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Text:EBD:Accad

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The high land or [[Text:EBD:Mount (EBD)|mountains]], a [[Text:EBD:City (EBD)|city]] in the land of [[Text:EBD:Shinar, The Land of (EBD)|Shinar]]. It has been identified with the mounds of Akker Kuf, some 50 miles to the north of [[Text:EBD:Babylon (EBD)|Babylon]]; but this is doubtful. It was one of the cities of [[Text:EBD:Nimrod (EBD)|Nimrod]]'s kingdom (Ge 10:10). It stood close to the [[Text:EBD:Euphrates (EBD)|Euphrates]], opposite Sippara Sippara. (See [[Text:EBD:Sepharvaim (EBD)|SEPHARVAIM]].)
It is also the name of the country of which this city was the capital, namely, northern or upper Babylonia. The [[Text:EBD:wikipedia:Accadians|Accadians]] who came from the "mountains of the [[East (EBD)|east]]," where the [[Text:EBD:Ark (EBD)|ark]] rested, attained to a high degree of civilization. In the Babylonian inscriptions they are called "the black heads" and "the black faces," in contrast to "the white race" of [[Text:EBD:wikipedia:Semitic|Semitic]] descent. They invented the form of writing in pictorial hieroglyphics, and also the [[Wikipedia:cuneiform|cuneiform]] system, in which they wrote many books partly on [[Paper (EBD)|papyrus]] and partly on clay. The Semitic Babylonians ("the white race"), or, as some scholars think, first the [[Text:EBD:Cushite (EBD)|Cushites]], and afterwards, as a second immigration, the Semites, invaded and conquered this country; and then the Accadian language ceased to be a spoken language, although for the sake of its literary treasures it continued to be studied by the educated classes of Babylonia. A large portion of the [[Text:EBD:Nineveh (EBD)|Ninevite]] tablets brought to light by Oriental research consists of interlinear or parallel translations from Accadian into [[Text:EBD:Assyria (EBD)|Assyrian]]; and thus that long-forgotten language has been recovered by scholars. It belongs to the class of languages called [[Text:EBD:wikipedia:agglutinative|agglutinative]], common to the Tauranian race; i.e., it consists of words "glued together," without declension of conjugation. These tablets in a remarkable manner illustrate ancient history. Among other notable records, they contain an account of the [[Creation (EBD)|Creation]] which closely resembles that given in the book of [[Text:EBD:Genesis (EBD)|Genesis]], of the [[Text:EBD:Sabbath (EBD)|Sabbath]] as a [[Text:EBD:Day (EBD)|day]] of [[Text:EBD:Rest (EBD)|rest]], and of the [[Text:EBD:Deluge (EBD)|Deluge]] and its cause. (See BABYLON; [[Text:EBD:Chaldea (EBD)|CHALDEA]].)
{{returnto}} [[Easton's Bible Dictionary]]
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