endured. She consoled herself for her actual
servitude by her habitual simulation of independence;
she called Assur-bani-pal Kandalanu, and this new name
allowed her to fancy she had a separate king, distinct
from the King of Assyria. Elam no longer existed.
Its plains and marsh lands were doubtless occupied
by Assyrian garrisons, and formed an ill-defined annexation
to Nineveh; the mountain tribes retained their autonomy,
and although still a source of annoyance to their
neighbours by their raids or sudden incursions, they
no longer constituted a real danger to the state:
if there still remained some independent Elamite states,
Elam itself, the most ancient, except Babylon, of
all the Asiatic kingdoms, was erased from the map
of the world. The memories of her actual history
were soon effaced, or were relegated to the region
of legend, where the fabulous Memnon supplanted in
the memory of men those lines of hardy conquerors
who had levied tribute from Syria in the day when Nineveh
was still an obscure provincial town. Assyria
alone remained, enthroned on the ruins of the past,
and her dominion seemed established for all time;
yet, on closer investigation, indications were not
wanting of the cruel sufferings that she also had
endured. Once again, as after the wars of Tiglath-pileser
I. and those of Assur-nazir-pal and Shalmaneser III.,
her chiefs had overtaxed her powers by a long series
of unremitting wars against vigorous foes. Doubtless
the countries comprised within her wide empire furnished
her with a more ample revenue and less restricted
resources than had been at the command of the little
province of ancient days, which had been bounded by
the Khabur and the Zab, and lay on the two banks of
the middle course of the Tigris; but, on the other
hand, the adversaries against whom she had measured
her forces, and whom she had overthrown, were more
important and of far greater strength than her former
rivals. She had paid dearly for humiliating Egypt
and laying Babylon in the dust. As soon as Babylon
was overthrown, she had, without pausing to take breath,
joined issue with Elam, and had only succeeded in
triumphing over it by drawing upon her resources to
the utmost during many years: when the struggle
was over, she realised to what an extent she had been
weakened by so lavish an outpouring of the blood of
her citizens. The Babylonian and Elamite recruits
whom she incorporated into her army after each of
her military expeditions, more or less compensated
for the void which victory itself had caused in her
population and her troops; but the fidelity of these
vanquished foes of yesterday, still smarting from
their defeat, could not be relied on, and the entire
assimilation of their children to their conquerors
was the work of at least one or two generations.
Assyria, therefore, was on the eve of one of those
periods of exhaustion which had so often enfeebled
her national vitality and imperilled her very existence.
On each previous occasion she had, it is true, recovered