Ishme-Dagan I
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Ancient Mesopotamia |
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Euphrates • Tigris |
Cities / Empires |
Sumer: Eridu • Kish • Uruk • Ur • Lagash • Nippur • Ngirsu |
Elam: Susa |
Akkadian Empire: Akkad • Mari |
Amorites: Isin • Larsa |
Babylonia: Babylon • Chaldea |
Hittites • Kassites • Hurrians/Mitanni |
Assyria: Assur • Nimrud • Dur-Sharrukin • Nineveh |
Chronology |
History of Mesopotamia |
History of Sumer • Kings of Sumer |
Kings of Assyria |
Kings of Babylon |
Mythology |
Enûma Elish • Gilgamesh |
Assyro-Babylonian religion |
Language |
Sumerian • Elamite |
Akkadian • Aramaic |
Hurrian • Hittite |
Ishme-Dagan I was the son of the Amorite king Shamshi-Adad I, put on throne of Ekallatum by his father after a successful military attack. He ruled the area of the upper Tigris, including the city-state of Assur. After Shamshi-Adad's death he managed to rule for a few years before being ousted from power by local forces. His brother, Yasmah-Adad, ruled at the same time in the city of Mari, where the correspondence between the father and two sons was found by archaeologists.
[edit] References
- Jean-Marie Durand, Documents Epistolaires du Palais de Mari, Collection « Littérature Ancienne du Proche-Orient » N° 16. (1997); (2002) ISBN 2204056855
[edit] See also
Preceded by Shamshi-Adad I |
King of Assyria | Succeeded by Mut-Ashkur |