'Babil' (
Arabic: بابل) is a province in
Iraq. It has an area of , with an estimated population of 1,751,900 people in
2003.
The provincial capital is the town of
al Hillah. The city
Al Musayyib and the ancient ruins of
Babylon (''Babil'', after which the region is named) are also in the province.
Before 1971 it was known as Hilla province.
[1]
The ancient city of Babylon in present-day Babil province was the capital of the Old Kingdom of Babylonia situated on the Euphrates River south of Baghdad in modern Iraq. The city was occupied from the 3rd millennium BC but became important early in the 2nd millennium under the kings of the First Dynasty of Babylon. The sixth king of this dynasty was
Hammurabi (1792-1750 BC) who made Babylon the capital of a vast empire and is best remembered for his code of laws. This period was brought to an end by the Hittites when in 1595 BC Babylon is sacked by
King Mursili I. The city then had a mixed history until the Neo-Babylonian Period of the 7th-6th centuries BC. It once again achieved pre-eminence when
Nebuchadnezzar II (605-562 BC) extended the Chaldean Empire over most of Western Asia. Babylon fell to Cyrus the Great of Persia in 539 BC; occupation continued in the Achaemenid Period. The city was taken by
Alexander the Great in 331 BC.
Recent DNA (
Y chromosome) studies conducted by the
National Geographic Magazine on the bones of ancient Babylonians and living people from Babil have shown that the modern peoples carry the same ancient Babylonian genetic material.
[1]
References
1. History: Mesopotamia