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Account of the fall of Babylon: Daniel 5
Cyrus was now reduced to great perplexity, as time went on and he made no progress against the place. In this distress either some one made the suggestion to him, or he bethought himself of a plan, which he proceeded to put in execution. He placed a portion of his army at the point where the river enters the city, and another body at the back of the place where it issues forth, with orders to march into the town by the bed of the stream, as soon as the water became shallow en
eyewitness of account of Babylon
Assyria possesses a vast number of great cities, whereof the most renowned and strongest at this time was Babylon, whither, after the fall of Nineveh, the seat of government had been removed. The following is a description of the place: The city stands on a broad plain, and is an exact square, a hundred and twenty furlongs in length each way, so that the entire circuit is four hundred and eighty furlongs. While such is its size, in magnificence there is no other city that app
Biblical archaeology
2. Then the archaeologists began to dig into the ruins of the Mesopotamian Valley. Oh, what a spade has done to Daniel! Great numbers of clay tablets and other ancient inscriptions were excavated among the ruins of the city along the Euphrates River and sent to the British Museum. There learned Assyriologists began to study them. Their published announcements and discoveries were amazing.
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