Sargon I of Akkad

Sargon is the great teacher who taught early
mankind how to build an empire.
SARGON OF AKKAD was an ancient Mesopotamian ruler who reigned approximately 2334-2279 BC, and was one of the earliest of the world's great empire builders, conquering all of southern Mesopotamia as well as parts of Syria, Anatolia, and Elam (western Iran). He established the region's first Semitic dynasty and was considered the founder of the Mesopotamian military tradition.
Sargon filtered into Sumer from an area north of Sumer that was known as Akkad. This area was inhabited by a group of people called the Semites. The Semites came into Mesopotamia and absorbed the culture there. Around 2350 B.C. Sargon conquered Sumer. He would continue his conquest and end up conquering an area that covered the area between the Persian Gulf and the Mediterranean Sea.

Sargon is known almost
entirely from the legends and tales that followed his reputation through
2,000years of cuneiform Mesopotamian history, and not from documents that were
written during his lifetime. The lack of contemporary record is explained
by the fact that the capital city of Agade, which he built, has never been
located and excavated. It was destroyed at the end of the dynasty that Sargon founded
and was never again inhabited, at least under the name of Agade.
According to a folktale,
Sargon was a self-made man of humble origins; a gardener, having
found him as a baby floating in a basket on the river, brought him up in his own
calling. His father is unknown; his own name during his childhood is also
unknown; his mother is said to have been a priestess in a town on the middle
Euphrates. Rising, therefore, without the help of influential relations, he
attained the post of cupbearer to the ruler of the city of Kish, in the north of
the ancient land of Sumer. The event that brought him to supremacy was the
defeat of Lugalzaggisi of Uruk (biblical Erech, in central Sumer). Lugalzaggisi
had already united the city-states of Sumer by defeating each in turn and
claimed to rule the lands not only of the Sumerian city-states but also those as
far west as the Mediterranean. Thus, Sargon became king over all of southern
Mesopotamia, the first great ruler for whom, rather than Sumerian, the Semitic
tongue known as Akkadian was natural from birth, although some earlier kings
with Semitic names are recorded in the Sumerian king list. Victory was ensured,
however, only by numerous battles, since each city hoped to regain its
independence from Lugalzaggisi without submitting to the new overlord. It may
have been before these exploits, when he was gathering followers and an army,
that Sargon named himself Sharru-kin ("Rightful King") in support of
an accession not achieved in an old-established city through hereditary succession.
Historical records are still so meager, however, that there is a complete gap in
information relating to this period.
Not content with dominating this area, his wish to secure favorable trade with Agade throughout the known world, together with an energetic temperament, led Sargon to defeat cities along the middle Euphrates to northern Syria and the silver-rich mountains of southern Anatolia. He also dominated Susa, capital city of the Elamites, in the Zagros Mountains of western Iran, where the only truly contemporary record of his reign has beenuncovered. Such was his fame that some merchants in an Anatolian city, probably in central Turkey, begged him to intervene in a local quarrel, and, according to the legend, Sargon, with a band of warriors, made a fabulous journey to the still-unlocated city of Burushanda (Purshahanda), at the end of which little more than his appearance was needed to settle the dispute.
As the result of Sargon's
military prowess and ability to organize, as well as of the legacy of the
Sumerian city-states that he had inherited by conquest and of previously
existing trade of the old Sumerian city-states with other countries,
commercial connections flourished with the Indus Valley, the coast of Oman, the
islands and shores of the Persian Gulf, the lapis lazuli mines of Badakhshan,
the cedars of Lebanon, the silver-rich Taurus Mountains, Cappadocia, Crete, and
perhaps even Greece.
During Sargon's rule Akkadian
became adapted to the script that previously had been used in the Sumerian
language, and the new spirit of calligraphy that is visible upon the clay
tablets of this dynasty is also clearly seen on contemporary cylinder seals,
with their beautifully arranged and executed scenes of mythology and festive
life. Even if this new artistic feeling is not necessarily to be attributed
directly to the personal influence of Sargon, it shows that, in his newcapital, military and economic values were not alone important.
Because contemporary record is
lacking, no sequence can be given for the events of his reign. Neither the
number
of years during which he lived nor the point in time at which he ruled can be
fixed exactly; 2334 BC is now given as a date on which to hang the beginning of
the dynasty of Agade, and, according to the Sumerian king list, hewas king for
56 years.
2334 BC is now given as adate
on which to hang the beginning of the dynasty of Agade, and, according to the
Sumerian king list, he was king for 56 years.
The latter part of his reign was troubled with rebellions, which later literature ascribes, predictably enough, to sacrilegious acts that he is supposed to have committed; but this can be discounted as the standard cause assigned to all disasters by Sumerians and Akkadians alike. The troubles, in fact, were probably caused by the inability of one man, however energetic, to control so vast an empire without a developed and well-tried administration. There is no evidence to suggest that he was particularly harsh, nor that the Sumerians disliked him for being a Semite. The empire did not collapse totally, for Sargon's successors were able to control their legacy, and later generations thought of him as being perhaps the greatest name in their history.
Attributing his success
to the patronage of the goddess Ishtar, in whose honor Agade was erected,
Sargon of Akkad became the first great empire builder. Two later
Assyrian kings were named in his honor. Although the briefly recorded
information of his predecessor Lugalzaggisi shows that expansion beyond the
Sumerian homeland had already begun, later Mesopotamians looked to Sargon as the
founder of the military tradition that runs through the history of their people.
THE LEGEND OF SARGON
[Ancient Near Eastern Texts 119]
Sargon, the mighty king, king of Agade, am I.
MY mother was a changeling1, my father I knew not.
The brother(s) of my father loved the hills.
My city is Azupiranu, which is situated on the banks of
the Euphrates.
My changeling mother
conceived me, in secret she bore me.
She set me in a basket of rushes, with bitumen she
sealed
My lid.
She cast me into the river which rose not (over) me,
The river bore me up and carried me to Akki, the
drawer of water.
Akki, the drawer of water lifted me out as he
dippedhis
e[w]er.
Akki, the drawer of water, [took me] as his son
(and) reared me.
Akki, the drawer of water, appointed me as hisgardener,
While I was a gardener, Ishtar granted me (her) love,
And for four and [ ... ] years I exercised kingship,
The black-headed [people] I ruled, I gov[erned];
Mighty [moun]tains with chip-axes of bronze I
conquered
The upper ranges I scaled,
The lower ranges I traversed,
The sea lands three times I circled.
Dilmun my hand captured,
[To] the great Der I [went up], I [. . . ],
[ . . . ] I altered and [. . .].
Whatever king may come up after me,
[. . .]
Let him rule, let him govern the black-headed
people;
Let him conquer mighty mountains with chip-axes
of bronze,
[Let] him scale the upper ranges,
[Let him traverse the lower ranges],
Let him circle the sea [lan]ds three times!
[Dilmun let his hand capture],
Let him go up [to] the great Der and [. . . ]!
[. . .] from my city, Aga[de ... ]
[. . . ] . . . [. . .].
(Remainder broken away.)
Source:
From: George A. Barton, Archaeologyand
The Bible, 3rd Ed.,(Philadelphia: American Sunday-School Union, 1920), p.
310.
Scanned by: J. S.
Arkenberg,Dept. of History, Cal. State Fullerton. Prof. Arkenberg has
modernized thetext.
See other links of Sargon:
Sargon The Great
Sargon, king of Assyria. The
ColumbiaEncyclopedia, Sixth Edition
Sargon of Akkad