Shamash-shum-ukin

Shamash-shum-ukin or Shamashshumukin[3] (Neo-Assyrian/Babylonian cuneiform: Šamaš-šuma-ukin[4][5] or Šamaš-šumu-ukīn,[6] meaning "Shamash has established the name"),[6] also known as Saulmugina[7] and Sarmuge,[8] was the son of the Neo-Assyrian king Esarhaddon and his appointed successor as King of Babylon, ruling Babylonia from 668 BC to his death in 648 BC.

Shamash-shum-ukin
Detail of a stone monument of Shamash-shum-ukin as a basket-bearer. 668–655 BC, from the temple of Nabu at Borsippa. Currently housed in the British Museum.
King of Babylon
Reign668–648 BC
PredecessorEsarhaddon
SuccessorKandalanu
Died648 BC
AkkadianŠamaš-šuma-ukin
Šamaš-šumu-ukīn
DynastySargonid dynasty
FatherEsarhaddon
MotherUnknown,[1] possibly of Babylonian origin.[2]
ReligionAncient Mesopotamian religion

Despite being the eldest living son of Esarhaddon at the time, Shamash-shum-ukin was designated as the heir to Babylon in 672 BC and in his stead his younger brother Ashurbanipal was designated as the heir to Assyria. Despite documents from Esarhaddon suggesting that the two brothers were intended to have equal power, Shamash-shum-ukin only ascended to the Babylonian throne months after Ashubanipal had become king and throughout his reign could only make decisions and issue orders if these were also approved and verified by Ashurbanipal.

Shamash-shum-ukin assimilated well into Babylonia, despite being ethnically and culturally Assyrian. His royal inscriptions are far more "quintessentially Babylonian" than those of other Assyrian rulers of southern Mesopotamia, using Babylonian imagery and rhetoric to an unprecedented extent. He participated in the Babylonian New Year's festival and is recorded as partaking in other Babylonian traditions. The Statue of Marduk, the main cult image of Babylon's patron deity Marduk, was returned to Babylon in 668 BC at Shamash-shum-ukin's coronation, having been stolen from the city by his grandfather Sennacherib twenty years prior.

Eventually, Shamash-shum-ukin grew tired of Ashurbanipal's overbearing control and in 652 BC he rebelled against his younger brother. Despite successfully raising several allies, a coalition of enemies of Assyria, to his cause, Shamash-shum-ukin's rebellion proved disastrous. After enduring a two-year siege by Ashurbanipal of Babylon, the city fell and Shamash-shum-ukin died, though the exact circumstances of his death are unclear.

Background

Shamash-shum-ukin was probably the second eldest son of King Esarhaddon, younger only than the crown prince, Sin-nadin-apli.[5] Sin-nadin-apli died unexpectedly in 674 BC and Esarhaddon, who was keen to avoid a succession crisis as he himself had only ascended to the throne with great difficulty, soon started making new succession plans.[9] Esarhaddon entirely bypassed the third eldest son, Shamash-metu-uballit, possibly because this prince suffered from poor health.[10]

In May 672 BC, Ashurbanipal, probably Esarhaddon's fourth eldest son (and definitely younger than Shamash-shum-ukin), was appointed by Esarhaddon as the heir to Assyria and Shamash-shum-ukin was appointed as the heir to Babylonia.[11] The two princes arrived at the capital of Nineveh together and partook in a celebration with foreign representatives and Assyrian nobles and soldiers.[12] Promoting one of his sons as the heir to Assyria and another as the heir to Babylon was a new idea, for the past decades the Assyrian king had simultaneously been the King of Babylon.[13] Esarhaddon might have decided to split his titles between his sons since Esarhaddon's brothers had murdered his father Sennacherib and attempted to usurp the throne after Esarhaddon had been proclaimed as heir decades prior. By splitting rulership of the empire, he might have surmised that such jealousy and rivalry could be avoided.[14]

