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The king of Assyria (Akkadian: , later ) was the ruler of the ancient kingdom of , which was founded in the late 21st century BC and fell in the late 7th century BC. For much of its early history, Assyria was little more than a city-state, centered on the city , but from the 14th century BC onwards, Assyria rose under a series of warrior kings to become one of the major political powers of the Ancient Near East, and in its last few centuries it dominated the region as the largest empire the world had seen thus far. Ancient Assyrian history is typically divided into the Old, Middle and Neo-Assyrian periods, all marked by ages of ascendancy and decline.

The ancient Assyrians did not believe that their king was divine himself, but saw their ruler as the vicar of their principal deity, Ashur, and as his chief representative on Earth. In their worldview, Assyria represented a place of order while lands not governed by the Assyrian king (and by extension, the god Ashur) were seen as places of chaos and disorder. As such it was seen as the king's duty to expand the borders of Assyria and bring order and civilization to lands perceived as uncivilized. As Assyria expanded, its rulers gradually adopted grander and more boastful titles. Early kings used (representative/viceroy of Ashur), considering the god Ashur to be the true king. From the time of (14th century BC), the rulers instead used king (). In time, further titles, such as "king of Sumer and Akkad", "king of the Universe" and "king of the Four Corners of the World", were added, often to assert their control over all of Mesopotamia.

All modern lists of Assyrian kings generally follow the Assyrian King List, a list kept and developed by the ancient Assyrians themselves over the course of several centuries. Though some parts of the list are probably fictional, the list accords well with Hittite, Babylonian and ancient Egyptian king lists and with the archaeological record, and is generally considered reliable for the age. The line of Assyrian kings ended with the defeat of Assyria's final king by the Neo-Babylonian Empire and the in 609 BC, after which Assyria disappeared as an independent political unit, never to rise again. The survived the fall of their empire and kept their own cultural and religious traditions (though were Christianized in the 1st–3rd centuries AD). At times, Assur and other Assyrian cities were afforded great deals of autonomy by its foreign rulers after the 7th century BC, particularly under the Achaemenid and empires.


Introduction

Sources
Incomplete king-lists have been recovered from three of the major ancient capitals (, and ). The three lists are largely consistent with each other, all originally copies of a single original list, and are based on the yearly appointments of -officials (the officials for each year, appointed by the king to preside over the celebration of the New Year festival). Because of the consistency between the list and the method through which it was created, modern scholars usually accept the regnal years mentioned as more or less correct. There are some differences between the copies of the list, notably in that they offer somewhat diverging regnal years before the reign of king of the Middle Assyrian Empire (reign beginning in 1178 BC). After his time, the lists are identical in their contents.

The king-lists mostly accord well with Hittite, Babylonian and ancient Egyptian king lists and with the archaeological record, and are generally considered reliable for the age. It is however clear that parts of the list are fictional, as some known kings are not found on the list and other listed kings are not independently verified. Originally it was assumed that the list was first written in the time of 1800 BC but it now is considered to date from much later, probably from the time of (1049–1031 BC). The oldest of the surviving king-lists, List A (8th century BC) stops at Tiglath-Pileser II (967–935 BC) and the youngest, List C, stops at (727–722 BC).

One problem that arises with the Assyrian King List is that the creation of the list may have been more motivated by political interest than actual chronological and historical accuracy. In times of civil strife and confusion, the list still adheres to a single royal line of descent, probably ignoring rival claimants to the throne. Additionally, there are some known inconsistencies between the list and actual inscriptions by Assyrian kings, often regarding dynastic relationships. For instance, is stated by the list to be the son of his predecessor , but from inscriptions it is known that he was actually the son of and brother of Enlil-Nasir.


Titles
Assyrian royal titles typically followed trends that had begun under the ( 2334–2154 BC), the Mesopotamian civilization that preceded the later kingdoms of Assyria and . When the Mesopotamian central government under the Third Dynasty of Ur ( 2112–2004 BC) collapsed and polities that had once been vassals to Ur became independent, many of the new sovereign rulers refrained from taking the title of king (), instead applying that title to their principal deities (in the case of Assyria, Ashur). For this reason, most of the Assyrian kings of the Old Assyrian period ( 2025–1364 BC) used the title , translating to "governor of Assyria".

