Ikunum

Ikunum was a king of Assyria between 1867 BC — 1860 BC and the son of Ilushuma. He built a temple for the god Ninkigal.[1] He strengthened the fortifications of the city of Assur and maintained commercial colonies in Asia Minor.[2] The following is a list of the sixteen annually-elected limmu officials from the year of accession of Ikunum until the year of his death.[3] BC dates are based on a date of 1833 BC for the recorded solar eclipse in the limmu of Puzur-Ištar:[4]

1920 BC Buzi son of Adad-rabi
1919 BC Šuli son of Šalmah
1918 BC Iddin-Suen son of Šalmah
1917 BC Ikunum son of Šudaya
1916 BC Dan-Wer son of Ahu-ahi
1915 BC Šu-Anum from Nerabtim
1914 BC Il-massu son of Aššur-ṭab
1913 BC Šu-Hubur son of Šuli
1912 BC Idua son of Ṣulili
1911 BC Laqip son of Puzur-Laba
1910 BC Šu-Anum the hapirum
1909 BC Uku son of Bila
1908 BC Aššur-malik son of Panaka
1907 BC Dan-Aššur son of Puzur-Wer
1906 BC Šu-Kubum son of Ahu-ahi
1905 BC Irišum son of Iddin-Aššur

Notes

  1. Rogers, Robert (2003). A History of Babylonia and Assyria. Lost Arts Media. ISBN 978-1-59016-317-7.
  2. Bertman, Stephen (2005). Handbook to Life in Ancient Mesopotamia. New York: Oxford UP. p. 88.
  3. Cahit Günbattı, An Eponym List (KEL G) from Kültepe Altoriental. Forsch. 35 (2008) 1, 103-132.
  4. C. Michel, Nouvelles données pour la chronologie du II millénaire, NABU 2002, Nr. 20, 17f.

References

Preceded by
Erishum I
Išši’ak Aššur
c. 1867 BC — c. 1860 BC
Succeeded by
Sargon I
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