Pengguna:Bennylin/Daftar Raja Babilonia
The following is a list of the kings of Babylonia (ancient southern-central Iraq), compiled from the traditional Babylonian king lists and modern archaeological findings.
The Babylonian King List
suntingThe Babylonian King List is not merely a list of kings of Babylon, but is a very specific ancient list of supposed Babylonian kings recorded in several ancient locations, and related to its predecessor, the Sumerian King List. As in the latter, contemporaneous dynasties are listed chronologically without comment.
There are three versions, one known as "King List A"[1] (containing all the kings from the First Dynasty of Babylon to the Neo-Assyrian king Kandalanu) and "King List B"[2] (containing only the two first dynasties) and "King List C"[3] (containing the first seven kings of the Second Dynasty of Isin). A fourth version was written in Greek by Berossus. The "Babylonian King List of the Hellenistic Age" is a continuation that mentions all the Seleucid kings from Alexander the Great to Demetrius II Nicator.[4]
Zaman Perunggu Pertengahan
suntingNegara kota bangsa Amori awal
suntingPenguasa | Bertakhta | Catatan |
---|---|---|
Naplanum | ca. 1961–1940 BC | Sezaman dengan Ibbi-Suen dari Ur III |
Emisum | ca. 1940–1912 BC | |
Samium | ca. 1912–1877 BC | |
Zabaia | ca. 1877–1868 BC | Anak Samium |
Gungunum | ca. 1868–1841 BC | Merdeka dari Isin |
Abisare | ca. 1841–1830 BC | |
Sumuel | ca. 1830–1801 BC | |
Nur-Adad | ca. 1801–1785 BC | Sezaman dengan Sumu-la-El dari Babilonia |
Sin-Iddinam | ca. 1785–1778 BC | Anak Nur-Adad |
Sin-Eribam | ca. 1778–1776 BC | |
Sin-Iqisham | ca. 1776–1771 BC | Sezaman dengan Zambiya dari Isin, Anak Sin-Eribam |
Silli-Adad | ca. 1771–1770 BC | |
Warad-Sin | ca. 1770–1758 BC | Anak Kudur-Mabuk |
Rim-Sin I | ca. 1758–1699 BC | Sezaman dengan Irdanene dari Uruk, dikalahkan oleh Hammurabi, saudara Warad-Sin |
Hammurabi | ca. 1699–1686 BC | Penguasa resmi Babilonia, Kodeks Hammurabi |
Samsu-iluna | ca. 1686–1678 BC | Penguasa resmi Babilonia |
Rim-Sin II | ca. 1678–1674 BC | Dibunuh karena memberontak terhadap Babilonia |
Kekaisaran Babilonia (Middle Bronze Age)
suntingDinasti Babilonia Pertama, (Amorite Dynasty)
suntingRuler | Reigned | Comments |
---|---|---|
Sumu-abum or Su-abu | ca. 1830–1817 BC | Amorite chieftain, founder of independent Babylonian State, Contemporary of Erishum I of Assyria |
Sumu-la-El | ca. 1817–1781 BC | Contemporary of Ikunum of Assyria |
Sabium or Sabum | ca. 1781–1767 BC | Son of Sumu-la-El |
Apil-Sin | ca. 1767–1749 BC | Son of Sabium |
Sin-muballit | ca. 1748–1729 BC | Son of Apil-Sin |
Hammurabi | ca. 1728–1686 BC | Mendirikan Kekaisaran Babilonia. Contemporary of Zimri-Lim of Mari, Siwe-palar-huppak of Elam and Shamshi-Adad I of Assyria |
Samsu-iluna | ca. 1686–1648 BC | Son of Hammurabi |
Abi-eshuh or Abieshu | ca. 1648–1620 BC | Son of Samsu-iluna |
Ammi-ditana | ca. 1620–1583 BC | Son of Abi-eshuh |
Ammi-saduqa or Ammisaduqa | ca. 1582–1562 BC | Venus tablet of Ammisaduqa |
Samsu-Ditana | ca. 1562–1531 BC | Deposed by Hitite king Mursilis in the Sack of Babylon. Last Amorite ruler. |
Sealand Dynasty (Dynasty II of Babylon)
suntingThese rulers may not have ruled Babylonia itself for more than the briefest of periods, but rather the formerly Sumerian regions south of it. Nevertheless, it is often traditionally numbered the Second Dynasty of Babylon, and so is listed here.
