fbpx
Wikipedia

Kashtiliash IV

Kaštiliašu IV was the twenty-eighth Kassite king of Babylon and the kingdom contemporarily known as Kar-Duniaš, c. 1232–1225 BC (short chronology). He succeeded Šagarakti-Šuriaš, who could have been his father, ruled for eight years,[i 1] and went on to wage war against Assyria resulting in the catastrophic invasion of his homeland and his abject defeat.

Kaštiliašu IV
King of Babylon
The Tablet of Akaptaḫa, recording a gift of land by Babylonian king, Kaštiliašu IV
Reignc. 1232–1225 BC
PredecessorŠagarakti-Šuriaš
SuccessorEnlil-nādin-šumi
HouseKassite

He may have ruled from the Palace of the Stag and the Palace of the Mountain Sheep, in the city of Dur-Kurigalzu, as these are referenced in a jeweler's archive from this period.[1] Despite his short reign there are at least 177 economic texts dated to him,[2] on subjects as diverse as various items for a chariot, issue of flour, dates, oil and salt for offerings, receipt of butter and oil at the expense of the šandabakku (the governor of Nippur), i.e. his shopping receipt, and baskets received by Rimutum from Hunnubi.[3][i 2]

War with Assyria edit

According to his eponymous epic, Tukulti-Ninurta I, king of Assyria, was provoked into war by Kaštiliašu's dastardly preemptive attack on his territory, thereby breaching an earlier treaty between their ancestors Adad-nīrāri I and Kadašman-Turgu.[4] But trouble may have been brewing for some time. Tudḫaliya, king of the Hittites, himself reeling from defeat by the Assyrians at the Battle of Nihriya, refers to the Babylonian king as his equal, in his treaty with his vassal, Šaušgamuwa of Amurru, hinting at the possible existence of an alliance or at least a tacit understanding between them.[5] It reads:

The kings who are equal to me (are) the king of Egypt, the king of Karanduniya (Babylon), the king of Assyria <and the king of Aḫḫiyawa>.
And if the king of Karanduniya is My Majesty's friend, he shall also be your friend; but if he is My Majesty's enemy, he shall also be your enemy.
Since the king of Assyria is My Majesty's enemy he shall also be your enemy.
Your merchant shall not enter into Assyria and you shall not allow his merchant into your land. He shall not pass through your land.
But if he enters into your land, you should seize him and send him off to My Majesty.[6]

— Treaty between Tudḫaliya and Šaušgamuwa, Tablet A, column IV, lines 1-18 edited

Also, Kaštiliašu had granted land and presumably asylum to a Hurrian, a fugitive from Assyria's vassal Ḫanigalbat, commemorated on the Tablet of Akaptaḫa.[2] He also reconfirmed a large gift of land on a kudurru that had been provided to Uzub-Šiḫu or -Šipak by the Kassite king, Kurigalzu II (c. 1332-1308 BC) in grateful recognition of his service in an earlier war against Assyria.[i 3]

Tukulti-Ninurta petitioned the god Šamaš before beginning his counter offensive.[7] Kaštiliašu was captured, single-handed by Tukulti-Ninurta according to his account, who “trod with my feet upon his lordly neck as though it were a footstool”[8] and deported him ignominiously in chains to Assyria. The victorious Assyrian demolished the walls of Babylon, massacred many of the inhabitants, pillaged and plundered his way across the city to the Esagila temple, where he made off with the statue of Marduk.[9] He then proclaimed himself “king of Karduniash, king of Sumer and Akkad, king of Sippar and Babylon, king of Tilmun and Meluhha.”[7] Middle Assyrian texts recovered at modern Tell Sheikh Hamad, ancient Dūr-Katlimmu, which was the regional capital of the vassal Ḫanigalbat, include a letter from Tukulti-Ninurta to his grand vizier, Aššur-iddin advising him of the approach of Šulman-mušabši escorting a Babylonian king, who may have been Kaštiliašu, his wife, and his retinue which incorporated a large number of women,[10] on his way to exile after his defeat. The journey to Dūr-Katlimmu seems to have traveled via Jezireh.[11]

The conflict, and its outcome, is recorded in the Tukulti-Ninurta Epic, a poetic “victory song”, which has been recovered in several lengthy fragments, somewhat reminiscent of the earlier account of Adad-nīrāri's victory over Nazi-Maruttaš.[7] It would lend its form to later Assyrian epics such as that of Shalmaneser III, concerning his campaign in Ararat.[12] Written strictly from the Assyrian point of view, it provides a strongly biased narrative. Tukulti-Ninurta is portrayed as an innocent victim of the invidious Kaštiliašu, who is contrasted as “the transgressor of an oath”, and who has so vexed the gods that they have abandoned their sanctuaries.[13]

