A'annepada

King of Kish From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A'annepada

A'annepada (Sumerian: π’€€π’€­π’‰Œπ’…†π’Š’π’•, romanized: AanΓ©pΓ dda; fl. c. 2350 BC[1][2]) was a king of the First Dynasty of Ur. He was a son of Mesannepada.[1][3] It is thought that his tomb may be tomb PG 580 in the Royal Cemetery at Ur.[1]

Quick Facts A'annepada π’€€π’€­π’‰Œπ’…†π’Š’π’•, King of Ur ...
A'annepada
π’€€π’€­π’‰Œπ’…†π’Š’π’•
King of Kish
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Gold dagger from tomb PG 580, thought to belong to A'anepada
King of Ur
Reignc. 2350 BC
PredecessorPossibly Balulu
SuccessorPossibly Lunanna
HouseFirst Dynasty of Ur
FatherMesannepada
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Location of Ur

Votive tablets

Several tablets are known that bear his name, in particular dedicated to Ninhursag, and proclaiming Mesannepada as his father:[4]

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A'annepada tablet inscription. British Museum.[5]

π’€­π’Š©π’Œ†π’„―π’Š• / π’€€π’€­π’‰Œπ’…†π’Š’π’• / π’ˆ—π’ŒΆπ’†  / π’Œ‰π’ˆ©π’€­π’‰Œπ’…†π’Š’π’• / π’ˆ—π’ŒΆπ’†  /π’€­π’Š©π’Œ†π’‰Ίπ’‚…π’Š / 𒂍 π’ˆ¬π’ˆΎπ’†•

Dnin-hur-sag / a-an-ne2-pa3-da / lugal uri5{ki} / dumu mes-an-ne2-pa3-da / lugal uri5{ki} /Dnin-hur-sag-ra / e2 mu-na-du3

"For Nin-hursag: A'annepada, king of Ur, son of Mesannepada, king of Ur, built the temple for Ninhursag."

β€”β€ŠDedication tablet by King A'annepada found at Tell al-'Ubaid, British Museum, BM 116982.[5][6]

Foundation cone

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Foundation cone of A'annepada for Inanna, British Museum BM 90951[7][8][9]

A foundation cone in a copper alloy was found in Ur, bearing the name of "King A'annepada" in a dedication for Inanna, now in the British Museum (BM 90951).[7][8][9][10]

The cone was discovered by John Taylor in 1854 during his excavations in Ur.[9] It has a length of 34.3 centimeters, a diameter of 3.7 centimeters, and weighs 1.7 kilograms.[9][8] According to the British Museum, it was found together with two other objects, a carved stone with handle and a lapis lazuli portrait, which together probably formed a foundation deposit.[11]

The actual content of the inscription had been overlooked, until it was published by J.C. Gadd in 1928.[8]

Artifacts from tomb PG 580 at Ur

It has been suggested that the tomb of A'annepada may be tomb PG 580 in the Royal Cemetery at Ur.[1]

References

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