In contrast to the titles employed by the Babylonian kings in the south, which typically focused on the protective role and the piety of the king, royal inscriptions tend to glorify the strength and power of the king. Assyrian titularies usually also often emphasize the royal genaeology of the king, something Babylonian titularies do not, and also drive home the king's moral and physical qualities while downplaying his role in the judicial system. Assyrian epithets about royal lineage vary in how far they stretch back, most often simply discussing lineage in terms of "son of ..." or "brother of ...". Some cases display lineage stretching back much further, Shamash-shum-ukin (667–648 BC) describes himself as a "descendant of Sargon II", his great-grandfather. More extremely, (681–669 BC) calls himself a "descendant of the eternal seed of ", a king who lived more than a thousand years before him.

Assyrian royal titularies were often changed depending on where the titles were to be displayed, the titles of the same Assyrian king would have been different in their home country of Assyria and in conquered regions. Those Neo-Assyrian kings who controlled the city of Babylon used a "hybrid" titulary of sorts in the south, combining aspects of the Assyrian and Babylonian tradition, similar to how the traditional Babylonian deities were promoted in the south alongside the Assyrian main deity of Ashur. The assumption of many traditional southern titles, including the ancient "king of Sumer and Akkad" and the boastful "king of the Universe" and "king of the Four Corners of the World", by the Assyrian kings served to legitimize their rule and assert their control over Babylon and lower Mesopotamia. Epithets like "chosen by the god and the goddess " and "favourite of the god Ashur and the goddess ", both assumed by Esarhaddon, illustrate that he was both Assyrian (Ashur and Mullissu, the main pair of Assyrian deities) and a legitimate ruler over Babylon (Marduk and Sarpanit, the main pair of Babylonian deities).

To exemplify an Assyrian royal title from the time Assyria ruled all of Mesopotamia, the titulature preserved in one of Esarhaddon's inscriptions reads as follows:


Role of the Assyrian king
Ancient Assyria was an absolute monarchy, with the king believed to be appointed directly through divine right by the chief deity, Ashur. The Assyrians believed that the king was the link between the gods and the earthly realm. As such, it was the king's primary duty to discover the will of the gods and enact this, often through the construction of temples or waging war. To aid the king with this duty, there was a number of priests at the royal court trained in reading and interpreting signs from the gods.

The heartland of the Assyrian realm, Assyria itself, was thought to represent a serene and perfect place of order whilst the lands governed by foreign powers were perceived as infested with disorder and chaos. The peoples of these "outer" lands were seen as uncivilized, strange and as speaking strange languages. Because the king was the earthly link to the gods, it was his duty to spread order throughout the world through the military conquest of these strange and chaotic countries. As such, imperial expansion was not just expansion for expansion's sake but was also seen as a process of bringing divine order and destroying chaos to create civilization.

There exists several ancient inscriptions in which the god Ashur explicitly orders kings to extend the borders of Assyria. A text from the reign of Tukulti-Ninurta I ( 1243–1207 BC) states that the king received a royal scepter and was commanded to "broaden the land of Ashur". A similar inscription from the reign of (668–631 BC) commands the king to "extend the land at his feet".

The king was also tasked with protecting his own people, often being referred to as a "shepherd". This protection included defending against external enemies and defending citizens from dangerous wild animals. To the Assyrians, the most dangerous animal of all was the , used (similarly to foreign powers) as an example of chaos and disorder due to their aggressive nature. To prove themselves worthy of rule and illustrate that they were competent protectors, Assyrian kings engaged in ritual . Lion-hunting was reserved for Assyrian royalty and was a public event, staged at parks in or near the Assyrian cities. In some cases, the hunt even took place with captive lions in an arena.


Legitimacy
As opposed to some other ancient monarchies, such as , the Assyrian king was not believed to be divine himself, but was seen as divinely chosen and uniquely qualified for the royal duties. Most kings stressed their legitimacy through their familial connections to previous kings; a king was legitimate through his relation to the previous line of great kings who had been chosen by Ashur. Usurpers who were unrelated to previous kings usually either simply lied about being the son of some previous monarch or claimed that they had been divinely appointed directly by Ashur.

Two prominent examples of such usurpers are the kings Tiglath-Pileser III (745–727 BC) and (722–705 BC). The inscriptions of these kings completely lack any familial references to previous kings, instead stressing that Ashur himself had appointed them directly with phrases such as "Ashur called my name", "Ashur placed me on the throne" and "Ashur placed his merciless weapon in my hand".