The choice to name a younger son as crown prince of Assyria, which was clearly Esarhaddon's primary title, and an older son as crown prince of Babylon might be explained by the mothers of the two sons. While Ashurbanipal's mother was likely Assyrian in origin, Shamash-shum-ukin was the son of a woman from Babylon (though this is uncertain, Ashurbanipal and Shamash-shum-ukin may have shared the same mother)[1] which might have had problematic consequences if Shamash-shum-ukin was to ascend to the Assyrian throne. Since Ashubanipal was the next oldest son, he then was the superior candidate to the throne. Esarhaddon might then have surmised that the Babylonians would be content with someone of Babylonian heritage as their king and as such set Shamash-shum-ukin to inherit Babylon and the southern parts of his empire instead.[2] Treaties drawn up by Esarhaddon are somewhat unclear as to the relationship he intended his two sons to have. It is clear that Ashurbanipal was the primary heir to the empire and that Shamash-shum-ukin was to swear him an oath of allegiance but other parts also specify that Ashurbanipal was not to interfere in Shamash-shum-ukin's affairs which indicates a more equal standing.[15]

Because Esarhaddon was constantly ill, much of the administrative duties of the empire fell upon Ashurbanipal and Shamash-shum-ukin during the last few years of their father's reign.[13]

Reign

Early reign

Confirmation by Shamash-shum-ukin of a grant originally made by Ashur-nadin-shumi. 670–650 BC.

After Esarhaddon's death in late 669 BC, Ashurbanipal became the Assyrian king as per Esarhaddon's succession plans. In the spring of the next year, Shamash-shum-ukin was inaugurated as the king of Babylon and returned the Statue of Marduk, Babylon's chief deity, to the city, stolen by his grandfather King Sennacherib twenty years prior.[16] The return of the statue was particularly important as it in the eyes of the Babylonians cemented Marduk's approval of the new king's rule.[17] Though Samash-shum-ukin, an Assyrian prince, being installed as the King of Babylon was in a way an embodiment of Assyrian hegemony, Shamash-shum-ukin's coronation ceremony (parallelling that of Ashurbanipal) and the return of the Statue of Marduk were efforts made to portray him as an independent king of Babylon.[18] Samash-shum-ukin was the only member of the Assyrian royal family (the Sargonid dynasty) to accede to the Babylonian throne and intentionally never to the Assyrian one. The only other Sargonid prince who ruled Babylon and not Assyria was Shamash-shum-ukin's uncle Ashur-nadin-shumi, though he had been the crown prince of Sennacherib and the intended successor in Assyria as well.[14] Though Ashurbanipal, as King of Assyria, was more powerful, Shamash-shum-ukin's kingship of Babylon, important to the Assyrians for military, political, religious and ideological reasons, was prestigious in its own right.[19]

Shamash-shum-ukin would rule at Babylon for sixteen years, apparently mostly peacefully in regards to his younger brother, but there would be repeated disagreements on the exact extent of his control.[16] Although Esarhaddon's inscriptions suggest that Shamash-shum-ukin should have been granted the entirety of Babylonia to rule, contemporary records only definitely prove that Shamash-shum-ukin held Babylon itself and its vicinity. The governors of some Babylonian cities, such as Nippur, Uruk and Ur, and the rulers in the Sea Land, all ignored the existence of a king in Babylon and saw Ashurbanipal as their monarch.[20]

Shamash-shum-ukin is recorded as having participated in several traditional Babylonian royal activities. He rebuilt the walls of the city Sippar and is known to have participated in the Babylonian New Year's festival,[20] which had been suspended during the time that the god's statue was absent from the city.[17] He gave considerable attention to the temples of his domain, confirming offerings in several temples in his inscriptions and increasing the land of the Ishtar temple in Uruk.[21] Shamash-shum-ukin was ethnically and culturally Assyrian, but appears to have assimilated well into Babylonia. His royal inscriptions are far more "quintessentially Babylonian" than those of other Assyrian rulers of southern Mesopotamia, using Babylonian imagery and rhetoric to an unprecedented extent,[14] almost as if overriding his actual cultural and ethnic origin as an Assyrian.[22] Though he was in Assyria at some points, such as when he returned the Marduk statue and on one occasion when he was feeling sick, Shamash-shum-ukin was presumably the first of the rulers of the Sargonid dynasty to live in the city full-time.[23] Throughout his Babylonian reign, Shamash-shum-ukin partook in several building projects, an important aspect of Babylonian kingship to the same degree as military campaigns were important in Assyrian kingship.[24] He is recorded as restoring shrines in several cities and as rebuilding the city wall of Sippar.[17]

