Shamshi-Adad I
| Cities / Empires |
|---|
| Sumer: |
| Akkadian Empire: Akkad |
| Assyria: Assur · |
| Hurrians · Mitanni |
| Chronology |
| Language |
| Elamite · Hurrian |
| Mythology |
| Enûma Elish |
Shamshi-Adad I (reigned 1813 to 1776 BC) rose to
prominence when he carved out a large kingdom in northern
His father Ila-kabkabu ruled a kingdom on the borders of Mari and was an
He first conquered
The next target was the city Mari which controlled the caravan route between Anatolia and
Mesopotamia. The king of Mari, Iakhdunlim, was assassinated by his own servants, possibly on
Shamshi-Adad's orders. Shamshi-Adad seized the opportunity and occupied Mari. The heir to the throne, Zimri-Lim, was forced to flee to
With the annexation of Mari, Shamshi-Adad was in control of a large empire, controlling the whole of Upper Mesopotamia. On
inscriptions Shamshi-Adad boasts of erecting triumphal
Naturally, Shamshi-Adad's rise to glory earned him the envy of neigbhouring kings and tribes, and throughout his reign, he and his sons faced several threats to their control. While Ishme-Dagan probably was a competent ruler, his brother appears to have been a man of weak character; something the disappointed father was not above mentioning: Are you a child, not a man, have you no beard on your chin, he writes, and in another letter While here your brother is victorious, down there you lie about among the women.
Shamshi-Adad was a great organizer and he kept a firm controls on all matters of state, from high policy down to the
appointing of officials and the dispatching of provisions. His campaigns were meticulously planned, and his army knew all the
classic methods of siegecraft, such as encircling ramparts and
Shamshi-Adad continued to strengthen his kingdom throughout his life, but upon his death it soon began to crumble. The empire lacked cohesion and was in a vulnerable geographical position. When the news of Shamshi-Adad's death spread, his old rivals at once set out to topple his sons from the throne. Iasmakh-Adad was soon expelled from Mari by Zimri-Lim, and the rest of the empire was soon lost to Hammurabi of Babylon.
See also
- Assyria
- Babylonia and Assyria
Kings of Assyria - Chronology of Babylonia and Assyria
References
- OBO (Orbis Biblicus et Orientalis) 160/4
- Larsen
- Veenhof
- Michel
- "Documents Epistolaires du Palais de Mari"
- E.Roux "Ancient Iraq" (Penguin, Harmondsworth)
| Preceded by |
1813– 1791 BCE |
Succeeded by Ishme-Dagan I |
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