More succinct accounts of these events are also inscribed on five large limestone tablets which were imbedded in Tukulti-Ninurta's construction projects as foundation stones, for example the Annals of Tukulti-Ninurta, carved on a slab which was buried in or under the wall of his purpose-built capital, Kar-Tukulti-Ninurta.[14]

Relations with Elam edit

There is no extant evidence of conflict between Elam and Babylon during his reign. The ruling families had been joined through intermarriage in the past, but the countries had resorted to war to settle their differences under the reigns of Kurigalzu I and possibly Nazi-Maruttaš. However, the sequence of kings of Elam during this period is very confused, with several names suspiciously appearing over again some in shuffled sequences, such as Napirisha-Untash and Untash-Napirisha, making it hard to make sense of the chronology. After Kaštiliašu's overthrow, however, Kidin-Hutran III, the king of Elam, certainly led two successive incursions into Babylonia, which have been explained as either indicative of his loyalty to the fallen Kassite dynasty or alternatively raiding with impunity to exploit the weakness of the over-extended Assyrians.[15]

Babylon under Assyrian Governorship edit

The Chronicle P records that Tukulti-Ninurta ruled through his appointed governors for seven years, where the term šaknūtīšu could include appointees or prefects.[i 4] Alternative reconstructions of these events have been proposed whereby Tukulti Ninurta ruled for seven years and then three successive Kassite kings took power before the original dynasty was reinstated[16] or that his own rule followed these kings.[17]

It has been suggested that the Šulgi Prophecy, a prophecy dated to after the events, might refer to the events during one of these reigns.[18] Enlil-nādin-šumi may be the subject of Column V of the Šulgi prophetic speech.[19] It is preserved in heavily damaged late-period tablets, in which Šulgi (2112–2004 BC), the second and most famous king of the third dynasty of Ur, and founder of Nippur, summarizes his achievements. He predicts that Babylon will submit to Assyria, Nippur will be “cast down”, Enlil will remove the king, another king will make a messianic appearance, restore the shrines and Nippur will rise from its ashes.[20]

With the collapse of Tukulti-Ninurta's regime in Babylonia, some years before his assassination, the Kassite rabûti (important men, noblemen, officers?)[2] rebelled and installed Kaštiliašu's son, Adad-šuma-ušur, on the throne.[i 4]

In literature edit

Kashtiliash is a significant character in S. M. Stirling's Against the Tide of Years and On the Oceans of Eternity, the second and final novels of his Nantucket series. In this alternate history, the intervention of time-traveling Americans turns the tide in the war, Assyria is totally defeated and crushed, and the victorious Kashtiliash eventually marries an American woman who doubles as both his queen and the commander of the modernized Babylonian army, equipped with firearms.

Inscriptions edit

  1. ^ Kinglist A, BM 33332, column 2, lines 7-10.
  2. ^ Tablets BM 17678, 17712, 17687, 17740.
  3. ^ Kudurru of Kaštiliašu, Sb 30 in the Musée du Louvre.
  4. ^ a b Chronicle P (ABC 22), BM 92701, column 4, lines 7 and 8, 14-16, 17-20.