Assyrian kings

Early Assyrian rulers

Early names in king lists
The Assyrian King List includes a long sequence of rulers before Assyria's first con

kosomak fidently attested kings (of the Puzur-Ashur dynasty), though it is suspected by modern scholars that at least portions of this line of rulers are invented since none of the names are attested in contemporary records and many of the names of the earliest rulers rhyme (suggesting an invented pattern). This is further corroborated by the absence of certain figures in the list known to have ruled in Assur before the Puzur-Ashur dynasty (the governors under Assur's foreign rulers). The Synchronistic King List diverges from the Assyrian King List and considers ( 1974–1935 BC), the fourth king of the Puzur-Ashur dynasty, to be the first king of Assyria. Though it includes earlier names, the Assyrian King List does not list the length of the rule of any king before Erishum I.

Given that the earliest rulers are described as "kings who lived in tents", they, if real, may not have ruled Assur at all but rather have been nomadic tribal chieftains somewhere in its vicinity. As in the Sumerian King List, several names may also have belonged to rulers who were contemporaries/rivals, rather than successors and predecessors of one another. Some researchers have dismissed these names as a mixture of tribal-geographical names with no relation to Assyria at all. It is possible that the 'kings who were ancestors', who are not attested in any other sources as present at Assur, refer to the ancestors of ( 1808–1776 BC), given that other sources claim that his father was named Ilu-kabkabu, and they might thus not have been kings of Assyria, but rather rulers of , Shamshi-Adad's supposed ancestral home. Including these figures may have served to justify Shamshi-Adad's rise to the throne, either through obscuring his non-Assyrian origins or through inserting his ancestors into the sequence of Assyrian kings.

The early portion of the Assyrian King List contains these otherwise historically unverified names:

Kings who lived in tents

  1. Adamu
  2. Hanu

Kings who were ancestors

The kings are listed in reverse order in the AKL, starting from Aminu and ending with Apiashal(who is also included in the list of kings who lived in tents).

Kings named on bricks

There are six of them, including three kings that are part of the Old Assyrian empire from to .


Attested early rulers
A handful of early local rulers of under foreign suzerainty are known from contemporary sources from before the time of . The precise dates of the highly incomplete sequence of figures listed below are unknown and none of them appear among the rulers before Puzur-Ashur I in the king list. Perhaps their absence could be explained by these figures not being considered to be proper kings. Several are however attested with the title "supreme judge" () a title probably equivalent to and sometimes used by later kings.
ItitiVassal of of Akkad ( 2279–2270 BC) (?), described as the son of Ininlaba (possibly another ruler?)
AzuzuVassal of of Akkad ( 2270–2255 BC). Name found inscribed on the point of a spear.
IlabaandulAttested as governor of Assur in an Akkadian-period list from Ur of local governors.
Ur IIIVassal of of Ur ( 2046–2037 BC). Name found inscribed on a limestone slab.
SiluluUncertainName inscribed on a seal. Perhaps identifiable with the Assyrian King List's Sulili, but described as the son of Dakiki (not Aminu).


Puzur-Ashur dynasty (2025–1809 BC)
The dynasty founded by Puzur-Ashur is conventionally known by modern historians as the 'Puzur-Ashur dynasty' after its founder. Puzur-Ashur I is generally seen as the founder of Assyria as an independent city-state 2025 BC. Some historians on the other hand speculate that Puzur-Ashur was not a new dynastic founder, but that his dynasty actually began earlier, perhaps by Sulili. The dynasty has thus also been termed the 'Sulili–Puzur-Ashur dynasty'. The dynasty has also been referred to simply as the 'Old Assyrian dynasty'. These kings, beginning with Puzur-Ashur I, took power in the aftermath of the collapse of the Neo-Sumerian Empire, which had ruled over Assyria.

Old Assyrian period, 2025–1364 BC

UncertainUnclear succession, possibly first independent ruler of

UncertainSon of Puzur-Ashur I

UncertainSon of Shalim-ahum

1974 – 1935 BC
(40 years)
Son of Ilu-shuma

1934 – 1921 BC
(14 years)
Son of Erishum I

1920 – 1881 BC
(40 years)
Son of Ikunum

1880 – 1873 BC
(8 years)
Son of Sargon I
Naram-Sin
1872 – 1829/1819 BC
(54 or 44 years)
Son of Puzur-Ashur II

1828/1818 – 1809 BC
(20 or 10 years)
Son of Naram-Sin


Shamshi-Adad dynasty (1808–1736 BC)
The dynasty founded by Shamshi-Adad I, who deposed the Puzur-Ashur dynasty, is conventionally known as the 'Shamshi-Adad dynasty', after its founder. During the rule of Shamshi-Adad I and his successors, of Amorite descent and originally from the south, a more absolute form of kingship, inspired by that of Babylon, was introduced in Assyria. During the preceding Puzur-Ashur dynasty, royal power in Assur had been more limited than in other cities, with inscriptions describing how the king worked in tandem with the city assembly to establish law and order. The earliest use of the term (king) in Assyrian inscriptions comes from Shamshi-Adad I's reign. Shamshi-Adad I was also the first Assyrian king to assume the title 'king of the Universe', though these styles fell into a long period of disuse again after his death. The short-lived realm founded by Shamshi-Adad I is sometimes referred to as the Kingdom of Upper Mesopotamia.


