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King of the Four Corners

King of the Four Corners of the World (Sumerian: lugal-an-ub-da-limmu-ba,[1] Akkadian: šarru kibrat arbaim,[2] šar kibrāti arbaʾi,[3] or šar kibrāt erbetti[4]), alternatively translated as King of the Four Quarters of the World, King of the Heaven's Four Corners or King of the Four Corners of the Universe[5] and often shortened to simply King of the Four Corners,[3][6] was a title of great prestige claimed by powerful monarchs in ancient Mesopotamia. Though the term "four corners of the world" does refer to specific geographical places within and near Mesopotamia itself, these places were (at the time the title was first used) thought to represent locations near the actual edges of the world and as such, the title should be interpreted as something equivalent to "King of all the known world", a claim to universal rule over the entire world and everything within it.

Relief with Naram-Sin of Akkad's portrait. Naram-Sin, who reigned between 2254 and 2218 BC, created the title of King of the Four Corners of the World. Relief today housed at the Istanbul Archaeological Museum.
Seal of the Neo-Sumerian king Ibbi-Sin in the Metropolitan Museum of Art. The inscription reads "Ibbi-Sin the strong king, king of Ur, King of the four corners of the world".

The title was first used by Naram-Sin of the Akkadian Empire in the 23rd century BC and was later used by the rulers of the Neo-Sumerian Empire, after which it fell into disuse. It was revived as a title by a number of Assyrian rulers, becoming especially prominent during the Neo-Assyrian Empire. The final ruler to claim the title was the first Persian Achaemenid king, Cyrus the Great, after his conquest of Babylon in 539 BC.

It is possible, at least among Assyrian rulers, that the title of King of the Four Corners was not inherited through normal means. As the title is not attested for all Neo-Assyrian kings and for some only attested several years into their reign it is possible that it might have had to be earned by each king individually, possibly through completing successful military campaigns in all four points of the compass. The similar title of šar kiššatim ("King of Everything" or "King of the Universe"), also with Akkadian origins and attested for some of the Neo-Assyrian kings, may have required seven successful military campaigns. The difference between the exact meaning of the two titles may have been that "King of the Universe" laid claim to the cosmological realm whereas "King of the Four Corners of the World" laid claim to the terrestrial.

Meaning of "Four Corners of the World" edit

Naram-Sin "King of the Four Regions"
 
Map of the four corners of the world as Naram-Sin, the creator of the title of King of the Four Regions, would probably have imagined them.
 
"Naram-Sin, King of the four regions (of the World)"[7]
𒀭𒈾𒊏𒄠𒀭𒂗𒍪 𒈗 𒆠𒅁𒊏𒁴 𒅈𒁀𒅎
DNa-ra-am DSîn lugal ki-ibratim arbaim
Limestone vase inscription, Girsu, circa 2250 BCE. Louvre Museum AO 74.[8][9][7]
In the time of Naram-Sin, these locations were thought to be near the edges of the world. As such, the term should be understood as referring to the entire world. He also used the title "King of the Universe".[7]

The term "four corners of the world" appears in several ancient mythologies and cosmologies, wherein it roughly corresponds the four points of the compass. In most of these representations, four principal rivers run to these four corners, their water irrigating the four quadrants (or quarters) of the world. In the view of the Mesopotamian Akkadians, the term referred to four regions on the edge of the then known world; Subartu (probably corresponding to the region of Assyria) in the north, Martu (roughly corresponding to modern Syria) in the west, Elam in the east and Sumer in the south.[10] To Naram-Sin of Akkad (r. 2254–2218 BC), the creator of the title, it probably, in geographical terms, expressed his dominion over the regions Elam, Subartu, Amurru and Akkad (representing east, north, west and south respectively).[11]

The term thus covers a somewhat clear geographical region, corresponding to Mesopotamia and its surroundings, but should be understood as referring to the entire known world. At the point in time when the title was first used, the 2200s BC, the Mesopotamians would have equated all of Mesopotamia to the entire world; the region was highly productive, densely populated and was bordered on all sides by seemingly empty and uninhabited lands.[12] A title the like of King of the Four Corners of the World should be taken as meaning that its holder was the ruler of the entire Earth and everything within it.[5] The title can be interpreted as being equivalent to calling oneself "King of all the known world".[6] Thus, the title is an example of merism, combining contrasting concepts to refer to an entirety (the four corners being on the edges of the world and the title referring to them and everything in between).[13]

History edit

Background (2900–2334 BC) edit

 
The domain of Lugalzaggesi of Uruk (in orange) c. 2350 BC, one of the first kings to claim universal rule.

During the Early Dynastic Period in Mesopotamia (c. 2900–2350 BC), the rulers of the various city-states in the region would often launch invasions into regions and cities far from their own, at most times with negligible consequences for themselves, in order to establish temporary and small empires to either gain of keep a superior position relative to the other city-states. This early empire-building was encouraged as the most powerful monarchs were often rewarded with the most prestigious titles, such as the title of lugal (literally "big man" but often interpreted as "king", probably with military connotations[n 1]). Most of these early rulers had probably acquired these titles rather than inherited them.[12]

Eventually this quest to be more prestigious and powerful than the other city-states resulted in a general ambition for universal rule. Since Mesopotamia was equated to correspond to the entire world and Sumerian cities had been built far and wide (cities the like of Susa, Mari and Assur were located near the perceived corners of the world) it seemed possible to reach the edges of the world (at this time thought to be the lower sea, the Persian gulf, and the upper sea, the Mediterranean).[12]

