ABI-ESHUH
Term
: 28 years; c. 1648 – 1620 BC
Preceded
by :
Samsu-iluna
Succeeded by : Ammi-ditana
Regnal
titles of Abi-Eshuh : King of Babylon
Abi-Eshuh
/ Abi-Eschu / Abieshu / Abi-Ešuh (variants: ma-bi-ši,
[i 1] "Abiši", mE-bi-šum, [i 2] "Ebišum")
was the 8th king of the 1st Dynasty of Babylon and reigned for
28 years from ca. 1648–1620 BC (short chronology) or 1711–1684
BC (middle chronology). He was preceded by Samsu-iluna, who was
his father.
Biography
:
His exuberant titles included, “descendant of Sumu-la-El,
princely heir of Samsu-iluna, eternal seed of kingship, mighty
king, king of Babylon, king of the land of Sumer and Akkad, king
who makes the four quarters be at peace.” This was presumably
achieved by his two aggressive military campaigns. His fourth
year-name records that he subdued the army of the Kassites. [i
3] The Chronicle of Early Kings [i 1] recalls his damming of the
Tigris in a vain attempt to capture Ilum-ma-ili, the founder of
the Sealand Dynasty. A clay cylinder fragment [i 4] from Kiš
is tentatively assigned to this king because the events it commemorates
coincide with three of his year-names. It mentions the Tigris
river (year “o” the damming of the Tigris), the Tigris
gate (year “m” the ká-gal-i7idigna), the fashioning
of a mace for Marduk (year “g”) and digging of the
Zubi canal (year “I”). He is described as “the
great champion” in his son, Ammi-Ditana's inscription, [i
5] and in the genealogy of his descendant Ammi-Saduqa. The Elamites
under their king Kutir-nahhunte I raided into Babylonia early
in his reign and sacked 30 cities.
Two
copies of a building inscription [i 6] commemorate his construction
activities at Luhaia, a town founded by Hammu-rapi on the Arahtum
canal to the north of Babylon. A single inscription exists found
on an onyx eye stone dedicated to the goddess Ningal.
He
is richly attested in the cylinder seal impressions of his minions
with one [i 8] of his servant, Lamanum, son of Bel-kulla, another
[i 9] of Luštamar-Adad, son of Mar-Sipparim, another [i 10]
of Nabi’um-an[dasa], son of Ilšu-ib[nišu], another
[i 11] … son of Awil-…, another [i 12] Ilšu-nasir,
diviner, son of Marduk-nasir, another a copy [i 13] Iddin-Šamaš,
sanga priest of the goddess Ninisina, son of Ku-Ninisina, and
another [i 14] overseer of the merchants, Sin-iddina[m] son of
Šerum-ban [i]. The Uruk List of Kings and Sages [i 15] records
that “during the reign of Abi-ešuh, the king, Gimil-Gula
and Taqis-Gula were the scholars”.
Source
:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abi-Eshuh