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Full text of "The early dynasties of Sumer and Akkad"

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, 

[UNIVERSITY) 



THE "EOTHEN" SERIES 

The object of this series is to publish 
original texts and translations, transliterations 
and translations of texts hitherto unpublished 
in English, and essays on the history, civilisa- 
tion, religion, etc., of Western Asia in the 
earliest times. 

O++D 

I. THE EARLY DYNASTIES OF 
SUMER AND AKKAD. 

By C. J. GADD, B.A., Assistant in the Depart" 
ment of Egyptian and Assyrian Antiquities in 
the British Museum. 

In the press. 

II. THE FIRST CAMPAIGN OF 
SENNACHERIB. 

An unpublished text, edited by SIDNEY SMITH, 
M.A., Assistant in the Department of Egyptian 
and Assyrian Antiquities in the British Museum. 

In preparation. 

THE BOGHAZ'KEUI TREATIES. 

(1) The Treaty of Shuna-asshura, King of 
Kizzuwadni, with a King of the Hittites. 

By SIDNEY SMITH. 



Eotben Series i. 



THE EARLY DYNASTIES OF 
SUMER AND AKKAD. 



BY 

C. J. GADD, B.A., 

Assistant in the Department of Egyptian and Assyrian Antiquities 
in the British Museum. 



LONDON : 

LUZAC & CO. 
1921. 



HARRISON & SONS, LTD., 

Printers in Ordinary to His Majesty, 

44-47, ST. MARTIN'S LANE, LONDON, W.C. 2. 



NOTE. 



THE acquisition of a complete and trustworthy scheme 
for the foundations of the oldest history of even one 
well-defined region in the ancient world is no mean 
addition to science, and perhaps only those who work 
in less favoured fields can duly appreciate the fortune of 
the Assyriologist in this important respect. Thanks to 
discoveries which date almost entirely from the last ten 
years, this claim can now be made with confidence for 
the early period of history in Babylonia. This short 
essay is an attempt to utilise the latest available material, 
which seems to afford sufficient indications to furnish at 
last an entirely connected scheme of chronology, which 
rests, not upon conjecture, but upon the evidence of 
written records, that are, in comparison, almost as old as 
the events which they commemorate. Nor must it be 
forgotten that this is due, in very great measure, to the 
good fortune which has attended one particular series of 
excavations, namely, those which have been carried 
on since 1888, on the site of the ancient city of 
Nippur, by the successive expeditions of the University 
of Pennsylvania. In connection with this essay on 
the earliest period of Babylonian chronology I reproduce 



VI NOTE. 

another celebrated text which has not hitherto, owing to 
the circumstances of its first appearance, received the 
careful study that its importance warrants, and I quote, 
en passant, certain other monuments illustrative of this 
early period. 

My thanks are due, and are hereby very heartily 
offered, firstly, to the Trustees of the British Museum, 
for permission to publish the texts printed herein, and 
secondly, to Sir E. A. Wallis Budge, Keeper of the 
Department of Egyptian and Assyrian Antiquities, who 
encouraged me to publish this essay and assisted me in 
the work. 



For a modification of certain statements made on pp. 29 and 
37 concerning the Dynasty of Agade, I would refer to an 
Additional Note which appears at the end of this work. 

C. J. GADD. 

> * 

July ;M, 1921. 



THE EARLY DYNASTIES OF SUMER 
AND AKKAD. 



CHAPTER I. 

Sources. 

That the Babylonian scribes had preserved at least the chrono- 
logical outline of their history from the Flood until the Persian 
conquest had always been inferred from the Greek tradition found 
in the late excerptors of Berossus. But it is only in recent years 
that native evidence has become available, in the fragments of 
standard works on chronology, which appear to have been drawn 
up and re-copied at the central shrine of Nippur. It is un- 
necessary here to do more than mention that this evidence 
has, until very recently, been constituted by what may be called 
two groups. The collection of Nippur fragments published by 
DR. POEBEL (Historical Texts) takes up the history of Babylonia 
immediately after the Flood, and would, if complete, have con- 
tinued it to the end of the Isin Dynasty, which immediately 
preceded the First Dynasty of Babylon. Such, however, is the 
damage to the tablets that all the middle portion of the mains 
text is completely missing, and a great gap exists 'between the 
very early Dynasty of Awan and that of Isin, which concludes 
the list. Other fragments (Nos. 3 and 4) stand isolated in this 
void with their references to the kingdoms of Agade and Gutium f 
but their relative position could not, without other information, 
have been fixed. Fortunately, some such information existed in 
the second of those groups of evidence mentioned above. The 
tablet published by FATHER SCHEIL in 191 1, 1 apparently a First 
Dynasty extract from the Isin works at Nippur, not merely ad- 
justed, as it were, the focus of these two early kingdoms of Agade 
and Gutium, but carried the chronology back three dynasties 

1 Comptes rtndus de VAcadtmic des Inscriptions > 1911, p. 606 et sqq. 

A 



2 THE EARLY DYNASTIES OF SUMER AND AKKAD. 

beyond them, thus filling a considerable portion of the great 
<empty space which followed the earliest kingdoms on the Nippur 
lists. With these materials DR. POEBEL was able to offer a pro- 
visional reconstruction of Babylonian chronology from after the 
Flood until the end of the Isin Dynasty. 

Since the time cf that publication, therefore, the position has 
'b'een such as may be thus briefly summarised. Disregarding 
the legendary kings "before the Flood," our information began 
.apparently with the First Dynasty "after" that event, which was 
.assigned to the city of Kish. This was followed by a dynasty of 
Uruk, and this again by one of Ur, after which there existed a 
kingdom of Awan, though few details of it were preserved. Then 
came a considerable gap, over which it was obviously necessary 
to distribute a number of kings already known, but nothing more 
than conjecture could determine their place or the number of 
their dynasties. On the other side of this gap the list was re- 
sumed abruptly by the SCHEIL tablet at the dynasty of Akshak, 
and carried on, with only a slight break, to the beginning of 
Gutium. Of this last dynasty fragments of the names of two 
"kings were preserved by No. 4 of Historical Texts^ after which 
another, but much smaller, gap intervened before the opening of 
the well-known kingdom of Ur inaugurated by Ur-Engur. The 
position, therefore, was thus : 



("The Flood") 
Dynasty of Kish 

of Uruk 

ofUr 

I 

of Awan 



{First great %ap.) 

Dynasty of Aksbak 

of Kish 



of Uruk 

of Agade 

of Uruk 

of Gutium 

(Second smaller gap.) 



Dynasty of Ur. (Ur-Engur) 
of Isin 



CHAPTER II. 
The tablet B.M. 108857. 

Before proceeding to any consideration of some striking new 
evidence which has recently appeared it is desirable to present 
again an important constituent of that which was already known, 
both to secure convenience of reference, and also to exhibit one 
or two points of some importance which have not hitherto 
received comment. The king list first published by SCHEIL in 
1911, as noted above, belonged to a private collection, and was 
merely lent to him by the owner that he might make known the 
contents of a text so fundamentally important. SCHEIL subse- 
quently discovered that the tablet, broken at the lower edge, had 
been dishonestly "restored" by the addition of an alien fragment, 
and discovered also that this attempted join had concealed traces 
of the name of Shar-gali-sharri, a well-known king of Agade. In 
view of these facts, he gave a new photographic reproduction of 
the tablet, accompanied by a note, in the Revue d'Assyriologie, 
Vol. IX, 69. Meantime, the tablet had also been seen and 
copied by M. THUREAU-DANGIN, who re-edited it with important 
comments in his recent work, La Chronologic des dynasties de 
Sumer et tfAccad, p. 59, 60. Shortly before the late war this 
tablet came into the possession of the British Museum, and is here 
re-published as the result of still further examination (Plates 
i and 2). The text may be transliterated and translated as 
follows : 

OBVERSE. 

1. aksak-(Ki)-a kalam-zi lugal-dm xxx mu in-ag 

At Akshak Kalam-zi, being king, reigned 30 years. 

2. Kalam-da-lu-lu xn mu in-ag 

Kalam-dalulu reigned 12 years. 

A 2 



4 THE EARLY DYNASTIES OF SUMER AND AKKAD. 

3. ur-ur vi mu in-ag 
Ur-ur reigned 6 years. 

4. puzur- dt sahan xx mu in-ag 

Puzur-Sahan reigned 20 years. 

5. i-su-il xxiv mu in-ag 
Ishuil reigned 24 years. 

6. su- d - men dumu i-su-il-ge vn mu in-ag 
Gimil (?)-Sin, son of Ishuil reigned 7 years. 

7. vi lugal-e-ne mu-bi xcix in-ag-es 

6 kings, their years that they reigned were 99. 

8. aksak-(K/)-a bal-bi ba-kur nam-lugal-bi Kis-(Ki)-u ba-tum 

At Akshak its rule was changed; its royalty was | u^Kislf 

9. Kis-(Ki)-a kit d - ba-u sal lii-kas-din-na suhus Kis-(Ki] mu-un-gi-na 

At Kish Ku-Bau, hostess of a tavern, 

10. lugal-dm c mu in-ag 

(and) being queen reigned 100 years. 

