Shi'nar. (country of two rivers). The ancient name of the great alluvial
tract, through which the Tigris and Euphrates pass, before reaching the sea --
the tract known, in later times, as Chaldaea or Babylonia. It was a plain
country, where brick had to be used for stone and slime for mortar. Gen_11:3. Among the cities were Babel (Babylon),
Erech or Orech (Orchoe), Calneh or Calno (probably, Niffer), and
Accad, the site of which is unknown. It may be suspected that Shinar was the
name by which the Hebrews originally knew the lower Mesopotamian country, where
they so long dwelt, and which Abraham brought with him, from "Ur of the
Chaldees."
Source:
Smith’s Bible Dictionary
Shinar
shī´nar (שׁנער, shin‛ar; Σεναάρ,
Senaár, Σεν(ν)αάρ, Sen(n)aár):
1. Identification
2. Possible Babylonian Form of the
Name
3. Sumerian and Other Equivalents
4. The Syriac Sen'ar
5. The Primitive Tongue of Shinar
6. Comparison with the Semitic Idiom
7. The Testimony of the Sculptures,
etc., to the Race
8. The Sumerians Probably in Shinar
before the Semites
9. The States of Shinar:
(1) Sippar
(2) Kes
(3) Babylon
(4) Nippur
(5) Adab
(6) Surippak
(7) Umma
(8) Erech
(9) Lagas
(10) Larsa
(11) Ur
(12) Eridu
(13) The Land of the Sea
(14) Nisin, Isin, or Karrak
(15) Upa or Upia (Opis)
(16) Other Well-known Cities
10. Shinar and Its Climate
11. Sculpture in Shinar
12. The First Nation to Use Writing in
Western Asia
13. The System Employed, with an
Example
1. Identification:
The name given, in the earliest Hebrew records, to
Babylonia, later called Babel, or the land of Babel (bābhel,'erec
bābhel). In Gen_10:10 it
is the district wherein lay Babel, Erech, Accad, and Calneh, cities which were
the “beginning” of Nimrod's kingdom. In Gen_11:2
Shinar is described as the land of the plain where migrants from the East
settled, and founded Babel, the city, and its great tower.
2. Possible Babylonian Form
of the Name:
Though sometimes identified with the Babylonian Šumer,
the connection of Shinar with that name is doubtful. The principal difficulty
lies in the fact that what might be regarded as the non-dialectical form šingar
(which would alone furnish a satisfactory basis of comparison) is not found,
and would, if existent, only apply to the southern portion of Babylonia. The
northern tract was called Akkad, after the name of its capital city (see
ACCAD). The Greek form Sen(n)aar shows that, at the time
the Septuagint translation was made, there was no tradition that the ‛ayin
was guttural, as the supposed Babylonian forms would lead us to expect. As the
Biblical form Shinar indicates the whole of Babylonia, it corresponds
with the native (Sumerian) Kingi-Ura, rendered “Sumer and Akkad,”
from which, by changing K into Sh (found in Sumerian), Shinar may
have been derived, but this explanation is not free from difficulties.
3. Sumerian and Other
Equivalents:
This two-fold designation, Kingi-Ura,
is that which is commonly used in the inscriptions of the earlier kings, though
it cannot then have indicated always the whole country, but only such parts of
it as acknowledged their overlordship. Later on the corresponding term seems to
have been Kar-Duniaš (“the territory of the god Duniaš,”
to all appearance a term introduced by the Kassite rulers). Nabonassar and his
successors seem to have contented themselves with the title “king of Babylon,”
rule in the city implying also the dominion over the whole country. Often,
however, the equivalent term for Babylonia is Ehi, probably
an abbreviation of Êridu, and here standing for the land belonging
to that sacred city - “the good city,” a type of Paradise, Babylonia being, in
fact, situated upon the êdinu, or “plain.” See EDEN.
4. The Syriac Sen'ar:
All these comparisons tend to show that the
Babylonian equivalent of Shinar is not any of the above, and as yet has not, in
fact, been found. This is also implied by the fact, that Sen'ar was used
in Syriac for the country around Bagdad, and in ancient times included (it may
be supposed) the plain upon which the ruins of Babylon stand. Sen'ar was
therefore in all probability an ancient Babylonian designation of the tract,
now lost, but regarded by the Hebrews as synonymous with Babylonia.