Rulers attempting to reach a position of universal rule became more common during the Early Dynastic IIIb period (c. 2450–2350 BC) during which two prominent examples are attested.[15] The first, Lugalannemundu, king of Adab, is claimed by the Sumerian King List (though this is a much later inscription, making the extensive rule of Lugalennemundu somewhat doubtful) to have created a great empire covering the entirety of Mesopotamia, reaching from modern Syria to Iran, saying that he "subjugated the Four Corners".[16] The second, Lugalzaggesi, king of Uruk, conquered the entirety of Lower Mesopotamia and claimed (despite this not being the case) that his domain extended from the upper to the lower sea.[15] Lugalzaggesi was originally titled as simply "King of Uruk" and adopted the title "King of the Land" (Sumerian: lugal-kalam-ma[1]) to lay claim to universal rule.[17] This title had also been employed by some earlier Sumerian kings claiming control over all of Sumer, such as Enshakushanna of Uruk.[1]

Akkadian and Sumerian Kings of the Four Corners (2334–2004 BC) edit

 
The victory stele of Naram-Sin of Akkad, the first king to claim the title of King of the Four Corners, depicts the king with a horned helmet (symbolizing divinity) and twice as large as his soldiers, standing on a mountain that reaches the heavens.[5] The stele is today housed in the Louvre, Paris.

Sargon, king of Akkad, unified Lower and Upper Mesopotamia, creating the first true Mesopotamian empire. Though Sargon most commonly used the title "King of Akkad" (šar māt Akkadi[18]), he also introduced the more boastful title of šar kiššatim ("King of Everything" or "King of the Universe"), used prominently by his successors.[19] The title of "King of the Four Corners of the World" is first attested to have been used by the Akkadian king Naram-Sin, the grandson of Sargon of Akkad and the fourth ruler of the Akkadian Empire.[2][6] Naram-Sin also proclaimed himself to be a living god (the first Mesopotamian king to do so), making his capital of Akkad not only the political but also the religious center of the empire.[5] It is possible that Naram-Sin might have been inspired to claim the title following his conquest of the city Ebla, in which quadripartite divisions of the world and the universe were prominent parts of the city's ideology and beliefs.[20]

The title of King of the Four Corners suggests that Naram-Sin viewed himself not merely as a Mesopotamian ruler but as a universal ruler who happened to conform to the usual Mesopotamian royal traditions, the monarch of a new empire that not only incorporated the city-states of Mesopotamia but the lands beyond as well. In particular, art made during the period starts to incorporate previously unseen objects such as highland plants and animals and mountains, previously seen as highly foreign objects. Their increasing appearance in art suggests that they were seen as belonging to the empire of Akkad as much as everything else did.[5] It is possible that šar kiššatim referred to the authority to govern the cosmological realm whilst "King of the Four Corners" referred to the authority to govern the terrestrial. Eitherway, the implication of these titles was that the Mesopotamian king was the king of the entire world.[21]

The title doesn't appear to have been used by any of Naram-Sin's direct successors of the Akkadian Empire, which began to collapse during the reign of Naram-Sin's son Shar-Kali-Sharri.[2][6] In the 2100s BC, the Gutians attacked the Akkadian Empire and supplanted the ruling "Sargonic" dynasty, destroying the city of Akkad and establishing an empire of their own.[22] By 2112 BC, the Gutians had been driven out and the city of Ur had become the center of a new Sumerian civilization, referred to as the Third Dynasty of Ur or the Neo-Sumerian Empire. The rulers of this empire emulated the previous monarchs from Akkad, referring to themselves as "Kings of Sumer and Akkad" and all of them—with the exception of the founder of the dynasty, Ur-Nammu—used the title of "King of the Four Corners of the World".[6][23] Some ancient sources confer the title onto Ur-Nammu as well, referring to him as "King in Heaven and the Four Corners of the World", but these inscriptions date to centuries after his reign.[24]

Assyrian Kings of the Four Corners (1366–627 BC) edit

 
Ashurnasirpal II of the Neo-Assyrian Empire was referred to as King of the Totality of the Four Corners including all their rulers. Relief today housed at the British Museum, London.

With the collapse of the Neo-Sumerian Empire in c. 2004 BC, the title fell into disuse once more. Except for the Babylonian king Hammurabi who claimed to be "the king who made the four corners of the Earth obedient" in 1776 BC,[25] the title was not used until occasionally by Assyrian kings of the Middle-Assyrian Empire, often as "King of All the Four Corners of the World" (šar kullat kibrāt erbetti[26]).[27]

The first king of the Neo-Assyrian Empire, Adad-nirari II (r. 911–891 BC), used the title of "King of the Four Corners".[27] The concept of a king governing the four corners of the world was well-established by the reign of the second king of the Neo-Assyrian Empire, Tukulti-Ninurta II (r. 891–884 BC), who claimed to have been "he whose honoured name he has pronounced forever for the four corners" (ana mu urut kibrāt erbetti ana dāriš išquru) and "governor of the four corners" (muma'er kibrāt erbetti).[4] In Assyria, the deity Ashur was referred to as "[the one] who makes the king's kingship surpass the kings of the four quarters" (mušarbû šarrūtija eli šarrāni ša kibrāt erbetti).[28]

Tukulti-Ninurta II's son and successor, Ashurnasirpal II (r. 883–859 BC) is in different inscriptions twice referred to as “King of the Totality of the Four Corners including all their rulers” (šar kiššat kibrāte ša napḫar malkī kalîšunu). The title is also attested for his son and successor, Shalmaneser III (r. 859–824 BC) and is the only title applied to this king by his successors.[4]

 
Sennacherib of the Neo-Assyrian Empire could only claim the title five years into his reign after having completed military campaigns in all four directions of the compass. Relief originally discovered near Mount Judi.

