Page:A History of Art in Chaldæa & Assyria Vol 1.djvu/21

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IN CHALD^A AND ASSYRIA CHAPTER I. THE GENERAL CHARACTERISTICS OF CHALD/EO- ASSYRIAN CIVILIZATION. i. Situation and Boundaries of Chaldcea and Assyria. THE primitive civilization of Chaldsea, like that of Egypt, was cradled in the lower districts of a great alluvial basin, in which the soil was stolen from the sea by long continued deposits of river mud. In the valley of the Tigris and Euphrates, as in that of the Nile, it was in the great plains near the ocean that the inhabitants first emerged from barbarism and organized a civil life. As the ages passed away, this culture slowly mounted the streams, and, as Memphis was older by many centuries than Thebes, in dignity if not in actual existence, so Ur and Larsam were older than Babylon, and Babylon than Nineveh. The manners and beliefs, the arts and the written characters of Egypt were carried into the farthest recesses of Ethiopia, partly by commerce but still more by military invasion ; so too Chaldaic civilization made itself felt at vast distances from its birth-place, even in the cold valleys and snowy plateaux of Armenia, in districts which are separated by ten degrees of latitude from the burning shores where the fish god Cannes showed himself to the rude fathers of the race, and taught them " such things as contribute B