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Labashi-Marduk

Labashi-Marduk (Babylonian cuneiform:   Lâbâši-Marduk or Lā-bâš-Marduk, meaning "O Marduk, may I not come to shame")[1] was the fifth and penultimate king of the Neo-Babylonian Empire, ruling in 556 BC. He was the son and successor of Neriglissar. Though classical authors such as Berossus wrote that Labashi-Marduk was just a child when he became king, Babylonian documents indicate that he had been in charge of his own affairs before his rise to the throne, suggesting he was an adult, though possibly still relatively young.

Labashi-Marduk
King of the Neo-Babylonian Empire
ReignApril – May/June 556 BC
PredecessorNeriglissar
SuccessorNabonidus
DiedMay/June 556 BC
Babylon?
AkkadianLâbâši-Marduk
Lā-bâš-Marduk
HousePuqudu
DynastyChaldean dynasty
(matrilineal) (?)
FatherNeriglissar
MotherKashshaya (?)

Labashi-Marduk's reign was very short, lasting only one to three months, with the last evidence of Neriglissar's life dating in April 556 BC and documents dated to Labashi-Marduk's successor, Nabonidus, appearing in May that same year and becoming widespread in Babylonia by the end of June. Nabonidus's son Belshazzar led a coup against the king, deposing and killing Labashi-Marduk and proclaiming Nabonidus as king. The reason for Labashi-Marduk's deposition is unknown, Berossus simply describes the justification as Labashi-Marduk having indulged in "evil ways". One possible explanation is that whereas Neriglissar derived his claim to the throne from having married a daughter of Nebuchadnezzar II, a previous king, Labashi-Marduk may have been wholly unconnected to the Babylonian ruling dynasty, as a result of being the son of another wife.

Background

 
The Neo-Babylonian Empire under Nebuchadnezzar II

Labashi-Marduk was the son and heir of Neriglissar (r.560–556 BC), the fourth king of the Neo-Babylonian Empire. Labashi-Marduk's mother was a daughter of Nebuchadnezzar II (r.605–562 BC),[2] the empire's second and most powerful king.[3] Three daughters of Nebuchadnezzar are known; Kashshaya, Innin-etirat and Ba'u-asitu, but no cuneiform text explicitly mentions which daughter Neriglissar married.[4] Historian David B. Weisberg proposed in 1974 that Neriglissar's wife was Kashshaya, since her name appears together with the name of Nebuchadnezzar and Neriglissar in economic documents.[5] Though no concrete evidence exists, this identification has generally been accepted by subsequent historians, such as Donald Wiseman and Jona Lendering.[6][7]

Neriglissar was the son of a man by the name Bel-shum-ishkun[6] and might originally have been from the Aramean clan of the Puqudu, since Bel-shum-ishkun is recorded as originating in the Babylonian province of the same name. According to the later Hellenistic-era Babylonian writer and astronomer Berossus,[5] Naboukhodonosoros (Nebuchadnezzar) died of sickness after a reign of 43 years and was succeeded by his son Euilmaradokhos (Amel-Marduk), who "ruled capriciously and had no regard for the laws". After a reign of two years, Neriglassaros (Neriglissar) plotted against Amel-Marduk and had him deposed and killed.[8] If Berossus is to be believed, Neriglissar was the leader of this conspiracy. It is likely that the conflict between Amel-Marduk and Neriglissar was a case of inter-family discord rather than some other form of rivalry.[9] Neriglissar's claim to the throne likely came through his marriage to Nebuchadnezzar's daughter, who might have been significantly older than either of Nebuchadnezzar's sons (as she is attested significantly earlier in her father's reign).[4]

Reign

Neriglissar probably died in April 556 BC. The last known documents dated to Neriglissar's reign are a contract from 12 April 556 BC at Babylon and a contract from 16 April that same year from the city of Uruk.[10] The Uruk King List (IM 65066, also known as King List 5), a record of rulers of Babylon from Shamash-shum-ukin (r.668–648 BC) to the Seleucid king Seleucus II Callinicus (r.246–225 BC),[11][12] accords Neriglissar a reign of three years and eight months, consistent with the possibility that Neriglissar died in April.[10]