References edit

  1. ^ Andrew George (2004). "Palace names and epithets, and the vaulted building". Sumer. 51. School of Oriental and African Studies: 39.
  2. ^ a b c J. A. Brinkman (1976). "Kaštiliašu". Materials and Studies for Kassite History, Vol. I (MSKH I). Oriental Institute of the University of Chicago. pp. 175–189.
  3. ^ M. Sigrist; H. H. Figulla; C. B. F. Walker (1996). Catalogue of Babylonian Tablets in the British Museum, Volume II. British Museum Press. pp. 81–82.
  4. ^ Trevor Bryce (2003). Letters of the great kings of the ancient Near East: the royal. Routledge. p. 11.
  5. ^ Trevor Bryce (2005). The Kingdom of the Hittites. Oxford University Press. pp. 494, 318.
  6. ^ Itamar Singer (2003). "Treaties". In William W. Hallo (ed.). The Context of Scripture: Volume II: Monumental Inscriptions from the Biblical World. Brill. p. 99.
  7. ^ a b c J. M. Munn-Rankin (1975). "Assyrian Military Power, 1300-1200 B.C.". In I. E. S. Edwards (ed.). Cambridge Ancient History, Volume 2, Part 2, History of the Middle East and the Aegean Region, c. 1380-1000 BC. Cambridge University Press. pp. 287–288, 298.
  8. ^ Albert Kirk Grayson (1972). Assyrian Royal Inscriptions: Volume I. Wiesbaden: Otto Harrassowitz. p. 108. §716.
  9. ^ Christopher Morgan (2006). Mark William Chavalas (ed.). The ancient Near East: historical sources in translation. Blackwell Publishing. pp. 145–152.
  10. ^ Frederick Mario Fales (2010). "Production and Consumption at Dūr-Katlimmu: A Survey of the Evidence". In Hartmut Kühne (ed.). Dūr-Katlimmu 2008 and beyond. Harrassowitz Verlag. p. 82.
  11. ^ Hartmut Kühne (1999). "Tall Šēḫ Ḥamad - The Assyrian City of Dūr-Katlimmu: A Historic-Geographic Approach". In Prince Mikasa no Miya Takahito (ed.). Essays on ancient Anatolia in the second millennium B.C. Harrassowitz. p. 282.
  12. ^ Benjamin R. Foster. Carl S. Ehrlich (ed.). From an antique land: an introduction to ancient Near Eastern literature. p. 200.
  13. ^ John F. Kutsko (2000). Between Heaven and Earth: divine presence and absence in the Book of Ezekiel. Eisenbrauns. p. 106.
  14. ^ L. W. King (1904). Records of the reign of Tukulti-Ninib I, King of Assyria, about B.C. 1275. Luzac and Co. pp. 78–95.
  15. ^ D. T. Potts (1999). The archaeology of Elam: formation and transformation of an ancient Iranian State. Cambridge University Press. pp. 230–231.
  16. ^ C.B.F. Walker (May 1982). "Babylonian Chronicle 25: A Chronicle of the Kassite and Isin II Dynasties". In C. Van Driel (ed.). Assyriological Studies presented to F. R. Kraus on the occasion of his 70th birthday. London: Netherlands Institute for the Near East. pp. 402–406.
  17. ^ Shigeo Yamada (2003). "Tukulti-Ninurta I's Rule over Babylonia and its Aftermath - A Historical Reconstruction". Orient. 38: 153–177. doi:10.5356/orient1960.38.153.
  18. ^ J. A. Brinkman. "Enlil-nādin-šumi". MSKH I. p. 125.
  19. ^ Albert Kirk Grayson (1975). Assyrian and Babylonian chronicles. J. J. Augustin. p. 290.
  20. ^ Bernard McGinn; John J. Collins; Stephen J. Stein (2003). The Continuum history of apocalypticism. Continuum. pp. 10–11.

