeping the trade routes open... Assyria had been a minor kingdom of northern Mesopotamia... Assyria became a great regional power... Assyria finally succumbed to the rise of the... The ancient people of Assyria spoke an Assyrian dialect of the... Achaemenid Assyria retained a separate identity for some time... Assyria and Babylonia contrasted... Assyria and Babylonia contrasted...

Encyclodia Page On: Assyria

These Are Links To Other Documents
Assyria (disambiguation) | History of the | Assyrian people | | Ancient Assyria | Aramaeans | Neo-Assyrian Empire | Achaemenid Assyria | Osroene | Roman Syria | Adiabene | Roman Assyria | Asuristan | Syriac Christianity | Nestorian Schism | Emirs of Mosul | Principality of Antioch | Ottoman Empire | Rise of nationalism | Assyrian Genocide | Assyrian diaspora | Independence movement | Simele massacre | Post-Saddam Iraq | Middle Bronze Age | Tigris | Assur | Akkadian | Arabic | Hebrew | Aramaic | Fertile Crescent | Egypt | Anatolia | term | Mesopotamia | Babylonia | Nineveh | Neo-Assyrian | Carduchian | Armenia | excavation to undermine | city walls | battering rams | engineers | Ancient
Mesopotamia
| Lion image on Ishtar Gate | Euphrates | Tigris | Sumer | Eridu | Kish | Uruk | Ur | Lagash | Nippur | Ngirsu | Elam | Susa | Akkadian Empire | Akkad | Mari | Amorites | Isin | Larsa | Babylonia | Babylon | Chaldea | Assur | Nimrud | Dur-Sharrukin | Nineveh | Hittites | Kassites | Hurrians | Mitanni | Chronology | Mesopotamia | Sumer | king list | Kings of Assyria | Kings of Babylon | Mythology | Enûma Elish | Gilgamesh | Assyro-Babylonian religion | Language | Sumerian | Elamite | Akkadian | Aramaic | Hurrian | Hittite | neolithic | Hassuna | Assur | Ashur | Shem | Tigris | Sumer | Akkad | Sargon the Great | barbarians | Gutian period | 3rd dynasty of Ur | Semitic | Zulilu | 1900 BC | Shalmaneser I | Anatolian | Cappadocia | Kanesh | Kültepe | 1920 BC | 1840 BC | 1798 BC | 1740 BC | oligarchy | eponym | Akkadian | Assur | Sumerian | ensi(k) | archons | consuls | Classical Antiquity | lot | Shamshi-Adad I | 1813 BC | 1791 BC | Amorite | Khabur river | Ishme-Dagan | Mari | Euphrates | Yasmah-Adad | Shubat-Enlil | Hammurabi | Babylon | vassal | Kassites | Hurrians | Assur | chronology of Babylonia and Assyria | Map of the Ancient Near East during the Amarna period, showing the great powers of the day: Egypt (green), Hatti (yellow), the Kassite kingdom of Babylon (purple), Assyria (grey), and Mitanni (red). Lighter areas show direct control, darker areas represent spheres of influence. The extent of the Achaean/Mycenaean civilization is shown in orange. | | Ancient Near East | Amarna period | Hatti | Kassite | Shamshi-Adad I | Ashur-uballit I | 15th century BC | Saushtatar | Mitanni | Hittite | Ashur-uballit I | 1365 BC | 1330 BC | Babylonia | Akhenaten | Egypt | Amarna letters | Kurigalzu | Military history of the Neo-Assyrian Empire | Adad-nirari I | Shalmaneser I | Kalhu | Carchemish | Tukulti-Ninurta I | Wikipedia | Assyrian eclipse | Assyrian eclipse | June 15 | 763 BC | Phrygians | Mushki | Amorite | Ashur-resh-ishi I | Nebuchadnezzar I | Tiglath-Pileser I | 1120 BC | Euphrates | Black Sea | Mediterranean | Phoenicia | Hittites | Hurrians | Kassites | Persian Gulf | Ashur | Tukulti-Ninurta I | Ashur | Nimrud | Nineveh | Tigris | Assyrian law | Map of the Neo-Assyrian Empire and its expansions. | | Neo-Assyrian Empire | Military history of the Neo-Assyrian Empire | Adad-nirari II | 911 BC | 612 BC | Babylonia | 25th dynasty Egypt | reforms | Tiglath-Pileser III | 745 | 727 BC | Assyro-Babylonian Chronicles | Hebrew Bible | neo-Babylonian | Chaldean dynasty | Nineveh | 612 BC | Akkadian language | Semitic languages | Aramaic language | Akkadian | Sumerian language | Art and architecture of Babylonia and Assyria | Relief from Assyrian capital of Dur Sharrukin, showing transport of Lebanese cedar (8th century BC) | | Dur Sharrukin | Nimrud | Khorsabad | Balawat | shedu | Nimrud lens | rock crystal | Austen Henry Layard | Iraq | Assyrian astronomy | Assyria (Persian province) | History of the Assyrian people | Assyriology | Imperial Aramaic | Seleucid | Judea | Biblical Aramaic | Syrian Desert | Nabataeans | Khuzestan | Mandaic | Classical historiographers | Chronicon | Ninus | Belus | Sardanapalus | Arbaces | Ptolemy's Canon | Nabonassar | Syriac Christianity | Assyrian people | Neo-Aramaic | modern discovery of Babylonia and Assyria | Nineveh | Ashurbanipal | cuneiform | Royal Asiatic Society | Assyriology | rediscovery of ancient Assyria | Assyrian nationalism | historical urban community sizes | | Wiktionary | Wikimedia Commons | Assyrian eclipse | Assyriology | Ancient Near East | Kings of Assyria | Military history of the Assyrian Empire | Assyria and Babylonia contrasted | Chronology of Babylonia and Assyria | Geography of Babylonia and Assyria | Social life in Babylonia and Assyria | Cuneiform script | v | d | Ancient Near East | ISBN 0520252667 | ISBN 1855321637 | OCLC | Parpola, Simo | Journal of Assyrian Academic Studies | ISBN 014012523X | The Might That Was Assyria | ISBN 0283989610 | ISBN 0531167410 | OCLC | Easton's Bible Dictionary | Categories | Assyria | History of Iraq | Civilizations | Former countries in the Middle East | Hebrew Bible places | Geography of Iraq | WikiProject Ancient Near East articles |
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Assyria".