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@im_generous: Night Guard. The most scary Job. part 9 #relatable #everyone #usa #africa #scary
Generous
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Friday 23 January 2026 17:23:41 GMT
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Generous :
follow me
2026-01-23 17:25:26
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please Share
2026-01-23 17:25:18
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Generous :
Good evening guys 😊
2026-01-23 17:24:51
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2026-01-23 17:25:22
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Ashurbanipal was one of the last great rulers of the Neo-Assyrian Empire and is remembered as both a feared conqueror and a remarkable patron of knowledge. He was born around 685 BCE as the son of King Esarhaddon and grew up in the royal courts of Assyria, where he received an unusually advanced education for a Mesopotamian king. Unlike many rulers of his time, Ashurbanipal learned how to read and write cuneiform texts in Akkadian and Sumerian, studied religion, literature, omens, mathematics, and royal administration, and took great pride in being an educated monarch. He often described himself as a king who understood the wisdom of the scribes and the secrets of ancient tablets. Ashurbanipal became king of Assyria in 669 BCE after the death of his father. His accession was carefully planned because Esarhaddon wanted to avoid civil war between his sons. Ashurbanipal ruled Assyria itself while his brother Shamash-shum-ukin was placed on the throne of Babylon as a subordinate ruler. At first the arrangement appeared stable, but tensions slowly grew between the two brothers. Meanwhile Ashurbanipal continued expanding Assyrian power through a series of brutal military campaigns. He fought against Egypt, Elam, Arabian tribes, and several rebellious kingdoms across the Near East. One of his most famous victories came in Egypt, where Assyrian armies captured and sacked the ancient city of Thebes around 663 BCE, an event that shocked the ancient world and demonstrated the immense military strength of Assyria. The greatest internal crisis of Ashurbanipal’s reign began when his brother in Babylon rebelled against him around 652 BCE. Shamash-shum-ukin formed alliances with Elamites, Chaldeans, Arabs, and other enemies of Assyria in an attempt to overthrow Ashurbanipal. The war was long and devastating, but Ashurbanipal eventually emerged victorious after besieging Babylon for years. According to ancient records the city suffered famine and destruction before finally falling in 648 BCE. Shamash-shum-ukin likely died during the collapse of the rebellion, possibly by suicide as his palace burned. After defeating Babylon, Ashurbanipal turned his full attention toward Elam, Assyria’s long-time rival to the east. His campaigns against Elam were exceptionally harsh, and he eventually destroyed the Elamite capital of Susa. Assyrian inscriptions describe cities being burned, statues carried away, and entire regions devastated. These actions helped secure Assyrian dominance but also contributed to the empire’s reputation for extreme brutality. Despite his image as a ruthless conqueror, Ashurbanipal is equally famous for his cultural achievements. He established the great royal library at Nineveh, one of the most important collections of texts in the ancient world. Scribes gathered thousands of clay tablets from across Mesopotamia containing myths, epics, medical texts, religious rituals, astronomy, history, and scholarly works. Thanks to this library many ancient Mesopotamian texts survived into the modern era, including large portions of the Epic of Gilgamesh. Ashurbanipal considered the preservation of knowledge a royal duty and proudly recorded that he could read difficult ancient inscriptions that even many scribes no longer understood. Near the end of his reign the empire began showing signs of exhaustion after decades of war. Although Ashurbanipal maintained Assyrian dominance during his lifetime, constant campaigns weakened the state economically and politically. The exact date of his death is uncertain, but he likely died around 631 BCE. After his death the empire quickly descended into instability and succession struggles. Within less than twenty years the Neo-Assyrian Empire collapsed entirely after attacks by the Babylonians and Medes, and the great city of Nineveh fell in 612 BCE. Even so, Ashurbanipal remained one of the most significant figures of ancient Mesopotamian history. He represented Assyrians power
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