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rdfs:comment | - The Babylonians were an ancient race of avians who came to Mobius aboard a spacecraft that came to be known as the Babylon Garden. Their descendants are known to include the Babylon Rogues.
- Babylonia was an Amorite state in Lower Mesopotamia (modern southern Iraq), with Babylon as its capital. Babylonia emerged when Hammurabi (fl. ca. 1728 – 1686 BC, short chronology) created an empire out of the territories of the former kingdoms of Sumer and Akkad. The Amorites being a Semitic people, Babylonia adopted the written Semitic Akkadian language for official use, and retained the Sumerian language for religious use, which by that time was no longer a spoken language. The Akkadian and Sumerian cultures played a major role in later Babylonian culture, and the region would remain an important cultural centre, even under outside rule.
- Au temps de Babylone [= Babylonians] / Harry W.F. Saggs.- Philippe Lebaud, 1998 [1995]
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Caption | - The Ishtar gate depicted in this image remains as a common symbol to the ancient city of Babylon.
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Features | - +50% Priest rejuvenation rate
+30% Stone mining
- Wall hit points doubled
Tower hit points doubled
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abstract | - The Babylonians were an ancient race of avians who came to Mobius aboard a spacecraft that came to be known as the Babylon Garden. Their descendants are known to include the Babylon Rogues.
- Babylonia was an Amorite state in Lower Mesopotamia (modern southern Iraq), with Babylon as its capital. Babylonia emerged when Hammurabi (fl. ca. 1728 – 1686 BC, short chronology) created an empire out of the territories of the former kingdoms of Sumer and Akkad. The Amorites being a Semitic people, Babylonia adopted the written Semitic Akkadian language for official use, and retained the Sumerian language for religious use, which by that time was no longer a spoken language. The Akkadian and Sumerian cultures played a major role in later Babylonian culture, and the region would remain an important cultural centre, even under outside rule.
- Au temps de Babylone [= Babylonians] / Harry W.F. Saggs.- Philippe Lebaud, 1998 [1995]
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