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1
The Babylonian "World Map"
and its Nar Marratum, "Bitter River,"
(7th-6th century B.C.)
New Site Proposals
Walter Reinhold Warttig Mattfeld y de la Torre, M.A. Ed.
22 October 2009 (Revisions through 08 September 2010)
Please click here for an earlier article on the Nar Marratum Map.
On 20 October 2009 while studying various maps of Iraq from the 19th through
20th century A.D. on the internet I stumbled across an "interpretative" drawing of
the famous "Babylonian World Map" which may date to the 6th century B.C. (The
Persian Period, when Persia bore rule over Babylonia after 539 BC).
Upon a careful study of this map it struck me that professional PhD scholars
were "perhaps" _wrong_ in their interpretation of the features on this ancient clay
tablet.
The Babylonian "World Map" map is highly schematized: A double circle
surrounds Babylon which appears on a rectangle in the center. This circle is
labeled in cuneiform the Nar Marratum, translated to mean nar= "river," (Arabic:
nahr= "river") marratum= "bitter" (Arabic: marah, myrrh, merra, murr, murrat also
mean "bitter").
The usual scholarly explanation is that this Circle-River is being called "bitter"
because it represents the Cosmic Ocean surrounding the earth which possesses
bitter saltwater. Hence the reason why some scholars alternately render the
"Bitter River" rather freely, the "Bitter Sea."
Surrounding the Circle-River ("Bitter River/Bitter Sea," or "Cosmic-River-Ocean")
are several triangles, sometimes interpreted as being "islands" beyond the "Bitter
Sea/Ocean" which encircles the land/world of Babylonia.
Several small ovals ringing Babylon within the Nar Marratum have been identified
as being cities.
To the SE of Babylon appears Deri, to the NE of Babylon is Asshur and Armenia,
to the NW of Babylon is Habban and to the SW of Babylon is Bit-Ya'kin ( bit=
"house" or "tribe" of Ya'kin" or Ja'kin).
2
Modern scholarly maps today place the region of Bit-Ya'kin (Bit-Jakin) as SE of
Babylon and E of the city of Ur and W of the Hor al Hammar Lagoon in Lower
Mesopotamia (modern Iraq).
As a result of my "research" on 20-23 October 2009 I find myself in agreement
with professional PhD scholars on the following identifications:
(1) I _agree_ that the city of Babylon appears on the rectangle in the middle of
the circle ring;
(2) I _agree_ that Babylon is shown as being on a river extending from the top to
the bottom of the ring-circle river or Nar Marratum.
(3) I _agree_ that the Ring-Circle is labeled the Nar Marratum.
(4) I _agree_ that Asshur is the city of Asshur in Assyria.
(5) I _agree_ that Armenia is the mountainolus area of Eastern Turkey.
It is my understanding that PhD scholars (Assyriologists) have for over 100 years
(since 1881) _misunderstood_ "some" of the features appearing on the
Babylonian "World Map," and that this moniker is a mislabeling of the map based
on the mistaken notion that the Bitter River is a "Saltwater-Cosmic-OceanStream" encircling the known world of the Babylonians. Some scholars tend to
suggest that the following bodies of water are "embraced" by the Nar Marratum:
(1) The Persian Gulf or "the Lower Sea (2) the Mediterranean Sea or "the Upper
Sea." Some suggest perhaps the northern part of the Nar Marratum includes the
Black Sea and or Caspian Sea.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------In opposition to 100 years of professional PhD scholarship I understand that the
Nar Marratum, "Bitter River" encircling Babylon is intended to represent the Tigris
and Euphrates Rivers which "encircle" Babylonia, Akkad and Sumer.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------For purposes of discussion I will break down this schematized map into sectors
and identify each sector with a geographical feature appearing on modern maps
of present day Iraq (I will be using maps from the 19th and 20th centuries A.D. as
not all maps have "all" the features on them needed to make the identifications)
Ring-Circle River (Labeled Nar Marratum, "Bitter River"):
East Sector of the Ring-Circle: May be that portion of the Tigris River called on
modern maps the Shatt al-Amarah extending north from Qurnah to the city of alAmarah and continuing WNW to the Kut al-Amarah due east of Babylon/Hillah.
