"Dudu the Great King of Akkad" πΊπΊ ππ π ππ΅ππ du-du da-num lugal a-ga-de3{ki} on an alabaster vase fragment, Louvre Museum AO 6773[1]
He became king after a period of apparent anarchy that had followed the death of Shar-Kali-Sharri.[3] The king list mentions four other figures who had been competing for the throne during a three-year period after Sharkalisharri's death. There are no other surviving records referencing any of these competitors, but a few artifacts with inscriptions confirming Dudu's rule over a reduced Akkadian Empire. Given activity at Umma and Girsu, and at Apiak whose location is unknown but which lay near the Tigris river to the East of Nippur, the Akkadian Empire maintained some level of control to the south at least. The find of a seal at Adab, lying further East that Apiak, of a servant of Dudu supports this view.[4] His inscriptions present him simply as "King of Akkad":
"Dudu the mighty, king of Agade: Amar-Ε‘uba the scribe (is) his servant."
ββSeal inscription of Amar-Ε‘uba found at Bismaya.[5][6]
He also seems to have campaigned against former Akkadian subjects to the south, including Girsu, Umma (where the governor of Lagash appointed by Shar-Kali-Sharri, Puzer-Mama, had declared independence at the end of that rule) and possibly Elam.[7][8] One inscription relates directly to his destruction of Girsu:
"To {d}inanna IΕ‘tar, Dudu, king of Agade, when Girsu he smote, from the booty of Girsu he dedicated it."
Dudu was succeeded by his son Shu-turul per the king list, who became the last known king of the Akkadian Empire. It has been suggested that a known high official in the Late Akkadian period, IΕ‘arum, was another son of Dudu. In inscriptions he calls himself "IΕ‘arum, son of Dudu" and calls on the tutelary gods of the Akkadian Empire, Istar and Ilaba.[17]
"Dudu, Great King of Akkad" (πΊπΊ ππ π ππ΅ππ , Du-du da-num lugal a-ga-de3(ki)) on the Dudu alabaster vase.
King Dudu of Agade, complete alabaster vase inscription (transcription in standard Sumero-Akkadian cuneiform): "Dudu, the Great king of Akkad, for Nergal of Apiak has dedicated this".[18]
Dudu in the Akkadian family tree
See also
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