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Encyclopedia Britannica



SEMIRAMIS (c. 800 B.C.)

This article appears in Volume V24, Page 617 of the Encyclopedia Britannica.

Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: SCY-SHA
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
  (q.v.) of Ascalon in Syria, and was miraculously preserved by doves, who fed her until she was found and brought up by Simmas, the royal shepherd. Afterwards she married Onnes, one of the generals of Ninus, who was so struck by her bravery at the capture of Bactra that he married her, after Onnes had committed suicide. Ninus died, and Semiramis, succeeding to his power, traversed all parts of the empire, erecting
great
  cities (especially Babylon) and stupendous monuments, or opening roads through savage mountains. She was unsuccessful only in an attack on India. At length, after a reign of
forty
 -two years, she delivered up the kingdom to her son Ninyas, and disappeared, or, according to what seems to be the
original
  form of the story, was turned into a dove and was thenceforth worshipped as a deity. The name of Semiramis came to be applied to various monuments in Western Asia, the origin of which was forgotten or unknown (see Strabo xvi. I. 2). Ultimately every stupendous
work
  of antiquity by the Euphrates or in
Iran
  seems to have been ascribed to her even the Behistun
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
  as well as in her disappearance from earth, Semiramis appears as a goddess, the daughter of the fish-goddess
Atargatis
 , and herself connected with the doves of Ishtar or Astarte. The same association of the fish and dove is found at Hierapolis (Bambyce, Mabbog), the
great
  temple at which, according to one legend, was founded by Semiramis (Lucian, De dea Syria, 14), where her statue was shown with a golden dove on her head (33, 39) The irresistible charms of Semiramis, her sexual excesses (which, however, belong only to the legends: there is no historical groundwork), and other features of the legend, all
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
 , King of the World, King of Assyria, .. . King of the Four Quarters of the World." Ninus was her son. The dedication of this column shows that Semiramis occupied a position of unique influence, lasting probably for more than one reign. She waged war against the Indo-Germanic Medes and the Chaldaeans. The legends probably have a Median origin. A popular etymology, which connected the name with the Assyrian summat, " dove," seems to have first started the identification of the historical Semiramis with the goddess Ishtar and her doves.
See F. Lenormant, La Legende de Semiramis (1873) ; A. H. Sayce, " The Legend of Semiramis," in Hist. Rev. (January, 1888).


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