3
North Sector of the Ring-Circle: The mountains N of Asshur (the city of Asshur on
the Tigris) and Armenia (Armenia in eastern Turkey) are where the Tigris and
Euphrates begin at their sources, completing the northern Ring-Circle.
West Sector of the Ring-Circle: Descending from the mountains of Armenia to
the vicinity of Habban and Falluja thence descending _to the west_ of Babylon
(this western sector of the Nar Marratum includes perhaps the ancient Abgal or
Pallukatu canal from Falluja which might preserve Pallukatu?). This stream
descends further to the S from Hor al-Habbaniyah to Bahr al-Milh, thence SE to
the Bahr Nedjef and its marshes, thence SE to as-Samawa/Samaua. This
completes the western part of the River-Circle.
South Sector of the Ring-Circle: From the Bahr Nedjif and its marshes to asSamaua and an-Nasiriya and the Hor al Hammar Lagoon and its marshes, the
circle completes its self at al Qurnah.
Cities or Regions "within" the Circle-River (Nar Marratum, Bitter River):
ESE of Babylon is Deri, which I propose might be Kalaat Deraji (1897 map ruin or
tell site), alternately rendered Durraji (1922 map)? It might also be further E in the
locality of ad-Dair between Qurna and Basra on the W bank of the Shatt al Arab?
ENE of Babylon, and _within_ the Circle-River is the Assyrian city of Asshur
which lies _within_ the Nar Marratum, on the west bank of the Tigris.
WNW of Babylon the city of Habban/Khabban may perhaps be identified with alHabbaniya and its nearby lake called Hor al-Habbaniyah, W of Baghdad.
I understand that Ring-Circle Nar Marattum has its name preserved today in the
Shatt al-Amarah due E of Babylon/Hillah which runs to the SE from Kut alAmarah to the city of al-Amarah north of al Qurna. The Shatt al-Amarah was
probably in antiquity the "border" between Babylonia and Elam (Elam being to
the east of this stream).
The Tigris/Shatt al Amarah is _not_ a "bitter river," so the river apparently (?)
took its name in antiquity from perhaps the site of Al Amarah, north of Qurna?
Neo-Assyrian texts (circa 694 BC) mentioning battles or engagements and the
pursual of defeated enemies "across the Bitter River" may be referring to the
Shatt al Amarah being crossed by fleeing marsh dwellers seeking sanctuary in
Elam whose plain extends to the eastside of the Shatt al-Amarah.
Roux (1966) on the 'Bitter River' being the border of Elam (I suspect that the
Shatt al-Amarah or Tigris is the Nar Marratum corruptly preserved in Arabic):
"...then in 694 B.C., under the pretext of capturing the Elamite cities 'on the other
side of the Bitter River', whither the people of Bit-Iakin had scattered before the
4
mighty weapon of Asshur..." (p. 321. George Roux. Ancient Iraq. Penguin Books.
1966, 1992, 3rd edition. paperback)
Bit Ya'kin is, in my opinion _incorrectly_ located on _all_ PhD scholarly maps.
These maps show Bit Ya'kin as SE of Babylon, and E of Ur and W of the Hor al
Hammar Lagoon. Why do I understand this is "wrong"? The Babylonian World
map reveals a river extending south of Babylon to connect at the Nar Marratum
Ring-Circle. I understand this river is the Shatt al Hillah and that Bit-Yakin on this
map is to the W of this river, _not_ to the E of the river.
