destruction of Babylon

E577112

The destruction of Babylon was the brutal 689 BCE sack and razing of the ancient Mesopotamian city by the Assyrian king Sennacherib, marking a notorious episode of imperial violence in Near Eastern history.

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Label Occurrences
destruction of Babylon canonical 1

How this entity was disambiguated

Statements (48)

Predicate Object
instanceOf historical event
razing of a city
sack of a city
siege
appliesToJurisdiction Babylonia NERFINISHED
chronologyWithin late 8th century BCE Near Eastern history
conflictType imperial suppression of revolt
contributedTo long-term Assyro-Babylonian hostility
country Neo-Assyrian Empire NERFINISHED
describedBySource Assyrian royal inscriptions of Sennacherib NERFINISHED
classical historiography on Mesopotamia
later Babylonian chronicles
followedBy Assyrian policy of reconciliation with Babylonia
rebuilding of Babylon under Esarhaddon
follows Babylonian revolt of 689 BCE NERFINISHED
earlier Assyrian campaigns in Babylonia
hasAggressor Neo-Assyrian Empire NERFINISHED
hasCause Babylonian revolt against Assyrian rule
conflict between Assyria and Babylonia
hasCommander Sennacherib NERFINISHED
hasDefender Babylonian forces
hasEffect damage to Sennacherib’s reputation among Babylonians
demolition of city walls of Babylon
depopulation of Babylon
destruction of Babylonian temples
devastation of Babylonia
intensification of Babylonian hatred of Assyria
religious scandal in Mesopotamia
hasHistoricalRegion ancient Near East NERFINISHED
hasLanguageOfSources Akkadian
Sumerian (literary tradition)
later Greek sources
hasPlace Babylon NERFINISHED
Mesopotamia NERFINISHED
southern Mesopotamia NERFINISHED
mainSubject Babylon NERFINISHED
notableFor extreme level of urban destruction
infamy in Near Eastern historical memory
razing of religious monuments
symbolic attack on Babylon’s religious status
participant Babylonia NERFINISHED
Babylonian rebels
Neo-Assyrian Empire NERFINISHED
Sennacherib NERFINISHED
partOf Assyro-Babylonian conflicts
history of Babylonia
history of the Neo-Assyrian Empire
pointInTime 689 BCE

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Referenced by (1)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Sennacherib knownFor destruction of Babylon