FIND OUT MORE. Western Asia and the Middle East 264–265
GATEWAY GUARDIAN 3
This is one of a pair of huge stone
figures that adorned the gateway of
the palace of Assyrian King Sargon II
(r. 722–705 BCE), at Khorsabad (now in
Iraq). They represented the might of
Assyria and guarded the palace.
WHERE WAS THE PROMISED LAND?
The Hebrews believed that God had promised them a home in Canaan. According to
the Bible, the prophet Moses led them to this land in around 1200 BCE. Later, in 922
BCE, the Hebrew kingdom of Canaan divided into two separate nations – Israel in the
north and Judah in the south. Judah would give its name to the Jewish people.
ASSYRIANS
The Assyrians lived in northern Mesopotamia. Their large empire, built
around 1400 BCE, was destroyed by the Sea Peoples. In 900 BCE, the
Assyrians conquered a new empire stretching from Egypt to the Persian
Gulf. It collapsed after the Babylonians and Medes attacked in 612 BCE.
HEBREWS
The Hebrews were shepherds and farmers in Canaan, at the eastern
end of the Mediterranean Sea. Sea Peoples also settled there.
Around 1020 BCE, the Hebrews conquered these peoples and
founded a powerful new kingdom, led by great kings. Saul was
the first king. He was succeeded by David, and then Solomon.
PRACTISING FOR WAR 3
This stone carving shows the
Assyrian King Ashurnasirpal II
and his soldiers practising combat
skills by hunting lions. It comes
from the king’s palace at Nimrud.
Bull’s legs and
body symbolized
strength
Wings of an eagle,
the most powerful
creature in the sky
Human head
represents
intelligence
Crown is
symbol of
power
King
Ashurnasirpal II
4 HEBREW PRISONERS
The Assyrians besieged
the town of Lachish, in
Judah, in 701 BCE. This
carving shows Jewish
prisoners being led away
by Assyria’s King
Sennacherib (r. 705–
681 BCE). The picture once
decorated the king’s palace
in the Assyrian city
of Nineveh.
Wheeled war
chariot copied
from Hittite
armies
Hebrews’ valuable
farm animals also
taken into captivity
HOW DID THE ASSYRIANS FIGHT THEIR BATTLES?
The first Assyrian soldiers were farmers, who left their
fields when called up to fight. But by around 740 BCE,
the Assyrian kings had developed fierce new
armies made up of captured
foreigners. They fought with
swords, spears, bows and
arrows, and battering rams.
They demanded tributes of
timber, metal, and horses
from weaker peoples.
Middle
Eastern
empires