IT. puzur d - zuen dumu ku d - ba-u-ge xxv mu in-ag 

Puzur-Sin, son of Ku-Bau reigned 25 years. 

12. ur d - ilbaba dumu puzur d - zuen-ge vi mu in-ag 

Ur-Ilbaba, son of Puzur-Sin reigned 6 years. 

13. zi-mu-dar xxx mu in-ag 

Zimudar reigned 30 years. 

1. For the reading of UHU.Ki as ak-Sa-ak see THUREAU-DANGIN, 

Chronologic p. 6l. 

2. With this king's name cf. Liigal-afo-/, an early king of Adab, (Banks 

Bismya y 196). 

3. Ur-ur is actually the true reading, as suggested by THUREAU-DANGIN. 

4. For Puzur as the reading of the signs hitherto transcribed BA-&A sec 

finally SCHROEDER, Zeitschrift fur AssyriologU xxxm, 55. d M{/$ 
(sa-fra-an) Cuneiform Texts XXI V, 8, 1 1. 

12. * ZA-MAL-MAL to be read il-ba-ba ; SCHROEDER, Ktilschrifttexte aus 
Assur verschied. Inhalts. 46, 9. 



THE TABLET B.M. 108857. 

14. u-zi-wa-dar dumu zi-mu-dar-ra-ge vi mu in-ag 

Uzi-wadar, son of Zimudar reigned 6 years. 

15. el-mu-ti xi mu in-ag 
Elmuti reigned n years. 

1 6. i-mu d - samas xi mu in-ag 

Imu-Shamash reigned n years. 

17. na-ni-ia-ah in mu in-ag 

Naniah reigned 3 years. 

1 8. vin lugal-t-ne mu-bi DLXXXVI in-ag-e 

8 kings, their years that they reigned were 586. 

19. KIS-(KI). bal-bi ba-kur nam-lugal-bi unu(g)-(Ki)-su ba-tum 
(At) Kish its rule was changed ; its royalty was { 



20. unu(g)-(Ki)-ga lugal-zag-gi-si lugal-dm xxv mu in-ag 

At Uruk Lugal-zaggissi, being king, reigned 25 years. 

21. i lugal mu-bi xxv in-ag 

i king, his years that he reigned were 25. 

2 2 . unu(g)-(Ki)-ga bal-bi ba-kur \nam-lugal\-bi a-ga-de-(KJ)-u ba-tum 
At Uruk its rule was changed ; its royalty was { unto^ade 

23. a-ga-dt-(Ki)-a $ar-ru-Ki-in ?-ba-ni nu-gis-ar 

At Agade Sharru-kin ......... a gardener. 

24. qa-su-dii ur d - ilbaba 
cup-bearer of Ur-Ilbaba, 

17. THUREAU-DANGIN (loc. cit.) suggests Nania zadim, "Nania, the gem- 
engraver." 

23. After the name of Sharru-kin there is a break in the surface and it is not 

possible to decide what sign was originally written. LU is certain, but 
it is extremely probable that this was preceded by something else, and 
the braces might indicate si. The reading must, however, remain 
doubtful. 

24. UR d - ilbaba^ not E d - ilbaba ; a point of considerable significance. 



THE EARLY DYNASTIES OF SUMER AND AKKAD 



25- 
26. 

25 



lugal a-ga-de-(Ki) \lii a-ga-de-(Kj) 
king of Agade, [who] 

\lugal-dm 
[being king] 



mu-un-da (T)\-du-a 
build[ed Agade] 

LV mu i\n-ag. 
reign [ed 55 years] 



26. The restorations, in square brackets, are from the photographs in The 
Musctim Journal of the University of Pennsylvania, Dec., 1920, 
176 & 178. 



REVERSE. 





Shar-[gali-sharri 


2. 


a-ba-d\m lugal 
Who [was king? 


3- 


Igigi the king, 


4- 


m * na-nu-um lugal 
Nanum the king, 


5- 


limmu-bi 
These four 


6. 


du-du 




Dudu 



7. 

8. 



SU-DUR-KIB dumu du-du-ge 
Shudurkib (?), son of Dudu, 



xxiv mu in-ag] 
reigned 24 years] 

a-ba-dm nu lugal\ 
who was not king?] 

m - i-mi lugal 
Imi the king, 

w * i-lu-lu lugal 
Ilulu the king, 

in mu in-ag 
reigned 3 years. 

xxi mu in-ag 
reigned 21 years. 

xv mu in-ag 
reigned 15 years. 



xii lugal-e-ne mu-bi cxcvn in-ag-e$ 
12 kings, their years that they reigned were 197 

9. a-ga-dc-(Ki] bal-bi ba-kur 

At Agade its rule was changed. 

1. Restored from Poebel Hist. Texts. Frag. 3. Col. 8 (p. 80). 

2. Restored by Poebel, ibid. p. 133. 

5. The translation given appears the most probable, but the omission of the 
past plural ending -e$ from the verb is curious, limmu is, no doubt, 
regarded collectively in this instance. 

7. The reading of this name is still unknown. 



THE TABLET B.M. 108857. 7 

10. nam-lugal-bi unu(g)-(Ki)-u ba-tum 

Its royalty unto Uruk was carried off. 

11. unu(g)-(Ki)-ga ur-nigin lugal-dm in mu in-ag 

At Uruk Ur-nigin, being king, reigned 3 years. 

12. Ur &* gigir dumu ur-nigin-ge VI mu in-ag 

Ur-gigir, son of Ur-nigin reigned 6 years. 

13. Kud-da vi mu in-ag 

Kudda reigned 6 years. 

14. puzur-l-li , v mu in-ag 

Puzur-ili reigned 5 years. 

15. ur <* utu vi mu IK ag 
Ur-Utu reigned 6 years. 

1 6. v lugal-c-ne mu-bi xxvi in-ag-e$ 

5 kings, their years that they reigned were 26. 

17. unu(g} (Ki)-ga bal-bi ba-kur 
At Uruk its rule was changed. 

1 8. nam-lugal-bi ugnim gu-ti-um-(Ki)-$u ba-tum 

Its royalty unto the host of Gutium was carried off. 



itu sig-a ud xxx (KAM} 
Month of Siwan, 3oth day. 

12. For the reading gigir see now Cuneiform Texts, xxxv, i. 27. 



CHAPTER III. 
The new Philadelphia Fragment (L.) 

It has been already stated that by far the most serious lacuna 
in our partially-recovered scheme of Babylonian chronology was 
that which extended from the early dynasty of Awan to that of 
Akshak, where the above text commences. It is therefore 
extremely fortunate that a recent discovery has supplemented 
our evidence at this very point. In the summer of 1920 a 
fragment from Nippur was discovered in the collections of the 
University Museum of Pennsylvania, and has been published 
with photographs and a translation by DR. LEON LEGRAIN in 
The Museum Journal si December, 1920. The supreme import- 
ance of this fragment is that it yields the middle portion of the 
columns of text which were missing from the main tablet (No. 2) 
of POEBEL. For so small a fragment, the amount of additional 
information which it yields is astonishing. 

(a) Three new " cities of royalty." 

(b) The position of dynasties and kings hitherto con- 

jectural. 

(f) The first three kings of Agade in their order, and the 
regnal years of two. 

(d) The first four kings of Gutium. 



THE NEW PHILADELPHIA FRAGMENT (L.). 



This new text, so far as it is possible to decipher it from the 
photographs, runs as follows : 



OBVERSE. 



Col. III. 

[xxx mu t]-ag 
+ . . . reigned 30 years. 

-&]-/ 

Elulu 

[xxv] mu i - ag 
reigned 25 years. 

[ba\ -lu-lu 
Balulu 

[xxxvi] mu I - ag 
reigned 36 years. 

[iv] lugal 
4 kings 

[mu - bi CL]XXI ag - ag 

their years that they reigned 

were 171. 

\uri- (KJ) **tukul] ba-sig 
Ur was smitten with arms. 



Col. IV. 



iv (?) lugal 
four kings 

i MMMDCCLXXXXII \b-ag 
their years that they reigned 
were 3792. 

Ki$ - (KI) s *tukul ba - sig 
Kish was smitten with arms, 

nam - lugal - bi 
its royalty 

ha -ma- zi - (KI) - Su ba - turn (?) 
was carried off to Hamazi 

[ha - ma] - zi - (KI) - a 
at Hamazi 



[lugal] - dm 
being king 



reigned ? years. 



Col. Ill restored from POEBEL, Hist. Texts, no. 2, Col. III. 



10 THE EARLY DYNASTIES OF SUMER AND AKKAD 



Col. V. 

adab - (KI) - $u ba - turn 
was carried off to Adab 

adab - (KI) - a 
at Adab 

lugal - an - ni - mu - un - du 
Lugal-anni-mundu 

lugal - dm 
being king 

xc mu l-ag 
reigned 90 years. 

