In the eleventh century BC, the Aramaic / Hadd - Il - Aden / seized the throne of Babylon
The Arameans represent the third wave of Semitic migrations. They came from one of the regions of the Syrian Desert. In the beginning, they were nomadic nomads organized into tribes. They reached the upper regions of Mesopotamia, where we find them, in some density, settling first in Harran. Then, starting in the fourteenth century BC, they migrated to Syria, where they established urban colonies. However, they never completely expelled the ancient population, nor were they able to overwhelm them in numbers, nor did they ever establish a single state, but rather multiple kingdoms that might sometimes war.
Historical data indicate that the Aramaic presence, which was small and primitive since the end of the third millennium BC, then through the movement of the Golan tribes in the Levant, seems that the migratory tribes had a good place in the Levantine desert, all the way to the Euphrates and Mesopotamia.
“It has been proven to us from cuneiform writings dating back to the fourteenth century BC that people from the Aramaic lands of Suti settled in the vicinity of Damascus, and that Akhlamite tribes of the Aramaic element settled in areas south of the Euphrates near the Arabian Gulf” (3).
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