kashtiliash, kaštiliašu, twenty, eighth, kassite, king, babylon, kingdom, contemporarily, known, duniaš, 1232, 1225, short, chronology, succeeded, Šagarakti, Šuriaš, could, have, been, father, ruled, eight, years, went, wage, against, assyria, resulting, catas. Kastiliasu IV was the twenty eighth Kassite king of Babylon and the kingdom contemporarily known as Kar Dunias c 1232 1225 BC short chronology He succeeded Sagarakti Surias who could have been his father ruled for eight years i 1 and went on to wage war against Assyria resulting in the catastrophic invasion of his homeland and his abject defeat Kastiliasu IVKing of BabylonThe Tablet of Akaptaḫa recording a gift of land by Babylonian king Kastiliasu IVReignc 1232 1225 BCPredecessorSagarakti SuriasSuccessorEnlil nadin sumiHouseKassiteHe may have ruled from the Palace of the Stag and the Palace of the Mountain Sheep in the city of Dur Kurigalzu as these are referenced in a jeweler s archive from this period 1 Despite his short reign there are at least 177 economic texts dated to him 2 on subjects as diverse as various items for a chariot issue of flour dates oil and salt for offerings receipt of butter and oil at the expense of the sandabakku the governor of Nippur i e his shopping receipt and baskets received by Rimutum from Hunnubi 3 i 2 Contents 1 War with Assyria 2 Relations with Elam 3 Babylon under Assyrian Governorship 4 In literature 5 Inscriptions 6 ReferencesWar with Assyria editAccording to his eponymous epic Tukulti Ninurta I king of Assyria was provoked into war by Kastiliasu s dastardly preemptive attack on his territory thereby breaching an earlier treaty between their ancestors Adad nirari I and Kadasman Turgu 4 But trouble may have been brewing for some time Tudḫaliya king of the Hittites himself reeling from defeat by the Assyrians at the Battle of Nihriya refers to the Babylonian king as his equal in his treaty with his vassal Sausgamuwa of Amurru hinting at the possible existence of an alliance or at least a tacit understanding between them 5 It reads The kings who are equal to me are the king of Egypt the king of Karanduniya Babylon the king of Assyria lt and the king of Aḫḫiyawa gt And if the king of Karanduniya is My Majesty s friend he shall also be your friend but if he is My Majesty s enemy he shall also be your enemy Since the king of Assyria is My Majesty s enemy he shall also be your enemy Your merchant shall not enter into Assyria and you shall not allow his merchant into your land He shall not pass through your land But if he enters into your land you should seize him and send him off to My Majesty 6 Treaty between Tudḫaliya and Sausgamuwa Tablet A column IV lines 1 18 edited Also Kastiliasu had granted land and presumably asylum to a Hurrian a fugitive from Assyria s vassal Ḫanigalbat commemorated on the Tablet of Akaptaḫa 2 He also reconfirmed a large gift of land on a kudurru that had been provided to Uzub Siḫu or Sipak by the Kassite king Kurigalzu II c 1332 1308 BC in grateful recognition of his service in an earlier war against Assyria i 3 Tukulti Ninurta petitioned the god Samas before beginning his counter offensive 7 Kastiliasu was captured single handed by Tukulti Ninurta according to his account who trod with my feet upon his lordly neck as though it were a footstool 8 and deported him ignominiously in chains to Assyria The victorious Assyrian demolished the walls of Babylon massacred many of the inhabitants pillaged and plundered his way across the city to the Esagila temple where he made off with the statue of Marduk 9 He then proclaimed himself king of Karduniash king of Sumer and Akkad king of Sippar and Babylon king of Tilmun and Meluhha 7 Middle Assyrian texts recovered at modern Tell Sheikh Hamad ancient Dur Katlimmu which was the regional capital of the vassal Ḫanigalbat include a letter from Tukulti Ninurta to his grand vizier Assur iddin advising him of the approach of Sulman musabsi escorting a Babylonian king who may have been Kastiliasu his wife and his retinue which incorporated a large number of women 10 on his way to exile after his defeat The journey to Dur Katlimmu seems to have traveled via Jezireh 11 The conflict and its outcome is recorded in the Tukulti Ninurta Epic a poetic victory song which has been recovered in several lengthy fragments somewhat reminiscent of the earlier account of Adad nirari s victory over Nazi Maruttas 7 It would lend its form to later Assyrian epics such as that of Shalmaneser III concerning his campaign in Ararat 12 Written strictly from the Assyrian point of view it provides a strongly biased narrative Tukulti Ninurta is portrayed as an innocent victim of the invidious Kastiliasu who is contrasted as the transgressor of an oath and who has so vexed the gods that they have abandoned their sanctuaries 13 More succinct accounts of these events are also inscribed on five large limestone tablets which were imbedded in Tukulti Ninurta s construction projects as foundation stones for example the Annals of Tukulti Ninurta carved on a slab which was buried in or under the wall of his purpose built capital Kar Tukulti Ninurta 14 Relations with Elam editThere is no extant evidence of conflict between Elam and Babylon during his reign The ruling families had been joined through intermarriage in the past but the countries had resorted to war to settle their differences under the reigns of Kurigalzu