I "suspect" but cannot "prove," that Bit-Ya'kin "may be" (?) preserved in two
Arabic names: (1) Tell Khanasar; and (2) the Shatt el Alkhan, a stream near Tell
Khanasar flowing SE from the Bahr Nedjef towards es-Samaua. That is to say
Bit-Ya'kin is _within_ the SW sector of the Bitter River circle map, _not_ the SE
sector of the map where scholars for over 100 years have located it.
The Babylonian clay tablet map shows a stream/river extending south from
Babylon to the ring-circle river, bisecting a river labeled "water stream marsh."
Maps of the 19th century reveal a great marsh once existed from Bahr Nedjef to
Samaua, thence past Uruk's south side to Ur and thence to the Hor al Hammar
east of an-Nasiriyah. I understand this clay tablet's "water stream marsh" is this
area from the Bahr Nedjef to Samaua and the marshes of the Hor al Hammar
and nearby Qurnah.
I understand that the river (two lines) extending south of the city of Babylon
(Babylon is the rectangle) is the Hilla/Euphrates channel on modern maps, it
bisects the marsh river (Euphrates) going W to E from Nedjef to Nasiriyah at asSamaua.
On the clay tablet map a "curious" quarter-of-an-arc" small river bisects the lower
half of Babylon's Hillah/Euphrates river and connects into the southside of the
Circle-River. I understand this curious "quarter-of-arc" river is the Shatt al Khar
draining into the Khor Husainiyah (map 1922) between Samaua and Nasiriyah as
it flows SE from the Hilla channel to the Khor Husainiyah. A small stream exists
the south side of the Khor Husainiyah linking it to the Euphrates (the clay tablet
map's south river-circle) just W of Nasiriyah (map 1922). Below: A photo of the
7th-6th century B.C. Babylonian "World Map" on a clay tablet with cuneiform
inscription:
5
6
Below, the same above map "interpreted" into English; said map being used by
myself to identify the ancient features with present-day geographical localities
and features on modern 19th-20th century maps of Iraq
(Special Note: the pictures in the below triangles are "whimsical renderings" of
the artist, only cuneiform text actually appears in these triangles as can be seen
by the above photo of the clay tablet map)
7
Below, this artist has left off the triangles bordering the Nar Marratum. Habban is
spelled Khabban and Bit Jakin is spelled Bit-Yakin, the "waterstream marsh" is
called a "water-swamp." (cf. p. 43. Emil G. Kraeling. Rand McNally Bible Atlas.
New York. Rand McNally Company. 1966)
Kraeling on the below map:
"This map is a Neo-Babylonian copy of a much older map. It dwells on the TigrisEuphrates countries and on points north, and ignores Syria and Egypt...Bit Yakin
is prominent near the mouth of the river...Upstream Der is mentioned...Khabban
or Bit Khabban is also named, but its exact location is not yet known and
references to it are scarce in the Babylonian texts. Assyria is named, too, but the
Tigris river is ignored. Around the disk-like earth runs the oceanic stream ("the
Bitter River"), and a bayou from it runs up at an angle to the Euphrates. The six
triangles extending out from the Bitter waters lead over to islands beyond the
oceanic stream." (p. 43. Kraeling)
8
Below, in place of the word "Armenia" on the above two maps is the word
"Urartu" (Neo-Assyrian for the kingdom of biblical Ararat). Eight triangles exist
instead of seven triangles on the above first map. "Asshur" has been replaced by
"Assyria" and "Deri" has been replaced by "Der." The "Water-Swamp" is now the
"Channel Lagoon." The quarter-circle arc river is labeled "marshes" instead of
"bitter" (cf. p. 53. fig. 46. "Cosmology." Jeremy Black & Anthony Green. Gods,
Demons and Symbols of Ancient Mesopotamia, An Illustrated Dictionary. London.
The British Museum Press. 1992)
9
Habban might be the town of al Habbaniyah W of Baghdad?
Asshur is perhaps the city (the nearby oval being a city) of Asshur on the Tigris
River (in the Nar Marratum's northern sector).
