Southern Mesopotamia’s pacific Kassite kings, who have…
1341 BCE to 1330 BCE
Southern Mesopotamia’s pacific Kassite kings, who have ruled Babylonia for two and-a-half centuries, will hold their own against Assyrian incursions in this age, with a couple of notable exceptions.
Burna-Buriash, King of Babylon in the Kassite Dynasty, is succeeded in 1333 BCE by his son from his royal Assyrian wife, prince Kara-hardash, but a revolt soon breaks out that shows the unpopularity of the Assyrians.
Asshur-uballit will not allow his grandson to be cast aside, and duly invades Babylon.
Because Kara-Hardash is killed in the rebellion by the Kassite faction at court, the Assyrians, in the first of what would become a series of Assyrian interventions in Babylonian affairs, place on the Babylonian throne a certain Kurigalzu II of the royal line, who may have been Burnaburiash's son or grandson.
But this new puppet king does not remain loyal to his master, and soon invades Assyria.
Ashur-uballit is only able to stop the Babylonian army at Sugagu, not far south from the capital Assur.