Ruler | Reigned | Comments |
---|---|---|
Ilum-ma-ili | fl. ca. 1732 BC | Contemporary of Samsu-iluna and Abi-ešuh |
Itti-ili-nibi | ||
Damqi-ilishu | His city walls for Der demolished by Ammi-Ditana | |
Ishkibal | ||
Shushushi | ||
Gulkishar | ||
mDIŠ+U-EN | Contemporary of LIK.KUD-Šamaš (Assyria) | |
Peshgaldaramesh | ||
Ayadaragalama | May have ruled briefly over Babylon | |
Akurduana | ||
Melamkurkurra | ||
Ea-gamil | fl. ca. 1460 BC | Overthrown by Kassite Ulam Buriaš |
This dynasty also did not actually rule Babylon, but their numbering scheme was continued by later Kassite Kings of Babylon, and so they are listed here.
Ruler | Reigned | Comments |
---|---|---|
Gandaš | fl. ca. 1730 BC | |
Agum I | Known as Maḫrû, "the first," or rabi, "the great." | |
Kaštiliašu I | Son of Agum I *according to the Agum-Kakrime Inscription | |
Abi-Rattaš | Son of Kaštiliašu I *; may occupy fifth place, then Ušši or Uššiašu may come here | |
Kaštiliašu II | ||
Ur-zigurumaš | Descendant of Abi-Rattaš *; alternative reading Tazzigurumaš | |
Ḫurbazum | Tell Muḥammed level 3, alternatively Ḫarba-Šipak/Šihu | |
Šipta’ulzi | Tell Muḥammed level 2, alternatively Tiptakzi |
Late Bronze Age
suntingKassite Dynasty (Third Dynasty of Babylon)
suntingRuler | Reigned | Comments |
---|---|---|
Agum II or Agum-Kakrime | ca. 1507 BC | |
Burnaburiash I | Treaty with Puzur-Ashur III of Assyria | |
Kashtiliash III | ||
Ulamburiash | Conquers the first Sealand dynasty | |
Agum III | ||
Karaindash | Contemporary of Amenophis III of Egypt | |
Kadashman-harbe I | ||
Kurigalzu I | ||
Kadashman-Enlil I | ca. 1374–1360 BC | Contemporary of Amenophis III of the Egyptian Amarna letters |
Burnaburiash II | ca. 1359–1333 BC | Contemporary of Akhenaten and Ashur-uballit I |
Kara-hardash | ca. 1333 BC | Grandson of Ashur-uballit I of Assyria |
Nazi-Bugash or Shuzigash | ca. 1333 BC | Deposed by Ashur-uballit I of Assyria |
Kurigalzu II | ca. 1332–1308 BC | Son of Burnaburiash II, Fought Battle of Sugagi with Enlil-nirari of Assyria |
Nazi-Maruttash | ca. 1307–1282 BC | Contemporary of Adad-nirari I of Assyria |
Kadashman-Turgu | ca. 1281–1264 BC | Contemporary of Hattusili III of the Hittites |
Kadashman-Enlil II | ca. 1263–1255 BC | Contemporary of Hattusili III of the Hittites |
Kudur-Enlil | ca. 1254–1246 BC | |
Shagarakti-Shuriash | ca. 1245–1233 BC | Son of Kudur-Enlil |