The Kition stele, a large basalt stele discovered on Cyprus and the westernmost ancient Assyrian artifact known, identifies the king Sargon II, (r. 722–705 BC) with many titles, including "King of the Universe", "King of Assyria", "King of Sumer and Akkad", "Governor of Babylon" and "King of the Four Corners of the World".[29] Sargon II's son and heir Sennacherib (r. 705–681 BC) did not immediately inherit the title, referring to himself simply as the "unrivaled king" at the beginning of his reign. Sennacherib conducted several military campaigns during his reign, after which he routinely added titles to his titulary. After his third campaign he added "king of the world" and after conquests in the Mediterranean Sea and Persian Gulf in 694 BC he added the title "King from the Upper Sea of the Setting Sun to the Lower Sea of the Rising Sun". It was only after Sennacherib had conducted campaigns to the south, east, west and north during his fifth campaign that he replaced the title of "unrivaled king" with "King of the Four Corners of the World".[30] Sennacherib's son and heir, Esarhaddon (r. 681–669 BC) also used the title of "King of the Four Corners of the World" alongside that of "King of the Universe".[3]

Unlike the apparent dynastic inheritance of the title during the Neo-Sumerian Empire, it is possible that the title of King of the Four Corners had to be earned by each Assyrian king individually, thus explaining why the title is not attested for every Neo-Assyrian king and why Sennacherib first used it several years into his reign. British historian Stephanie Dalley, specializing in the Ancient Near East proposed in 1998 that the title may have had to be earned through the king successfully campaigning in all four points of the compass. Dalley also proposed that the similar title of "King of the Universe", with a virtually identical meaning, would have been earned through seven (which would have been connected to totality in the eyes of the Assyrians) successful campaigns.[4] It would thus not have been possible for the king to claim either title before the required military campaigns.[31] Periods during which the title was not used, such as the ~80-year gap between Shalmaneser III and Tiglath-Pileser III, probably reflect periods during which the military activity of the country and its kings declined.[32]

Cyrus the Great (539 BC) edit

After the fall of the Neo-Assyrian Empire in 609 BC, the principal power in Mesopotamia was the Neo-Babylonian Empire. The founder of the Neo-Babylonian Empire, Nabopolassar, wished to associate himself with the previous Assyrian rulers to establish continuity and assumed many of the same titles such as šarru dannu ("mighty king") and the much older Sumerian "King of Sumer and Akkad" (which had been used by the Neo-Assyrian rulers as well) but do not appear to have assumed the title of King of the Four Corners. Unlike previous ruling dynasties in Mesopotamia, the Neo-Babylonians usually only employed one royal title on any one occasion. Only rarely are examples with more than one royal title in use found from the Neo-Babylonian period, which might explain the absence of "King of the Four Corners..." since this was an additional prestigious title rather than a primary royal title.[18] Nabopolassar's successors abandoned most of the old Assyrian titles, even abandoning the "mighty king" used by Nabopolassar.[33] The only Neo-Babylonian king to assume the title of "King of the Four Corners" was Nabonidus, who in other aspects also tried to emulate the Assyrian kings.[34]

The Neo-Babylonian Empire ended with the conquest of Babylon by the Persian king Cyrus the Great, founder of the Achaemenid Persian Empire, in 539 BC. The Cyrus Cylinder is an ancient clay cylinder written in Akkadian cuneiform script in the name of Cyrus, made to be used as a foundation deposit and buried in the walls of Babylon.[35] In the text of the cylinder, Cyrus assumes several traditional Mesopotamian titles including those of "King of Babylon", "King of Sumer and Akkad" and "King of the Four Corners of the World".[36][37] The title was not used after the reign of Cyrus but his successors did adopt similar titles. The popular regnal title "King of Kings", used by monarchs of Iran until the modern age, was originally a title introduced by the Assyrian Tukulti-Ninurta I in the 13th century BC (rendered šar šarrāni in Akkadian).[38] The title of "King of Lands", also used by Assyrian monarchs since at least Shalmaneser III,[39] was also adopted by Cyrus the Great and his successors.[40] Titles such as "King of Kings" and "Great-King" (šarru rabu), ancient titles with the connotation of holding supreme power in the lands surrounding Babylon, would remain in use up until the Sassanid dynasty in Persia of the 3rd to 7th centuries.[41][42]

Examples of rulers who used the title edit

 
Hammurabi (standing), a Babylonian king that claimed to be the king who made the four corners of the Earth obedient. This depiction is the top part of the Code of Hammurabi, today housed in the Louvre, Paris.

Kings of the Four Corners in the Akkadian Empire:

Kings of the Four Corners of the Gutian dynasty of Sumer:

Kings of the Four Corners in the Neo-Sumerian Empire:

Kings of the Four Corners in Babylonia:

Kings of the Four Corners in the Middle Assyrian Empire:

Kings of the Four Corners in the Neo-Assyrian Empire:

Kings of the Four Corners in the Neo-Babylonian Empire:

Kings of the Four Corners in the Achaemenid Empire:

References edit

Annotations edit

  1. ^ There were several titles used by rulers during this period. Lugal is often seen as a title primarily based on a ruler's military prowess, whilst en seems to have implied a more priestly role.[14]