1808 – 1776 BC
(33 years)
Amorite usurper, unrelated to previous kings

1775 – 1765 BC
(11 years)
Son of Shamshi-Adad I

UncertainSon of Ishme-Dagan I
Rimush
UncertainUncertain relation

UncertainGrandson (?) of Shamshi-Adad I


Non-dynastic usurpers (1735–1701 BC)

UncertainUsurper, unrelated to previous kings

Uncertain
(6 years)
Usurper, unrelated to previous kings

UncertainUsurper, unrelated to previous kings

Usurper, unrelated to previous kings

Usurper, unrelated to previous kings

Usurper, unrelated to previous kings

Usurper, unrelated to previous kings
Adasi
Usurper, unrelated to previous kings


Adaside dynasty (1700–722 BC)
The dynasty founded by Bel-bani, which ruled Assyria throughout most of its history, is conventionally known as the Adaside or Adasi dynasty, after Bel-bani's father. In Babylonia, this dynasty of kings was called the "Baltil dynasty", Baltil being the oldest portion of the city of Assur.
(Portrait)NameReignSuccession and notesRef

1700 – 1691 BC
(10 years)
Son of Adasi

1690 – 1674 BC
(17 years)
Son of Bel-bani

1673 – 1662 BC
(12 years)
Son of Libaya

1661 – 1650 BC
(12 years)
Son of Sharma-Adad I

1649 – 1622 BC
(28 years)
Son of Bel-bani

1621 – 1616 BC
(6 years)
Unrelated to other kings, possibly a usurper

1615 – 1602 BC
(14 years)
Son of Bazaya

1601 – 1599 BC
(3 years)
Son of Shu-Ninua

1598 – 1586 BC
(13 years)
Son of Shu-Ninua

1585 – 1580 BC
(6 years)
Son of Erishum III

1579 – 1564 BC
(16 years)
Son of Shamshi-Adad II

1563 – 1548 BC
(16 years)
Son of Shamshi-Adad II
(2002). 9781134787968, Routledge. .

1547 – 1522 BC
(26 years)
Son of Ishme-Dagan II

1521 – 1498 BC
(24 years)
Son of Ashur-nirari I

1497 – 1485 BC
(13 years)
Son of Puzur-Ashur III

1484 – 1473 BC
(12 years)
Son of Enlil-nasir I

1473 BC
(1 month)
Son of Nur-ili

1472 – 1453 BC
(20 years)
Son of Enlil-nasir I, usurped the throne from his nephew
Ashur-nadin-ahhe I
1452 – 1431 BC
(22 years)
Son of Ashur-rabi I

1430 – 1425 BC
(6 years)
Son of Ashur-rabi I, usurped the throne from his brother

1424 – 1418 BC
(7 years)
Son of Ashur-rabi I
Ashur-bel-nisheshu
1417 – 1409 BC
(9 years)
Son of Ashur-nirari II
Ashur-rim-nisheshu
1408 – 1401 BC
(8 years)
Son of Ashur-nirari II
Ashur-nadin-ahhe II
1400 – 1391 BC
(10 years)
Son of Ashur-rim-nisheshu

1390 – 1364 BC
(27 years)
Son of Ashur-bel-nisheshu
Middle Assyrian Empire, 1363–912 BC

1363 – 1328 BC
(36 years)
Son of Eriba-Adad I, first

1327 – 1318 BC
(10 years)
Son of Ashur-uballit I

1317 – 1306 BC
(12 years)
Son of Enlil-nirari

1305 – 1274 BC
(32 years)
Son of Arik-den-ili

1273 – 1244 BC
(30 years)
Son of Adad-nirari I
Tukulti-Ninurta I
1243 – 1207 BC
(37 years)
Son of Shalmaneser I

1206 – 1203 BC
(4 years)
Son of Tukulti-Ninurta I, usurped the throne from his father

