Ashurbanipal, in assigning his brother to Babylon, …
Years: 669BCE - 658BCE
Ashurbanipal, in assigning his brother to Babylon, had sent a statue of the divinity Marduk with him as sign of good will.
The arrangement is evidently intended to flatter the Babylonians by giving them once more the semblance of independence.
For some time this works well; however, Shamash-shum-ukin becomes infused with Babylonian nationalism, and claims that it is he rather than his younger brother who is the successor of the Mesopotamian monarchs whose empire stretched from Iran to the Mediterranean and from the Caucasus to Arabia and north Africa.
The Babylonian territory consists of Babylon, Borsippa, Kutha and Sippar.
While Shamash-shum-ukin is the sovereign ruler of the south in theory, Assyria maintains a garrison in Nippur, and some of the provincial governors try to get into Assyrian favor.
Letters by Sin-balassu-iqbi, governor of Ur, show how he tried to ingratiate himself with Ashurbanipal.
Shamash-shum-ukin's powers are limited.
He performs Babylonian rituals but the official building projects are still executed by his younger brother, who takes an active part in the restoration of sanctuaries in the south.
A stela now in London commemorates his help in restoring the temple Esagila; another tells of how he restored the Nabu-temple in Borsippa.
Even the Sumerian language is revived as the official tongue.
During Shamash-shum-ukin’s first years, Elam is still in peace as it was under his father.
Ashurbanipal even claimed that he sent food supplies during a famine.
Around 664 BCE, the situation changes and Urtaku, the Elamite king, attacks Babylonia by surprise.
Assyria’s delays in sending aid to Babylon could have been caused either by the soothing messages of Elamite ambassadors or the possibility that Ashurbanipal might simply not have been present at that time.
Elamites retreat before the Assyrian troops, and in the same year Urtaku dies.
He is succeeded by Teumman (Tempti-Khumma-In-Shushinak) who is not his legitimate heir.
Thus, many Elamite princes have to flee from him to Ashurbanipal's court, including Urtaku's oldest son Humban-nikash.
Locations
People
Groups
- Mesopotamia
- Polytheism (“paganism”)
- Babylon, Kingdom of
- Elam, (New) Kingdom of
- Assyrian people
- Assyria, (New) Kingdom of (Neo-Assyrian Empire)
Topics
- Younger Subboreal Period
- Iron Age, Near and Middle East
- Iron Age Cold Epoch
- Classical antiquity
- Assyrian Wars of c. 745-609 BCE