I and possibly Nazi Maruttas However the sequence of kings of Elam during this period is very confused with several names suspiciously appearing over again some in shuffled sequences such as Napirisha Untash and Untash Napirisha making it hard to make sense of the chronology After Kastiliasu s overthrow however Kidin Hutran III the king of Elam certainly led two successive incursions into Babylonia which have been explained as either indicative of his loyalty to the fallen Kassite dynasty or alternatively raiding with impunity to exploit the weakness of the over extended Assyrians 15 Babylon under Assyrian Governorship editThe Chronicle P records that Tukulti Ninurta ruled through his appointed governors for seven years where the term saknutisu could include appointees or prefects i 4 Alternative reconstructions of these events have been proposed whereby Tukulti Ninurta ruled for seven years and then three successive Kassite kings took power before the original dynasty was reinstated 16 or that his own rule followed these kings 17 It has been suggested that the Sulgi Prophecy a prophecy dated to after the events might refer to the events during one of these reigns 18 Enlil nadin sumi may be the subject of Column V of the Sulgi prophetic speech 19 It is preserved in heavily damaged late period tablets in which Sulgi 2112 2004 BC the second and most famous king of the third dynasty of Ur and founder of Nippur summarizes his achievements He predicts that Babylon will submit to Assyria Nippur will be cast down Enlil will remove the king another king will make a messianic appearance restore the shrines and Nippur will rise from its ashes 20 With the collapse of Tukulti Ninurta s regime in Babylonia some years before his assassination the Kassite rabuti important men noblemen officers 2 rebelled and installed Kastiliasu s son Adad suma usur on the throne i 4 In literature editKashtiliash is a significant character in S M Stirling s Against the Tide of Years and On the Oceans of Eternity the second and final novels of his Nantucket series In this alternate history the intervention of time traveling Americans turns the tide in the war Assyria is totally defeated and crushed and the victorious Kashtiliash eventually marries an American woman who doubles as both his queen and the commander of the modernized Babylonian army equipped with firearms Inscriptions edit Kinglist A BM 33332 column 2 lines 7 10 Tablets BM 17678 17712 17687 17740 Kudurru of Kastiliasu Sb 30 in the Musee du Louvre a b Chronicle P ABC 22 BM 92701 column 4 lines 7 and 8 14 16 17 20 References edit Andrew George 2004 Palace names and epithets and the vaulted building Sumer 51 School of Oriental and African Studies 39 a b c J A Brinkman 1976 Kastiliasu Materials and Studies for Kassite History Vol I MSKH I Oriental Institute of the University of Chicago pp 175 189 M Sigrist H H Figulla C B F Walker 1996 Catalogue of Babylonian Tablets in the British Museum Volume II British Museum Press pp 81 82 Trevor Bryce 2003 Letters of the great kings of the ancient Near East the royal Routledge p 11 Trevor Bryce 2005 The Kingdom of the Hittites Oxford University Press pp 494 318 Itamar Singer 2003 Treaties In William W Hallo ed The Context of Scripture Volume II Monumental Inscriptions from the Biblical World Brill p 99 a b c J M Munn Rankin 1975 Assyrian Military Power 1300 1200 B C In I E S Edwards ed Cambridge Ancient History Volume 2 Part 2 History of the Middle East and the Aegean Region c 1380 1000 BC Cambridge University Press pp 287 288 298 Albert Kirk Grayson 1972 Assyrian Royal Inscriptions Volume I Wiesbaden Otto Harrassowitz p 108 716 Christopher Morgan 2006 Mark William Chavalas ed The ancient Near East historical sources in translation Blackwell Publishing pp 145 152 Frederick Mario Fales 2010 Production and Consumption at Dur Katlimmu A Survey of the Evidence In Hartmut Kuhne ed Dur Katlimmu 2008 and beyond Harrassowitz Verlag p 82 Hartmut Kuhne 1999 Tall Seḫ Ḥamad The Assyrian City of Dur Katlimmu A Historic Geographic Approach In Prince Mikasa no Miya Takahito ed Essays on ancient Anatolia in the second millennium B C Harrassowitz p 282 Benjamin R Foster Carl S Ehrlich ed From an antique land an introduction to ancient Near Eastern literature p 200 John F Kutsko 2000 Between Heaven and Earth divine presence and absence in the Book of Ezekiel Eisenbrauns p 106 L W King 1904 Records of the reign of Tukulti Ninib I King of Assyria about B C 1275 Luzac and Co pp 78 95 D T Potts 1999 The archaeology of Elam formation and transformation of an ancient Iranian State Cambridge University Press pp 230 231 C B F Walker May 1982 Babylonian Chronicle 25 A Chronicle of the Kassite and Isin II Dynasties In C Van Driel ed Assyriological Studies presented to F R Kraus on the occasion of his 70th birthday London Netherlands Institute for the Near East pp 402 406 Shigeo Yamada 2003 Tukulti Ninurta I s Rule over Babylonia and its Aftermath A Historical Reconstruction Orient 38 153 177 doi 10 5356 orient1960 38 153 J A Brinkman Enlil nadin sumi MSKH I p 125 Albert Kirk Grayson 1975 Assyrian and Babylonian chronicles J J Augustin p 290 Bernard McGinn John J Collins Stephen J Stein 2003 The Continuum history of apocalypticism Continuum pp 10 11 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kashtiliash IV amp oldid 1209901768, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.