Kashtiliashu IV | ca. 1232–1225 BC | Deposed by Tukulti-Ninurta I of Assyria |
Enlil-nadin-shumi | ca. 1224 BC | Assyria installed governor under Tukulti-Ninurta I |
Kadashman-Harbe II | ca. 1223 BC | Assyria installed governor under Tukulti-Ninurta I |
Adad-shuma-iddina | ca. 1222–1217 BC | Assyria installed governor under Tukulti-Ninurta I |
Adad-shuma-usur | ca. 1216–1187 BC | Contemporary of Ashur-nirari III of Assyria |
Meli-Shipak II | ca. 1186–1172 BC | |
Marduk-apla-iddina I | ca. 1171–1159 BC | |
Zababa-shuma-iddin | ca. 1158 BC | |
Enlil-nadin-ahi | ca. 1157–1155 BC | Deposed by Shutruk-Nahhunte of Elam, ending the Kassite Dynasty |
The name of the dynasty, BALA PA.ŠE, is a paronomasia on the term išinnu, “stalk,” written as PA.ŠE and is the only apparent reference to the actual city of Isin.[5]
Ruler | Reigned | Comments |
---|---|---|
Marduk-kabit-ahheshu | ca. 1155–1140 BC | Founded first native Mesopotamian Dynasty in Babylon |
Itti-Marduk-balatu | ca. 1140–1132 BC | |
Ninurta-nadin-shumi | ca. 1132–1126 BC | |
Nabu-kudurri-usur (Nebuchadnezzar I) | ca. 1126–1103 BC | Contemporary and rival of Ashur-resh-ishi I of Assyria |
Enlil-nadin-apli | ca. 1103–1100 BC | Fought with Tiglath-Pileser I of Assyria |
Marduk-nadin-ahhe | ca. 1100–1082 BC | Fought with Tiglath-Pileser I of Assyria |
Marduk-shapik-zeri | ca. 1082–1069 BC | Entente cordial with Aššur-bêl-kala of Assyria |
Adad-apla-iddina | ca. 1069–1046 BC | Married daughter to Aššur-bêl-kala of Assyria |
Marduk-ahhe-eriba | ca. 1046 BC | |
Marduk-zer-X | ca. 1046–1033 BC | |
Nabu-shum-libur | ca. 1033–1025 BC | Dynasty ends with incursions of the Arameans |
Dynasty V of Babylon
suntingKnown as the 2nd Sealand Dynasty, the evidence that this was a Kassite Dynasty is rather tenuous.[6]
Ruler | Reigned | Comments |
---|---|---|
Simbar-shipak | ca. 1025–1008 BC | Deposed native dynasty, assassinated by his successor |
Ea-mukin-zeri | ca. 1008 BC | Usurper |
Kashshu-nadin-ahi | ca. 1008–1004 BC | Distressed times and famine |
Dynasty VI of Babylon
suntingKnown as the Bīt-Bazi Dynasty after the region from where this minor Kassite clan drew its ancestry.[7]
Ruler | Reigned | Comments |
---|---|---|
Eulmash-shakin-shumi | ca. 1004 – 987 BC | Founded Bīt-Bazi dynasty |
Ninurta-kudurri-usur I | ca. 987 – 985 BC | |
Shirikti-shuqamuna | ca. 985 BC |
Dynasty VII of Babylon
suntingThis was an Elamite Dynasty.