The mountains north of Habban/Khabban and Armenia may be the Armenian
mountains of eastern Turkey and the "source" of the Euphrates and Tigris (the
Nar Marratum), and, as these two rivers have their origins "near" each other, this
completes the northern circle of the Euphrates/Tigris Circle-River. The maps
shows the Euphrates stream Babylon is on as originating from the mountains
north of Asshur and Armenia.
Deri (Der) might be Kalaat Daraji SE of Babylon and near the Euphrates E of
Samaua and W of Nasiriyah. It too lies _inside_ the Ring-Circle of the Nar
Marratum (Others suggest Der, near Elam, south of Asshur, but this Der is E of
the Tigris, not W of the river as on the Babylonian Map).
The triangles are sometimes referred to as "islands" as scholars understand that
a world encircling Cosmic Ocean is being portrayed as the Nar Marratum. I
disagree. I understand that the triangles are intended to be mountains. The High
Plateau of the deserts on the W and S might be the "mountains" (foothills) in this
area which trap the Euphrates' waters into depressions creating wadies and
10
seasonal Sebkhas or Lakes extending from Habbaniyah southwards to Bahr
Nedjef thence to Samaua and Nasiriyah (The ancient Abgal later Pallukkatu
canal from Falluja above Sippar being the westernmost branch of the Euphrates
(the western sector of the Ring-Circle Nar Marratum, west of Babylon)..
Horowitz (1998) on the Babylonian World Map's "cosmic ocean" (the Nar
Marratum):
"The Babylonian Map of the World and the bilingual Creation of the World by
Marduk demonstrate that the Babylonians, at least, believed that a cosmic ocean
encircled the continental portion of the earth's surface. The most familiar parts of
this ocean were the Upper Sea (Mediterranean) and the Lower Sea (Persian Gulf,
Indian Ocean), but it is clear from the World Map that the cosmic ocean was also
believed to flow to the east of Babylonia beyond Iran, and to the mountains of
modern Turkey. The tradition of a northern part of the ocean may have been
influenced in part by the vague knowledge of the Black and Caspian Seas."
(p. 325. "The Sea." Wayne Horowitz. Mesopotamian Cosmic Geography.
Eisenbrauns. 1998)
Here's what Kraeling had to say about Habban/Khabban on the Babylonian
World Map in 1956 (I have his 1966 edition):
"Khabban or Bit Khabban is also named, but its exact location is not yet known
and references to it are scarce in the Babylonian texts." (p. 43. Kraeling)
Regretably, Kraeling does not offer an explanation for the site of "Armenia"
appearing on his Babylonian World Map.
The "first" appearance of Armenia in an ancient text that can be securely dated is
of the 6th century BC (circa 520 BC) Persian King Darius II who mentions Armina
as part of his empire in the Behistun rockface inscription in present day Iran.
Mellink on Armenia's first appearance in ancient texts that can be securely dated
(Behistun is in Iran, ancient Persia the inscription was incised in a cliff-face by the
Persian King Darius II in the 6th century BC):
"Armenia, a KJV translation of the Septuagint's Armenia in 2 Kings 19:37; Isaiah
37:38 (RSV Ararat). This is a later name of Urartu-Ararat. The name Armenia
(Armina) first occurs in the inscriptions at Behistun (section 6)."
(p. 227. Vol. 1. M. J. Mellink. "Armenia." George Arthur Butler. Editor. The
Interpreter's Dictionary of the Bible, An Illustrated Encyclopedia. New York &
Nashville. Abingdon Press. 1962)
Harley and Woodward (1987) on the Babylonian World Map's features:
11
"Despite the absence of a name, it is clear that the parallel lines running to and
from Babylon represent the river Euphrates. To the right of Babylon an oval
marks Assyria, and above it is apparently Urartu (Armenia). Several other cities
are marked by small circles; one near the trumpet-shaped sea, named "Fort of
the God," is probably Der (Badrah) at the foot of the Zagros Mountains. The
name Khabban to the upper left appears to denote an area of Elam southeast of
the Zagros, geographically out of place (it might be another town of the same
name otherwise unknown)."
