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  2. Assyrian conquest of Egypt - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Assyrian_conquest_of_Egypt

    The city itself was conquered "smashed (as if by) a floodstorm" and heavily plundered, in the Sack of Thebes. [29] The event is not mentioned in Egyptian sources but is known from the Assyrian annals, [ 30 ] which report that the inhabitants were deported.

  3. Sack of Thebes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sack_of_Thebes

    The sack of Thebes took place in 663 BC in the city of Thebes at the hands of the Neo-Assyrian Empire under king Ashurbanipal, then at war with the Kushite Twenty-fifth Dynasty of Egypt under Tantamani, during the Assyrian conquest of Egypt. After a long struggle for the control of the Levant which had started in 705 BC, the Kushites had ...

  4. History of the Assyrians - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_Assyrians

    A giant lamassu from the royal palace of the Neo-Assyrian king Sargon II (r. 722–705 BC) at Dur-Sharrukin The history of the Assyrians encompasses nearly five millennia, covering the history of the ancient Mesopotamian civilization of Assyria, including its territory, culture and people, as well as the later history of the Assyrian people after the fall of the Neo-Assyrian Empire in 609 BC.

  5. Battle of Carchemish - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Carchemish

    When Harran was captured by the alliance in 609 BC, [7] ending the Assyrian Empire, remnants of the Assyrian army joined Carchemish, a city under Egyptian rule, on the Euphrates. Egypt, a former vassal of Assyria, was allied with Assyrian King Ashur-uballit II and marched in 609 BC to his aid against the Babylonians. [8]

  6. Fall of Ashdod - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fall_of_Ashdod

    The Fall of Ashdod was the successful Egyptian assault on the city of Ashdod, one of the five cities of the famed Philistine pentapolis, located in southwestern Canaan, about 655 BC. [3] According to the Greek historian Herodotus, pharaoh Psamtik I besieged Ashdod for 29 years. Ashdod had lost most of its inhabitants during those long years of ...

  7. Middle Assyrian Empire - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Middle_Assyrian_Empire

    Amarna letter EA 15, a royal letter sent by Ashur-uballit I of Assyria (r. c. 1363–1328 BC) to Akhenaten of Egypt (r. c. 1353–1336) Assyria became an independent territorial state under Ashur-uballit I c. 1363 BC, having previously been under the suzerainty of the Mitanni kingdom. [1]

  8. Late Bronze Age collapse - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Late_Bronze_Age_collapse

    The Arameans, together with the Phoenicians and the Syro-Hittite states, came to dominate most of the region demographically; however, these people, and the Levant in general, were also conquered and dominated politically and militarily by the Middle Assyrian Empire until Assyria's withdrawal in the late 11th century BC, although the Assyrians ...

  9. Battle of Nineveh (612 BC) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Nineveh_(612_BC)

    The Battle of Nineveh, also called the fall of Nineveh is conventionally dated between 613 and 611 BC, with 612 BC being the most supported date. After Assyrian defeat at the battle of Assur, an allied army which combined the forces of Medes and the Babylonians besieged Nineveh and sacked 750 hectares of what was, at that time, one of the greatest cities in the world.