1202 – 1197 BC
(6 years)
Son of Ashur-nadin-apli
Enlil-kudurri-usur
1196 – 1192 BC
(5 years)
Son of Tukulti-Ninurta I
Ninurta-apal-Ekur
1191 – 1179 BC
(13 years)
Great-great-great-grandson of Adad-nirari I, usurped the throne from his distant cousin

1178 – 1133 BC
(46 years)
Son of Ninurta-apal-Ekur
Ninurta-tukulti-Ashur
1132 BC
(less than a year)
Son of Ashur-dan I

1132 BC
(less than a year)
Son of Ashur-dan I, usurped the throne from his brother
Ashur-resh-ishi I
1132 – 1115 BC
(18 years)
Son of Mutakkil-nusku
Tiglath-Pileser I
1114 – 1076 BC
(39 years)
Son of Ashur-resh-ishi I
Asharid-apal-Ekur
1075 – 1074 BC
(2 years)
Son of Tiglath-Pileser I

1073 – 1056 BC
(18 years)
Son of Tiglath-Pileser I; a century-long period of decline followed Ashur-bel-kala's death

1055 – 1054 BC
(2 years)
Son of Ashur-bel-kala

1053 – 1050 BC
(4 years)
Son of Tiglath-Pileser I, usurped the throne from his nephew

1049 – 1031 BC
(19 years)
Son of Shamshi-Adad IV

1030 – 1019 BC
(12 years)
Son of Ashurnasirpal I

1018 – 1013 BC
(6 years)
Son of Shalmaneser II

1012 – 972 BC
(41 years)
Son of Ashurnasirpal I
Ashur-resh-ishi II
971 – 967 BC
(5 years)
Son of Ashur-rabi II
Tiglath-Pileser II
966 – 935 BC
(32 years)
Son of Ashur-resh-ishi II

934 – 912 BC
(23 years)
Son of Tiglath-Pileser II, began to reconquer the territory lost under his predecessors
Neo-Assyrian Empire, 911–609 BC
PortraitNameReignSuccessionLife details and notesRef

911 – 891 BC
(21 years)
Son of Ashur-dan II
Tukulti-Ninurta II
890 – 884 BC
(7 years)
Son of Adad-nirari II

884 – 859 BC
(25 years)
Son of Tukulti-Ninurta IIChanged the Assyrian capital to . Campaigned to the Mediterranean. First Assyrian king to make extensive use of reliefs. Died a natural death.

859 – 824 BC
(35 years)
Son of Ashurnasirpal IIFully restored Assyia's ancient borders, though there was again decline after his death. Died a natural death.

824 – 811 BC
(13 years)
Son of Shalmaneser III, defeated his brother in a civil warConquered , though it became independent again in the reign of his son. Died relatively young in unclear circumstances.

811 – 783 BC
(28 years)
Son of Shamshi-Adad V. Probably young at the time of his father's death, his mother may have served as co-regent in his early reign.Adad-nirari III's late reign began an obscure period from which few sources survive and Assyrian officials wielded great power. Presumably died of natural causes.

783 – 773 BC
(10 years)
Son of Adad-nirari IIIFate unclear due to the lack of surviving sources

773 – 755 BC
(18 years)
Son of Adad-nirari IIIFate unclear due to the lack of surviving sources

755 – 745 BC
(10 years)
Son of Adad-nirari IIIFate unclear due to the lack of surviving sources, possibly deposed and killed by Tiglath-Pileser III
Tiglath-Pileser III
745 – 727 BC
(18 years)
Son of either Adad-nirari III or Ashur-nirari V. Succeeded Ashur-nirari V in uncertain circumstances, either legitimately or through a coup or civil war.Revitalized the Assyrian Empire and made it the supreme imperial and political power in the Near East. Conquered Babylon. Died a natural death.

727 – 722 BC
(5 years)
Son of Tiglath-Pileser IIIDeposed and killed by Sargon II in a


Sargonid dynasty (722–609 BC)

722 – 705 BC
(17 years)
Claimed to be a son of Tiglath-Pileser III, actual connections to previous royalty disputed. Seized the throne from Shalmaneser V in a palace coup.Changed the Assyrian capital to . Killed in battle in Anatolia, fighting against Tabal.

705 – 681 BC
(24 years)
Son of Sargon IIChanged the Assyrian capital to . Murdered by his eldest son , who hoped to seize power for himself.