(p. 112. Vol. 1. John Brian Harley & David Woodward. The History of
Cartography in Prehistoric, Ancient, and Medieval Europe and the Mediterranean.
University of Chicago. 1987)
Conclusions (23 October 2009):
"If" I am "right" that the Nar Marratum is the Euphrates and Tigris from its origins
in the mountains of Armenia to its end in the swamps extending from the Bahr
Nedjef to the Hor al Hammar Lagoon and marshes, and, "_if_"my site proposals
are "on the mark," a rewriting of texts on the Geography of Neo-Assyrian and
Neo-Babylonian Eras (The 9th-6th centuries BC) may be in store for the future as
most scholars "think" _incorrectly_, in my opinion, that Bit-Yakin (Bit-Jakin) is SE
of Babylon _contra_ the Babylonian World Map's placing this region to the SW of
Babylon. A whole "slew" of new sites may await (?) the archaeologist's spades as
they uncover the "missing world" of the Chaldean Tribes of the Bit Yakin (BitJakin), Bit-Dakkuri, Bit-Snilani, Bit-Shilani, Bit-Amukkani, Bit-Adini, Bit-Saala and
their capitals and villages in the marshes SW of Babylon. That is to say the NeoAssyrian's Kaldi (Chaldeans) may have been very close to Babylon "if" they
inhabitated the marshes and swamps in the SW sector below Babylon. Has this
SW sector been subjected yet to a thorough archaeological search for sites of
the 9th-6th centuries BC when they appear in Neo-Assyrian records? I note from
my personal study of archaeological sites appearing in Roaf's Atlas of
Mesopotamia (1990) that he shows practically _no_ ancient sites in the sector
SW of Babylon, almost all his sites are to the SE of Babylon (cf. Michael Roaf.
Cultural Atlas of Mesopotamia and the Ancient Near East. New York. Facts on
File. 1990).
Neo-Assyrian texts of the 9th-7th centuries BC speak of their victories in Lower
Mesopotamia and that their enemies flee their marsh hideouts to across "the
Bitter River" to Elam. This suggests for me that the "Bitter River" is the Tigris as
the Shatt al-Amarah (apparently Elam's western border). It makes "no sense," to
me, for the defeated marshland foes to be crossing a "Cosmic Ocean" to get to
Elam!
12
An eastern triangle the Babylonian World Map is described where the sun rises.
This makes sense if the triangle is the Zagros mountain range where the sun
would rise for someone viewing it from the Babylonian plain. Between Babylon
and this mountian range that the sun shines from is the Tigris as the Shatt alAmarah, the "Bitter River" or Nar Marratum, not a Cosmic Ocean-River. The
Babylonian World Map does not have a Tamtu Marratum ("Bitter Sea") between
Babylon and the sunrise mountain triangle of the east, its a Nar Marratum, a
"bitter river," (the Shatt al-Amarah).
A Triangle to the north is described as a region being in darkness. As the sun
rises in the east it moves southward to set in the west, the north side of a house
would witness darkness or no sunshine. So the northern mountains (triangles)
beyond the Nar Marratum are in darkness on their northern sides. Again, the
Tigris and Euphrates are south of these mountains and the Nar Marratum CircleRiver is also south of these triangle mountains.
The word for "sea" was usually tamtu, not nar. Nar means "river" and the only
_"nar"_ between Babylon and the triangle mountain to the east of Babylon is the
Nar Marratum, the Shatt al-Amarah (Tigris), a Cosmic Ocean-River or tamtu
does not exist between Babylon and the Zagros mountain range where the sun
rises.
If the Babylonian World Map's Habban/Khabban is modern al Habbaniya NW of
Babylon-Hilla, then the presence of Armenia (The Persian King Darius II's
"Armina" of ca. 522 BC) would appear to date this map to 6th century BC, the
early Persian period, sometime after 539 BC and the capture of Babylon by
Cyrus and the rule over the city and its region, Babylonia and Assyria, by his
successors.