I lugal 
i king 

mu-bi xc l-ag 

his years that he reigned 

were 90. 

a dab - (KI) sis tukul ba - sig 
Adab was smitten with arms, 

nam - lugal -bi 
its royalty 

ma - ri - (KI) - sit ba - turn 
was carried off to Mari 

ma - ri - (KI) - a 
at Mari 

an -pu lugal - dm 
Anpu, being king, 

xxx mu I - ag 
reigned 30 years 



Col. VI 
mu - bi xcix ...... 

their years 99 .... 



akSak-(Ki) ^tukul ba-sig 
Akshak was smitten with arms 

nam - lugal - bi 
its royalty 

Ki$ - (KI) - $u ba - turn 
was carried off to Kish 

Kts - (KI) - a 
at Kish 

puzur d - zuen, 
Puzur - Sin 

dumu ku d - ba-u 
son of Kli - Bau 

lugal - dm 
being king 

xxv mu t - ag 
reigned 25 years. 

ur d - ilbaba 
Ur - Ilbaba 

dumu puzur d - zuen 
son of Puzur - Sin 



THE NEW PHILADELPHIA FRAGMENT (L.). II 



REVERSE. 



Col. VII. 

\ga - su] - du ur d - ilbaba 
cup-bearer of Ur-Ilbaba, 

lugal a-ga-de-(Ki) 
king of Agade 

lu a-ga-de-(xi) 
who Agade 

mu-un- da (?) -du-a 
built, 

lugal - dm 
being king 

LV mu I - ag 
reigned 55 years. 

ri -mu-u dumu Sar-ru - ki - in 
Rimush, son of Sharru-kin 

xv mu l-ag 
reigned 15 years. 

ma- ni- is -te- su 
Manishteshu 

mu I - ag 

reigned . . , years. 



Col. VIII. 

ugnim \gu-ti-um-(KJ) 
the host of Gutium 

lugal nu tuk - tuk 
had no king 

im -bi -a v mu i - ag 
Imbia reigned 5 years. 

in -gi -Su 
Ingishu 

vn mu in-ag 
reigned 7 years. 

wa -ar -la -ga - ba 
Warlagaba 

vi mu in-ag 
reigned 6 years. 

ia-ar-la -ga-as 
larlagash 

T 

.... mu I - ag 
reigned .... years. 



12 THE EARLY DYNASTIES OF SUMER AND AKKAD. 

Col. IX. Col. X. 

gan 

xxi lug** [Ishme-Dajgan 

21 kings , 

da -gan 

mu-bi cxxiv ud XL \b-az r c TJ- i ^ 

, . [son of IdmJ-Dagan 

their years that they reigned 
were 124 and 40 days. 

ugnim 
the host 

gu- ti-um-(Ki) 
of Gutium 

**tukul ba-sig 
was smitten with arms. 

\nam~\ - lugal - bi 
its royalty 

da- turn 

was carried off to . 



With respect to the long gap mentioned above, the position 
of the new fragment is readily fixed by its contents. On the 
Obverse, a few surviving signs from the right side of a column 
deal with the first kingdom of Ur, inaugurated by Mesannipada, 
which was the third dynasty "after the Flood." These remains 
belong, therefore, to Column 3 of the main text of POEBEL, and 
consequently the fragment supplies the middle portion of 
Cols. 4, 5, 6 on the Obverse, and Cols. 7, 8, 9, on the Reverse, 
which are entirely missing from the former tablet. This is 
confirmed by the fragments of a last column on the Reverse, 
which correspond with Col. 10 of POEBEL'S text. Finally, the 
first lines of the last column of the Obverse on the new fragment 
contain the summary of that dynasty of Akshak which begins 
the text of the SCHEIL tablet. These facts being settled, the new 
Pennsylvania fragment will henceforth be quoted by the numbered 
columns of LEGRAIN'S publication (as L. Ill, L. IV, etc.) and 
the tablet here reproduced will bear its Museum number 108857. 



CHAPTER IV. 



The Dynasties Kish I Kish II. 

Towards filling the gap between Awan and Akshak, the new 
fragment contributes the notice of four new dynasties, Kish- 
Hamazi ...... Adab-Mari, these pairs standing like islands, 

and so creating three smaller gaps in place of one greater. The 
problem is, therefore, to find whether it is now possible to fill 
these spaces, and it is proposed to investigate this question in 
the following pages. 

The first step is to obtain the dimensions of the task. What 
are the spaces that have to be filled ? In the present case this is 
merely another form of asking what number of lines, approximately, 
are lost between the end of one column on the fragment and the 
beginning of the next. This question may be answered by pro- 
ceeding from the known to the unknown. The gaps between 
Cols. III-IV, IV- V, and V-VI are unknown. But those between 
VI-VII and VII-VIII can be filled from 108857. To obtain 
the approximate number of lines missing from L. the given material 
from 108857 must be re-arranged in accordance with the practice 
of the L. scribe, somewhat as follows : 



Between L. VI, 12 and L. VII, i. 

zi - mu - dar m mu in - ag 

xxx mu in - ag vin lugal-e - ne 

u - zi - wa - dar mu - bi DLXXXVI 
dumu zi-mu-dar-ra-ge in -ag - es 



vi mu in - ag 
tl - mu - ti 
xi mu in - ag 
i -mu d -$amas 
xi mu in - ag 
na-ni- a- ah 



KIS(KI) bal-bi ba-kur 
nam - lugal - bi 
unu(g)-(Ki)-sii ba-tum 
unu(g} - (KI) - ga 
lugal - zag - gi - si 
lugal - dm 



xxv mu in - ag 

i lugal 

mu - bi xxv in - ag 

bal - bi ba - kur 
nam - lugal - bi 
a-ga-de\Ki)-su ba-tum 
a-ga-de-(Ki)-a 
$ar - ru - ki - in 
t-ba-ni nu-gi-$ar 



14 THE EARLY DYNASTIES OF SUMER AND AKKAD. 

As a result of this re-arrangement it has appeared that the 
total gap between the end of L. VI and the beginning of L. VII 
is about 30 lines, and might be rather more. The next space, 
which extends from the middle of the Agade kingdom to the 
beginning of Gutium, may be similarly filled from the contents of 
108857. It would be tedious to repeat the actual process here, 
and in this case the result may be barely stated : this gap 
appears to comprise some 36 lines. The beginning of L. IX 
contains the summary of the Gutium dynasty, and here, as we 
do not possess the missing portions, no very precise reckoning 
is possible. But L. enumerated 21 kings in this dynasty, and 
four are preserved in Col. VIII. This would leave 17 more 
to be entered, and, allowing two lines to each king, we might 
arrive at a rough total of 34 lines missing between L. VIII-IX. 
The result of these calculations is that we have three spaces 
which contained approximately 30, 36, and 34 lines, from 
which the average of 33 or 34 is readily obtained, and, while 
there is, of course, no mathematical exactitude about these 
figures, they may still be sufficient to constitute a working 
formula. It should, perhaps, be added that, in each case, what 
seems to be the smallest possible number of lines has been 
allowed, and that the average therefore represents a minimum 
computation. 

The next step is to apply these results to the unknown. L. Ill 
has traces belonging to the first kingdom of Ur, and L. IV deals 
with a kingdom of Kish, followed by that of Hamazi. Between 
these points there is known to be a kingdom of Awan, and it is 
no unreasonable conjecture that this was succeeded by Ur II. 
The summary of kingdoms (Hist. Texts, 77) gives 3 kings of 
Awan, and 13 kings of Ur. But, the first and third kingdoms of 
Ur being known to comprise 9 kings when added together, the 
second is seen, by mere subtraction from the total 13, to have 
contained four kings (ibid. 106). L. IV begins with a summary 
of 4 (?) kings of Kish. Assuming, therefore, that the order of 
dynasties at this point is Ur I, Awan, Ur II, Kish II, Hamazi, 
we may attempt a skeleton reconstruction of the text between 



THE DYNASTIES KISH I KISH II. 1$ 

L. III-IV, and test the assumption by the figures already 
obtained : 

Between L. Ill, 8 and L. IV. 

nam - lugal - bi uri - (AY) - su ba - turn 

a -wa -an- (AY) - sti ba - turn uri - (AY) - ma etc. 

a-wa- an - (AY) - na 8 lines for 4 kings 

6 lines for 3 kings 2 ,, summary of Ur II 

in lugal 4 transfer to Kish II 

mu-bi CCCLVI ib-ag 8 for 4 kings of Kish II. 

a-wa-an-(Ki)-**-tukul ba-slg Total: 37 lines. 
nam - lugal- bi 

In view of this so-far satisfactory result, it is necessary only to 
add that the sole member of this group of dynasties which is still 
entirely submerged in the missing portion of the lists is Ur II, 
and that the placing of it in this position must, to that extent, be 
regarded as conjectural. But the risks of error do not appear 
very serious. There are, of course, three possible alternatives for 
the position of Ur II : 

(a) between Kish III Adab. 

(b) Mari Akshak. 

(c) Gutium Ur III (i.e., the Ur-Engur 

dynasty). 

