Simbar-Šipak, or perhaps Simbar-Šiḫu,Earlier readings render his name as Simmash-Shipak. (typically inscribed m sim-bar-d ši-i-ḪU or si-im-bar-ši-ḪU in cuneiform, where the reading of the last symbol is uncertain) was a Babylonian king who reigned 1021–1004 BC.
His name means the “offspring of (the Kassite deities) Šipak”. He founded the 2nd Dynasty of the Sealand, Babylon’s 5th Dynasty. He conducted a program of restoration of a number of temples that had been destroyed earlier by the marauding Arameans and the Sutû. His identification with the Sibir (m Si-bir) named by Ashurnasirpal II in his annals Annals of Ashurbanipal II, ii 84: msi-bir šar4 kurkar-du-ni-áš. as having earlier captured and laid waste Atlila (probably modern Bakr Awa), a city on Assyria’s eastern flank, remains unresolved.
Only four contemporary written documents from his reign are known. One comprises two late copies of a royal inscription, known as “Enlil’s throne” or the “Royal inscription of Simbar-Šipak”, no. 21. another a legal deed drawn up in the king's twelfth year, a third an inscribed dagger in the Archaeological Museum of Tabriz, Iran, apparently found in a river in the eastern Azerbaijan province, and the fourth an arrowheadBronze Arrow Head, 2 9/16 in. (6.5 cm.) high, Christie’s, New York, 7 December 2011, lot 13, sale 2490. inscribed "(Property) of Simbar-Šiḫu, son of Eriba-Sin," thus confirming the name of his father given in two late chronicles. no. 20. The deed details the sale of land in compensation for ransom paid by an intermediary and redemption of the former landowner’s three sons, no. 71. and the inscription on the bottom edge (pictured) reads:
It would be tempting to identify the first witness with his nemesis and successor, Ea-mukin-zeri but this would be speculative.
In his dedication to Enlil, he describes himself as, “he who puts in order the paths of Anum and Dagan, he who preserves their rites.” muštēšir alkakāti Anim u Dagan mušallimu mēsīšunu.
The Religious Chronicle is thought to record events of his reign, based on the order of preceding kings, commentary to lines ii 1–29. and provides some fairly obscure portents such as “a wolf was lurking in the west,” “a badger in the Uraš gate at the door of the šatammu's (temple administrator’s) residence,” “two deer entered Babylon,” and most ominously “on the twenty-sixth of the month Simanu, in the seventh year, day turned to night and there was a fire in the sky,” an eclipse, speculated to have taken place on 9 May 1012 B.C. Things seemed to have taken a turn for the worse from the thirteenth year onward as the chariot of Bel did not come out for three successive years and the eighteenth year was marked by a wave of water coming down from the Ishtar Gate, entering Babylon, two soldiers were killed and an idol was knocked off its pedestal. Religious Chronicle (ABC 17) tablet BM 35968, ii 1–25. This was the year his reign came to a dramatic end when he was assassinated, quite possibly by his successor, Ea-mukin-zēri, “by the sword,”GIŠ.TUKUL.TA BA.AN.SÌG.GI.IN, “by the sword.” plunging the country once again into chaos. He “was buried in the palace of Sargon.”
Royal Inscription of Simbar-Šipak
Other sources
Inscriptions
Notes
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