词条 | Lullaya |
释义 |
BiographyHe was the last in the sequence of kings omitted from the dissident Assyrian Kinglist known as KAV 14,[5] which otherwise provides the only extant sequence of Shamshi-Adad I’s later successors, Mut-Ashkur and Rimush.[6] The Synchronistic Kinglist[7] gives his Babylonian counterpart as Ayadaragalama of the Sealand Dynasty.[8] There are no extant inscriptions from Lullaia's or his predecessor's reigns in marked contrast with their Sealand contemporaries.[3] He was succeeded by Shu-Ninua, the son of his predecessor, Bazaya, for whom he may have acted as regent until reaching his majority as there is no tradition that Lullaia was a usurper. Inscriptions1. ^Khorsabad List, IM 60017 (excavation nos.: DS 828, DS 32-54), ii 22. 2. ^SDAS List, IM 60484, ii 19. 3. ^1 {{cite book | title = Babylonian Tablets from the First Sealand Dynasty in the Schoyen Collection | author = Stephanie Dalley |authorlink=Stephanie Dalley | publisher = CDL Press | year = 2009 | page = 3}} 4. ^{{cite journal | title = Assyrian King-Lists, the Royal Tombs of Ur, and Indus Origins | author = Julian Reade | journal = Journal of Near Eastern Studies | volume = 60 | number = 1 | date = Jan 2001 | jstor = 545577 | page = 7 | doi=10.1086/468883}} 5. ^Assyrian Kinglist fragment VAT 9812 = KAV 14: 5. 6. ^{{ cite book | title = Mesopotamian Chronicles | author = Jean-Jacques Glassner | publisher = Society of Biblical Literature | year = 2005 | page = 88 }} 7. ^Synchronistic Kinglist, Ass 14616c (KAV 216), I 7’. 8. ^{{ cite book | title = Ancient Near Eastern Texts Relating to the Old Testament (ANET) | chapter = Babylonian and Assyrian Historical Texts | editor = J. B. Pritchard | author = A. Leo Oppenheim | publisher = Princeton University Press | year = 1969 | page = 273 }} References 3 : 17th-century BC Assyrian kings|Assyrian kings|17th-century BC rulers |
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