An ancient language spoken by the Kassites.
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1The Babylonian was thus a compound of Sumerian, Semitic, and Kassite elements.
2The Kassite conquerors of Babylonia soon submitted to the influences of Babylonian civilisation.
3Some of the Kassite monarchs, however, showed a preference for Nippur.
4Ashur-dan inflicted a crushing defeat upon the second-last Kassite ruler.
5Thereafter the glory of the Kassite Dynasty passed away.
6The whole of Babylonia thus came under Kassite sway.
7He founded a new city called Lukhaia, and appears to have repulsed a Kassite raid.
8Babylonia was called Karduniash during the Kassite Dynasty.
9With the advent of the Kassite kings a new chapter opens in the history of Western Asia.
10But not until well on in the Kassite period did any of them attain prominence in Western Asia.
11The Kassites poured into the Babylonian plain, and Kassite kings ruled at Babylon for 576 years and a half.
12The Babylonian nobles meantime drove the Assyrian garrisons from their cities, and set on the throne the Kassite prince Adad-shum-utsur.
13The great Western Asiatic kingdoms at the time were the Hittite, the Mitannian, the Assyrian, and the Babylonian (Kassite).
14The Kassite conquest destroyed the Babylonian empire; Canaan was lost to it for ever, and eventually became a province of Egypt.
15The Kassite language added to the "Babel of tongues" among the common people, but was never used in inscriptions.
16Did they represent an advance-guard of the Kassite tribes, who eventually succeeded in establishing themselves as the Third Dynasty in Babylon?