The last of these possibilities is much discounted by the 
rise, so soon after, of the powerful and all-embracing empire of 
Ur-Engur and his successors; it is hardly likely that this had 
been preceded, within the limit of so few years, by an earlier 
kingdom of Ur. In addition to this it will be argued, in the 
proper place, that there is no room for another dynasty in 
this interval. With regard to (a), it is hoped to show that we 
dispose of ample material to occupy the space between Kish III 
and Adab without introducing Ur II at this point. The second 
possibility certainly remains open; in that space occurs the 
dynasty of Mari, of uncertain length, and the known dynasty of 
Akshak, comprising six kings. Whether, therefore, there is room 



16 THE EARLY DYNASTIES OF SUMER AND AKKAD. 

for another dynasty between these depends entirely on the length 
of the Mari kingdom, which is at present un-ascertainable. In 
these circumstances it does not seem unfair to refer to the calcu- 
lations attempted above; it there appeared that the insertion of 
Ur II would account for space on the tablet which accorded very 
well with the other evidence. The decision between the gaps Awan 

Kish II and Mari Akshak as claimants for the dynasty 

Ur II is therefore a decision between some evidence and none,, 
and it is justifiable to pronounce in favour of the first claimant, 
though with all due reserve. The investigation, therefore, has 
now reached the point of arranging the earliest dynasties thus : 

Kish I Uruk I Ur I Awan Ur II Kish II. 



CHAPTER V. 
Hamazi to Uruk II. 

With this last dynasty comes a momentary foothold on firm 
ground ; we are now, for a moment, in the light of L. IV, which 
exhibits a dynasty of Kish (II) succeeded by that of Hamazi. 
The latter is an entirely new revelation, and completes the list of 
the "eleven cities of royalty" summarised in Historical Texts, 
p. 78, Adab and Mari having been already conjectured by POEBEL 
on reasonable grounds, though these also lacked confirmation 
before the discovery of L. The duration of the Hamazi kingdom 
is lost, for L preserves only part of the name of one king. Never- 
theless it is probable that this kingdom actually comprised only 
one king, who reigned for seven years. The enumeration of 
kingdoms in Hist. Texts, p. 77, is broken after Awan, but retains 
the information that the next hegemony was unique in the city 
which held it, and that it was exercised by one king who reigned 
for seven years. POEBEL has shown (ibid., p. 99) that "the 
enumeration corresponds to the order in which the various cities 
first became seats of kings of Babylonia." If the results hitherto 
obtained are at all correct, the next new (i.e., hitherto unmentioned) 
seat of a dynasty after Awan is precisely Hamazi, and it is natural, 
therefore, to assign the "one king for seven years" to this city. 
The position of Hamazi is unknown, unless it be possible to 
identify it with the Hamasi or Hamsi mentioned in the inscription 
of Eri-Nanna, a governor of Lagash in the reign of Gimil-Sin, 
king of Ur. 1 In this instance it is brought into close connexion 
with the cities of Urbiltum and Ganhar, which occur so frequently 
in the date-formulae as the enemies of Dungi and his successor, 
and would consequently have to be sought in the immediate 

1 Rtvue cTAssyriologte V, 99, and VI, 67. 



1 8 THE EARLY DYNASTIES OF SUMER AND AKKAD. 

neighbourhood of these Elamite cities. If this be so, Hamazi 
would represent a second Elamite domination, Awan having been 
the first. Apart from this, I am aware of only one other occurrence 
of the name, but this in a singularly interesting connexion which 
may provide a starting point for an attempt to bridge the next 
gulf in the records. Two fragments of a vase from Nippur l bear 
part of a dedication to the god Ilbaba by Utug, patesi of Kish, 
who calls himself " Smiter (?) of Hamazi." This, then, is perhaps 
an echo of the overthrow of the city, and, if so, we might proceed 
to infer that Hamazi was succeeded by a third dynasty of Kish. 
It is true that Utug does not claim the style of "king" in this 
inscription but merely that of patesi^ and it might be held that 
this disqualifies him as the possible founder of a dynasty. But 
it has yet to be shown that the use of these titles affords a rigid 
distinction ; certainly, the members of Ur-Nina's line at Lagash 
had no formal right to the style of "king " which several of them 
affected, and Utug may well have continued, in the early days of 
his new-won power, the humble title which he had borne under 
the sovereignty of Hamazi. If, then, it be permissible to regard 
Utug as the first member of a Kish III dynasty, some of his 

successors may be readily supplied, Mesilim, Ur-zag-e, 

Lugal-tarsi, and Enbi-Ishtar. But the last is known (Hist. Texts^ 
151) to have been defeated and captured by Enshakushanna of 
Uruk, which city is, therefore, the successor of Kish III. To 
this dynasty of Uruk (II) are generally assigned the early monarchs 
Lugal-kigubni-dudu and Lugal-kisal-si, but in all these cases the 
lists give no help, and the assignations are made chiefly upon 
epigraphical grounds or as the result of other historical indications. 
It is unfortunate that the evidence which can be extracted 
from the summaries is not very satisfactory for these dynasties of 
Kish III and Uruk II. The total of 51 kings of Kish is itself 
uncertain, and so is the summary of 4 or (6) kings for Kish II. 
But Kish I comprised 23 kings, and Kish IV (dynasty of Ku-Bau) 

1 Published by HILPRECHT, Old Babylonian Inscriptions ; Nos. 108 
and 109. 



HAMAZI TO URUK II. Ip 

^ -^ 

8 kings, according to 108857, though L. ignores Ku-Bau herself. 
Consequently : 

T * i i i Kish * 2 3 1 

Total kingsl . , TT . 

fS 1 Kishll 4 or 6 > 34 or 37. 

of Kish J Tr . . TT _ i 

Kish IV 7 or 8 J 

and therefore, by subtraction, Kish III had 17 or 14 kings. 
That it was a long dynasty is probable from the comparatively 
large number of early Kish rulers who are known to us by name. 
With regard to Uruk II, although the number of kings in the 
Uruk I dynasty is uncertain, the conclusion of POEBEL (Hist. 
TextS) p. 107) is that "in no case can we assume more than four 
missing kings for the second and fifth dynasties." If Enshaku- 
shanna, Lugal-kigubni-dudu, and Lugal-kisal-si composed Uruk II, 
it would follow that Uruk V consisted of Utu-hegal alone; nor 
is this improbable, but the question does not arise here and may 
be postponed to its own place. The position is, therefore, that a 
long dynasty of Kish and a short one of Uruk are to be placed 
after Hamazi, and these appear sufficient to fill the gap which 
occurs in L. before Adab. Having thus reached the second 
" island," we may again set out the result of the investigation up 
to this point : 

Kish I Uruk I Ur I Awan Ur II Kish II 

Hamazi Kish III Uruk II. 



B 2 



20 



CHAPTER VI. 
Adab, Mari, Akshak, and Kish IV. 

The record is now taken up by L. V, which here begins a 
kingdom of Adab inaugurated by Lugal-anni-mundu, who is said 
to have been the sole king of his dynasty and to have reigned for 
90 years. This king is known from a later copy of one of his 
inscriptions published as text No. 75 in POEBEL'S collection. The 
statement that he reigned for 90 years is, however, both improb- 
able in itself, and not in accordance with the trend of other 
evidence which we possess. The site of Adab is now known to 
be the modem Bismya, from which BANKS, during his excavations, 
recovered a stone statue with an archaic inscription 1 stating that 
the figure represented one Lugal-da-lu, king of Adab. He found 
also a vase bearing a similar legend, 2 but this time with the name 
of Me-shi- ?, also a king of Adab. There seems reason to suppose 
that both these rulers, and possibly others, belong to the dynasty 
inaugurated by Lugal-anni-mundu, and that L. is incorrect in 
assigning to one king so unusual a length of reign. It may, 
however, be admitted that we cannot tell whether there was not 
another dynasty of Adab somewhat later, in the gap between 
Mari and Akshak. If there was, Lugal-da-lu and Me-shi- ? might 
have belonged to it ; nevertheless, the reign of 90 years attributed 
to Lugal-anni-mundu is highly suspicious, and very probably has 
incorporated the years of other kings whose names have been, by 
some mischance, lost from the record. 

Adab, we learn from L. V, was succeeded by a dynasty of 
Mari, a city on the middle Euphrates, just below the confluence 
of the Habur, from which came also, in later times, Ishbi-Irra, 
the founder of the Isin dynasty. Unfortunately, L. V breaks off at 

1 BANKS, Bismya, p. 196. 2 Ibid., p. 264. 



ADAB, MARI, AKSHAK, AND KISH IV. 21 

the very beginning of the Mari kings, giving only the first of them, 
Anpu, 1 who reigned 30 years, and a few traces of his successor. 
A broken statuette in the British Museum bears a fragmentary 

inscription 2 of Shamash, king of Mari, who may also be 

assigned to this dynasty. Of its total length, however, we have 
no evidence at all, as the summary (Hist. Texts^ p. 77) is also 

broken away. For the third gap (between Mari Akshak) 

we are therefore left without any guide. Practically the whole 
of the Akshak dynasty, as known from 108857, occurs within this 
gap, for L. VI opens with its concluding summary. This would 
account for a considerable part of the available space, but whether 
anything intervened between the end of Mari and the beginning 
of Akshak depends entirely on the length of Mari, which is 
unknown. The possibility has already been noted (p. 15) 
that Ur II might occur in this place. But, while withholding 
judgment, in the absence of any evidence to the contrary we 
shall assume that no other kingdom did intervene between these 
two. It is, however, fairly clear that in this period there has to 
be placed the local line of Ur-Nina and his successors at Lagash, 
though it is not necessary to hold that Eannadu was ever recognised 
as lugal of all Babylonia, reigning at Kish. Indeed, the four 
" kingdoms " which the summary allows to Kish are already 
accounted for ; three have been passed in the preceding pages, 
and the fourth is that of Ku-Bau, which succeeded Akshak. 

