CITY
STATE OF LARSA
Apart
from one possible contender during the pre-flood period in which
Bad-Tibira held the kingship, the city of Larsa doesn't seem to
have had any other independent kings of its own until the very end
of Sumerian civilisation.
Control
of it was gained by the Amorite inheritors of southern Mesopotamia,
becoming the centre of a moderately successful city state which
also controlled Ur and Uruk. Its name (modern Tell as-Senkereh),
was corrupted to Ellasar in the Bible, although the Biblical king
Arioch of Ellasar is now thought to be the early Hurrian king Ariukki.
Dates are according to the Middle Chronology, which (until recently
at least) was the most popular. The Long Chronology sets the dates
120 years earlier, while the Low Chronology sets them 64 years later.
c.2025
BC :
With
the power of the Third Dynasty at Ur crumbling, it seems that Larsa
becomes independent, at least to a degree, founding its own line
of kings.
Amorite
Rulers of Larsa :
Larsa
became a formidable force in southern Mesopotamia during the Old
Babylonian Period. After the Third Dynasty of Ur collapsed, many
of the larger city states hurried to fill the resultant power vacuum.
Isin managed to regain many of the most important Sumerian sites,
and appointed their own governors at Larsa. One of them, an Amorite
of the Yamutbal tribe named Gungunum, broke with Isin, set up his
own independent dynasty at Larsa, and seized the now diminished
city of Ur. Whether his predecessors were also Amorites is not known.
c.2025
- 2004 BC :
Naplanum / Nablanum : Presumably an Amorite of the Yamutbal.
c.2004
- 1998 BC :
Emisum
: Possible son?
c.1998
BC :
Larsa
falls under the control of Isin in the century of disorder which
follows the collapse of Sumerian civilisation. It seems by the Larsa
king list that Emisum continues to govern the city, but probably
only as a subject of Isin.
c.1998
- 1976 BC :
Emisum
c.1976
- 1941 BC :
Samium
: Possible son? Established Larsa as a rival to
Isin.
c.1941
- 1933 BC :
Zabaya
/ Zabaia / Zambija : Governor of Larsa
under Isin's rule?
c.1932
- 1905 BC :
Gungunum
: Son? Governor of Larsa under Isin's rule. First
king of Larsa.
c.1920?
BC :
Gungunum,
Isin's governor of the province of Lagash, breaks with his masters
and sets up his own dynasty in Larsa, although the reasons for this
are largely unknown. To further frustrate Isin's rulers, he seizes
Ur, cutting Isin's vital trade route and economically crippling
the city.
c.1905
- 1894 BC :
Abisare
/ Abi-sare : Son?
c.1905
- 1866 BC :
Gungunum's
two successors in the rule of Larsa and Ur seek to cut off Isin's
access to water by rerouting canals to Larsa. There is evidence
that acquiring access to water in this increasingly arid region
poses quite a problem for most of southern Mesopotamia in this period,
so making it an increasingly vital resource. After this period,
Isin quickly loses political and economical force.
c.1894
- 1866 BC :
Sumu-el
: Son?
c.1865
- 1850 BC :
Nur-Adad
c.1850
- 1843 BC :
Sin-iddinam
c.1843
- 1841 BC :
Sin-eribam
: Son?
c.1841
- 1836 BC :
Sin-iqisham
c.1836
- 1835 BC :
Silli-Adad
: Son?
c.1835
BC :
Silli-Adad
is defeated and killed in battle by Sabium of Babylon, apparently
leaving the kingdom in a political vacuum which is quickly filled
by Elamites.
fl
c.1835 BC :
Kudur-mabug
: King of an Elamite state north of Susa?
c.1834
BC :
Kudur-mabug,
apparent king of an otherwise unknown Elamite state to the north
of the Elamite capital at Susa, manages to install his son, Warad-Sin,
on the throne of Larsa.
Warad-Sin
: Son.
c.1834-1823
BC :
Rim-Sin
succeeds his brother and conquers much of southern Mesopotamia.
Isin is taken in c.1796 BC (or perhaps earlier), and Sin-muballit
of Babylon is defeated. Uruk is also defeated (c.1810 BC) and then
finally captured (c.1803/2 BC). The city state's possessions reach
their peak, such as it is, controlling about ten to fifteen other
cities - nowhere near the territory controlled by many previous
dynasties in Sumerian history. Even so, the city state manages to
undertake huge building projects and agricultural undertakings.
c.1822-1763
BC :
Rim-Sin
: Brother. 'Shepherd of the land of Nippur'.
c.1763
BC :
Rim-Sin
is attacked by Hammurabi's Babylonian empire for his failure to
provide any real assistance in the allied effort to beat back the
growing threat of the powerful Elamites. Given Rim-Sin's ancestry
perhaps the lack of support should not have been a surprise. Hammurabi
now controls most of Sumer.
c.1741
- 1736 BC :
Rim-Sin
II : An adventurer.
Along
with many others at the time of Hammurabi's death, Rim-Sin II sees
an opportunity to lead a revolt against the rule of Samsu-iluna's
Babylonian empire. The two fight for five years, with Rim-Sin allied
to Eshnunna, and most battles taking place on the Elam/Sumer border
before Rim-Sin is captured and executed.
c.539
BC :
Archaeological
evidence suggests that Larsa remains occupied until the end of the
Neo-Babylonian empire, when it is abandoned, either upon Babylonia
becoming part of the Persian Achaemenid empire, or shortly afterwards.
Source
:
https://www.historyfiles.co.uk/
KingListsMiddEast/
MesopotamiaLarsa.htm#Amorites