Citations edit

  1. ^ a b c Maeda 1981, p. 4.
  2. ^ a b c Levin 2002, p. 360.
  3. ^ a b c d Roaf & Zgoll 2001, p. 284.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g Karlsson 2013, p. 135.
  5. ^ a b c d e f Raaflaub & Talbert 2010, p. 153.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i Bachvarova 2012, p. 102.
  7. ^ a b c Roux, Georges (1992). Ancient Iraq. Penguin Books Limited. p. 167. ISBN 978-0-14-193825-7.
  8. ^ "Site officiel du musée du Louvre". cartelfr.louvre.fr.
  9. ^ "CDLI-Found Texts". cdli.ucla.edu.
  10. ^ The Four Quarters of the World.
  11. ^ Hallo 1980, p. 189.
  12. ^ a b c Liverani 2013, p. 120.
  13. ^ Waltke 2007, p. 456.
  14. ^ Crawford 2013, p. 283.
  15. ^ a b Liverani 2013, pp. 120–121.
  16. ^ Ur III Dynasty.
  17. ^ McIntosh 2017, p. 167.
  18. ^ a b Da Riva 2013, p. 72.
  19. ^ Levin 2002, p. 362.
  20. ^ Hallo 1980, p. 190.
  21. ^ Hill, Jones & Morales 2013, p. 333.
  22. ^ De Mieroop 2004, p. 67.
  23. ^ a b c d e Gerstenberger 2001, p. 205.
  24. ^ Hallo 1966, p. 134.
  25. ^ a b De Mieroop 2004, p. 119.
  26. ^ Karlsson 2016, p. 150.
  27. ^ a b c d e Karlsson 2013, p. 255.
  28. ^ Karlsson 2013, p. 61.
  29. ^ a b Radner 2010, p. 435.
  30. ^ a b Russell 1987, p. 530–531.
  31. ^ Karlsson 2013, p. 201.
  32. ^ a b c Yamada 2014, p. 43.
  33. ^ Stevens 2014, p. 73.
  34. ^ a b Beaulieu 1989, p. 214.
  35. ^ Cyrus Cylinder.
  36. ^ a b Cyrus Cylinder Translation.
  37. ^ a b New Cyrus Cylinder Translation.
  38. ^ Handy 1994, p. 112.
  39. ^ Miller 1986, p. 258.
  40. ^ Peat 1989, p. 199.
  41. ^ Bevan 1902, pp. 241–244.
  42. ^ Frye 1983, p. 116.
  43. ^ Selz 2016, p. 74.
  44. ^ Selz 2016, p. 87.
  45. ^ a b Brinkman 1968, p. 43.
  46. ^ Grayson 2002, p. 240.
  47. ^ Luckenbill 1925, p. 164.
  48. ^ Karlsson 2017, p. 10.
  49. ^ a b Karlsson 2017, p. 11.

Bibliography edit

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  • "British Museum - The Cyrus Cylinder". www.britishmuseum.org. from the original on 19 January 2019. Retrieved 19 January 2019.
  • "Livius - Cyrus Cylinder Translation". www.livius.org. from the original on 19 January 2019. Retrieved 19 January 2019.
  • Farrokh, Kaveh. "A New Translation of the Cyrus Cylinder by the British Museum". kavehfarrokh.org. from the original on 19 January 2019. Retrieved 19 January 2019.
  • . www.binujohn.name. Archived from the original on 17 May 2017. Retrieved 17 May 2017.
  • Yanli, Chen; Yuhong, Wu (2017). "The Names of the Leaders and Diplomats of Marḫaši and Related Men in the Ur III Dynasty". Cuneiform Digital Library Journal. 2017 (1). from the original on 20 January 2019. Retrieved 20 January 2019.

