'Chaldea' (from Greek Χαλδαία, ''Chaldaia'';
Akkadian māt Kaldu),
[1][2] "the Chaldees" of the
KJV Old Testament, was a
Hellenistic designation for a part of
Babylonia, mainly around
Sumerian
Ur, which turned into an independent kingdom under the Chaldees. Known as "Ur of the Chaldees," it went on war campaigns against foreign dynasties ruling southern Mesopotamia, mainly the
Akkadians and the Babylonians. It turned into a Babylonian colony in the early days of
Hammurabi, but remained in a special position in relation to other cities ruled by Babylon in that region. One early such reference is to the impending sack of
Jerusalem by
Nebuchadnezzar II (
Habakkuk 1:6). The
Hebrew name for ancient Chaldeans was כשדים (''Kaśdim'').
The 11th dynasty of the
Kings of Babylon (
6th century BC) is conventionally known to historians as the
Chaldean Dynasty. Their kingdom in the southern portion of
Babylonia lay chiefly on the right bank of the Euphrates. Though the name came to be commonly used to refer to the whole of Mesopotamia, Chaldea proper was the vast plain in the south formed by the deposits of the
Euphrates and the
Tigris, extending to about four hundred miles along the course of these rivers, and about a hundred miles in average width.
The Land
Chaldea as the name of a country is used in two different senses. In the early period it was the name of a small territory in southern Babylonia extending along the northern and probably also the western shores of the Persian gulf. It is called in Assyrian ''mat Kaldi''—that is, "land of Chaldea"—but there is also used, apparently synonymously, the expression ''
mât Bit Yakin.'' It would appear that Bit Yakin was the chief or capital city of the land; and the king of Chaldea is also called the king of Bit Yakin, just as the kings of Babylonia are regularly styled simply king of Babylon, the capital city. In the same way, the Persian gulf was sometimes called "the Sea of Bit Yakin", besides "the Sea of the Land of Chaldea."
It is impossible to define narrowly the boundaries of this early land of Chaldea, and one may only locate it generally in the low, marshy, alluvial land about the estuaries of the Tigris and Euphrates, which then discharged their waters through separate mouths into the sea. In a later time, when the Chaldean people had burst their narrow bonds and obtained the ascendency over all Babylonia, they gave their name to the whole land of
Babylonia, which under the
Chaldean dynasty was called Chaldea.
The People
The ''Kaldu'' were a
Semitic people. They appear in the country of the sea-lands about the head of the Persian gulf at about the same time that the Arameans and the Sutu appeared in Babylonia. Though probably of Aramaean stock, they were differentiated from other Arameans due to their geographic location; and
Sennacherib, for example, is careful in his inscriptions to distinguish them. When they came to possess the whole land their name became synonymous with Babylonian, and, though conquerors, they were speedily assimilated to Babylonian culture.
The language of the Kaldu was
Babylonian, the same, save for slight peculiarities in sound and in characters, as the Assyrian language of Niniveh. In the late
Assyrian Empire, Babylonian ceased to be spoken, and
Aramaic took its place. One form of this widespread language is used in Daniel and Ezra.
The Chaldeans were traditional allies of the Elamites and Iranians in their struggle against the Assyrians.
[3]
History
Important Kaldu cities were ''Bit-Yâkin'' (the original homeland at the Persian Gulf), ''Bit-Dakuri, Bit-Adini, Bit-Amukkani'', and ''Bit-Shilani''.
King
Ukinzir (Greek: ''Chinzeros'') conquered Babylonia, ruling 731-729, but was again defeated by
Tiglath-Pileser III. During the reign of Tiglath-Pileser III (745-727), Babylonia sees significant influx of Kaldu settlers.
Merodach-Baladan of Bit-Yâkin gained the support of the
Elamites and was king of Babylonia several times between 721 and 710, being deposed by the Assyrians, but always succeeding in seizing the reins of power again. In 702, he once more campaigned against
Sennacherib before being finally defeated at
Kish. King
Mushezib-Marduk was king just before Sennacherib's sack of Babylon in
689 BC.
It was only under
Nabopolassar in 625 that the Kaldu attained lasting control over Babylon, after having defeated Assyria and Egypt at
Karchemish, founding the
Chaldean dynasty, which lasted until 539 and the rise of the
Achaemenid Empire.
When the Chaldean empire was absorbed into the Achaemenid, the name Chaldean lost its meaning as the name of a race of men, and came to be applied to a class. The Persians found the Chaldeans masters of reading and writing, and especially versed in all forms of incantation, in sorcery, witchcraft, and the magical arts.
Thus, in Greek, "Chaldean" came to acquire the meaning of "astrologer" (e.g. in
Strabo). In this sense it is also used in the
Book of Daniel (Dan. 1:4, 2:2ff.).
References
1. Ptolemy 5.19
2.
3. Chaldeans at Iranica, (Muhammad Dandamayev)
External links
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Jewish Encyclopedia: Chaldea
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Encyclopedia Britannica: Chaldea
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Study Light: Kasidy
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The Chaldean Church: The Christians in Iraq
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Magic of the Egyptians and Chaldeans