5. The Primitive Tongue of
Shinar:
From the inscriptions it would seem that the
primitive language of Shinar was not Semitic, but the agglutinative idiom now
named Sumerian - a tongue long regarded as Turanian, and having, it is thought,
Turko-Chinese affinities - gal, “to be,” Turkish ol-mak; ama
(ana), “mother,” Turkish ana; abba, “old man,” Turkish baba,
“father”; (h)ê, “house,” Turkish ev, etc. The
Chinese affinities seem less close, but the following may be quoted: a(y)a
“father,” Chinese ye (Amoy iâ); ge, “night,” Chinese
ye; gu, “to speak,” Chinese yu; shu, “hand,”
Chinese sheù; kin, “business,” Chinese kūng,
“work”; etc. Chinese and Turkish, however, have had time to pass through many
changes since Sumerian was current in Shinar. Many words of the Sumerian
language were borrowed by the Semitic Babylonians, and a few (like hēkal,
“temple,” Semitic (h)êgal, “great house”) entered the other
Semitic languages.
6. Comparison with the
Semitic Idiom:
Halevy's contention, that Sumerian is simply “an
allography” for the expression of Sera Babylonian, seems to be untenable, as
they differ not only in words, but also in grammar; moreover, Sumerian had a
dialect, called by the natives “woman's tongue.” For the rest, the principal
differences between Sumerian and Semitic Babylonian are: (1) post-positional
suffixes instead of prepositions; (2) verbs with long strings of prefixes and
infixes to express the persons and regimens, instead of a prefix and a suffix;
(3) compound words, both nouns and verbs, are common instead of being
exceedingly rare. Sumerian seems to have borrowed several words from Semitic
Babylonian.
7. The Testimony of the
Sculptures, Etc. To the Race:
Not only the language, but also the sculptures
which they have left, point to the probability that the earlier inhabitants of
Shinar belonged to a different race from the later. The Semites of Babylonia
were to all appearance thick-set and muscular, but the Sumerians,
notwithstanding the stumpy figures which their statues and bas-reliefs show,
seem to have been slim - in any case, their warriors, in the better basreliefs,
as well as the figures of the god Nin-Girsu (formerly known as “the god with
the firestick”), and the engraved cylinders, have this type. Moreover, the
sculptures and cylinder-seals show that certain classes - priests or the like -
were clean shaven, in marked contrast to Semitic usage elsewhere. Their
deities, however, always had hair and beard, implying that they came from a different,
though possibly related, stock. These deities were very numerous, and it is
noteworthy that, though those with Sumerian names may be counted by hundreds,
those with Semitic names are only to be reckoned by tens.
8. The Sumerians Probably
in Shinar Before the Semites:
Though there is no certain indication which race
entered Shinar first, it is to be noted that Nimrod, presumably Shinar's first
king and the founder of its great cities, was a son of Cush (Gen_10:8), and the name of Shinar seems to have
existed before the foundation of Babel (Babylon) and its tower (Gen_11:2). In the native sculptures, moreover,
the non-Semitic type precedes the Semitic; and in the inscriptions the
non-Semitic idiom precedes that of the Semitic tranlation. Everything points,
therefore, to the Sumerians having been in Babylonia before the Semitic
inhabitants.
9. The States of Shinar:
At the earliest period to which our records refer
the Sumerians of Shinar were divided into a number of small states, of which
the following may be regarded as the principal:
(1)
Sippar:
Sippar or Sippar-Aruru
(-Ya'ruru), possibly including Accad (Gen_10:10),
some distance Southwest of Bagdad. It is the modern ‛Abu-habbah,
“father of grain.” Though it seems to have fallen early under the dominion of
the Semites, it was at first Sumerian, as its native name, Zimbir, and
the ideographic writing thereof show. According to Berosus, who calls it Pantabiblion,
one of its earliest kings was Amelon or Amillarus, who reigned 13
sari, or 46,800 years. Later on came Evedoreschus, the native Enwe-duran-ki,
renowned as a priest favored by the gods. His descendants, if of pure race,
inherited the divine grace which he enjoyed. It is said to have been in Sippara
(Sippar) that Ut-napištim, the Babylonian Noah,
buried the records before entering the ark.
(2)
Kes:
About 18 miles North of Babylon lay Kěŝ,
now Oheimer - a foundation which seems to have preceded Babylon as the
capital of Shinar. Its early queen, Azag-Bau, is said to have
been the wife of a wine-merchant and to have reigned 100 years.
