Chaldea
more correctly Chaldae’a, the ancient name of a country of Asia bordering on the Persian Gulf. Chaldea proper was the southern
part of Babylonia, and is used in Scripture to signify that vast alluvial plain which has been formed by the deposits of the
Euphrates and the Tigris. This extraordinary flat, unbroken except by the works of man, extends a distance of 400 miles along
the course of the rivers, and is on an average about 100 miles in width. In addition to natural advantages these plains were
nourished by a complicated system of canals, and vegetation flourished bountifully. It is said to be the only country in the
world where wheat grows wild. Herodotus declared (i. 193) that grain commonly returned two hundred fold to the sower, and
occasionally three hundred fold. Cities.—Babylonia has long been celebrated for the number and antiquity of its cities. The
most important of those which have been identified are Borsippa (Birs-Nimrun), Sippara or Sepharvaim (Mosaib), Cutha (Ibrahim),
Calneh (Niffer), Erech (Warka), Ur (Mugheir), Chilmad (Kalwadha), Larancha (Senkereh), Is (Hit), Durabe (Akkerkuf); but besides
these there were a multitude of others, the sites of which have not been determined. Present condition—This land, once so
rich in corn and wine, is to-day but a mass of mounds, “an arid waste; the dense population of former times is vanished, and
no man dwells there.” The Hebrew prophets applied the term “land of the Chaldeans” to all Babylonia and “Chaldeans” to all
the subjects of the Babylonian empire.