Despite his kingship having been designated by Esarhaddon, Ashurbanipal refers to himself in his inscriptions as the man who granted Shamash-shum-ukin rule over Babylon. This is possibly due to Shamash-shum-ukin only being formally crowned as king a few months after Ashurbanipal had become the Assyrian monarch and that it would have been within Ashurbanipal's power to stop his coronation.[25]

Status

Locations of some major Mesopotamian cities.

The exact reasons for Samash-shum-ukin's revolt against Ashurbanipal are unknown, but there are several possibilities. Perhaps the most commonly believed reason is that although Esarhaddon had designated Shamash-shum-ukin to inherit control of all of Babylonia, this had not been respected by Ashurbanipal once Esarhaddon was dead. Although business documents from Shamash-shum-ukin are known throughout Babylonia (suggesting that most of the region saw him as their king), similar documents dated to the reign of Ashurbanipal are also known from Babylonia, which suggests that Ashurbanipal had assumed the authority of a Babylonian monarch despite there already being a king in Babylon.[26]

The cities Babylon, Dilbat, Borsippa and Sippar all lack business documents from Ashurbanipal, suggesting that these cities were firmly under Shamash-shum-ukin's rule, but Ashurbanipal had agents throughout the south that reported directly to him (not to Shamash-shum-ukin) and inscriptions suggest that any orders Shamash-shum-ukin gave to his subjects first had to be verified and approved by Ashurbanipal before they could be carried out.[27] Ashurbanipal had a permanent garrison of troops and officials stationed at Borsippa, a city which would have been deep inside Shamash-shum-ukin's domain.[28] There are also preserved petitions sent by officials in Babylon directly to Ashurbanipal. Had Shamash-shum-ukin been the universally respected sovereign of Babylon, he would probably have been the receiver of such letters.[29]

Royal records from Babylonia during the time of peaceful coexistence between Ashurbanipal and Shamash-shum-ukin mention the names of both monarchs, but contemporary documents from Assyria only mention Ashurbanipal, reinforcing that the two kings were not equal in status. Kudurru, who was the governor of Uruk, addressed Ashurbanipal in his letters with the title "King of the Lands", despite Uruk being located in Babylonia, indicating that Kudurru saw Ashurbanipal, and not Shamash-shum-ukin, as his overlord.[30] Shamash-shum-ukin himself seems to have seen himself as Ashurbanipal's equal, simply addressing him as "my brother" in his letters (unlike how he addressed his father Esarhaddon, "the king, my father"). Although there are several letters preserved from Shamash-shum-ukin to Ashurbanipal, there are no known replies preserved. It is possible that Ashurbanipal, on account of his network of informers, did not feel a need to write to his brother.[25]

Revolt against Ashurbanipal and death

Babylonian prisoners under Assyrian guard, reign of Ashurbanipal 668-630 BC, Nineveh.

By the 650s BC, the hostility between Shamash-shum-ukin and Ashurbanipal had grown. A letter from Zakir, a courtier at Shamash-shum-ukin's court, to Ashurbanipal described how visitors from the Sea Land had publicly criticized Ashurbanipal in front of Shamash-shum-ukin, using the phrase "this is not the word of a king!". Zakir reported that though Shamash-shum-ukin was angered, he and his governor of Babylon, Ubaru, chose to not take action against the visitors.[31] Perhaps the most important factors behind Shamash-shum-ukin's revolt was his dissatisfaction with his position relative to that of his brother, the constant resentment of Assyria in general by the Babylonians and the constant willingness of the ruler of Elam to join anyone who waged war against Assyria.[32]