From this point onwards to the beginning of Gutium, 
except for a break in the middle of Agade, we are in the fuller 
light of 108857, which, though presenting a connected text, is not 
without difficulties of its own. The dynasty of Kish IV, founded 
by Ku-Bau, succeeds that of Akshak both in 108857 and in L. 
This passage, in the former, has been a well -known crux since its 
first discovery owing to its very singular arithmetic, and the length 
of reign attributed to the first ruler, a queen who is said to have 
risen from a tavern to the throne. Eight monarchs composed 

1 The reading of this name is, of course, doubtful. 
Cuneiform Texts V, 12146. 



22 THE EARLY DYNASTIES OF SUMER AND AKKAD. 

this dynasty, and the scribe of 108857, adding up their total of 
years, obtains the incredible result of 586! Actually, the sum 
of the eight reigns, even including the impossible 100 years of 
Ku-Bau, amounts to no more than 192. Several ingenious 
attempts have been made to explain this extraordinary aberration, 
but none can be described as entirely convincing, and the confu- 
sion is now increased by L., which ignores the reign of Ku-Bau 
altogether, though it mentions her as mother of the succeeding 
king. Unfortunately, L. does not continue to the end of the 
dynasty and therefore throws no light upon the curious total given 
by 108857. In these circumstances it seems most prudent to 
acknowledge the difficulty, and to recognise that there existed at 
this point some confusion in the records which will scarcely be 
explained without further discoveries. 



CHAPTER VII. 
The reigns of Lugal-zaggisi and Sargon. 

Kish IV, the tablet continues, was succeeded by a kingdom 
of Uruk (III), the sole member of which was Lugal-zaggisi, who 
reigned 25 years. This celebrated monarch was known, before 
the discovery of 108857, as a subject of a long archaic inscription 
engraved on vases dedicated at Nippur, and also as a governor 
of Umma, who sacked the city of Lagash under Urukagina, its 
last king. Since that time the Historical Inscriptions of POEBEL 
have revealed a number of new facts concerning him, particularly 
that he was defeated and captured by the even more celebrated 
Sargon (Sharru-kin), founder of the succeeding dynasty of Agade. 
It is unnecessary to re-emphasise the great interest of the details 
which the tablet furnishes concerning Sargon of Agade. Though 
the meaning of the signs immediately following his name must 
still remain obscure owing to uncertainty of reading, he is clearly 
described as having been "a gardener," and this is in accordance 
with the " Legend of Sargon," 1 which tells how the infant was 
launched on the Euphrates by his mother and rescued by Akki, 
the irrigator, who brought him up and made him a gardener. 
Further, a fragment of a history of Sargon, published by SCHEIL in 
the Revue d' Assyria logic XIII, 176, states that he "grew up 
among the cattle." The next information given by 108857 is 

even more interesting the young Sargon was "cupbearer of 

Ur-Ilbaba." The tablet has hitherto been misread in this place, 
and translated "cupbearer in the temple of Ilbaba." But the 
sign is quite clearly UR, not fi, as I have for some time been 
aware, and this reading is now confirmed by L. But to translate 
it " devotee of Zamama,' with LEGRAIN, does not appear a natural 

1 Cuneiform Texts XIII, 42, 43. 



24 THE EARLY DYNASTIES OF SUMER AND AKKAD. 

interpretation ; Ur-Ilbaba is clearly a proper name. Nor have we 
far to seek its bearer. Ur-Ilbaba, son of Puzur-Sin, grandson ot 
Ku-Bau, was the third king of the preceding Kish IV dynasty 
and reigned 6 years. The record therefore appears to state 
definitely that Sargon, in his youth, was cupbearer, a favourite 
retainer, of this former king. The importance of this statement, 
accepted at its face value, is considerable, owing to the synchronism 
it provides. Nevertheless, it seems to involve great difficulty, as 
may be seen by a simple calculation. The remaining kings of 
Kish, after Ur-Ilbaba, reigned 30 4-6 + 11 + 11 + 3 = 61 years 
altogether, and were succeeded by Lugal-zaggisi, with a reign of 

25 years. The latter was defeated by Sargon, who became king 
and reigned 55 years (according to L.). Sargon, therefore, 
continued as a subject for 61+25 years, then became king and 
reigned 55 more. Even had he been only 10 years old at the 
death of Ur-Ilbaba, this would give him an age of 10 + 61 + 25 + 55 
= 151 years! This, then, is a reductio ad absurdum ; the explana- 
tion must manifestly be sought by some other means. And 
there seems to be only one possibility. It is no longer a new 
discovery that the Babylonian scribes have in several instances 
conveyed a wrong impression by arranging in succession dynasties 
which were actually in part contemporary. Thus, the dynasty of 
Isin synchronised not merely with that of Larsa (which has not 
yet appeared in the connected dynastic lists) but also partly with 
the First Dynasty of Babylon, which began to rule not much later 
than the middle of the Isin kingdom. 1 Subsequently, the king 
lists exhibit the Second Dynasty as following immediately upon 
the First ; it has long been known, however, that Iluma-ilum, the 
founder of the Second Dynasty, was not the successor of 
Samsu-ditana, but the contemporary of Samsu-iluna. 2 In view of 
these familiar instances it is difficult to resist the conclusion that 
the same process is at work between the dynasties of Kish IV, 
Uruk III, and Agade, and that both Lugal-zaggisi and Sargon 
must have set up as independent rulers while the dynasty of 

1 THUREAU-DANGIN, Chronologie, p. 47. 2 KING, Chronicles II, 20. 



THE REIGNS OF LUGAL-ZAGGISI AND SARGON. 25 

Kish IV still existed. In support of this, it is possible to quote 
the fragment mentioned above (p. 23) which, after referring to a 
king of Kish, continues "to change the rule of his royalty, to 
prolong the ruin of his palace, Enlil, by his holy decree, 
irrevocably resolved; in his place (came) Sharrum-kin." No 
mention is made of Lugal-zaggisi intervening between the rule of 
Kish and Agade, but Sargon is exhibited as the direct successor 
of the kings of Kish, and, when the story is taken up again, he 
appears at the head of a rival power offering hostile provocations 
to Lugal-zaggisi as the prelude to a war in which he was finally 
victorious. At what precise time these revolts of Lugal-zaggisi 
and Sargon from their loyalty to Kish took place it is, of course, 
impossible to say. But it may be pointed out, even if it be no 
more than a coincidence, that the 25 years of Lugal-zaggisi 
correspond exactly with the reigns of the last three kings at Kish 
(11 + 11 + 3), and one might conjecture that Lugal-zaggisi pro- 
claimed his independence upon the death of Uzi-wadar, but 
lacked either the desire or the means to dispossess the dynasty of 
Kish, which continued until its own city and that of Lugal-zaggisi 
came simultaneously under the rule of Sargon. The 55 years of 
the latter would seem to include the whole time that he reigned 
in his own city, not merely the period in which he was supreme 
in Babylonia; for, even if the rule of Lugal-zaggisi be wholly 
contained in the last years of Kish IV, Sargon must have been 
some 70 years old at the fall of that dynasty, and, though it is 
known that he lived to be an aged man, we cannot venture to 
add another 55 years to his life. 



26 



CHAPTER VIII. 
Stories concerning Sargon. 

The detail which exhibits Sargon as cupbearer to a former 
king, and as rising from this office to the throne, is an addition 
eiusdem generis to the stories of his humble birth in which all our 
other sources concur. This somewhat naive romance of the 
menial become king must have had a peculiar fascination for the 
Babylonians; one of the earliest rulers "after the Flood," Arpi, 
is said to have been " son of a plebeian " Queen Ku-bau had 
been a publican Irra-imitti, ninth king of I sin, set the crown 
upon the head of Enlil-bani, his gardener. 1 Better known than 
these are the very similar stories which are told about a later 
hero, Cyrus, the Persian. The circumstantial narrative of 
Herodotus (I, 107-130), which makes Cyrus the grandson of 
Astyages, and relates how his life was secretly saved from the 
king's jealousy by an oxherd who was charged to expose the child 
in the desert, is probably derived through the Median house of 
Harpagus from Babylonian sources. Even this account of the 
unexpected preservation of Cyrus is reminiscent of the rescue of 
the infant Sargon from the Euphrates by Akki the irrigator. 
But Ctesias had a version of the early days of Cyrus even more 
characteristic of its Mesopotamian origin, and, in view of its striking 
parallelism with the present story concerning Sargon, it may be 
worth while to translate a part of this version, which survives only 
in a long fragment of the later historian Nicolaus Damascenus 
(No. 66 in C. MULLER'S Fragmenta Historicorum Graecorum, 
Vol. Ill, p. 397):- 

" In Asia, upon the death of the Median king, his son 
Astyages succeeded to his throne. Report says that he 
was the most valiant man after Arbaces. It was during his 
1 KING, Chronicles II, 12. 



