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Shagarakti-Shuriash
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | Šagarakti-Šuriaš |
| title | King of Babylon |
| image | Nabonidus cylinder sippar bm1.jpg |
| caption | The *Nabonidus Cylinder* which names Šagarakti-Šuriaš as builder of the Eulmaš temple. |
| reign | 13 regnal years |
| c. 1245–1233 BC | |
| predecessor | Kudur-Enlil |
| successor | Kaštiliašu IV |
| royal house | Kassite |
c. 1245–1233 BC
Šagarakti-Šuriaš, written phonetically ša-ga-ra-ak-ti-šur-ia-aš or dša-garak-ti-šu-ri-ia-aš in cuneiform or in a variety of other forms, Šuriaš (a Kassite sun god corresponding to Babylonian Šamaš) gives me life, (c. 1245–1233 BC was the twenty seventh king of the Third or Kassite dynasty of Babylon. The earliest extant economic text is dated to the 5th day of Nisan in his accession year, corresponding to his predecessor’s year 9, suggesting the succession occurred very early in the year as this month was the first in the Babylonian calendar. He ruled for thirteen years and was succeeded by his son, Kaštiliašu IV.Babylonian King List A, BM 33332, a broken and badly worn tablet in the British Museum, provides his name in abbreviated form, Šá-ga-rak-[ti-], and the length of his reign.
Biography
The Babylonian King List A names Kudur-Enlil as his father but there are no confirmatory contemporary inscriptions and the reigns are too short around this period to allow for the genealogy alleged by this king list.
A large inscribed stone, of unusual provenance, was photographed and then lost in Kermānšāh province Iran. It read "One talent, correct (weight), of Rabâ-ša-Adad, ša rēši (official) of Šagarakti-Šuriaš, son of Ku⸣dur -Enlil, king of the world". This would indicate that paternity of this ruler.
Economic turbulence
More than three hundred economic texts have been found in several caches from Ur, Dur-Kurigalzu, and overwhelmingly Nippur dated to Šagarakti-Šuriaš’ reign. In addition, there are 127 tablets recently published probably recovered from Dūr-Enlilē. They are characterized by the extraordinary variety of spellings used to name this king, who bears a defiantly Kassite title in contrast with his predecessor. Brinkman identifies eighty four The texts record events such as the hire of slaves, payments in butter to temple servants, and even an agreement to assume a debt for which a priest had been imprisoned. Amīl-Marduk was the Šandabakku or governor of Nippur during his reign, a position he had filled since the earlier reign of Kudur-Enlil. Four tablets obtained on the antiquities market but believed to be from Nippur concern the release of prisoners after a guarantee. They date to the accession year, year 1, and year 2 of Šagarakti-Šuriaš.
It has been suggested that the preponderance of commercial texts detailing debts, loans and slave transactions indicate that Babylonia faced hard economic times during his reign, where people sold themselves into slavery to repay their creditors. One of whichTablet Ni 2891. seems to indicate his involvement in the incarceration of an individual while anotherNi 2885. is a declaration of zakût nippurēti, "freeing of the women of Nippur" as part of a general amnesty. Ini-Tešub, the king of Kargamiš, wrote a letter to him complaining about the activities of the Ahlamu and their effect on communications and presumably trade.
The Sippar-Annunītu Eulmaš of Ištar-Annunītu
Šagarakti-Šuriaš built the shrine, or Eulmaš, of the warrior goddess Ištar-Annunītu, in the city of Sippar-Annunītu. Nabonidus (556-539 BC), the last king of the Neo-Babylonian Empire, recorded on one of his four foundation cylinders, pictured, that
They were actually separated by slightly less than six hundred and eighty years. This is the only other inscription describing Šagarakti-Šuriaš as son of Kudur-Enlil. Another of his cylinders quotes his statue inscription, buried in a trench at the site of the temple:
The Seal legend

A clay tablet from the time of Sennacherib (705–681 BC) quotes a legendary inscription from a lapis lazuli seal. Originally the seal was in the possession of Shagarakti-Shuriash, but was carried off to Nineveh by Tukulti-Ninurta I (1243–1207 BC) as war booty when he sacked Babylon during Kaštiliašu’s reign, and he had his own inscription engraved on it without erasing the original. Sometime afterwards the seal again found its way back to Babylon, in circumstances unknown, where it was re-plundered, some six hundred years later by Sennacherib.
A brick discovered in situ in Nippur has an inscription along its edge which shows that Šagarakti-Šuriaš commissioned work here on the Ekur of Enlil as well.
Inscriptions
References
References
- J. A. Brinkman. (1976). "Materials for the Study of Kassite History, Vol. I (MSKH I)". Oriental Institute of the University of Chicago.
- Itamar Singer. (2006). "Ḫattuša-Boğazköy". Gernot Wilhelm.
- Brinkman, J. A., Aliyari, Shahram, MacGinnis, John and Alibaigi, Sajjad, "An Inscribed Kassite Weight from Kermānšāh Province, Western Iran", Altorientalische Forschungen, vol. 51, no. 2, pp. 133-137, 2024
- Wilfred van Soldt. (2015). "Middle Babylonian Texts in the Cornell University Collections: I. The Later Kings (CUSAS 30)". CDL Press.
- Albert T. Clay. (1906). "Documents from the Temple Archives of Nippur dated in the Reigns of the Cassite Rulers". Departmenf of Archaeology, University of Pennsylvania.
- Levavi, Yuval. “FOUR MIDDLE-BABYLONIAN LEGAL DOCUMENTS CONCERNING PRISON.” Revue d’Assyriologie et d’archéologie Orientale, vol. 111, 2017
- Stephen Bertman. (2003). "Handbook to Life in Ancient Mesopotamia". Oxford University Press.
- Jonathan S. Tenney. (2011). "Life at the Bottom of Babylonian Society". Brill.
- J. A. Brinkman. (2006). "Babylonian Royal Land Grants, Memorials of Financial Interest, and Invocation of the Divine". Journal of the Economic and Social History of the Orient.
- Alexa Bartelmus, and Jon Taylor. “COLLECTING AND CONNECTING HISTORY: NABONIDUS AND THE KASSITE REBUILDING OF E(UL)MAŠ OF (IŠTAR)-ANNUNĪTU IN SIPPAR-ANNUNĪTU.” Journal of Cuneiform Studies, vol. 66, 2014, pp. 113–28
- George R. Law. (2010). "Identification of Darius the Mede". Ready Scribe Press.
- S. Langdon. (Jan 1916). "New Inscriptions of Nabuna'id". The American Journal of Semitic Languages and Literatures.
- Olaf Alfred Toffteen. (1907). "Ancient chronology". University of Chicago Press.
- L. W. King. (1904). "Records of the reign of Tukulti-Ninib I, King of Assyria, about B.C. 1275". Luzac and Co..
- Dolores Casero Chamorro, María. "Stolen, Not Given?". At the Dawn of History: Ancient Near Eastern Studies in Honour of J. N. Postgate, edited by Yağmur Heffron, Adam Stone and Martin Worthington, University Park, USA: Penn State University Press, 2021, pp. 85-94
- Yalçın, S., "Chapter 4 Men of the State: Seals as Markers of Distinction in Assyria, ca. 1353–1050 BCE", in Selves Engraved on Stone. Leiden, The Netherlands: Brill, pp. 123–177, 2022
- Hermann Vollrat Hilprecht. (1903). "Explorations in Bible lands during the 19th century". A. J. Hollman & Company.
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