Shamash-shum-ukin rebelled against Ashurbanipal in 652 BC.[33] This civil war would last for three years.[16] The rebellion was not an attempt to claim the Assyrian throne, but rather an attempt at securing the independence of Babylonia.[22] Inscription evidence suggests that Shamash-shum-ukin addressed the citizens of Babylon to join him in his revolt. In Ashurbanipal's inscriptions, Shamash-shum-ukin is quoted to have said "Ashurbanipal will cover with shame the name of the Babylonians", which Ashurbanipal refers to as "wind" and "lies". Soon after Shamash-shum-ukin began his revolt, the rest of southern Mesopotamia rose up against Ashurbanipal alongside him.[34] Early in the war, Ashurbanipal tried to get various local governors in the south to join his side instead, writing to them in hopes that some of them might be interested in de-escalating the war. In these letters, Ashurbanipal never refers to Shamash-shum-ukin by name, instead calling him lā aḫu ("no-brother"). In many inscriptions, Shamash-shum-ukin is simply identified as the "unfaithful brother", "enemy brother" or just "the enemy".[35] In some of the letters Ashurbanipal referred to him as "this man whom Marduk hates" in an effort to undermine his legitimacy as a Babylonian king.[17]

According to the inscriptions of Ashurbanipal, Shamash-shum-ukin was very successful in finding allies against the Assyrians. Ashurbanipal identifies three groups which aided his brother, first and foremost there were the Chaldeans, Arameans and the other peoples of Babylonia, then there were the Elamites and lastly the kings of Gutium, Amurru and Meluhha. This last group of kings might refer to the Medes (as Gutium, Amurru and Meluhha no longer existed at this point) but this is uncertain. Meluhha might have referred to Egypt, which did not aid Shamash-shum-ukin in the war. Shamash-shum-ukin's ambassadors to the Elamites had offered gifts (called "bribes" by Ashurbanipal) and their king sent an army under the command of an Elamite prince to aid in the conflict.[36]

Despite the coalition of Assyrian enemies he had assembled, Shamash-shum-ukin's revolt would be unsuccessful. The Elamites, his primary ally, were defeated near Der and ceased to play a role in the conflict.[37] By 650 BC Shamash-shum-ukin's situation looked grim, with Ashubanipal's forces having besieged Sippar, Borsippa, Kutha and Babylon itself. Having endured starvation and disease over the course of the siege, Babylon finally fell in 648 BC and was plundered by Ashurbanipal.[38] One of Shamash-shum-ukin's recorded prayers records his despair in the final stages of the war:

I moan like a dove night and day; I bemoan myself, I weep bitterly; Tears are forced from my eyes.[39]

Shamash-shum-ukin is traditionally believed to have committed suicide by setting himself on fire in his palace,[38] but contemporary texts only say that he "met a cruel death" and that the gods "consigned him to a fire and destroyed his life". In addition to suicide though self-immolation or other means, it is possible that he was executed, died accidentally or was killed in some other way.[40] Most of the accounts of his death state that it involved fire in some capacity, but do not give more elaborate details.[41] The gods are typically identified as playing a part (perhaps burning him away with fire themselves) due to Shamash-shum-ukin's war against Ashurbanipal also being framed by Ashurbanipal as impious.[42] If Shamash-shum-ukin was executed, it would be logical for the Assyrian scribes to leave this out of historical records since fratricide (killing a brother) was illegal and even if a soldier (and not Ashurbanipal) had carried it out, it would still constitute a murder of a member of the Assyrian royal family.[43] Had a soldier killed Shamash-shum-ukin, he might very well have been executed himself.[42] After Shamash-shum-ukin's death, Ashubanipal placed one of his officials, Kandalanu, on the Babylonian throne as his vassal.[38]

Legacy

Ashurbanipal inspects booty and prisoners from Babylon after a two years long siege, 648 BC.

