SAMSU-DITANA
Term
: 31 years; c. 1562 – 1531 BC
Preceded
by :
Ammi-Saduqa
Successor : None
Regnal
titles of Samsu-Ditana : King of Babylon
Samsu-Ditana
/ Samsuditana / Samsuditani, inscribed phonetically in cuneiform
sa-am-su-di-ta-na in the seals of his servants, the 11th and last
king of the Amorite or First Dynasty of Babylon, reigned for 31
years, [i 1] [i 2] 1625 – 1595 BC (Middle Chronology) or 1562
– 1531 BC (Short Chronology). His reign is best known for
its demise with the sudden fall of Babylon at the hands of the Hittites.
History
:
He was the great great grandson of Hammurabi and, although the Babylonian
kingdom had shrunk considerably since its peak under this illustrious
ancestor, it still extended north from Babylon and the Euphrates
to Mari and Terqa. For the most part, he appears to have been non-belligerent
and content to stay at home at the seat of his kingdom as none of
his year names describe the waging of war or the building of monumental
edifices. They are about pious gifts to the gods and the erection
of statues dedicated to himself. None of his inscriptions have survived.
A royal epic of Gulkišar, the 6th king of the 2nd Dynasty of
Babylon, the Sealand Dynasty, describes his enmity against Samsu-ditana.
Samsu-ditana
apparently feared an attack as evidenced in extant tamitu texts,
oracle questions addressed to the gods Šamaš and Adad,
which name seven “rebel” enemies. However, he was powerless
to prevent it, as the Babylonian state was in decay, with offices
becoming hereditary, usurping royal prerogative, and payments accepted
in lieu of military service to fund the bloated bureaucracy. The
eventual coup-de-grace came from an unexpected quarter and his reign
was brought to an abrupt end by a raid by the Hittite king, Muršili
I in 1595 BC (Middle Chronology), 1531 BC (Short Chronology), which
resulted in the sacking and complete devastation of Babylon. The
Chronicle of Early Kings [i 3] tersely reported: “At the time
of Samsu-ditana, the Hittites marched against Akkad.” Muršili
conquered just to seize loot and captives, without attempting any
lasting occupation, a strategy he had previously employed in his
opportunistic putsch against Halpa (ancient Aleppo). The Hittite
account appears in the Edict of Telepinu, which relates: “Subsequently
he marched to Babylon and he destroyed Babylon, and defeated the
Hurrian troops, and brought captives and possessions of Babylon
to Hattusa.”
He
seized the statues of the Babylonian tutelary deity Marduk and his
consort Sarpatinum and transported them to Hani where they would
not be recovered until the reign of the Kassite king Agum-Kakrime
some 24 years later. Babylon was left in ruins and was not reoccupied
until the advent of the Kassite dynasty, where documents from Tell
Muhammad are dated by the number of years after it was resettled
for the reign of Šipta'ulzi.
Source
:
https://en.wikipedia.org/
wiki/Samsu-Ditana