Ruler | Reigned | Comments |
---|---|---|
Mar-biti-apla-usur | ca. 985 – 979 BC | Elamite king who deposed the Arameans |
Dynasty VIII of Babylon
suntingRuler | Reigned | Comments |
---|---|---|
Nabu-mukin-apli | ca. 979 – 943 BC | Native Babylonian dynasty |
Dynasty IX of Babylon
suntingRuler | Reigned | Comments |
---|---|---|
Ninurta-kudurri-usur II | ca. 943 BC | Succeeded his father Nabu-mukin-apli |
Mar-biti-ahhe-iddina | ca. 943 – 920 BC | Contemporary of Ashur-Dan II of Assyria |
Shamash-mudammiq | ca. 920 – 900 BC | Lost territory to Adad-nirari II of Assyria |
Nabu-shuma-ukin I | ca. 900 – 888 BC | Gained territory from Adad-nirari II of Assyria |
Nabu-apla-iddina | ca. 888 – 855 BC | |
Marduk-zakir-shumi I | ca. 855 – 819 BC | Subjugated by Shalmaneser III of Assyria |
Marduk-balassu-iqbi | ca. 819 – 813 BC | Subjugated by Shalmaneser III of Assyria |
Baba-aha-iddina | ca. 813 – 811 BC | Subjugated by Adad-nirari III of Assyria |
5 kings | ca. 811 – 800 BC | Subjugated by Adad-nirari III of Assyria |
Ninurta-apla-X | ca. 800 – 790 BC | Freed Babylonia from Assyrian influence |
Marduk-bel-zeri | ca. 790 – 780 BC | |
Marduk-apla-usur | ca. 780 – 769 BC | |
Eriba-Marduk | ca. 769 – 761 BC | |
Nabu-shuma-ishkun | ca. 761 – 748 BC | |
From this point on, the Babylonian chronology is securely known via Ptolemy's Canon of Kings and other sources. | ||
Nabu-nasir (Nabonassar) | 748 – 734 BC | Subjugated by Tiglath-Pileser III of Assyria |
Nabu-nadin-zeri | 734 – 732 BC | |
Nabu-suma-ukin II | 732 BC |
Dynasty X of Babylon (Assyrian)
suntingRuler | Reigned | Comments |
---|---|---|
Nabu-mukin-zeri | 732 – 729 BC | |
Tiglath-Pileser III | 729 – 727 BC | Assyrian king |
Shalmaneser V | 727 – 722 BC | Assyrian king |
Marduk-apla-iddina II | 722 – 710 BC | A Chaldean king, (the Biblical Merodach-Baladan) |
Sharrukin II (Sargon II) | 710 – 705 BC | Assyrian king |
Sin-ahhe-eriba (Sennacherib) | 705 – 703 BC | Assyrian king |
Marduk-zakir-shumi II | 703 BC | Assyrian vassal |
Marduk-apla-iddina II | 703 BC | Chaldean ruler retook Babylon from Assyria during uprising |
Bel-ibni | 703 – 700 BC | Assyrian vassal |
Ashur-nadin-shumi | 700 – 694 BC | Assyrian king, son of Sennacherib |
Nergal-ushezib | 694 – 693 BC | Elimite ruler, murdered Ashur-nadin-shumi |
Mushezib-Marduk | 693 – 689 BC | Elamite ruler |
Assyrian Sack of Babylon by Sennacherib , 689 BC; Babylon is rebuilt by Esarhaddon of Assyria in the 670s BC | ||
Sin-ahhe-eriba (Sennacherib) | 689 – 681 BC | Assyrian king, destroted Babylon |
Ashur-ahha-iddina (Esarhaddon) | 681 – 669 BC | Assyrian king, rebuilt Babylon |
Shamash-shum-ukin | 668 – 648 BC | Assyrian king, son of Esarhaddon, rebelled against his brother, Ashurbanipal and was killed. |
Kandalanu | 648 – 627 BC | Assyrian governor under Ashurbanipal, rumoured to have been Ashurbanipal himself, also governor under Ashur-etil-ilani of Assyria between 631 BC and 627 BC |
Sin-shumu-lishir | 626 BC | Assyrian king, Ruled Babylon, but lost control over regions in Babylonia. |
Sinsharishkun | ca. 626 – 620 BC | Assyrian king. Lost control over Babylonia in 620 BC. |
Ruler | Reigned | Comments |
---|---|---|
Nabu-apla-usur (Nabopolassar) | 626 – 605 BC | Chaldean king. Took control of Babylonia from Sinsharishkun of Assyria, ejected Assyrian armies from Babylonia in 616 BC. Entered into alliance with Cyaxares and destroyed Assyrian empire. |
Nabu-kudurri-usur (Nebuchadnezzar II) | 605 – 562 BC | Chaldean king. Defeated the Egyptians and Assyrians at Carchemish |
