c.2700
BC :
Enmebaragesi
of Kish constructs the Temple of Enlil at Nippur, quickly turning
the city into the Sumerian spiritual centre.
c.2450
BC :
Nippur becomes
part of the empire of Eannatum of Lagash.c.2430 BCNippur is conquered
by Enshakushanna of Uruk.
c.2300
BC :
Sargon's Akkadian
empire controls the city.
In
approximately 2230 BC, Naram-Sim of Agade is prompted by a pair
of inauspicious oracles to attack the E-kur temple, supposedly
protected by the god Enlil, head of the pantheon. As a result
of this, eight chief gods of the Anunaki pantheon come together
and withdrawn their support from Agade, pronouncing famine upon
the city and its empire (probably the result of the widespread
climate-induced collapse of this period). Naram-Sin places his
son, Sharkalisharri in Nippur to control it directly.
c.2230
- 2217 BC :
Sharkalisharri
/ Car-kali-carri : Son of
Naram-Sin of Agade and later king of Agade himself.
c.2193
BC :
The Gutians
conquer most of Sumer, including Nippur.
c.2112
BC :
The
Semitic kings of the new dynasty at Ur, Ur-Gur/Ur-Engur and Dungi
(probably Ur-Nammu and Shulgi of the Third Dynasty, so dating
this event), rebuild the temples and city walls at Nippur along
the same lines as the earlier work of Naram-Sin of Agade.
c.2004
1998 BC :
With
the collapse of Sumerian civilisation and the fall of Ur, Nippur
is briefly occupied by invading Elamites before becoming a possession
of the Amorite kingdom of Isin. The city seems to suffer some
damage from the occupation but also gains recognition from the
Elamites.
c.1890
BC :
A
weakened Isin loses control of Nippur around this point in time,
although the details are not known. A single Amorite king is known
for the city, so it may be that he rules during this period.
Hammurabi
c.1822
- 1763 BC :
Rim-Sin
of Larsa is known as the 'shepherd of the land of Nippur', suggesting
the city falls under Larsa's control.
c.1763
- 1595 BC :
Larsa is
defeated by the Babylonian empire and Nippur passes to Hammurabi.
Its spiritual centre is transferred to Babylon until the Kassites
gain power and Nippur is restored to its former splendour.
c.1375
- 1235 BC :
Nippur is
the repository of a very substantial administrative archive
that concentrates on the reigns of the Babylonian kings from
Burnaburiash II to Kashtiliash IV inclusive. The city and surrounding
province is administered by a governor who oversees the local
agricultural organisation which produces sometimes huge harvests.
The archive ends with the Assyrian capture of Babylonia, and
five years later the city is briefly captured by Elam.
c.1200
BC :
The
city is mostly abandoned between 1200-900 BC during a regional decline
in urbanism. By 1000 BC there is perhaps nothing more than a small
population clustered around the ancient ziggurat. Control eventually
passes to the Assyrians and then the Seleucids, who turn the temple
into a fortress. Final decay sets in under the Sassanids and the
former city becomes a collection of mud huts beside the ziggurat.
The Parthians construct over the ruins of the temple and the town
finally disappears in the thirteenth century AD.
Source
:
https://www.historyfiles.co.uk/
KingListsMiddEast/
MesopotamiaNippur.htm