The Nar Marratum map, _for me_, is concerned to show "the full extent" of the
two major rivers that watered Assyria and Babylonia, from their origins in the
mountains of Armenia to their eventual dissipation in the marshes of Lower
Mesopotamia, "the water-stream-marsh or water-swamp or channel-lagoon"
extending from the vicinity of Bahr Nedef and its marshes to the Hor al Hammar
marshes near Qurna.
This map, for me, is _not_ about a "Cosmic Ocean" encircling the World, the
Persians would have "known better;" they knew of Egypt, Canaan, Phoenicia,
Syria, the Greeks of Asia Minor, Elam, Media and their own country of Persia, yet
these nations do not appear. This map's concern, apparently, was to plot the
Tigris' and Euphrates' beginning in the mountains of Armenia, its encirclement of
Assyria and Babylonia, and its end in the marshes extending from Nedjef to
Qurna, which it does, remarkably well.
Below, a map showing the settlement of al Habbaniyah and a nearby lake
created by the Euphrates river called Hawr al Habbaniyah. The location of the
13
ancient city of Babylon is marked by a red dot. Compare the relative position of
Habban/Khabban on the 6th century BC Babylonian World Map with modern
Habbaniyah. Habbaniyah appears to be in the same relative location to the WNW
of ancient Babylon as the World Map's Habban/Khabban. If I am "right" that
Habbaniyah is Habban of the 6th century BC world map, then the Bitter River
near the site is probably the Euphrates not a Cosmic World Ocean River
embracing the Persian Gulf, Caspian, Mediterranean, and Black Seas as
proposed by PhD scholars for the past 100 years.
Below, a map showing Babylon as a red dot encircled by the Euphrates and
Tigris Rivers as portrayed on the 6th century BC Nar Marratum World Map. I
understand that Nar Marratum (nar= river, marratum= bitter) is preserved in
Arabic today at Al Amarah on the Tigris River and also at Al Kut, N of Al Amarah
(more properly Al Kut is actually called in Arabic Al Kut Al Amarah). The Nar
Marratum's Habban/Khabban I understand to be preserved in Arabic at Al
Habbaniyah ENE of Babylon (Red Dot). The modern highway encircling ancient
Babylonia follows the courses of the Tigris and Euphrates rivers which encircle
Babylon like the Nar Marratum.
14
Kraeling (1956) on Habban (Khabban) appearing on the Nar Marratum Map:
"Khabban or Bit Khabban is also named, but its exact location is not yet known
and references to it are scarce in the Babylonian texts."
(p. 43. "In the Beginning." Emil G. Kraeling. Rand McNally Bible Atlas. New York.
Rand McNally & Company. 1956, 1962, 1966)
Beitzel (1985), who understands Habban is an Iranian tribe and as Iran is east of
Babylon, he claims its position west of Babylon on the map is an "error":
"Habban, the homeland of a Kassite tribal group from Iran, is placed (wrongly) to
the west of Babylon."
(p. 197. "Ancient Mapmaking." Barry J. Beitzel. The Moody Atlas of Bible Lands.
Chicago. Moody Press. 1985)
Below, the Tigris River (east of ancient Babylon) is called the Shat el Amara
("bank of the el Amara"). It is my understanding that the Babylonian World Map's
Nar Marratum "Marratum River" has been preserved in Arabic as
15
Shat el Amara because Neo-Assyrian annals circa 694 BC mention marsh
dwellers fleeing Assyrian warriors by crossing the Nar Marratum/Bitter River to
seek refuge in Elam and Elam is east of the Shat el Amara river (Map of "Turkey
in Asia: Transcaucasia." The Royal Atlas of Modern Geography. Edinburgh &
London. William Blackwood & Sons. 1861).
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