Labashi-Marduk thus became king of Babylon, but his reign proved to be brief. Because he reigned for such a short period of time, no inscriptions survive from his time as king.[13] Berossus erroneously gives Labashi-Marduk's reign as nine months (though it is possible that this is a scribal error) and states that Labashi-Marduk's "evil ways" led to his friends plotting against him, eventually resulting in the child king being beaten to death. The plotters then agreed that Nabonnedos (Nabonidus), one of the plotters, should rule.[8] The Uruk King List only gives Labashi-Marduk a reign of three months[10] and contract tablets from Babylonia suggest that he might have ruled as briefly as just two months.[8] It appears the transition in leadership was either a brief period of confusion after a discrete palace coup, or a brief civil war. Labashi-Marduk was still recognised as king at Uruk up until at least 19 June, and in the key city of Sippar until at least 20 June. The earliest known document dated to the reign of Nabonidus at Sippar is from 26 June. However, the earliest document dated to Nabonidus at the city of Nippur is from 25 May and the latest documents dated to Labashi-Marduk at Babylon itself are from 24 May. The earliest known tablet dated to Nabonidus at Babylon is from 14 July. This evidence can be reconciled by positing that Nabonidus may have been recognised in the Babylonian heartland, including Nippur and Babylon, already on 25 May, whereas some outlying cities continued to recognise Labashi-Marduk (even though he quite possibly was dead at the time on account of a possible palace coup) as king until June.[14] By the end of June 556 BC, tablets dated to Nabonidus are known from across Babylonia.[10]

Although Berossus refers to Labashi-Marduk as a child, it possible that he became king as an adult since commercial texts from two years earlier indicate that Labashi-Marduk was in charge of his own affairs at that time.[10] Labashi-Marduk may still have been relatively young, however. One of the inscriptions of Nabonidus refers to Labashi-Marduk as "a young boy who had not yet learned proper behavior".[15]

The reason for the coup against Labashi-Marduk is unknown. It is possible that despite Labashi-Marduk and his father being well-connected and wealthy, they were ultimately seen as commoners, lacking noble blood.[7] Though his mother would have connected him to the royal dynasty as the grandson of Nebuchadnezzar, it is also possible that Labashi-Marduk was the son of Neriglissar and another of his wives. Thus, Labashi-Marduk's rise to the throne might have signified a true break in the dynasty of Nebuchadnezzar and might as such have aroused opposition from the Babylonian populace.[16] After Labashi-Marduk's death, the considerable wealth and estates of Neriglissar's family were confiscated and eventually taken up by Belshazzar, the son of Nabonidus, who (as the main beneficiary) was likely the main orchestrator of the conspiracy against Labashi-Marduk.[17]

References

  1. ^ Weiershäuser & Novotny 2020, p. 2.
  2. ^ Wiseman 1983, p. 12.
  3. ^ Mark 2018.
  4. ^ a b Beaulieu 1998, p. 200.
  5. ^ a b Beaulieu 1998, p. 199.
  6. ^ a b Wiseman 1991, p. 241.
  7. ^ a b Lendering 2006.
  8. ^ a b c Beaulieu 2006, p. 139.
  9. ^ Wiseman 1991, p. 242.
  10. ^ a b c d e Wiseman 1991, p. 243.
  11. ^ Oppenheim 1985, p. 533.
  12. ^ Lendering 2005.
  13. ^ Weiershäuser & Novotny 2020, p. 3.
  14. ^ Beaulieu 1989, pp. 87–88.
  15. ^ Beaulieu 1989, p. 95.
  16. ^ Gruenthaner 1949, p. 409.
  17. ^ Beaulieu 1989, p. 92.

Bibliography

  • 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.
  • Beaulieu, Paul-Alain (1998). "Ba'u-asītu and Kaššaya, Daughters of Nebuchadnezzar II". Orientalia. 67 (2): 173–201. JSTOR 43076387.
  • Beaulieu, Paul-Alain (2006). "Berossus on Late Babylonian History". Oriental Studies (Special Issue: A Collection of Papers on Ancient Civilizations of Western Asia, Asia Minor and North Africa): 116–149.
  • Gruenthaner, Michael J. (1949). "The Last King of Babylon". The Catholic Biblical Quarterly. 11 (4): 406–427. JSTOR 43720153.
  • Oppenheim, A. Leo (2003) [1985]. "The Babylonian Evidence of Achaemenian Rule in Mesopotamia". In Gershevitch, Ilya (ed.). The Cambridge History of Iran: Volume 2: The Median and Achaemenian Periods. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-20091-1.
  • Weiershäuser, Frauke; Novotny, Jamie (2020). The Royal Inscriptions of Amēl-Marduk (561–560 BC), Neriglissar (559–556 BC), and Nabonidus (555–539 BC), Kings of Babylon (PDF). Eisenbrauns. ISBN 978-1646021079.
  • Wiseman, D. J. (1983). Nebuchadnezzar and Babylon. British Academy. ISBN 978-0197261002.
  • Wiseman, D. J. (2003) [1991]. "Babylonia 605–539 B.C.". In Boardman, John; Edwards, I. E. S.; Hammond, N. G. L.; Sollberger, E.; Walker, C. B. F. (eds.). The Cambridge Ancient History: III Part 2: The Assyrian and Babylonian Empires and Other States of the Near East, from the Eighth to the Sixth Centuries B.C. (2nd ed.). Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-22717-8.

