CITY
STATE OF ISIN
Sumerian civilisation, already on the wane due to the collapse of
agriculture and a depopulation of southern Mesopotamia, was ended
in circa 2004 when Third Dynasty Ur was defeated by Elam. The Amorites,
who had been settling in Mesopotamia for some centuries, effectively
became the successors to the Sumerians, assimilating their culture
and founding city states of their own; Babylon, Ebla, Hamath, and
Isin. Isin (modern Ishan al-Bahriyat) already existed under the
rule of Ur's Third Dynasty, but there are no records of any of its
rulers from the Sumerian period. Instead, it achieved independence
as Ur declined. One of the final king's officials, Ishbi-Erra, moved
to Isin and established himself as a ruler there, continuing many
of Ur's traditions and ceremonies.
There
are a number of versions of the Sumerian king list which contain
many differences from one another. One version comes from an inscription
on a block of stone found at Isin. This one was an update of earlier
Sumerian king lists which added Isin's kings to Sumer's royal roster,
and it was inscribed during the reign of Damiqilishu, the last of
Isin's kings. The inscription was made only a few years before Hammurabi
of Babylon captured southern Mesopotamia in the mid-eighteenth century
BC and made it a province of his new empire.
FeatureAccording
to the Sumerian king list, a total of eleven kings (MS P4+Ha has
sixteen) ruled for 159 years (MS P4+Ha has 226 years), once (in
one dynasty) in Isin. This is the twentieth set of entries on the
list comprising kings 125-139. List 1 has fourteen kings ruling
for 203 years. Here, List 1 is primarily used, backed up by List
2.
c.2017
BC :
With
Ur rapidly fading in power and influence, a power vacuum emerges
which the larger city states scrabble to fill. One of Ibbi-Sin's
officials takes the opportunity to move to the subject city of Isin
and create his own city state there.
c.2017
- 1984 BC :
Ishbi-Erra
/ Icbi-Erra
: Ex-official
of Ur who founded the city state. Ruled for 33 years.
c.2016
BC :
Isin occupies and plunders the province of Hamazi as Ur's empire
collapses.
c.2013
BC :
Kazallu is conquered by Isin. Eshnunna receives Isin's help in battle
against Subartu.
c.1998
BC :
Six
years after the great brick mausoleums and temples of the third
dynasty kings of Ur are destroyed by the Elamites, Isin is strong
enough to force the Elamites out, seizing Ur and restoring the temples,
though Ur is no longer a capital city. At the same time Isin gains
control of the Sumerian spiritual centre of Nippur, another culturally
symbolic and commercially crucial town, Uruk, and the province of
Lagash, of which Larsa is a part. Ishbi-Erra also maintains good
relations with Eshnunna, another regional power at this time, while
Kazallu gains similar levels of power in central Mesopotamia. Ishbi-Erra
claims the title 'king of Ur' in an attempt to confirm the authority
of his domination of the region.
c.1984
- 1974 BC :
Shuilishu
/ Cu-ilicu
: Son.
Ruled for 10/20/10/15 years.
c.1974
- 1953 BC :
Idin-Dagan
/ Iddin-Dagan
: Son.
Ruled for 21/25 years.
c.1953
- 1933 BC :
Ishme-Dagan
/ Icme-Dagan
: Son.
Ruled for 20/18 years. Rebuilt the temple
at Ur.
c.1940
BC :
The
Assyrians begin making raids into central and southern Mesopotamia,
attacking the Amorite city states.
c.1933
- 1922 BC :
Lipit-Ishtar
/ Lipit-Ectar
: Son.
Ruled for 11 years.
c.1922
- 1894 BC :
Ur-Ninurta
: Son.
Ruled for 28 years.
c.1920?
BC :
Isin
suddenly and rapidly begins to decline. The exact events are not
known, but around this time, Gungunum, Isin's governor of the province
of Lagash (and apparently based at Larsa), seizes Ur. This move
cuts Isin's vital trade route, economically crippling the city.
c.1904
- 1866 BC :
Gungunum's
two successors at Ur seek to cut off Isin's access to water by rerouting
canals to Larsa. Nippur is also lost around this time, and Uruk
breaks away in about 1865 BC. Kazallu seemingly follows suit at
some point around 1900 BC.
c.1894
- 1873 BC :
Bur-Sin
/ Bur-Suen
: Son.
Ruled for 21 years.
c.1873
- 1868 BC :
Lipit-Enlil
: Son.
Ruled for 5 years.
c.1868
- 1860 BC :
Erraimitti
/ Erra-imitti
: Ruled
for 8/7 years.
c.1860
BC :
The
much-weakened throne of Isin is seized by Enlilbani, ending the
dynasty of kings which had been established over 150 years previously.
The city state remains weak, but independent.
c.1860
- 1836 BC :
Enlilbani
/ Enlil-bani
: Seized
the throne. Ruled for 24 years.
c.1836
- 1833 BC :
Zambia
/ Zambiya
/ Zambija : Ruled
for 3 years.
c.1833
- 1829 BC :
Iterpisha
/ Iter-pica
: Ruled
for 4 years.
c.1829
- 1825 BC :
Urdukuga
/ Ur-dul-kuga
: Ruled
for 4 years.
c.1825
- 1814 BC :
Sinmagir
/ Suen-magir
: Ruled
for 11 years.
c.1814
- 1791 BC :
(No
data) / Damiq-ilicu
/ Damiqilishu : Ruled
for 23 years.
c.1800
BC :
Scribes in Sumer record that rich shipments from the Indus Valley
culture suddenly cease at around this time.
c.1796
BC :
Rim-Sin of Larsa captures Isin, ending its independence.
c.1787
(1791?) BC :
Isin
is attacked and defeated by Hammurabi's Babylonian empire. Direct
rule of Isin appears to be taken by Larsa.
c.1763
BC :
With
the defeat of Larsa by the Babylonian empire. Hammurabi fully controls
Isin.
c.1732
BC :
Claiming descent from Damiq-ilicu, Iluma-Ilum gains the freedom
of Sumer south of Nippur, founding the Babylonian Dynasty of the
Sealand.
1156
BC :
Following invasions by the Elamites, the Babylonians rally around
the Isin nobility, which is now part of Babylonian nobility, and
they reclaim the throne and strengthen it.
Source
:
https://www.historyfiles.co.uk/
KingListsMiddEast/
MesopotamiaIsin.htm