(3)
Babylon:
Babylon, for which see BABEL;
BABYLON. As one of its early kings, Berosus mentions Alorus, “the
shepherd of the people,” as having reigned for 10 sari, or 36,000 years. The
state of Babylon probably included Cuthah. (Tel Ibrahim), which
once had kings of its own, and possessed a special legend of the Creation.
Belonging to Babylon, also, was the renowned city Borsippa, now Birs, or
the Birs Nimroud, the traditional site of the Tower of Babel. See
BABEL, TOWER OF.
(4)
Nippur:
Some distance Southeast of Babylon lay Nippur
or Niffur, now Niffer (Noufar), identified by the rabbis
with the “Calneh” of Gen_10:10. It was
a place of considerable importance, and the seat of the worship of Enlil and
Ninlil, later, also, of their son Ninip and his spouse (see CALNEH). The
American excavations on this site have thrown a flood of light upon almost
every branch of Assyriological research.
(5)
Adab:
Adab, now called Bismaya,
the city of Mah̬, the goddess of reproduction. One of the earliest
rulers of Adab was seemingly called Lugal-dalu, of whom a fine
statue, discovered by the American explorers, exists. It was apparently
renowned as a necropolis.
(6)
Surippak:
South and a little West of Adab was Šurippak,
now Fara. This was the birthplace of the Babylonian Noah, Ut-napištim,
son of Opartes (Umbara-Tutu), a Chaldean of Larancha. The
coming of the Flood was revealed to Ut-napištim here.
(7)
Umma:
Practically East of Fara lay Umma or Gišuh̬
(or Giuh̬), now Jokha. This city was apparently of
considerable importance, and the traditional rival of Lagaš.
(8)
Erech:
South of Fara lay Unuga, Semitic Uruk,
the Biblical ERECH (which see), now Warka. Its most celebrated king,
after Gilgameš, was Lugal-zaggi-si, one of
the opponents of the rulers of Lagaš.
(9)
Lagas:
Some distance East of Warka was the
territory of Lagaš, now Tel-loh - a little state,
rather in accessible, but of considerable importance to the antiquarian, which
is a testimonial to the advance in civilization which it had made. Its kings
and viceroys were among the most renowned, though apparently unknown outside
their own domains. The most celebrated were the reformer Uru-ka-gina
and viceroy Gudêa, to whom many erections in the city were due.
(See Gudêa's remarkable statue in the Louvre.)
(10)
Larsa:
Somewhat to the Southeast of Warka lay Larsa,
the “Ellasar” of Gen_14:1 (which see).
This center of learning maintained its independence even after the other states
had been absorbed by Hammurabi and his dynasty into the Babylonian empire.
(11)
Ur:
To the Southeast of Warka and Senqara
lies the site of the ancient UR OF THE CHALDEES (which see) now Mugheir.
It was renowned for its temple to the moon, and for the kings known as the
dynasty of Ur: Sur-Engur, Dungi, Bûr-Sin,
Gimil-Sin, and Ibi-Sin.
(12)
Eridu:
South of the Ur lay Êridu, or, in
full, Guruduga, “the good city,” wherein, apparently, lay the earthly
Paradise. This is identified with the present ‛Abu-shahrein,
and was the seat of Ea or Enki, god of the sea and of fertilizing
streams. According to the tradition, it was there that the “dark vine” grew - a
type, seemingly, of the tree of life. The later kings of Babylon sometimes bear
the title “king of Êridu,” as though rulers of the domain of
Paradise.
(13)
The Land of the Sea:
The Land of the Sea (that
bordering on the Persian Gulf), in which, seemingly, the Chaldeans afterward
settled, seems to have played an important part in the early history of Shinar.
Berosus speaks of its king Ammenon, who reigned 12 sari, or
43,200 years, and in whose time the Musarus Oannes, or Annedotus,
arose out of the Persian Gulf. Like others referred to in the legends which
Berosus refers to, he was half-man and half-fish. It is thought that these
incidents, though evidently mythical, point to the introduction of civilization
into Babylonia, from this point. See also JONAH; JONAH, THE BOOK OF.
(14)
Nisin, Isin, or Karrak:
Nisin, Isin, or Karrak,
seat of the worship of Nin-Karraga, was also an important state
governed by its own kings.
(15)
Upe or Upia (Opis):
Upê or Upia, the Greek Opis,
apparently obtained renown at a very early date, its kings being given in the
great chronological list before those of Kis.
