Sumerian king list

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Ancient Mesopotamia
EuphratesTigris
Cities / Empires
Sumer: EriduKishUrukUrLagashNippurNgirsu
Elam: Susa
Akkadian Empire: AkkadMari
Amorites: IsinLarsa
Babylonia: BabylonChaldea
HittitesKassitesHurrians/Mitanni
Assyria: AssurNimrudDur-SharrukinNineveh
Chronology
History of Mesopotamia
History of SumerKings of Sumer
Kings of Assyria
Kings of Babylon
Mythology
Enûma ElishGilgamesh
Assyro-Babylonian religion
Language
SumerianElamite
AkkadianAramaic
HurrianHittite

The Sumerian king list is an ancient text in the Sumerian language listing kings of Sumer from Sumerian and foreign dynasties. The later Babylonian king list and Assyrian king list were similar.

[edit] Description

The list records the location of the "official" kingship, along with the rulers with the lengths of their rule. The kingship was believed to be handed down by the gods, and could be passed from one city to another by military conquest. The list mentions only one female ruler: Kug-Bau, the tavern-keeper, who alone accounts for the third dynasty of Kish.

The list blends earlier, possibly mythical kings who have exceptionally long reigns with later more plausibly historical dynasties. It cannot be ruled out that earlier names in the list correspond to historic rulers who later became legendary figures.

The earliest name on the list whose existence has been authenticated through recent archaeological discoveries is that of En-me-barage-si of Kish (ca. 2600 BC). The fact that his name is also mentioned in the Gilgamesh epics has led to speculation that Gilgamesh himself could be historic.

Three dynasties are notably not included in this list: the Larsa dynasty from the Isin-Larsa period, when Larsa was vying for power with Isin, and the two dynasties of Lagash from before and after the Akkadian Empire, when Lagash exerted considerable influence in the region. Lagash in particular is known directly from archeological artifacts beginning ca. 2500 BC.

The list is central, for lack of a more accurate source, to the chronology of the 3rd millennium BC. However the fact that a number of the dynasties in the list probably reigned simultaneously in different cities makes it difficult to produce a strict chronology.

Some of the earliest known inscriptions containing the list date from the early 3rd millennium BC; for example, the Weld-Blundell Prism[1][2] [3] is dated to 2170 BC. The later Babylonian and Assyrian king lists that were based on it still preserved the earliest portions of the list well into the 3rd century BC, when Berossus popularised the list in the Hellenic world.

[edit] The list

[edit] Early Bronze Age I

[edit] Uruk period

[edit] "Pre-dynastic" rulers

[edit] Early Bronze Age II

[edit] Early Dynastic I and II periods

[edit] First Dynasty of Kish

[edit] First Dynasty of Uruk

[edit] Early Bronze Age III

[edit] Early Dynastic IIIa period

[edit] First dynasty of Ur

[edit] Dynasty of Awan

[edit] Second Dynasty of Kish

[edit] Early Dynastic IIIb period

(ca. 2500 – ca. 2271 BC)

The First Dynasty of Lagash (also ca. 2500 – ca. 2271 BC) is not mentioned in the King List, though it is well known from inscriptions

[edit] Dynasty of Hamazi

[edit] Second Dynasty of Uruk

[edit] Second Dynasty of Ur

[edit] Dynasty of Adab

[edit] Dynasty of Mari

[edit] Third Dynasty of Kish

[edit] Dynasty of Akshak

[edit] Fourth Dynasty of Kish

[edit] Third Dynasty of Uruk

[edit] Akkadian Empire

Victory stele of Naram-Suen (Louvre)
Victory stele of Naram-Suen (Louvre)

[edit] Dynasty of Akkad

[edit] Fourth Dynasty of Uruk
(Possibly rulers of lower Mesopotamia contemporary with the Dynasty of Akkad)

[edit] Early Bronze Age IV

[edit] Gutian period

The 2nd Dynasty of Lagash (before ca. 2093 – 2046 BC (short)) is not mentioned in the King List, though it is well known from inscriptions.

[edit] Gutian Rule

[edit] Fifth Dynasty of Uruk

[edit] Ur III period

"Sumerian Renaissance"
(ca. 2047 – 1940 BC (short))

[edit] Third Dynasty of Ur

[edit] Middle Bronze Age I

[edit] Isin-Larsa period

Independent Amorite states in lower Mesopotamia.

The Dynasty of Larsa (ca. 1961 – 1674 BC (short)) from this period is not mentioned in the King List.

[edit] Dynasty of Isin

* These epithets or names are not included in all versions of the king list.

[edit] See also

[edit] References and External links


[edit] Notes

  1. ^ [1] Historical inscriptions; containing principally the chronological prism, W-B 444, Stephen Langdon, Oxford University Press, 1923
  2. ^ [2] WB-444 High Resolution Image from CDLI
  3. ^ [3] WB-444 Line Art from CDLI
  4. ^ Harriet Crawford, Sumer and the Sumerians, Cambridge University Press, 1991, page 19.