Ishtup-Ilum

King of Mari From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Ishtup-Ilum

Ishtup-Ilum, also Ishtup-El (𒅖𒁾𒀭, Ish-dub-ilum; died c. 2136 BC)[1] was a ruler of the city of Mari, one of the military governors known as Shakkanakku in northern Mesopotamia, after the fall of Akkad.[2] He was probably a contemporary with the Second Dynasty of Lagash, around the time of Gudea.[1] He was the son of Ishma-Dagan and brother of Nûr-Mêr, both Shakkanakkus of Mari before him, and, according to the dynastic lists, he ruled after them for a period of 11 years.[3]

Quick Facts Ishtup-Ilum 𒅖𒁾𒀭, King of Mari ...
Ishtup-Ilum
𒅖𒁾𒀭
Thumb
Statue of Ishtup-Ilum
King of Mari
Reign11 years
c. 2148-2136 BCE
PredecessorNûr-Mêr
SuccessorIshgum-Addu
Diedc. 2136 BC
DynastyShakkanakku dynasty
FatherIshma-Dagan
Close
Thumb
Mari
Mari
Location of Mari

Attestations

Summarize
Perspective

He is known from inscriptions mentioning the building of a temple, as well as from a monumental statue, discovered in Mari.[2]

Statue of Ishtup-Ilum

His statue was discovered by the team of André Parrot on 14 March 1936 in Mari. It has a rather simple and coarse design, a provincial characteristic during this period, and is significantly less sophisticated than the statues of his successors, such as Puzur-Ishtar.[4] The statue is now in the Aleppo National Museum, Syria.[5][6]

Dedication tablets

Ishtup-Ilum is also known from a dedication tablet for the "Temple of the King of the Country" (either Dagan or Enlil)[7] with the inscription:

Thumb

𒅖𒁾𒀭 / 𒄊𒀴 𒈠𒌷𒆠 / 𒌉𒅖𒈣𒀭𒁕𒃶 / 𒄊𒀴 𒈠𒌷𒆠 / 𒂍 / 𒀭𒈗𒈤𒁴 / 𒅁𒉌[8]

Ishtup-Ilum / Shakkanakku Mari-ki / dumu Ishma-Dagan / Shakkanakku Mari-ki / e / dLugal-mādim / ibni[9]

"Ishtup-Ilum, Shakkanakku of Mari, son of Ishma-Dagan, Shakkanakku of Mari, built the Temple for God Lugal-mātim (the "Lord of the Land", identified with Dagan or Enlil)"[10][11]

This implies that Ishtup-Ilum was the builder of this "Temple of the King of the Country", in which were also discovered beautiful copper statues of guardian lions, the "Lions of Mari", probably installed later during a rebuilding of the temple in the early 2nd millennium BCE. The Temple was excavated in 1938 by André Parrot.[15]

More information Regnal titles ...
Ishtup-Ilum Mari
Regnal titles
Preceded by King of Mari
c. 2148 - c. 2136 BC
Succeeded by
Close

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.