(16)
Other Well-Known Cities:
Other well-known cities,
possibly state-capitals, were Larak, Greek Laranche; Amarda,
one of the centers of the worship of Nergal; Ašnunna, a
province East of the present Bagdad; Dilmu, now Dailem; Nuru,
Ennigi, and Kakra, seemingly centers of the worship of Hadad; Tilmun,
at the head of the Persian Gulf, and including the island of Bahrein; the
province of Sabu; Šešeb or Bagdadu, possibly
the modern Bagdad; and several others.
10. Shinar and Its Climate:
Whether the country was in the same seemingly
uncared-for state in ancient times as at present is unknown; but one cannot
help admiring the courage of the original immigrants into such a district, for
example, as that of Lagaš. This, which belongs to the southern
region, is very inaccessible on account of the watercourses and marshes. Like
the whole of Shinar in general, it is more or less dried up in summer, and
unhealthy for Europeans. The alterations in the waterways, owing to changes in
the irrigation-channels, must then, as now, have hindered communication. Sharp
cold, with frost, succeeds the heat of summer, and from time to time
sand-storms sweep across the plain. Notwithstanding the destruction sometimes
wrought, the floods were always welcomed in consequence of the fruitfulness
which followed, and which was such as to make Babylonia one of the most fertile
tracts known.
11. Sculpture in Shinar:
The reference to the Sumerian sculptures in (7)
above will have shown that the inhabitants of the Plain of Shinar possessed an
art of no mean order and of some antiquity, even at the time when it first
presents itself to our notice. It is true that many specimens are crude and
uncouth, but this is probably due to the sculptors having been, often enough,
the slaves of their material. Their stones were frequently more or less
pebble-shaped, and they had neither the skill nor the tools to reduce them to
better proportions - moreover, reduction of bulk would have meant a diminution
of their importance. The broad, squat figures which they produced, however,
gave them bad models for their bas-reliefs, and it was long ere this defect was
removed, notwithstanding the superior work produced by their seal-engravers
during and after the 4th millennium BC.
12. The First Nation to Use
Writing in Western Asia:
But in all probability special renown will always
be attached to the non-Semitic inhabitants of Shinar as the inventors, or at
least the earliest users known to us, of the cuneiform script. It may be
objected that the system which they introduced was cumbersome and imperfect,
but they knew of nothing simpler, and modern Chinese, with which their script
has been compared, is far less practical. Briefly, the system may be described
as syllabic for the prefixes and suffixes, and ideographic for the roots. To
show this the following transcribed example will probably suffice:
13. The System Employed,
with an Example:
Ê nu-DU URU
nu-DIM, A house was not built, a city was not constructed;
URU nu-DIM ADAM,
nu-mun-GAR, A city was not constructed, a community he had
not founded;
ABZU nu-DU GURUDUGA
nu-DIM, The abyss was not built, Êridu was not
constructed;
Ê AZAGA DINGIRene
KI-DURA-bi nu-DIM, The holy house of the
gods, its seat was not constructed;
Šu-NIGIN KURKURAgi
AABBAama, The whole of the lands was sea.
The nominal and verbal roots of the above extract
from the bilingual account of the Creation are in capitals, and the pronominal
prefixes and suffixes, with a couple of lengthenings which determine the
pronunciations of the nouns, in small letters. This will not only give an idea
of the poetical form of the Sumerian legend of the Creation by Merodach and
Aruru, but also show how short and concise, as a language, was the speech of
Shinar, before Semitic supremacy.
Source:
International Standard Bible Encyclopedia
Shinar, The Land of
LXX. and Vulgate “Senaar;” in the inscriptions, “Shumir;” probably
identical with Babylonia or Southern Mesopotamia, extending almost to the
Persian Gulf. Here the tower of Babel was built (Gen_11:1-6),
and the city of Babylon. The name occurs later in Jewish history (Isa_11:11; Zec_5:11).
Shinar was apparently first peopled by Turanian tribes, who tilled the land and
made bricks and built cities. Then tribes of Semites invaded the land and
settled in it, and became its rulers. This was followed in course of time by an
Elamite invasion; from which the land was finally delivered by Khammurabi, the
son of Amarpel (“Amraphel, king of Shinar,” Gen_14:1),
who became the founder of the new empire of Chaldea. (See AMRAPHEL.)
Source:
Easton’s Bible Dictionary