The Ahlamu, or Aḫlamū, were a group or designation of Semitic people semi-nomads. Their habitat was west of the Euphrates between the mouth of the Khabur and Palmyra.
They were first mentioned in sources of Rîm-Anum, a king of Uruk, ca. 1800 BC, and then in texts from Mari, and finally in the 14th century BC in Egyptian sources in one of the Amarna letters in the days of Akhenaten in which it is affirmed that the Ahlamu had advanced to the Euphrates.
There is also a scholarly debate as to whether this term is a proper name for a group or instead a designation of a type of group. The significance comes in identifying possible genealogical backgrounds and connections of some groups that are given the appellation, such as the Arameans and even some tribes that had elsewhere been called Amorites. That would imply either sub-tribes of an overarching "Aḫlamite" people or, rather, as separate, distinct peoples identified as such by a similar lifestyle. That would be a nomadic designation of the roaming raiding forces that made forays and razzias to capture flocks, slaves, and food supplies from the desert regions south and west of Mesopotamia.
In one of his inscriptions, Assyrian king Adad-nirari II states that his father, Ashur-dan II, defeated different peoples of the mountains including Ahlamu nomads. According to the inscription of another Assyrian king, Shalmaneser I, the Ahlamu with the support of Shattuara II of Hanigalbat were defeated in their uprising against the Assyrians.
The Ahlamu even obstructed communication between kingdoms, as was mentioned Babylon King Kadashman-Enlil II in his relations with Hittite King Ḫattušili III in which the former complains about the interruption of sending messengers between the two courts under the pretext of the assaults by Ahlamu bandits. From the 12th century BCE, the Mesopotamians increasingly referred to the same mobile groups as "Arameans."
They are also known as enemies of the Assyrians. When Assyria resurfaces again, already in the time of King Ashur-resh-ishi I, he alluded to victories over the Ahlamu and Gutians, as did his successor, Tiglath-Pileser I.
Assyrian King Arik-den-ili turned westward into the Levant (now Syria and Lebanon), where he managed to subjugate the Suteans, the Ahlamu, and the Yauru, in the region of Katmuḫi, in the middle Euphrates.
Tiglath-Pileser III mentioned in his royal inscriptions the Aḫlamu of the land Ulluba, as well as the "LÚ.aḫ-la-am-ak-ka-
Social life
See also
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