Yes (Genesis ch.10).
The Assyrians were a settled, militaristic, Semitic Mesopotamian society.
Assyrians contributed for civilization- palaces, public buildings, roads, culture, administration,libraries, and weapon technology. The related link below is for citations. Assyrians, a semitic people also borrowed from other nations for its civilization as others have borrowed from Assyrians. It is great, like other nations.
Assyrians are an ethnic group indigenous to the Middle East, primarily associated with the regions of modern-day Iraq, Syria, Turkey, and Iran. They are descendants of the ancient Assyrian civilization and primarily identify as Semitic people, speaking Neo-Aramaic languages. Assyrians have a distinct cultural and religious identity, with many adhering to Christianity, particularly various Eastern Christian denominations.
Arabs are just one group of Semites. They have effectively replaced almost all other groups of Semites, but there do remain Assyrians, Babylonians, Chaldeans, Maronites, Jews, and other Semitic groups.
the Assyrians people rebelled against them
All ancient peoples, Semitic and non-Semitic, believed in some form of continued life after death. This has been shown all over the world, in ancient writings, burial-practices, art, etc. No one in the ancient world was completely secular. Rather, you might ask what the precise afterlife-beliefs were, among specific branches of the Semitic peoples (or others). Included among the Semites were the Assyrians, Elamites, Arameans, Lyddians, Arabs, Israelite Hebrews, Moabites, Ammonites, Edumeans and others.
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.