Web sources

Labashi-Marduk
Clan of the Puqudu / Chaldean dynasty
 Died: 556 BC
Preceded by King of Babylon
556 BC
Succeeded by

labashi, marduk, babylonian, cuneiform, lâbâši, marduk, bâš, marduk, meaning, marduk, come, shame, fifth, penultimate, king, babylonian, empire, ruling, successor, neriglissar, though, classical, authors, such, berossus, wrote, that, just, child, when, became,. Labashi Marduk Babylonian cuneiform Labasi Marduk or La bas Marduk meaning O Marduk may I not come to shame 1 was the fifth and penultimate king of the Neo Babylonian Empire ruling in 556 BC He was the son and successor of Neriglissar Though classical authors such as Berossus wrote that Labashi Marduk was just a child when he became king Babylonian documents indicate that he had been in charge of his own affairs before his rise to the throne suggesting he was an adult though possibly still relatively young Labashi MardukKing of BabylonKing of Sumer and AkkadKing of the Neo Babylonian EmpireReignApril May June 556 BCPredecessorNeriglissarSuccessorNabonidusDiedMay June 556 BCBabylon AkkadianLabasi MardukLa bas MardukHousePuquduDynastyChaldean dynasty matrilineal FatherNeriglissarMotherKashshaya Labashi Marduk s reign was very short lasting only one to three months with the last evidence of Neriglissar s life dating in April 556 BC and documents dated to Labashi Marduk s successor Nabonidus appearing in May that same year and becoming widespread in Babylonia by the end of June Nabonidus s son Belshazzar led a coup against the king deposing and killing Labashi Marduk and proclaiming Nabonidus as king The reason for Labashi Marduk s deposition is unknown Berossus simply describes the justification as Labashi Marduk having indulged in evil ways One possible explanation is that whereas Neriglissar derived his claim to the throne from having married a daughter of Nebuchadnezzar II a previous king Labashi Marduk may have been wholly unconnected to the Babylonian ruling dynasty as a result of being the son of another wife Contents 1 Background 2 Reign 3 References 3 1 Bibliography 3 2 Web sourcesBackground Edit The Neo Babylonian Empire under Nebuchadnezzar IILabashi Marduk was the son and heir of Neriglissar r 560 556 BC the fourth king of the Neo Babylonian Empire Labashi Marduk s mother was a daughter of Nebuchadnezzar II r 605 562 BC 2 the empire s second and most powerful king 3 Three daughters of Nebuchadnezzar are known Kashshaya Innin etirat and Ba u asitu but no cuneiform text explicitly mentions which daughter Neriglissar married 4 Historian David B Weisberg proposed in 1974 that Neriglissar s wife was Kashshaya since her name appears together with the name of Nebuchadnezzar and Neriglissar in economic documents 5 Though no concrete evidence exists this identification has generally been accepted by subsequent historians such as Donald Wiseman and Jona Lendering 6 7 Neriglissar was the son of a man by the name Bel shum ishkun 6 and might originally have been from the Aramean clan of the Puqudu since Bel shum ishkun is recorded as originating in the Babylonian province of the same name According to the later Hellenistic era Babylonian writer and astronomer Berossus 5 Naboukhodonosoros Nebuchadnezzar died of sickness after a reign of 43 years and was succeeded by his son Euilmaradokhos Amel Marduk who ruled capriciously and had no regard for the laws After a reign of two years Neriglassaros Neriglissar plotted against Amel Marduk and had him deposed and killed 8 If Berossus is to be believed Neriglissar was the leader of this conspiracy It is likely that the conflict between Amel Marduk and Neriglissar was a case of inter family discord rather than some other form of rivalry 9 Neriglissar s claim to the throne likely came through his marriage to Nebuchadnezzar s daughter who might have been significantly older than either of Nebuchadnezzar s sons as she is attested significantly earlier in her father s reign 4 Reign EditNeriglissar probably died in April 556 BC The last known documents dated to Neriglissar s reign are a contract from 12 April 556 BC at Babylon and a contract from 16 April that same year from the city of Uruk 10 The Uruk King List IM 65066 also known as King List 5 a record of rulers of Babylon from Shamash shum ukin r 668 648 BC to the Seleucid king Seleucus II Callinicus r 246 225 BC 11 12 accords Neriglissar a reign of three years and eight months consistent with the possibility that Neriglissar died in April 10 Labashi Marduk thus became king of Babylon but his reign proved to be brief Because he reigned for such a short period of time no inscriptions survive from his time as king 13 Berossus erroneously gives Labashi Marduk s reign as nine months though it is possible that this is a scribal error and states that Labashi Marduk s evil ways led to his friends plotting against him eventually resulting in the child king being beaten to death