Well the Assyrians were brutal when conquering armies. The Assyrians tended to be ruthless and kill mercilessly. That is probably what brought out the end of the Assyrian civilization--so many other civilizations hated Assyria that they teamed up against Assyria so that it would be conquered. They tended to kill the people they captured (after conquering the land), and did not rule very "nicely", either. They believed that ruling by brutal force was more effective.
Well the Assyrians were brutal when conquering armies. The Assyrians tended to be ruthless and kill mercilessly. That is probably what brought out the end of the Assyrian civilization--so many other civilizations hated Assyria that they teamed up against Assyria so that it would be conquered. They tended to kill the people they captured (after conquering the land), and did not rule very "nicely", either. They believed that ruling by brutal force was more effective.
Most Assyrians were farmers, but a significant minority were soldiers or servants. Smaller minorities had other occupations, such as iron forging and metallurgy, scribes, and nobility and political elite.
Well the Assyrians were brutal when conquering armies. The Assyrians tended to be ruthless and kill mercilessly. That is probably what brought out the end of the Assyrian civilization--so many other civilizations hated Assyria that they teamed up against Assyria so that it would be conquered. They tended to kill the people they captured (after conquering the land), and did not rule very "nicely", either. They believed that ruling by brutal force was more effective.
the Assyrians people rebelled against them
because the Assyrians had a poor army
because the Assyrians had a poor army
because the Assyrians had a poor army
The Chaldeans rebelled against the Assyrians.
The assyrians exiled the people they conquered out of their homelands or took them in as slaves.
The assyrians exiled the people they conquered out of their homelands or took them in as slaves.
NO. On the contrary, Assyrians were infamous for the barbaric way that they treated peoples that they were conquering and, once conquered, the Assyrians would move large sections of the population to other regions as part of a concrete policy in order to prevent rebellion. Most people had a very localized sense of identity. The current idea that you retain your culture and beliefs when you move from place to place did not exist at that time. As a result, forcibly deporting people also took away their identities and their gods, making them much less likely to rebel. The Assyrians did it to the Arameans, Phoenicians, Israelites, Hattis, Hurrians, and Urartu (who were in their conquest area).