Amel-Marduk | 562 – 560 BC | |
Nergal-shar-usur (Nergal-sharezer/Neriglissar) | 560 – 556 BC | |
Labashi-Marduk | 556 BC | |
Nabu-na'id (Nabonidus) | 556 – 539 BC | Last Mesopotamian king of Babylon, originated in Harran in Assyria. Was not a Chaldean, often left rule to his son Belshazzar. |
Cyrus II of Persia | 539 – 529 BC |
Achaemenid Babylonia
suntingIn 539 BC, Babylon was captured by Cyrus II of Persia. His son was crowned one year later formally as King of Babylonia
Ruler | Reigned | Comments |
---|---|---|
Cambyses II | 529 – 522 BC | son of Cyrus the Great |
Smerdis (Bardiya) | 522 BC | (Possibly a usurper) alleged son of Cyrus the Great |
Darius I of Persia the Great | 521 – 486 BC | brother-in-law of Smerdis and grandson of Arsames |
Xerxes I of Persia | 485 – 465 BC | son of Darius I |
Artaxerxes I of Persia Longimanus | 465 – 424 BC | son of Xerxes I |
Xerxes II of Persia | 424 BC | son of Artaxerxes I |
Sogdianus of Persia | 424 – 423 BC | half-brother and rival of Xerxes II |
Darius II of Persia Nothus | 423 – 405 BC | half-brother and rival of Xerxes II |
Artaxerxes II of Persia Mnemon | 404 – 359 BC | (see also Xenophon) son of Darius II |
Artaxerxes III of Persia Ochus | 358 – 338 BC | son of Artaxerxes II |
Arses of Persia (Artaxerxes IV) | 338 – 336 BC | son of Artaxerxes III |
Darius III of Persia Codomannus | 336 – 330 BC | great-grandson of Darius II |
Seleucid Babylonia
suntingBabylon was captured by Alexander III of Macedon in 330 BC. It was captured by the Parthians in 141 BC.
Ruler | Reigned | Comments |
---|---|---|
Alexander the Great | 330 – 323 BC | |
Alexander IV of Macedon | 323 – 309 BC | |
Seleucus I Nicator | Satrap 311 – 305 BC, King 305 – 281 BC | |
Antiochus I Soter | co-ruler from 291, ruled 281 – 261 BC | |
Antiochus II Theos | 261 – 246 BC | |
Seleucus II Callinicus | 246 – 225 BC | |
Seleucus III Ceraunus (or Soter) | 225 – 223 BC | |
Antiochus III the Great | 223 – 187 BC | |
Seleucus IV Philopator | 187 – 175 BC | |
Antiochus IV Epiphanes | 175 – 164 BC | |
Antiochus V Eupator | 164 – 162 BC | |
Demetrius I Soter | 161 – 150 BC | |
Alexander I Balas | 150 – 145 BC | |
Demetrius II Nicator | first reign, 145 – 141 BC |
See also
suntingReferences
sunting- ^ BM 33332.
- ^ BM 38122.
- ^ The text is in a private collection and was published in: Arno Poebel (1955). "Second Dynasty of Isin According to a New King-List Tablet". Assyriological studies. University of Chicago Press (15).
- ^ Meissner, Bruno (1990). Reallexikon der Assyriologie. 6. Berlin: Walter de Gruyter. hlm. 90. ISBN 3110100517.
- ^ J. A. Brinkman (1999). Dietz Otto Edzard, ed. Reallexikon Der Assyriologie Und Vorderasiatischen Archaologie: Ia – Kizzuwatna. 5. Walter De Gruyter. hlm. 183—184.
- ^ Bruno Meissner (1999). Dietz Otto Edzard, ed. Reallexikon Der Assyriologie Und Vorderasiatischen Archaologie: Meek - Mythologie. Walter De Gruyter. hlm. 8. “The Kassite name of Simbar-Šipak, the Kassite derived theothoric element (dKaššû = “the Kassite (god)”) in the name of the third king, and the tribal affiliation of the second monarch could suggest that this dynasty represented a revival of Kassite power following the native Babylonian rulers of the Second Dynasty of Isin; but the evidence at present must be regarded as tenuous.”
- ^ J. A. Brinkman (1982). "Babylonia, c. 1000 – 748 B.C.". Dalam John Boardman, I. E. S. Edwards, N. G. L. Hammond, E. Sollberger. The Cambridge Ancient History (Volume 3, Part 1). Cambridge University Press. hlm. 296–297.