king, four, corners, world, sumerian, lugal, limmu, akkadian, šarru, kibrat, arbaim, šar, kibrāti, arbaʾi, šar, kibrāt, erbetti, alternatively, translated, king, four, quarters, world, king, heaven, four, corners, universe, often, shortened, simply, title, gre. King of the Four Corners of the World Sumerian lugal an ub da limmu ba 1 Akkadian sarru kibrat arbaim 2 sar kibrati arbaʾi 3 or sar kibrat erbetti 4 alternatively translated as King of the Four Quarters of the World King of the Heaven s Four Corners or King of the Four Corners of the Universe 5 and often shortened to simply King of the Four Corners 3 6 was a title of great prestige claimed by powerful monarchs in ancient Mesopotamia Though the term four corners of the world does refer to specific geographical places within and near Mesopotamia itself these places were at the time the title was first used thought to represent locations near the actual edges of the world and as such the title should be interpreted as something equivalent to King of all the known world a claim to universal rule over the entire world and everything within it Relief with Naram Sin of Akkad s portrait Naram Sin who reigned between 2254 and 2218 BC created the title of King of the Four Corners of the World Relief today housed at the Istanbul Archaeological Museum Seal of the Neo Sumerian king Ibbi Sin in the Metropolitan Museum of Art The inscription reads Ibbi Sin the strong king king of Ur King of the four corners of the world The title was first used by Naram Sin of the Akkadian Empire in the 23rd century BC and was later used by the rulers of the Neo Sumerian Empire after which it fell into disuse It was revived as a title by a number of Assyrian rulers becoming especially prominent during the Neo Assyrian Empire The final ruler to claim the title was the first Persian Achaemenid king Cyrus the Great after his conquest of Babylon in 539 BC It is possible at least among Assyrian rulers that the title of King of the Four Corners was not inherited through normal means As the title is not attested for all Neo Assyrian kings and for some only attested several years into their reign it is possible that it might have had to be earned by each king individually possibly through completing successful military campaigns in all four points of the compass The similar title of sar kissatim King of Everything or King of the Universe also with Akkadian origins and attested for some of the Neo Assyrian kings may have required seven successful military campaigns The difference between the exact meaning of the two titles may have been that King of the Universe laid claim to the cosmological realm whereas King of the Four Corners of the World laid claim to the terrestrial Contents 1 Meaning of Four Corners of the World 2 History 2 1 Background 2900 2334 BC 2 2 Akkadian and Sumerian Kings of the Four Corners 2334 2004 BC 2 3 Assyrian Kings of the Four Corners 1366 627 BC 2 4 Cyrus the Great 539 BC 3 Examples of rulers who used the title 4 References 4 1 Annotations 4 2 Citations 4 3 Bibliography 4 4 WebsitesMeaning of Four Corners of the World editSee also Four corners of the world Naram Sin King of the Four Regions nbsp Map of the four corners of the world as Naram Sin the creator of the title of King of the Four Regions would probably have imagined them nbsp Naram Sin King of the four regions of the World 7 𒀭𒈾𒊏𒄠𒀭𒂗𒍪 𒈗 𒆠𒅁𒊏𒁴 𒅈𒁀𒅎DNa ra am DSin lugal ki ibratim arbaimLimestone vase inscription Girsu circa 2250 BCE Louvre Museum AO 74 8 9 7 In the time of Naram Sin these locations were thought to be near the edges of the world As such the term should be understood as referring to the entire world He also used the title King of the Universe 7 The term four corners of the world appears in several ancient mythologies and cosmologies wherein it roughly corresponds the four points of the compass In most of these representations four principal rivers run to these four corners their water irrigating the four quadrants or quarters of the world In the view of the Mesopotamian Akkadians the term referred to four regions on the edge of the then known world Subartu probably corresponding to the region of Assyria in the north Martu roughly corresponding to modern Syria in the west Elam in the east and Sumer in the south 10 To Naram Sin of Akkad r 2254 2218 BC the creator of the title it probably in geographical terms expressed his dominion over the regions Elam Subartu Amurru and Akkad representing east north west and south respectively 11 The term thus covers a somewhat clear geographical region corresponding to Mesopotamia and its surroundings but should be understood as referring to the entire known world At the point in time when the title was first used the 2200s BC the Mesopotamians would have equated all of Mesopotamia to the entire world the region was highly productive densely populated and was bordered on all sides by seemingly empty and uninhabited lands 12 A title the like of King of the Four Corners of the World should be taken as meaning that its holder was the ruler of the entire Earth and everything within it 5 The title can be interpreted as being equivalent to calling oneself King of all the known world 6 Thus the title is an example of merism combining contrasting concepts to refer to an entirety the four corners being on the edges of the world and the title referring to them and everything in between 13 History editBackground 2900 2334 BC edit nbsp The domain of Lugalzaggesi of Uruk in orange c 2350 BC one of the first kings to claim universal rule During the Early Dynastic Period in Mesopotamia c 2900 2350 BC the rulers of the various city states in the region would often launch invasions into regions and cities far from their own at most times with negligible consequences for themselves in order to establish temporary and small empires to either gain of keep a superior position relative to the other city states This early empire building was encouraged as the most powerful monarchs were often rewarded with the most prestigious titles such as the title of lugal literally big man but often interpreted as king probably with military connotations n 1 Most of these early rulers had probably acquired these titles rather than inherited them 12 Eventually this quest to be more prestigious and powerful than the other city states resulted in a general ambition for universal rule Since Mesopotamia was equated to correspond to the entire world and Sumerian cities had been built far and wide cities the like of Susa Mari and Assur were located near the perceived corners of the world it seemed possible to reach