The plotters then agreed that Nabonnedos Nabonidus one of the plotters should rule 8 The Uruk King List only gives Labashi Marduk a reign of three months 10 and contract tablets from Babylonia suggest that he might have ruled as briefly as just two months 8 It appears the transition in leadership was either a brief period of confusion after a discrete palace coup or a brief civil war Labashi Marduk was still recognised as king at Uruk up until at least 19 June and in the key city of Sippar until at least 20 June The earliest known document dated to the reign of Nabonidus at Sippar is from 26 June However the earliest document dated to Nabonidus at the city of Nippur is from 25 May and the latest documents dated to Labashi Marduk at Babylon itself are from 24 May The earliest known tablet dated to Nabonidus at Babylon is from 14 July This evidence can be reconciled by positing that Nabonidus may have been recognised in the Babylonian heartland including Nippur and Babylon already on 25 May whereas some outlying cities continued to recognise Labashi Marduk even though he quite possibly was dead at the time on account of a possible palace coup as king until June 14 By the end of June 556 BC tablets dated to Nabonidus are known from across Babylonia 10 Although Berossus refers to Labashi Marduk as a child it possible that he became king as an adult since commercial texts from two years earlier indicate that Labashi Marduk was in charge of his own affairs at that time 10 Labashi Marduk may still have been relatively young however One of the inscriptions of Nabonidus refers to Labashi Marduk as a young boy who had not yet learned proper behavior 15 The reason for the coup against Labashi Marduk is unknown It is possible that despite Labashi Marduk and his father being well connected and wealthy they were ultimately seen as commoners lacking noble blood 7 Though his mother would have connected him to the royal dynasty as the grandson of Nebuchadnezzar it is also possible that Labashi Marduk was the son of Neriglissar and another of his wives Thus Labashi Marduk s rise to the throne might have signified a true break in the dynasty of Nebuchadnezzar and might as such have aroused opposition from the Babylonian populace 16 After Labashi Marduk s death the considerable wealth and estates of Neriglissar s family were confiscated and eventually taken up by Belshazzar the son of Nabonidus who as the main beneficiary was likely the main orchestrator of the conspiracy against Labashi Marduk 17 References Edit Weiershauser amp Novotny 2020 p 2 Wiseman 1983 p 12 Mark 2018 a b Beaulieu 1998 p 200 a b Beaulieu 1998 p 199 a b Wiseman 1991 p 241 a b Lendering 2006 a b c Beaulieu 2006 p 139 Wiseman 1991 p 242 a b c d e Wiseman 1991 p 243 Oppenheim 1985 p 533 Lendering 2005 Weiershauser amp Novotny 2020 p 3 Beaulieu 1989 pp 87 88 Beaulieu 1989 p 95 Gruenthaner 1949 p 409 Beaulieu 1989 p 92 Bibliography Edit 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 Beaulieu Paul Alain 1998 Ba u asitu and Kassaya Daughters of Nebuchadnezzar II Orientalia 67 2 173 201 JSTOR 43076387 Beaulieu Paul Alain 2006 Berossus on Late Babylonian History Oriental Studies Special Issue A Collection of Papers on Ancient Civilizations of Western Asia Asia Minor and North Africa 116 149 Gruenthaner Michael J 1949 The Last King of Babylon The Catholic Biblical Quarterly 11 4 406 427 JSTOR 43720153 Oppenheim A Leo 2003 1985 The Babylonian Evidence of Achaemenian Rule in Mesopotamia In Gershevitch Ilya ed The Cambridge History of Iran Volume 2 The Median and Achaemenian Periods Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 20091 1 Weiershauser Frauke Novotny Jamie 2020 The Royal Inscriptions of Amel Marduk 561 560 BC Neriglissar 559 556 BC and Nabonidus 555 539 BC Kings of Babylon PDF Eisenbrauns ISBN 978 1646021079 Wiseman D J 1983 Nebuchadnezzar and Babylon British Academy ISBN 978 0197261002 Wiseman D J 2003 1991 Babylonia 605 539 B C In Boardman John Edwards I E S Hammond N G L Sollberger E Walker C B F eds The Cambridge Ancient History III Part 2 The Assyrian and Babylonian Empires and Other States of the Near East from the Eighth to the Sixth Centuries B C 2nd ed Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 22717 8 Web sources Edit Lendering Jona 2005 Uruk King List Livius Retrieved 13 August 2020 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Lendering Jona 2006 Neriglissar Livius Retrieved 22 August 2020 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Mark Joshua J 2018 Nebuchadnezzar II World History Encyclopedia Retrieved 24 August 2020 Labashi MardukClan of the Puqudu Chaldean dynasty Died 556 BCPreceded byNeriglissar King of Babylon556 BC Succeeded byNabonidus Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Labashi Marduk amp oldid 1157204518, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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