STORIES CONCERNING SARGON. 2/ 

reign that there occurred the great revolution by which the 
sovereignty of the Medes passed to the Persians. The reason 
was this. There was a custom among the Medes that if a 
poor man went to a wealthy man for maintenance, offering 
himself to be fed and clothed, he should be considered as a 
slave of the latter. If, however, the host should not provide 
these, the suppliant might betake himself to another. Now 
a boy named Cyrus, a Mardian by birth, came thus to one 
of the king's servants, who was set over the palace cleaners. 
Cyrus was the son of Atradates, a bandit through stress of 
poverty, whose wife Argoste, the mother of Cyrus, made her 
living as a goatherd. Cyrus, then, hired himself to this 
officer for maintenance ; he cleaned the palace and was 
industrious. His master, therefore, gave him a better gar- 
ment and brought him from among the outside cleaners to 
those who cleaned inside, in the king's apartments, and 
placed him with the master of these servants. This man, 
however, was so cruel, and beat Cyrus so often, that he 
deserted him for the torch-bearer, who took a fancy to him, 
and brought him near the king to be one of his personal 
torch-bearers. Here, too, he was distinguished, and now 
passed on to Artembares, the chief of the cup-bearers, who 
actually held the cup for the king to drink. Artembares 
received him gladly, and bade him pour out wine for the 
king's guests. Not long afterwards, when Artembares was 
watching him serving well and adroitly, and offering the cup 
gracefully, the king asked Artembares whence came the boy, 
adding, " How nicely he serves the wine ! " " Master," re- 
plied Artembares, "he is thy slave, a Persian by birth, and 
of the Mardians, who hath delivered himself to me for 
maintenance." Now Artembares was old, and it chanced 
that he took a fever, so that he besought the king to let him 
go to his own house until he should be recovered. " And 
in my place," he said, "this boy (meaning Cyrus) whom 
thou approvest, shall serve thy wine. And, for that I am 
an eunuch, I will also make him my son, if his service be 



28 THE EARLY DYNASTIES OF SUMER AND AKKAD. 

pleasing to thee, his master." Astyages assenting, Artembares 
departed with many directions to Cyrus and many kindnesses 
as to his own son. Cyrus now stood beside the king, offered 
his cup, served his wine by night and day, and discovered 
much discretion and courage. Artembares died of his 
sickness after adopting Cyrus as his son, and Astyages 
bestowed on him, as son, the whole of Artembares' substance, 
and many gifts as well, so that he was by now a great man, 
and his name was noised abroad." 

It is evident that these are genuine folk-stories, and they may, 
without hesitation, be pronounced to be of Babylonian origin; 
the young Cyrus is merely a double of the young Sargon, both 
being of true plebeian origin, both miraculously saved in their 
infancy, both employed in the service of a former king, both 
actually his cupbearers, and both destined to reign in their master's 
stead. There is, of course, nothing to indicate what degree of 
historical truth underlies these stories in either instance. 



CHAPTER IX. 
Agade to Isin. 

The dynasty of Agade is continued by Rimush and Manishtusu, 
whose order is now definitely settled by L., to which we are also 
indebted for the 15 years of Rimush. After Manishtusu another 
break occurs, so that the name of the king who intervened between 
him and Naram-Sin is still missing. As, however, there are only 
10 or 20 years (the variation depends on the question whether 
Naram-Sin reigned 54 or 44 years) to divide between Manishtusu 
and the unknown, and as the former was himself a powerful and 
important king, the reign of the unknown was probably short. 
With the exception of this king's name, and some doubt about 
the lengths of certain reigns, the dynasty of Agade is now recovered 
in outline. As regards the last king, it has been thought worth 
while to reproduce, at the end of this essay (Plate 3), a copy 
of the sole monument hitherto assignable to him. The text is 
identical with that published by M. POGNON in the Journal 
Asiatique, 1913, p. 418, but it is difficult to say whether the 
object upon which it is inscribed is actually the one which he 
saw in Baghdad. In the present case the text is taken from 
a hammer-head of dark green marble, measuring 4 inches by 
ij inches, and pierced through the middle with a hole \ inch in 
diameter. The shape is an elongated ellipse with the ends un- 
flattened, both edges are chamfered, and the whole very carefully 



30 THE EARLY DYNASTIES OF SUMER AND AKKAD. 

finished, the inscription beginning on the top chamfer, extending 
down one side, and ending on the lower chamfer and base : 
a - na d ne-unu- gal a-na na -pit - si 1 su - DUR- KIB 2 
sar-ri a - ga - de - (KI} LA - BA - eri$um($um)* 
sabru bitim A - MU - RU (= isruq). 

"To Nergal, for the life of Shudurkib (?), king of Agade, 
Laba (P)-erishum, the palace soothsayer, has dedicated this." 

At the fall of the Agade Dynasty, the hegemony in Babylonia 
passed to an undistinguished line of five kings who ruled for 
26 years in Uruk as the fourth dynasty of that city. Nothing is 
known of these beyond what appears in 108857; their names, 
their regnal years, and the fact that their rule was cut short by 
the " host of Gutium," to which the sovereignty passed. At this 
point 108857 ends abruptly, but POEBEL'S texts contain a summary 
of the Gutian Dynasty, giving a total of 21 kings who reigned 
125 years and 40 days, while L. computes 124 years and 40 days. 
But, whereas the dynasty has almost completely disappeared from 
the former, L. preserves the names of the first four kings, prefaced 
with the curious statement that "the host of Gutium had no 
king," which presumably means that no single authority was 
recognised until the hordes settled in Babylonia. The names of 
the third and fourth kings contain a common element arlaga 
which reappears in the inscription 4 of Nammahni, a governor of 
Umma, who records his building of a temple in his own city 
at the time "when larlagan was king of Gutium" (u(d)-ba 
l-ar-la-ga-an lugal gu-ti-urn-kani)* It may not be too venturesome 

1 Probably a metathesis for napistn, napistu. The same phrase occurs in 
an inscription of Naram-Sin (published by SCHEIL, Textes elamites-slmitiques 
III, 6), which is closely parallel with the present text. There seems no need 
to assume identity with the na-si-zu of CLAY (Miscellaneous Inscriptions, 
No. 1 8) unless/?'/ be there accidentally omitted. 

2 The king's name is of uncertain reading. 

3 The third sign of this name is KAM and eri&uni($um} is therefore the 
probable reading. LA-BA may also be an ideogram (cf. BRUNNOW, 988). 

4 CLAY, Miscellaneous Inscriptions ', No. 13. 

5 With this may be compared a similar date referring to Siiim, king of 
Gutium (ScHEiL, Comptes-rendits de F Academic, 1911, p. 319, 11. 14, 15). 



AGADE TO ISIN. 3 1 

to identify this larlagan with larlagash, the fourth king of Gutium, 
according to L. .After this name L. is broken, and the next 
column preserves only the summary of the dynasty, and the 
statement of its downfall, but not the name of the city to which 
its power passed. Finally, L. X has traces belonging to the 
Dynasty of Isin. What is to be inserted in this last remaining 
gap? Some uncertainty still exists on this head. Isin is well 
known to have been the successor of the celebrated Dynasty of 
Ur (III) which was constituted by 5 kings reigning for 117 years. 
On the other hand, we have external information that the Gutians 
were expelled from Babylonia by one Utu-hegal, king of Uruk, 1 
and this is in accord with the summaries, which give 5 kingdoms 
of Uruk ; that of Utu-liegal is therefore the fifth, four having been 
already enumerated. The uncertainty is now narrowed down to 
the question whether there was yet another dynasty between those 
of Uruk and Ur. It may be said at once that this appears 
unlikely. POEBEL had formerly proposed (Hist. Texts^ 93) to insert 
a second kingdom of Adab at this point, but Lugal-anna-mundu 
is shown by L. to belong to the first Dynasty of Adab, and there 
are now no grounds for assuming any domination of that, or 
either of the other, " cities of royalty " beyond what has already 
been taken into account. In these circumstances, the only 
remaining question concerns the number of kings and the duration 
of Utu-hegaFs dynasty (Uruk V). First, then, let it be recalled 
that POEBEL has concluded, from examination of the main text, 
that no more than four kings are available for distribution between 
Uruk II and V. It has, however, seemed probable that Uruk II 
was composed of 3 kings, Enshakushanna, Lugal-kigubni-dudu, 
and Lugal-kisal-si, in which case one only, Utu-hegal himself, 
would be left for Uruk V. Further, by reconstructing the text 
backwards from L. X through the Dynasty of Ur, including the 
necessary formulae at the beginning and end of dynasties, it will 
be found that the space left is sufficient only for a very short 

1 For the inscription commemorating his triumph, see THURBAO-DANGIN 
in Rtvue (T Assyriologie IX, 111-120, and X, 99, IOO. 