the edges of the world at this time thought to be the lower sea the Persian gulf and the upper sea the Mediterranean 12 Rulers attempting to reach a position of universal rule became more common during the Early Dynastic IIIb period c 2450 2350 BC during which two prominent examples are attested 15 The first Lugalannemundu king of Adab is claimed by the Sumerian King List though this is a much later inscription making the extensive rule of Lugalennemundu somewhat doubtful to have created a great empire covering the entirety of Mesopotamia reaching from modern Syria to Iran saying that he subjugated the Four Corners 16 The second Lugalzaggesi king of Uruk conquered the entirety of Lower Mesopotamia and claimed despite this not being the case that his domain extended from the upper to the lower sea 15 Lugalzaggesi was originally titled as simply King of Uruk and adopted the title King of the Land Sumerian lugal kalam ma 1 to lay claim to universal rule 17 This title had also been employed by some earlier Sumerian kings claiming control over all of Sumer such as Enshakushanna of Uruk 1 Akkadian and Sumerian Kings of the Four Corners 2334 2004 BC edit nbsp The victory stele of Naram Sin of Akkad the first king to claim the title of King of the Four Corners depicts the king with a horned helmet symbolizing divinity and twice as large as his soldiers standing on a mountain that reaches the heavens 5 The stele is today housed in the Louvre Paris Sargon king of Akkad unified Lower and Upper Mesopotamia creating the first true Mesopotamian empire Though Sargon most commonly used the title King of Akkad sar mat Akkadi 18 he also introduced the more boastful title of sar kissatim King of Everything or King of the Universe used prominently by his successors 19 The title of King of the Four Corners of the World is first attested to have been used by the Akkadian king Naram Sin the grandson of Sargon of Akkad and the fourth ruler of the Akkadian Empire 2 6 Naram Sin also proclaimed himself to be a living god the first Mesopotamian king to do so making his capital of Akkad not only the political but also the religious center of the empire 5 It is possible that Naram Sin might have been inspired to claim the title following his conquest of the city Ebla in which quadripartite divisions of the world and the universe were prominent parts of the city s ideology and beliefs 20 The title of King of the Four Corners suggests that Naram Sin viewed himself not merely as a Mesopotamian ruler but as a universal ruler who happened to conform to the usual Mesopotamian royal traditions the monarch of a new empire that not only incorporated the city states of Mesopotamia but the lands beyond as well In particular art made during the period starts to incorporate previously unseen objects such as highland plants and animals and mountains previously seen as highly foreign objects Their increasing appearance in art suggests that they were seen as belonging to the empire of Akkad as much as everything else did 5 It is possible that sar kissatim referred to the authority to govern the cosmological realm whilst King of the Four Corners referred to the authority to govern the terrestrial Eitherway the implication of these titles was that the Mesopotamian king was the king of the entire world 21 The title doesn t appear to have been used by any of Naram Sin s direct successors of the Akkadian Empire which began to collapse during the reign of Naram Sin s son Shar Kali Sharri 2 6 In the 2100s BC the Gutians attacked the Akkadian Empire and supplanted the ruling Sargonic dynasty destroying the city of Akkad and establishing an empire of their own 22 By 2112 BC the Gutians had been driven out and the city of Ur had become the center of a new Sumerian civilization referred to as the Third Dynasty of Ur or the Neo Sumerian Empire The rulers of this empire emulated the previous monarchs from Akkad referring to themselves as Kings of Sumer and Akkad and all of them with the exception of the founder of the dynasty Ur Nammu used the title of King of the Four Corners of the World 6 23 Some ancient sources confer the title onto Ur Nammu as well referring to him as King in Heaven and the Four Corners of the World but these inscriptions date to centuries after his reign 24 Assyrian Kings of the Four Corners 1366 627 BC edit nbsp Ashurnasirpal II of the Neo Assyrian Empire was referred to as King of the Totality of the Four Corners including all their rulers Relief today housed at the British Museum London With the collapse of the Neo Sumerian Empire in c 2004 BC the title fell into disuse once more Except for the Babylonian king Hammurabi who claimed to be the king who made the four corners of the Earth obedient in 1776 BC 25 the title was not used until occasionally by Assyrian kings of the Middle Assyrian Empire often as King of All the Four Corners of the World sar kullat kibrat erbetti 26 27 The first king of the Neo Assyrian Empire Adad nirari II r 911 891 BC used the title of King of the Four Corners 27 The concept of a king governing the four corners of the world was well established by the reign of the second king of the Neo Assyrian Empire Tukulti Ninurta II r 891 884 BC who claimed to have been he whose honoured name he has pronounced forever for the four corners ana mu urut kibrat erbetti ana daris isquru and governor of the four corners muma er kibrat erbetti 4 In Assyria the deity Ashur was referred to as the one who makes the king s kingship surpass the kings of the four quarters musarbu sarrutija eli sarrani sa kibrat erbetti 28 Tukulti Ninurta II s son and successor Ashurnasirpal II r 883 859 BC is in different inscriptions twice referred to as King of the Totality of the Four Corners including all their rulers sar kissat kibrate sa napḫar malki kalisunu The title is also attested for his son and successor Shalmaneser III r 859 824 BC and is the only title applied to this king by his successors 4 nbsp Sennacherib of the Neo Assyrian Empire could only claim the title five years into his reign after having completed military campaigns in all four directions of the compass Relief originally discovered near Mount Judi The Kition stele a large basalt stele discovered on Cyprus and the westernmost ancient Assyrian artifact known identifies the king Sargon II r 722 705 BC with many titles including King of the Universe King of Assyria King of Sumer and Akkad Governor of Babylon and King of the Four Corners of the World 29 Sargon II s son and heir Sennacherib r 705 681 BC did not immediately inherit the title referring to himself simply as the unrivaled king at