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SEMIRAMIS (c. 800 B.C.)

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Originally appearing in Volume V24, Page 617 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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SEMIRAMIS (c. 800 B.C.)  , a famous
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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
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history . The legends derived by Diodorus Siculus, Justin and others from
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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
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Atargatis (q.v.) of
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Ascalon in
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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
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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
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empire, erecting
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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
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forty-two years, she delivered up the
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kingdom to her son Ninyas, and disappeared, or, according to what seems to be the
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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
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Asia, the origin of which was forgotten or unknown (see Strabo xvi . I . 2) . Ultimately every stupendous
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work of antiquity by the Euphrates or in
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Iran seems to have been ascribed to her —even the
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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
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gate of Babylon (iii . 155) . Various places in
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Media
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bore the name of Semiramis, but slightly changed, even in the
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middle ages, and the old name of
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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
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Ishtar or
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Astarte . The same association of the fish and dove is found at
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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
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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
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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
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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-
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Adad, King of the
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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 . (
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January, 1888) .

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