32 THE EARLY DYNASTIES OF SUMER AND AKKAD. 

dynasty, probably of no more than one or two kings. Finally, 
the contemporary history of Lagash supplies some measure of 
collateral evidence. In the time of Dungi, second king of Ur III, 
a certain Ur-Ningirsu, high-priest of Nina, is mentioned on a 
votive wig of black diorite dedicated to the goddess Bau, and it 
has long been held, with the greatest probability, that this person 
is identical with Ur-Ningirsu, the son of Gudea, who calls himself 
"beloved priest of Nina" in one of his own brick inscriptions. 1 
But the activity and semi-independence of Gudea, which permitted 
him even to embark upon a private military expedition against 
Anshan, 2 shews that at least some part of his reign must have lain 
in a period when there was no universally predominant power in 
Babylonia, and it is the period between the fall of Gutium and 
the rise of Ur which best corresponds with these conditions. It 
has already been mentioned (p. 30) that Nammahni, a patesi of 
Umma, was in all probability a contemporary of the fourth king 
of Gutium. But Nammahni was also the name of a patesi of 
Lagash, son-in-law of Ur-Bau, and predecessor of Gudea by a 
time which would appear to have embraced several generations, 
during which the names of four other patesis of Lagash are 
known. Umma was the near neighbour and ancient rival of 
Lagash, and it does not seem an impossible assumption that 
the two Nammahni's were identical, one man combining the 
rule of both cities either by conquest or consent. The fourth 
king of Gutium reigned about 100 years before the end of his 
dynasty, and, if the identification proposed might be accepted, 
this would tend again to fix the date of Gudea during the latter 
years and after the fall of the Gutian Dynasty. But the son of 
Gudea was, as it has appeared, a contemporary of Dungi, the 
second king of Ur. All evidence, therefore, seems to agree in 
indicating that the Dynasty of Uruk V was short, and that no 
very considerable gap intervened between the defeat of Gutium 
and the formation of Ur-Engur's kingdom. 

1 D&coiwertes en Chaldee II, PI. 37, No. 8. 

2 Gudea, Statue B. VI, 64-69. 



33 

CHAPTER X. 
A new text of Libit-Ishtar. 

With the Dynasty of Isin, which succeeded Ur III, and is 
mentioned in the fragments of L. X, this chronological survey 
may fitly close. It has, however, seemed worth while to insert, at 
this point, an inscription of Libit-Ishtar, fifth king of that dynasty, 
not because it has any historical value, but because of its interest 
as being only the second inscription of this king as yet recovered. 
Unlike the first (best represented in CLAY, Miscellaneous Inscrip- 
tionS) No. 27), it is written in Akkadian, and deals with a different 
event. The text (Plate 3), which is copied from two small clay 
cones in the British Museum, 1 may be transcribed and rendered 
as follows : 

Col. i. (\) d *li-bi-it-istar (2) ri-i-um (3) pa-li-ih (4) nippurim-(KJ) 
Libit-Ishtar, the shepherd who feareth Nippur, 

(5) i-ka-ru-um (6) ki-nu-um (7) sa uri-(Ki)-im 

the constant waterer of Ur, 

(8) la mu-pa-ar-ki-um (9) a-na eridi-(K/} (10) bel-um 

that ceaseth not his care for Eridu, the lord, 

(n) zi-ma-at (12) unu(g)-(Kf) (13) sar l-si-in-(fci) 

the adornment of Uruk, the king of Isin, 

(14) Sar ma-at (15) u-me-ri-im (16) it a-ga-ti-im 

king of the land of Sumer, and Akkad, 

(17) bi-bi-il (18) li-i-ba is tar (19) a-na-ku (20) ga-ni-in 
the beloved of the heart of Ishtar, am I A ? 

(21) tt-M-il (22) i-ti * belim (23) u *' btltim (ti-im) 

beloved of the hand of Bel and Beltu, 

1 The writer has also seen several further examples in private possession. 

C 



34 THE EARLY DYNASTIES OF SUMER AND AKKAD. 

Col. II. (i) i-na \-si-in-(Ki) (2) a-al sar-ru-ti-ia 

in Isin my royal city, 

(3) i-na ba-ab ekallim (im) (4) d li-bi-it iStar (5) ma-ru * bclim 
at the palace-gate, Libit-Ishtar, the son of BI, 



(6) a-na-ku (7) i-nu-mi 


(8) ki-i-ta-am 
justice 

(n) z} a-ga-ti-im 
and Akkad 


(9) t-na ma-at (10) $u-me-ri-im 
in the land of Sumer 


(12) aS-ku-nu-ni 


(13) e-fu-us 
HiH HnilH 



Col. I. 20. The meaning of this word, which describes the king's construction, 
appears doubtful, gamtnu is found in Citneiform Texts XII. 27 
(81-7-27, 200. Rev. 21), but is there also of uncertain meaning, though 
it is indicated that the ideogram explained was GA-f NUN. This 
composite sign actually appears in an unpublished inscription of 
Enannadu I (B.M. 114399), who there says that he built ^ganunmak 
for the god Lugal-Erim. The word is tentatively rendered "bed- 
chamber" by Ungnad, Baby Ionise he Brief e^ p. 216. But, in view of 
POEBEL, Historical Texts, No. 6, 9, where it is related that one Annani 
built the gi8-sar-mdk of Enlil at Nippur, it seems possible to compare 
the Arabic gunainak t ' garden.' 

It will be observed that the first part of the inscription, containing 
the royal titles, is merely an Akkadian translation of the 
corresponding lines in the Sumerian. But linguistically the most 
interesting point is the phonetic complement in Col. I, 23, 
* NIN-LIL (ti-im\ which points unequivocally to the reading btttim. 
It cannot, therefore, be doubted that, under the Isin Dynasty, the 
divine names Enlil and Ninlil were pronounced Bel and Beltu 
respectively by the Semitic speakers. The cones which bear this 
text are clearly derived from the site of Isin, which is still 
unknown, and it is a matter of regret that in no case has it been 
possible to acquire any information as to their provenance. 



35 

CHAPTER XL 
Rim-Sin of Larsa and Rim -Sin of Ashur. 

Attention may perhaps be directed to one more curious 
circumstance, before closing this survey of the early Babylonian 
dynasties. The city of Isin is now known to have been con- 
fronted, throughout its period of nominal supremacy, by the rival 
power of Larsa, and finally to have been vanquished by the arms 
of Rim-Sin. But by this time a third claimant to the hegemony 
had appeared, and the fall of Isin merely brought Larsa face to 
face with the rising strength of the First Dynasty of Babylon. 
The founder of this dynasty, Sumu-abum, was known from a 
chronicle 1 to have been a contemporary of Ilushuma, one of the 
early kings of Assyria, and later information 2 adds that Ilushuma's 
successor, Irishum I, was the contemporary of Sumu-la-ilu, the 
successor of Sumu-abum. Three more kings reign at Babylon, 
and then comes Hammurabi, who, as is well known, defeated 
Rim-Sin of Larsa. But, after four successors of Irishum I at 
Ashur, the throne of that city is also occupied by a king bearing 
the name of Rim-Sin ! That is to say, that the cities of Ashur 
and Larsa must have been ruled at almost precisely the same 
time by kings of the same name. It is not intended to suggest 
that identity is to be assumed. There is no warrant for any such 
inference, and, indeed, the date-list of Rim-Sin of Larsa, which 
may be trusted to reflect the more notable events of his reign, 
makes no reference to any enterprise beyond the limits of southern 
Babylonia. In these circumstances, the identity in the names of 
contemporary rulers between two cities so far separated as Ashur 
and Larsa might be considered simply as a remarkable coincidence. 
But it is worthy of note that Ashur had, before this, acknowledged 
the suzerainty of Bur-Sin I, and is also known to have been 
under the control of Hammurabi. Neither of these kings appear, 
however, in the list of actual Assyrian rulers. 

1 KING, Chronicles II, 14. 

2 SCHROEDER, Zcitschrift fiir Assyriologie^ XXXIII, 58. 

C 2 



36 THE EARLY DYNASTIES OF SUMER AND AKKAD. 



TABLE OF EARLY DYNASTIES. 
AFTER THE FLOOD. 



FIRST KINGDOM OF KISH 
Euechios 1 , 2,400 years 

Chomasbelos 2,700 
{6 kings unknown) 
Galumum 900 

Zugagib 840 

Arpi (son of a 720 

plebeian) 

Etana (a s hep herd) > 63 5(?) 
? 410 

Enmenunna, 6n 

Melam-Kish 900 M 

Barsalnunna 1,200 
(7 doubtful names) 
23 kings 18,000 + years, 

3 months, 3 days 

FIRST KINGDOM OF URUK 
Meskingasher, 325 years 
Enmerkar 420 

Lugal-banda (fhe 1,200 

shepherd) 
Dumuzi (the 100 

hunter) 

Gilgamish i26(?),, 

(several more kings) 

(Summary uncertain) 

FIRST KINGDOM OF UR 

Mesannipada, 80 years 

Meskiagnunna 30 

Elulu 25 

Balulu 36 

4 kings 171 



KINGDOM OF AWAN 

3 kings 356 years 

SECOND KINGDOM OF UR 

4 kings 1 08 years 

SECOND KINGDOM OF KISH 
4 (or) 6 kings 3,792 years 

KINGDOM OF HAMAZI 

i king 7 years 

THIRD KINGDOM OF KISH 
Utug 
Mesilim 
Ur-zag-e 
Lugal-tarsi 
Enbi-Ishtar 
(and other kings) 

(Summary doubtful) 

SECOND KINGDOM OF URUK 
Enshakushanna 
Lugal-kigubni-dudu 
Lugal-kisal-si 

3 (?) kings 

KINGDOM OF ADAB 
Lugal-anna-mundu 90 (?) years 
Lugal-da-lu 
Me-shi . 