Shamash-shum-ukin's rebellion and downfall represented a difficult case for the Assyrian royal scribes who recorded history. As Shamash-shum-ukin was both a member of the Assyrian royal family and a traitorous Babylonian king, it was difficult to write of his fate; while scribes eagerly recorded lengthy accounts of the defeat of foreign kings and rebels, there was a general reluctance to write about the death of members of the Assyrian royal family.[40] Matters might have been complicated further by the fact that unlike many other rebels faced by the Assyrians, Shamash-shum-ukin was not a usurper, but the legitimately installed ruler of Babylon, by decree of an Assyrian king.[44] Ashurbanipal's personal inscriptions offer little in regards to the end of Shamash-shum-ukin's life and Assyrian kings after Ashurbanipal do not mention him at all, almost as if he had never existed in the first place. Ashurbanipal's inscriptions talk around his brother's death and in many places even omit Shamash-shum-ukin's name, simply calling him "the king". In a relief from Ashurbanipal's palace at Nineveh, depicting his victory over the Babylonian revolt, soldiers are depicted as giving the Babylonian crown and the Babylonian royal insignia to him, but Shamash-shum-ukin is conspicuously absent.[40] There is evidence of a considerable damnatio memoriae following Shamash-shum-ukin's downfall, with steles erected by the king being purposefully mutilated after his death, erasing his face.[45]

Titulature

Shamash-shum-ukin's most frequently used title was šar Bābili ("King of Babylon"), though there exists a single inscription where he used šakkanakki Bābili ("Viceroy of Babylon") instead. In the inscriptions of other Assyrian kings who ruled the city, "viceroy" is typically more common than "king". He also assumed other traditional Babylonian royal titles, such as šar māt Šumeri u Akkadi ("King of Sumer and Akkad"). Overall, his titulary was quintessentially Babylonian to a much higher degree than other Assyrian rulers of the city.[23] As typically done by Assyrian rulers, Shamash-shum-ukin venerates his ancestors in many of his inscriptions, typically naming his great-grandfather Sargon II, his grandfather Sennacherib (from whom he typically omits the title "King of Babylon" due to Sennacherib's actions against the city), his father Esarhaddon and sometimes his brother Ashurbanipal. Their inclusion in his titles may be because of fears that his legitimacy might be questioned if they were omitted. The specific way his ancestors were presented, and Shamash-shum-ukin's use of deities in his inscriptions, set him apart from other Assyrian rulers.[46]

Significantly, Shamash-shum-ukin left out any mentions of the role of his royal ancestors as chief priests of Assyria's god Ashur, a concept intrinsically linked to Assyrian ideas of kingship.[46] As expected for a ruler of Babylon, the deity most frequently referenced in Shamash-shum-ukin's royal inscriptions is Marduk,[47] but Shamash-shum-ukin's inscriptions do not contain a single mention of Ashur, who was otherwise included (though sometimes in a reduced capacity) in the inscriptions of those of his ancestors who ruled both Assyria and Babylonia. Despite Shamash-shum-ukin publicly identifying himself as an Assyrian (through his genealogy), his inscriptions thus suggest that he did not venerate Assyria's national deity.[48] In many places in his titles, Shamash-shum-ukin appropriated Assyrian titular conventions in regards to how deities were used but substituted the important gods in Assyria, such as Ashur, Ishtar and Sîn, for deities more venerated in the south, such as Marduk and Sarpanit.[49]

gollark: Personal feelings on values? Probably consequentialist arguments that it works out badly if governments have very strong control?
gollark: Or at least in longer conversations.
gollark: We are, apparently, sane enough to get above "social shaming" most of the time.
gollark: I have this nice diagram.
gollark: And bad studies.

