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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: SCY-SHA |
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SEMIRAMIS (c. 800 B.C.) , a famous Assyrian princess, round whose personality a mass of legend has accumulated. It was not until 1910 that the researches of Professor Lehmann-Haupt of Berlin restored her to her rightful place in Babylonian-Assyrian history. The legends derived by Diodorus Siculus, Justin and others from Ctesias of Cnidus were completely disproved, and Semiramis had come to be treated as a purely legendary figure. The legends ran as follows: Semiramis was the daughter of the fish-goddess Atargatis
great
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original
work
Iran
inscriptions of Darius (Diod. Sic. ii. 3). Of this we already have evidence in Herodotus, who ascribes to her the banks that confined the Euphrates (i. 184) and knows her name as borne by a gate of Babylon (iii. 155). Various places in Media bore the name of Semiramis, but slightly changed, even in the middle ages, and the old name of Van was Shamiramagerd, Armenian tradition regarding her as its founder. These facts are partly to be explained by observing that, according to the legends, in her birth
Atargatis
great
bear out the view that she is primarily a form of Astarte, and so fittingly conceived as the great queen of Assyria.Professor Lehmann-Haupt, by putting together the results of archaeological discoveries, has arrived at the following conclusions. Semiramis is the Greek form of Sammuramat. She was probably a Babylonian (for it was she who imposed the Babylonian cult of Nebo or Nabu upon the Assyrian religion). A column discovered in 1909 describes her as " a woman of the palace of Samsi- Adad
See F. Lenormant, La Legende de Semiramis (1873) ; A. H. Sayce, " The Legend of Semiramis," in Hist. Rev. (January, 1888). End of Article: SEMIRAMIS (c. 800 B.C.) If you wish, you can link directly to this article.
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