Sippar
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Sippar (modern Tell Abu Habbah, Sumerian Zimbir "bird city") was an ancient Babylonian city on the east bank of the Euphrates, some 60 km north of Babylon.
It was divided into two parts, "Sippar of the Sun-god" and "Sippar of the goddess Anunit," the former of which was discovered by Hormuzd Rassam in 1881 at Abu-Habba, 16 miles southeast of Baghdad.
Sippar is called Sepharvaim in the Old Testament, which alludes to the two parts of the city by its dual form.
Two other Sippars are mentioned in inscriptions, one of them being "Sippar of Eden," which must have been an additional quarter of the city. It is possible that one of them should be identified with Agade or Akkad, the capital of the first Semitic Babylonian Empire.
The main god of the city was the Sun god, Utu (Shamash in Akkadian).
A large number of cuneiform tablets and other monuments have been found in the ruins of the temple of Shamash, which was called E-Babara by the Sumerians, Bit-Un by the Semites. This temple os thought to be the world's oldest bank, in operation until at least 1831 BC. [1]
Xisuthros, the "Chaldean Noah", is said by Berossus to have buried the records of the antediluvian world here--possibly because the name of Sippar was supposed to be connected with sipru, "a writing"--and according to Abydenus (Fr. 9) Nebuchadrezzar excavated a great reservoir in the neighbourhood. Here too was the Babylonian camp in the reign of Nabonidos.
Pliny (N.H. 6.30.123) mentions a sect, or school of Chaldeans called the Hippareni. It is often assumed that this name refers to Sippar (especially because the other two schools mentioned seem to be named after cities as well: the Orcheni, and the Borsippeni), but this is not universally accepted.[2]
- ^ Benjamin Bromberg (1942). "The Origin of Banking: Religious Finance in Babylonia". The Journal of Economic History 2 (1): 77–88.
- ^ "It is usually assumed that the Hippareni refers to Sippar (Ptolemy's Sippara), but even that requires proof, since the change of ‘s’ to ‘h’ is strange." —R. D. Barnett (1963). "Xenophon and the Wall of Media". The Journal of Hellenic Studies 83: 14.
- This article incorporates text from the Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition, a publication now in the public domain.