the beginning of his reign Sennacherib conducted several military campaigns during his reign after which he routinely added titles to his titulary After his third campaign he added king of the world and after conquests in the Mediterranean Sea and Persian Gulf in 694 BC he added the title King from the Upper Sea of the Setting Sun to the Lower Sea of the Rising Sun It was only after Sennacherib had conducted campaigns to the south east west and north during his fifth campaign that he replaced the title of unrivaled king with King of the Four Corners of the World 30 Sennacherib s son and heir Esarhaddon r 681 669 BC also used the title of King of the Four Corners of the World alongside that of King of the Universe 3 Unlike the apparent dynastic inheritance of the title during the Neo Sumerian Empire it is possible that the title of King of the Four Corners had to be earned by each Assyrian king individually thus explaining why the title is not attested for every Neo Assyrian king and why Sennacherib first used it several years into his reign British historian Stephanie Dalley specializing in the Ancient Near East proposed in 1998 that the title may have had to be earned through the king successfully campaigning in all four points of the compass Dalley also proposed that the similar title of King of the Universe with a virtually identical meaning would have been earned through seven which would have been connected to totality in the eyes of the Assyrians successful campaigns 4 It would thus not have been possible for the king to claim either title before the required military campaigns 31 Periods during which the title was not used such as the 80 year gap between Shalmaneser III and Tiglath Pileser III probably reflect periods during which the military activity of the country and its kings declined 32 Cyrus the Great 539 BC edit After the fall of the Neo Assyrian Empire in 609 BC the principal power in Mesopotamia was the Neo Babylonian Empire The founder of the Neo Babylonian Empire Nabopolassar wished to associate himself with the previous Assyrian rulers to establish continuity and assumed many of the same titles such as sarru dannu mighty king and the much older Sumerian King of Sumer and Akkad which had been used by the Neo Assyrian rulers as well but do not appear to have assumed the title of King of the Four Corners Unlike previous ruling dynasties in Mesopotamia the Neo Babylonians usually only employed one royal title on any one occasion Only rarely are examples with more than one royal title in use found from the Neo Babylonian period which might explain the absence of King of the Four Corners since this was an additional prestigious title rather than a primary royal title 18 Nabopolassar s successors abandoned most of the old Assyrian titles even abandoning the mighty king used by Nabopolassar 33 The only Neo Babylonian king to assume the title of King of the Four Corners was Nabonidus who in other aspects also tried to emulate the Assyrian kings 34 The Neo Babylonian Empire ended with the conquest of Babylon by the Persian king Cyrus the Great founder of the Achaemenid Persian Empire in 539 BC The Cyrus Cylinder is an ancient clay cylinder written in Akkadian cuneiform script in the name of Cyrus made to be used as a foundation deposit and buried in the walls of Babylon 35 In the text of the cylinder Cyrus assumes several traditional Mesopotamian titles including those of King of Babylon King of Sumer and Akkad and King of the Four Corners of the World 36 37 The title was not used after the reign of Cyrus but his successors did adopt similar titles The popular regnal title King of Kings used by monarchs of Iran until the modern age was originally a title introduced by the Assyrian Tukulti Ninurta I in the 13th century BC rendered sar sarrani in Akkadian 38 The title of King of Lands also used by Assyrian monarchs since at least Shalmaneser III 39 was also adopted by Cyrus the Great and his successors 40 Titles such as King of Kings and Great King sarru rabu ancient titles with the connotation of holding supreme power in the lands surrounding Babylon would remain in use up until the Sassanid dynasty in Persia of the 3rd to 7th centuries 41 42 Examples of rulers who used the title edit nbsp Hammurabi standing a Babylonian king that claimed to be the king who made the four corners of the Earth obedient This depiction is the top part of the Code of Hammurabi today housed in the Louvre Paris Kings of the Four Corners in the Akkadian Empire Naram Sin r 2254 2218 BC 5 Kings of the Four Corners of the Gutian dynasty of Sumer Erridupizir 43 Kings of the Four Corners in the Neo Sumerian Empire Utu hengal 44 Shulgi r 2094 2047 BC 6 23 Amar Sin r 2046 2038 BC 6 23 Shu Sin r 2037 2029 BC 6 23 Ibbi Sin r 2028 2004 BC 6 23 Kings of the Four Corners in Babylonia Hammurabi r 1810 1750 BC referred to as the king who made the four corners of the Earth obedient in 1776 BC 25 Marduk nadin ahhe r 1099 1082 BC 45 Marduk shapik zeri r 1082 1069 BC 45 Kings of the Four Corners in the Middle Assyrian Empire Tukulti Ninurta I r 1233 1197 BC 32 Tiglath Pileser I r 1114 1076 BC 27 Ashur bel kala r 1074 1056 BC 27 Kings of the Four Corners in the Neo Assyrian Empire Adad nirari II r 911 891 BC 27 Tukulti Ninurta II r 891 884 BC 4 Ashurnasirpal II r 883 859 BC 4 Shalmaneser III r 859 824 BC 4 Shamshi Adad V r 824 811 BC 46 Tiglath Pileser III r 745 727 BC 32 Shalmaneser V r 727 722 BC 47 Sargon II r 722 705 BC 29 Sennacherib r 705 681 BC claimed the title from 697 BC 30 Esarhaddon r 681 669 BC 3 Ashurbanipal r 669 631 BC 48 Shamash shum ukin Neo Assyrian king of Babylon r 667 648 BC 49 Ashur etil ilani r 631 627 BC 49 Kings of the Four Corners in the Neo Babylonian Empire Nabonidus r 556 539 BC 34 Kings of the Four Corners in the Achaemenid Empire Cyrus the Great r 559 530 BC claimed the title from 539 BC 36 37 References editAnnotations edit There were several titles used by rulers during this period Lugal is often seen as a title primarily based on a ruler s military prowess whilst en seems to have implied a more priestly role 14 Citations edit a b c Maeda 1981 p 4 a b c Levin 2002 p 360 a b c d Roaf amp Zgoll 2001 p 284 a b c d e f g Karlsson 2013 p 135 a b c d e f Raaflaub amp Talbert 2010 p 153 a b c d e f g h i Bachvarova 2012 p 102 a b c Roux Georges 1992 Ancient Iraq Penguin Books Limited p 167 ISBN 978 0 14 193825 7 Site officiel du musee du Louvre cartelfr louvre fr CDLI Found Texts cdli ucla edu The Four Quarters of the World Hallo 1980 p 189 a b c Liverani 2013 p 120 Waltke 2007 p 456 Crawford 2013 p 283 a b Liverani 2013 pp 