
The Assyrian eclipse, also known as the Bur-Sagale eclipse, was a
solar eclipse
A solar eclipse occurs when the Moon passes between Earth and the Sun, thereby obscuring the view of the Sun from a small part of Earth, totally or partially. Such an alignment occurs approximately every six months, during the eclipse season i ...
recorded in
Assyrian eponym lists that most likely dates to the tenth year of the reign of king
Ashur-dan III. The eclipse is identified with the one that occurred on 15 June
763 BC in the
proleptic Julian calendar.
Historical account
The entry from Assyrian records is short and reads:
:"
ear ofBur-Sagale of
Guzana. Revolt in the city of
Assur. In the month
Simanu an eclipse of the sun took place."
The phrase used – ''
shamash
Shamash (Akkadian language, Akkadian: ''šamaš''), also known as Utu (Sumerian language, Sumerian: dutu "Sun") was the List of Mesopotamian deities, ancient Mesopotamian Solar deity, sun god. He was believed to see everything that happened in t ...
'' ("the sun") ''akallu'' ("bent", "twisted", "crooked", "distorted", "obscured") – has been interpreted as a reference to a solar eclipse since the first
decipherment of cuneiform in the mid 19th century.
The name ''Bur-Sagale'' (also rendered ''Bur-Saggile, Pur-Sagale'' or ''Par-Sagale'') is the name of the
limmu official in the
eponymous year.
Modern research
In 1867,
Henry Rawlinson identified the near-
total eclipse of 15 June 763 BC as the most likely candidate (the month ''Simanu'' corresponding to the May/June lunation), visible in northern Assyria just before noon.
This date has been widely accepted ever since; the identification is also substantiated by other astronomical observations from the same period.
This record is one of the crucial pieces of evidence that anchor the absolute
chronology of the ancient Near East for the Assyrian period.
Role in the Bible
The Bur-Sagale eclipse occurred over the Assyrian capital city of
Nineveh
Nineveh ( ; , ''URUNI.NU.A, Ninua''; , ''Nīnəwē''; , ''Nīnawā''; , ''Nīnwē''), was an ancient Assyrian city of Upper Mesopotamia, located in the modern-day city of Mosul (itself built out of the Assyrian town of Mepsila) in northern ...
in the middle of the reign of
Jeroboam II, who ruled
Israel
Israel, officially the State of Israel, is a country in West Asia. It Borders of Israel, shares borders with Lebanon to the north, Syria to the north-east, Jordan to the east, Egypt to the south-west, and the Mediterranean Sea to the west. Isr ...
from 786 to 746 B.C. According to 2 Kings 14:25, the prophet
Jonah
Jonah the son of Amittai or Jonas ( , ) is a Jewish prophet from Gath-hepher in the Northern Kingdom of Israel around the 8th century BCE according to the Hebrew Bible. He is the central figure of the Book of Jonah, one of the minor proph ...
lived and prophesied in Jeroboam's reign. The biblical scholar
Donald Wiseman has speculated that the eclipse took place around when Jonah arrived in Nineveh and urged the people to repent, otherwise the city would be destroyed. This would explain the dramatic repentance of the people of Nineveh as described in the
Book of Jonah
The Book of Jonah is one of the twelve minor prophets of the Nevi'im ("Prophets") in the Hebrew Bible, and an individual book in the Christian Old Testament where it has four chapters. The book tells of a Hebrew prophet named Jonah, son of Amitt ...
. Ancient cultures, including Assyria, viewed eclipses as omens of imminent destruction, and the empire was in chaos at this time, struggling with revolts, famines and two separate outbreaks of
plague.
This eclipse is also mentioned by the prophet
Amos. Amos was also preaching during the reign of Jeroboam II and refers to the eclipse in
Amos 5:8 & 8:5,9.
In these passages Amos uses the eclipse as a prophecy of doom, and exhorts
Judeans to repentance.
See also
*
Chronology of the ancient Near East
*
Akitu
*
Historical astronomy
*
Eclipse of Thales
The eclipse of Thales was a solar eclipse in the early 6th century BC that was, according to the ancient Greek historian Herodotus (writing about 150 years later), accurately predicted by the Greek philosopher Thales of Miletus. If Herodotus' acc ...
*
Mursili's eclipse
References
External links
Path map of eclipses 780–761 BCE(NASA) – Includes total eclipse of June 15, 763 BC (labeled -0762 June 15)
Path map of eclipses 800–781 BCE(NASA) – includes annular eclipse of June 24, 791 BC (labeled -0790 June 24)
Five Millennium (-1999 to +3000) Canon of Solar Eclipses Database– maps the visibility of the total solar eclipse of June 15, 763 BC.
Five Millennium (-1999 to +3000) Canon of Solar Eclipses Database– maps the visibility of the annular solar eclipse of June 24, 791 BC.
{{Coord, 35, 27, N, 43, 16, E, source:enwiki-plaintext-parser, display=title
Chronology
Solar eclipses
Ancient astronomy
Eclipse
An eclipse is an astronomical event which occurs when an astronomical object or spacecraft is temporarily obscured, by passing into the shadow of another body or by having another body pass between it and the viewer. This alignment of three ...
760s BC
Nineveh