Surviving documents do not speak directly to the social and legal status of deportees, but historians attempted to infer them indirectly, especially from documents mentioning people with non-Assyrian names in
Assyrian heartlands—presumably many of such people were deportees. The treatment of the deportees varied from case to case and it is hard to generalize, often those who were untrained were enslaved and put to work on massive building projects, while those who worked in various professions were placed to work according to their training. Those who worked in agriculture were assigned lands to work on, with a similar status to that of others within the empire. Many worked in high-skilled jobs, including as craftsmen, scholars, and merchants. The most educated and trained deportees were placed in royal service, and those willing to adopt the Assyrian identity and
gods were able to join the
Assyrian military. The state encouraged the mixing of deportees and native inhabitants where they lived in order to abolish their previous ethnic and religious identity in favor of a new shared "Assyrian" identity.
Biblical events The resettlement of Israelites conquered by the Neo-Assyrian Empire were mentioned in the
Old Testament, which came to be called the "
Assyrian captivity". The first occurred in 734 BCE and is related in . The Assyrian King
Tiglath-Pileser III defeated an alliance which included King
Pekah of Israel, occupied Northern Israel and then ordered a large number of Israelites to relocate to Assyria proper. The second deportation started after 722 BCE and related in . Pekah's successor King
Hoshea rebelled against Assyria in 724 BCE. King
Shalmaneser V (Tiglath-Pileser's successor) besieged
Samaria, which was finally captured in 722 BCE by Shalmaneser's successor
Sargon II. After the fall of Samaria, 27,280 people (according to Assyrian records) were deported to various places throughout the empire, mainly to
Guzana in the Assyrian heartland, as well as to the cities of the
Medes in the eastern part of the empire (modern-day Iran). The cities of the Medes were only conquered by Assyria in 716 BCE, six years after the fall of Samaria, suggesting that the relocation took years to plan before it was implemented. At the same time, people from other parts of the empire were resettled in the depopulated areas of the then Assyrian province of
Samerina. == Legacy ==