(number of kings doubtful) 

90 years 

1 A comma following a name indicates that the king was succeeded by his son. 



TABLE OF EARLY DYNASTIES. AFTER THE FLOOD. 37 



KINGDOM OF MARI 

Anpu 30 years 

(and other kings) 



-Ur-Nina 



(summary doubtful) 

KINGDOM OF AKSHAK 

Kalam-zi 30 years 

Kalam-dalulu 12 ,, 

Ur-ur 6 

Puzur-Sahan 20 

Ishuil, 24 

Gimil Sin 7 

6 kings 99 

FOURTH KINGDOM OF 

KISH 
KINGDOM OF Ku-Bau, ? years 

AGADE Puzur-Sin, 25 

Sharru-kin, 55 years Ur-Ilbaba 6 
Zimudar, 30 
Uziwadar 6 

Elmuti 1 1 

Imi-Shamash n 
Nania 3 



of Lagash (?) 



Urukagina 

THIRD KINGDOM OF 
URUK 

Lugal-zaggisi 25 years 



Rim ush 
Manishtusu 



8 kings 92 + years i king 25 years 
15 years 

(?) 



Naram-Sin 44 (? 54) years 

Shar-gali-sharri 24 

Igigi. Imi. 
Nanum. Elulu. 
Dudu, 2 1 

Shudurkib (?) 15 



It 1 

ulu. J 



12 kings 



197 



38 THE EARLY DYNASTIES OF SUMER AND AKKAD. 



FOURTH KINGDOM OF URUK 
Ur-nigin 3 years 

Ur-gigir 6 

Kudda 6 

Puzur-ili 5 

Ur-Utu 6 



5 kings 



26 



KINGDOM OF GUTIUM 



Imbia 



5 years 



Ingishu 7 

Warlagaba 6 

larlagash ? 

(17 more kings, including: 

Erridu-pizir 

Lasirab 

Sium 

Saratigubisin 

Tirigan) 

21 kings i24(? 5) years, 40 days 

FIFTH KINGDOM OF URUK 
Utu-hegal 

(Summary doubtful) 

THIRD KINGDOM OF UR 
Ur-Engur w #& 18 years 

Dungi 58 



-Nammaljni of Umma 
(and Lagash ?) 



Gudea, 
of Lagash 



Bur-Sin I 
Gimil-Sin 
Ibi-Sm 

5 kings 



9 
7 

25 
117 



-Ur-Ningirsu, son of Gudea 

of Lagash 

-Zariku, Sakkanakku of 
Ashur 



TABLE OF EARLY DYNASTIES. AFTER THE FLOOD. 39 



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APPENDIX. 



IN the preceding pages, and in the list of dynasties, any attempt 
to fix absolute chronology has been purposely avoided. It may, 
however, be pointed out that the reconstruction of the Assyrian 
king list, combined with the chronological notes given by various 
Assyrian kings, and the known synchronisms with the first 
dynasty of Babylon, offer a new and promising means of 
approaching the early dynasties of Sumer and Akkad. Thus, 
Esarhaddon (B.C. 681-668) records 1 that Shalmaneser I lived 
580 years before his time, i.e., 680 + 580 = 1260 B.C. roughly. 
But Shalmaneser I himself states 2 that one Shamshi-Adad 
preceded him by 580 years, and that Irishum lived 159 years 
before this Shamshi-Adad. By addition, therefore, the date of 
Irishum, according to Shalmaneser I, was 12604-580+159, /'.<?., 
about B.C. 2000. Tukulti-Enurta I, son of Shalmaneser I, has 
been assigned on other grounds to the period about B.C. 1260- 
1240. It is interesting, therefore, to find that this king also gives 3 
a date for Ilushuma, the father of Irishum, 780 years before his 
own time, /".*., 1250 + 780 = 2030 B.C., which agrees very well 
with Shalmaneser's date for Irishum. It is true that Esarhaddon, 
in the passage already quoted, gives the intervals Shalmaneser I 
Shamshi-Adad as 434 years, and Shamshi-Adad Irishum as 
126 years, thus obtaining a date of B.C. 1820 for Irishum. There 
is thus a conflict of evidence, but in view of the higher antiquity 
of Shalmaneser, and the confirmation of his dating by his son 
Tukulti-Enurta I, it seems better to reject the version of 

1 Messerschmidt, Ktilschrifttcxtt aus Assur historischcn Inherits, No. 51, 
col. II, 11. 12-32. 

2 Ibid., No. 13, Reverse, col. Ill, 32 col. IV, 4. 

3 Mitttilungen dtr dcutschtn Orient- Gesellschaft^ 54, p. 23 sqq. 



APPENDIX. 41 

Esarhaddon. If, then, Ilushuma lived about B.C. 2035, an 
approximate date for Sumu-abum, the founder of the first dynasty 
of Babylon, is automatically obtained, and the chronology can be 
reckoned back to Ur-Engur without more inexactitude than may 
have been already involved in the preceding calculations. 
Incidentally, Bur-Sin I of Ur is known 1 to have been the 
contemporary and overlord of Zariku, one of the very earliest 
recorded rulers of Ashur. Even beyond this point a rough 
approximation might also be made to dates as far back as the 
dynasty of Akshak. But it seems better to abstain, at present, 
from anything more than this general sketch of a possible new 
method of inquiry. 

1 Mitttii. d. dtutsch. Or.-Gesell.^ 54, p. 16. 



ADDITIONAL NOTE. 



WHEN the foregoing pages had already reached their final form 
in the press, there appeared in the Expository Times of June, 
1921, p. 410, an article entitled "The Dynasties of Sumer and 
Akkad," to which the author, Prof. LANGDON, very kindly directed 
my attention. While, therefore, it was by that time impossible to 
make any alteration in the text of this essay (pp. 29 and 37), it 
seemed necessary to take account of certain additional information 
concerning the Dynasty of Agade, which is supplied by a still 
more recent discovery of Dr. LEGRAIN. Manishtusu and Naram- 
Sin are now known to have reigned 7 and 56 years respectively, 
and it is certain that the house of Sharru-kin ruled in regular 
succession from father to son through five generations down to 
Shar-gali-sharri, for a period of 157 years. This number agrees 
exactly with that which is given for the Sargonid family by 
POEBEL'S text no. 3, Col. VIII, 5, and no further doubt remains 
concerning this part of the dynasty. The gap which was assumed 
(p. 29) to occur between Manishtusu and Naram-Sin does not 
exist. The object of this assumption was to supply another king 
who should complete the number of 12 which is given in the 
summary. Here, therefore, the new information raises a difficulty 
the list of names is now complete, but there are only eleven. 
Further, the duration of the dynasty, given in the summary as 
197, is actually 196 by addition of the individual reigns, including 
the 3 years of the 4 " usurpers." As the figures for the Sargonid 
house are checked by an independent summary, as mentioned 
above, the inaccuracy must occur in the latter part of the dynasty . 
The deficiencies of one king and one year are probably connected 



ADDITIONAL NOTE. 43 

phenomena, but whereas the latter is comparatively unimportant, 
the loss of a name is more difficult to explain, in view of the 
precision with which the text states, for instance, the exact 
number of the pretenders who disputed the throne after the reign 
of Shar-gali-sharri. But it is indeed a matter of congratulation that 
these slight uncertainties are all that is now left of the formidable 
difficulties which once beset this important period of Babylonian 
history. 

KINGDOM OF AGADE. 

Sharru-kin, 55 years. 

Rimush, 15 

Manishtusu, ... ... 7 ,, 

Naram-Sin, 56 

Shar-gali-sharri ... ... 24 ,, 

Igigi Imi "1 

Nanum Elulu J 

Dudu, 21 

Shudurkib (?) 15 

ii kings ... ... 196 years. 

(according to summaries) 12 kings ... 197 years. 



PL, 1, 



LIST OF EARLY DYNASTIES. 

B.M. 108857. (OBVERSE.) 



JO 



iS 



to 



iff ** 



<T 



<T 




153 



PL. 2. 



LIST OF EARLY DYNASTIES. 

B.M. 108857. (REVERSE.) 




I * . V I'+^V* ' *^* ^ t~"^ 



|> 



T 



& 



>< 




16- 



X 



PL. 3. 



INSCRIPTION ON A VOTIVE HAMMER. 

B.M. 114703. 




CONE OF LIBIT-ISHTAR;, 

KING OF ISIN. 
COL. I. B.M. 114683. 



:c I 





COL. II. 



TfEajfefmaM 




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