120 121 Ur III Dynasty McIntosh 2017 p 167 a b Da Riva 2013 p 72 Levin 2002 p 362 Hallo 1980 p 190 Hill Jones amp Morales 2013 p 333 De Mieroop 2004 p 67 a b c d e Gerstenberger 2001 p 205 Hallo 1966 p 134 a b De Mieroop 2004 p 119 Karlsson 2016 p 150 a b c d e Karlsson 2013 p 255 Karlsson 2013 p 61 a b Radner 2010 p 435 a b Russell 1987 p 530 531 Karlsson 2013 p 201 a b c Yamada 2014 p 43 Stevens 2014 p 73 a b Beaulieu 1989 p 214 Cyrus Cylinder a b Cyrus Cylinder Translation a b New Cyrus Cylinder Translation Handy 1994 p 112 Miller 1986 p 258 Peat 1989 p 199 Bevan 1902 pp 241 244 Frye 1983 p 116 Selz 2016 p 74 Selz 2016 p 87 a b Brinkman 1968 p 43 Grayson 2002 p 240 Luckenbill 1925 p 164 Karlsson 2017 p 10 a b Karlsson 2017 p 11 Bibliography edit Bachvarova Mary R 2012 From Kingship in Heaven to King Lists Syro Anatolian Courts and the History of the World Journal of Ancient Near Eastern Religions 12 1 97 118 doi 10 1163 156921212X629482 Beaulieu Paul Alain 1989 Reign of Nabonidus King of Babylon 556 539 BC Yale University Press doi 10 2307 j ctt2250wnt ISBN 9780300043143 JSTOR j ctt2250wnt OCLC 20391775 Bevan Edwyn Robert 1902 Antiochus III and His Title Great King The Journal of Hellenic Studies 22 241 244 doi 10 2307 623929 JSTOR 623929 Brinkman J A 1968 Political history of Post Kassite Babylonia 1158 722 b C A Gregorian Biblical BookShop ISBN 978 88 7653 243 6 Crawford Harriet 2013 The Sumerian World Routledge ISBN 978 0415569675 Da Riva Rocio 2013 The Inscriptions of Nabopolassar Amel Marduk and Neriglissar Walter de Gruyter ISBN 978 1614515876 De Mieroop Marc Van 2004 A History of the Ancient Near East ca 3000 323 BC Blackwell Publishing ISBN 978 1405149112 Frye Richard Nelson 1983 The political history of Iran under the Sasanians The Cambridge History of Iran 3 1 116 180 doi 10 1017 CHOL9780521200929 006 ISBN 9781139054942 Gerstenberger Erhard S 2001 World Dominion in Yahweh Kingship Psalms Down To the Roots of Globalizing Concepts and Strategies Horizons in Biblical Theology 23 1 192 210 doi 10 1163 187122001X00107 Grayson A Kirk 2002 1996 Assyrian Rulers of the Early First Millennium BC II 858 745 BC Toronto University of Toronto Press ISBN 0 8020 0886 0 Hallo William W 1966 The Coronation of Ur Nammu Journal of Cuneiform Studies 20 3 4 133 141 doi 10 2307 1359648 JSTOR 1359648 Hallo William W 1980 Royal Titles from the Mesopotamian Periphery Anatolian Studies 30 189 195 doi 10 2307 3642789 JSTOR 3642789 Handy Lowell K 1994 Among the host of Heaven the Syro Palestinian pantheon as bureaucracy Eisenbrauns ISBN 978 0931464843 Hill Jane A Jones Philip Morales Antonio J 2013 Experiencing Power Generating Authority Cosmos Politics and the Ideology of Kingship in Ancient Egypt and Mesopotamia University of Pennsylvania Press ISBN 9781934536643 Karlsson Mattias 2013 Early Neo Assyrian State Ideology Relations of Power in the Inscriptions and Iconography of Ashurnasirpal II 883 859 and Shalmaneser III 858 824 Instutionen for lingvistik och filologi Uppsala Universitet ISBN 978 91 506 2363 5 Karlsson Mattias 2016 Relations of Power in Early Neo Assyrian State Ideology Walter de Gruyter GmbH amp Co KG ISBN 9781614519683 Karlsson Mattias 2017 Assyrian Royal Titulary in Babylonia Manuscript Uppsala University S2CID 6128352 Levin Yigal 2002 Nimrod the Mighty King of Kish King of Sumer and Akkad Vetus Testamentum 52 3 350 366 doi 10 1163 156853302760197494 Liverani Mario 2013 The Ancient Near East History Society and Economy Routledge ISBN 978 0415679060 Luckenbill Daniel David 1925 The First Inscription of Shalmaneser V The American Journal of Semitic Languages and Literatures 41 3 162 164 doi 10 1086 370064 Maeda Tohru 1981 King of Kish in Pre Sargonic Sumer Orient 17 1 17 doi 10 5356 orient1960 17 1 McIntosh Jane R 2017 Mesopotamia and the Rise of Civilization History Documents and Key Questions ABC CLIO ISBN 978 1440835469 Miller James Maxwell 1986 A History of Ancient Israel and Judah Westminster John Knox Press ISBN 978 0664223588 Peat Jerome 1989 Cyrus King of Lands Cambyses King of Babylon The Disputed Co Regency Journal of Cuneiform Studies 41 2 199 216 doi 10 2307 1359915 JSTOR 1359915 Raaflaub Kurt A Talbert Richard J A 2010 Geography and Ethnography Perceptions of the World in Pre Modern Societies John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 978 1405191463 Radner Karen 2010 The stele of Sargon II of Assyria at Kition A focus for an emerging Cypriot identity PDF Interkulturalitat in der Alten Welt Vorderasien Hellas Agypten und die vielfaltigen Ebenen des Kontakts Harrassowitz Verlag ISBN 978 3447061711 Roaf Michael Zgoll Annette 2001 Assyrian Astroglyphs Lord Aberdeen s Black Stone and the Prisms of Esarhaddon Zeitschrift fur Assyriologie und Vorderasiatische Archaologie 91 2 264 295 doi 10 1515 zava 2001 91 2 264 S2CID 161673588 Russell John Malcolm 1987 Bulls for the Palace and Order in the Empire The Sculptural Program of Sennacherib s Court VI at Nineveh The Art Bulletin 69 4 520 539 doi 10 1080 00043079 1987 10788457 Selz Gebhard J 2016 1st pub 2005 Sumerer und Akkader Geschichte Gesellschaft Kultur Sumerians and Akkadians History society culture in German 3rd ed Munich C H Beck ISBN 978 3 406 50874 5 Stevens Kahtryn 2014 The Antiochus Cylinder Babylonian Scholarship and Seleucid Imperial Ideology PDF The Journal of Hellenic Studies 134 66 88 doi 10 1017 S0075426914000068 JSTOR 43286072 Waltke Bruce K 2007 A commentary on Micah Wm B Eerdmans Publishing ISBN 978 0 8028 4933 5 Yamada Shigeo 2014 Inscriptions of Tiglath pileser III Chronographic Literary Styles and the King s Portrait Orient 49 31 50 doi 10 5356 orient 49 31 Websites edit British Museum The Cyrus Cylinder www britishmuseum org Archived from the original on 19 January 2019 Retrieved 19 January 2019 Livius Cyrus Cylinder Translation www livius org Archived from the original on 19 January 2019 Retrieved 19 January 2019 Farrokh Kaveh A New Translation of the Cyrus Cylinder by the British Museum kavehfarrokh org Archived from the original on 19 January 2019 Retrieved 19 January 2019 Epiphany The Four Quarters of the World www binujohn name Archived from the original on 17 May 2017 Retrieved 17 May 2017 Yanli Chen Yuhong Wu 2017 The Names of the Leaders and Diplomats of Marḫasi and Related Men in the Ur III Dynasty Cuneiform Digital Library Journal 2017 1 Archived from the original on 20 January 2019 Retrieved 20 January 2019 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title King of the Four Corners amp oldid 1222926175, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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