See also

References

  1. Novotny & Singletary 2009, p. 174–176.
  2. Ahmed 2018, p. 65–66.
  3. Mullo-Weir 1929, p. 553.
  4. Bertin 1891, p. 50.
  5. Novotny & Singletary 2009, p. 168.
  6. Frahm 2005, p. 47.
  7. Budge 2010, p. 52.
  8. Teppo 2007, p. 395.
  9. Ahmed 2018, p. 63.
  10. Novotny & Singletary 2009, p. 170.
  11. Encyclopaedia Britannica.
  12. Ahmed 2018, p. 64.
  13. Radner 2003, p. 170.
  14. Zaia 2019, p. 20.
  15. Ahmed 2018, p. 68.
  16. Ahmed 2018, p. 8.
  17. Zaia 2019b, p. 14.
  18. Zaia 2019b, p. 2.
  19. Zaia 2019b, p. 3.
  20. Ahmed 2018, p. 80.
  21. Ahmed 2018, p. 82.
  22. Zaia 2019b, p. 18.
  23. Zaia 2019b, p. 8.
  24. Zaia 2019b, p. 13.
  25. Ahmed 2018, p. 87.
  26. Ahmed 2018, pp. 82–83.
  27. Ahmed 2018, p. 83.
  28. Ahmed 2018, p. 84.
  29. Ahmed 2018, p. 85.
  30. Ahmed 2018, p. 86.
  31. Ahmed 2018, p. 88.
  32. Ahmed 2018, p. 90.
  33. MacGinnis 1988, p. 38.
  34. Ahmed 2018, p. 91.
  35. Zaia 2019, p. 31.
  36. Ahmed 2018, p. 93.
  37. Carter & Stolper 1984, p. 51.
  38. Johns 1913, p. 124–125.
  39. Ahmed 2018, p. 102.
  40. Zaia 2019, p. 21.
  41. Zaia 2019, p. 23.
  42. Zaia 2019, p. 37.
  43. Zaia 2019, p. 36.
  44. Zaia 2019, p. 26.
  45. Zaia 2019, p. 48.
  46. Zaia 2019b, p. 9.
  47. Zaia 2019b, p. 10.
  48. Zaia 2019b, p. 11.
  49. Zaia 2019b, pp. 13–14.

Cited bibliography

  • Ahmed, Sami Said (2018). Southern Mesopotamia in the time of Ashurbanipal. Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co KG. ISBN 978-3111033587.
  • Bertin, G. (1891). "Babylonian Chronology and History". Transactions of the Royal Historical Society. 5: 1–52.
  • Budge, Ernest A. (2010) [1880]. The History of Esarhaddon, King of Assyria, B.C. 681-688: Translated from the Cuneiform Inscriptions Upon Cylinders and Tablets in the British Museum Collection, Together with Original Texts. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9781108017107.
  • Carter, Elizabeth; Stolper, Matthew W. (1984). Elam: Surveys of Political History and Archaeology. University of California Press. ISBN 978-0520099500.
  • Frahm, Eckart (2005). "Observations on the Name and Age of Sargon II and on Some Patterns of Assyrian Royal Onomastics" (PDF). NABU. 2: 46–50.
  • Johns, C. H. W. (1913). Ancient Babylonia. Cambridge University Press. p. 124. Shamash-shum-ukin.
  • MacGinnis, J. D. A. (1988). "Ctesias and the Fall of Nineveh". Illinois Classical Studies. University of Illinois Press. 13 (1): 37–42. hdl:2142/12326.
  • Mullo-Weir, Cecil J. (1929). "The Return of Marduk to Babylon with Shamashshumukin". Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society. 61 (3): 553–555. doi:10.1017/S0035869X00151561.
  • Novotny, Jamie; Singletary, Jennifer (2009). "Family Ties: Assurbanipal's Family Revisited". Studia Orientalia Electronica. 106: 167–177.
  • Radner, Karen (2003). "The Trials of Esarhaddon: The Conspiracy of 670 BC". ISIMU: Revista sobre Oriente Próximo y Egipto en la antigüedad. Universidad Autónoma de Madrid. 6: 165–183.
  • Teppo, Saana (2007). "Agency and the Neo-Assyrian Women of the Palace". Studia Orientalia Electronica. 101: 381–420.
  • Zaia, Shana (2019). "My Brother's Keeper: Assurbanipal versus Šamaš-šuma-ukīn" (PDF). Journal of Ancient Near Eastern History. 6 (1): 19–52.
  • Zaia, Shana (2019). "Going Native: Šamaš-šuma-ukīn, Assyrian King of Babylon". IRAQ.
Shamash-shum-ukin
 Died: 648 BC
Preceded by
Esarhaddon
King of Babylon
668  648 BC
Succeeded by
Kandalanu
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