681 – 669 BC
(12 years)
Son of Sennacherib. After Sennacherib was killed by Arda-Mulissu, Esarhaddon had to fight a six-week-long civil war against his brother before he successfully assumed the throne.Brought Assyria to its greatest ever extent. Plagued by illnesses throughout his life. Died of natural causes on his way to campaign against Egypt.

669 – 631 BC
(38 years)
Son of Esarhaddon. Ashurbanipal's brother Shamash-shum-ukin inherited Babylonia, but after their civil war in 652–648 BC, Ashurbanipal strengthened his hold on the south as well.Generally regarded as the last great Assyrian king. Fate unclear due to lack of surviving sources, probably died a natural death.
Aššur-etil-ilāni
631 – 627 BC
(4 years)
Son of AshurbanipalFate unclear due to the lack of surviving sources
Sîn-šumu-līšir

(usurper)
626 BC
(3 months)
Prominent courtier and general. Influential under the reign of Aššur-etil-ilāni, rebelled upon the accession of Sîn-šar-iškun. Ruled only northern Babylonia.The only eunuch to ever claim the throne of Assyria. Defeated by Sîn-šar-iškun.
Sîn-šar-iškun
627 – 612 BC
(15 years)
Son of Ashurbanipal, succeeded as king after Aššur-etil-ilāni's deathKilled by the forces of the Babylonians and at the fall of Nineveh
Aššur-uballiṭ II
612 – 609 BC
(3 years)
Possibly son of Sîn-šar-iškun. Organized resistance against the Medes and Babylonians at . Formally ruling with the title of crown prince since he was unable to undergo traditional coronation at Assur.Defeated by the Babylonians at the Siege of Harran, fate thereafter unknown


Later Assyrian kingship

Geopolitical history and context
The defeat of Ashur-uballit II at Harran in 609 BC marked the end of the ancient Assyrian monarchy, which was never restored. The territory of the Assyrian Empire was split between the Neo-Babylonian and empires. The survived the fall of the empire, though Assyria continued to be a sparsely populated and marginal region under the Neo-Babylonian and later Achaemenid empires. Under the and empires, Assyria experienced a remarkable recovery. Under the last two or so centuries of Parthian rule, archaeological surveys have shown that the region reached a density of settlements that is only comparable to what the region was like under the Neo-Assyrian Empire.

A semi-autonomous city-state under Parthian suzerainty appears to have formed around the city of Assur, Assyria's oldest capital, near, or shortly after, the end of the 2nd century BC. In this period, the ancient city flourished, with some old buildings being restored and some new ones, such as a new palace, being constructed. The ancient temple dedicated to the god Ashur was also restored for the second time in the second century AD, and a cultic calendar effectively identical to that used under the Neo-Assyrian Empire was used. Stelae erected by the local rulers of Assur in this time resemble the stelae erected by the Neo-Assyrian kings, though the rulers are depicted in Parthian-style trouser-suits rather than ancient garb. The rulers used the title of Assur ("master of Assur") and appear to have viewed themselves as continuing the old Assyrian royal tradition. These stelae retain the shape, framing and placement (often in city gates) of stelae erected under the ancient kings and also depict the central figure in reverence of the moon and sun, an ever-present motif in the ancient royal stelae. This second period of prominent Assyrian cultural development at Assur came to end with the conquests of the in the region, 240, whereafter the Ashur temple was destroyed again and the city's people were dispersed.


City-lords of Assur
The sequence of local rulers of Assur under the three or four centuries of Parthian suzerainty is poorly known. Only five names are attested and their dates, their precise order and how they relate to each other is not clear. The order used here follows Aggoula (1985). There are large gaps in this sequence.
Hormoz
(or ?)
UncertainIranian name. Known from an inscription on a statue.
Hayyay
UncertainArabic name. Mentioned in an inscription.
Hanni
UncertainAkkadian-derived Aramaic name. Mentioned as the father of a person (whose name is illegible) in a relief.
Rʻuth-Assor
2nd century ADAkkadian-derived Aramaic name. Mentioned in inscriptions and in his own stele.
unknown2nd century ADIndirectly mentioned in an inscription by his nephews, though his name is not preserved.
Nbudayyan
2nd century ADAkkadian-derived Aramaic name. Mentioned in multiple inscriptions.


See also
  • List of kings of Babylon – for the Babylonian kings
  • List of Mesopotamian dynasties – for other dynasties and kingdoms in ancient Mesopotamia
  • List of kings of Syria – the Seleucids who became kings of Syria


Notes

Bibliography


Web sources
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