Ili-ishmani

King of Elam From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Ili-ishmani

Ili-ishmani (π’‰Œπ’‰Œπ’…–π’ˆ π’‰Œ i3-li2-isz-ma-ni; fl. c. 2150 BC) was a ruler of Elam around 2150 BC. His name is purely Akkadian, and he was in charge of Elam at the time of Naram-Sin and/or Shar-Kali-Sharri, and probably their vassal.[3][4] His title of "Military Governor" (Shakkanakku in Akkadian, GIR.NITA in Sumerian) suggests that he was a dependent of the Akkadian kings, rather than an independent ruler.[5] Ili-ishmani rose from the position of scribe, already one of the top three positions in the land, to the position of Governor.[6]

Quick Facts Ili-ishmani π’‰Œπ’‰Œπ’…–π’ˆ π’‰Œ, King of Elam ...
Ili-ishmani
π’‰Œπ’‰Œπ’…–π’ˆ π’‰Œ
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Axe blade with inscription "Ili-ishmani, scribe and shakkanakku of Elam". Louvre Museum Sb 14243.[1][2]
King of Elam
Reignc. 2150 BC
PredecessorPossibly Epirmupi
SuccessorPossibly Hi'elu
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Location of Susa

His predecessor was probably Epirmupi.[7] After him, and the weakening of Akkad, rule in Elam probably reverted to local rulers of the Awan Dynasty.[8]

Axe fragment

The fragment of an axe is known, which was dedicated by Ili-ishmani.[9][10] It reads:

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Axe blade with inscription Ilishmani, scribe and shakkanakku of Elam (with transcription)

π’‰Œπ’‰Œπ’…–π’ˆ π’‰Œ / π’Ύπ’Š¬ / π’„Šπ’€΄ / π’ˆ π’‹Ύ / 𒉏𒆠

"i3-li2-isz-ma-ni / dub-sar / szagina / ma-ti / elam{ki}
"Ili-iΕ‘mani, / scribe, / military governor (shakkanakku) / of the land / of Elam."

β€”β€ŠInscription of Ili-ishmani. Louvre Museum Sb 14243.[11][12][13]

Seal inscription

A seal found in Lagash also has the inscription "Ili-ishmani Governor (Ensi) of Susa" (π’‰Œπ’‰Œπ’…–π’ˆ π’‰Œ 𒑐𒋼𒋛 π’ˆΉπ’‚žπ’†  Ili-ishmani ensi Shushanki).[14]

References

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