Nimrud: The Ancient Assyrian City

Efalon Acies · AI-narrated by Morgan (from Google)
Audiobook
1 hr 9 min
Unabridged
Eligible
AI-narrated
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About this audiobook

In the rolling hills of northern Mesopotamia, where the Tigris River carves its ancient path through landscapes that have witnessed the rise and fall of empires for millennia, stands the magnificent ruin of Nimrud, once known to the ancient world as Kalhu. This extraordinary city, which served as the political and military capital of the Neo-Assyrian Empire during its greatest expansion between 884 and 612 BCE, represents one of humanity's most ambitious attempts to create an imperial capital worthy of ruling the known world. The story of Nimrud is inseparable from the story of Assyrian imperial power, a tale of military conquest, administrative innovation, and cultural synthesis that created the largest empire the world had yet seen.

The transformation of a modest Iron Age settlement into the glittering capital of the Neo-Assyrian Empire began with the vision and ambition of Ashurnasirpal II, who ascended to the Assyrian throne in 883 BCE with dreams of expanding his kingdom far beyond its traditional heartland in northern Mesopotamia. The choice of Kalhu as his new capital reflected both strategic considerations and symbolic aspirations that would define Assyrian imperial ideology for the next three centuries. Located approximately 35 kilometers south of the traditional Assyrian capital at Ashur, Kalhu occupied a commanding position on the east bank of the Tigris River that provided access to river transportation while offering defensive advantages against potential enemies.

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