Shamshi-Adad IV
{{Infobox monarch||name=Shamshi-Adad IV|title=King of Assyria|reign=1054–1050 BC|predecessor=Eriba-Adad II|successor=Ashurnasirpal I|father=Tiglath-Pileser I|succession=King of the Middle Assyrian Empire|issue=Ashurnasirpal I}}Shamshi-Adad IV, inscribed mdšam-ši-dIM, was the king of Assyria, 1054/3–1050 BC, the 91st to be listed on the Assyrian Kinglist.Khorsabad Kinglist, tablet IM 60017 (excavation nos.: DS 828, DS 32-54), iv 1–4.SDAS Kinglist, tablet IM 60484, iii 33–36. He was a son of Tiglath-Pileser I (1114–1076 BC), the third to have taken the throne, after his brothers Asharid-apal-Ekur and Ashur-bel-kala, and he usurped the kingship from the latter’s son, the short-reigning Eriba-Adad II (1055–1054 BC). It is quite probable that he was fairly elderly when he seized the throne.
Biography
The Assyrian kinglist recalls that he "came up from Karduniaš (i.e. Babylonia). He ousted Eriba-Adad, son of Aššur-bêl-kala, seized the throne and ruled for 4 years". The king of Babylon was Adad-apla-iddina, who had been installed more than a decade earlier by Shamshi-Adad brother, Ashur-bel-kala. The extent to which he was instrumental in the succession is uncertain but it seems that Shamshi-Adad may have earlier sought refuge in exile in the south.{{ cite book | title = A Political History of Post-Kassite Babylonia, 1158–722 BC | author = J. A. Brinkman | publisher = Pontificium Institutum Biblicum | year = 1968 | pages = 143–144 }}
The Synchronistic KinglistSynchronistic Kinglist, Ass 14616c (KAV 216), iii 3. gives Ea-, presumed to be Ea-mukin-zeri (c. 1008 BC), as his Babylonian contemporary,{{ cite book | title = Reallexikon der Assyriologie: Prinz, Prinzessin - Samug, Bd. 11 | chapter = Šamši-Adad IV | author = Heather D. Baker | publisher = Walter De Gruyter | year = 2008 | page = 636 }} an unlikely pairing as he was likely to have been concurrent with the latter kings of the 2nd dynasty of Isin during its dying throes. The political events of his reign are obscure and his fragmentary inscriptions are limited to commemorating renovation work carried out on the Ištar temple at Nineveh and the bīt nāmeru ("gate-tower") at Assur.{{ cite book | title = The Cambridge Ancient History, Volume II, Part 2, History of the Middle East and the Aegean Region, 1380–1000 BC | chapter = XXXI: Assyria & Babylonia 1200–1000 BC | author = D. J. Wiseman |editor1=I. E. S. Edwards |editor2=C. J. Gadd |editor3=N. G. L. Hammond |editor4=S. Solberger | publisher = Cambridge University Press | year = 1975 | page = 469 }}
He would be succeeded by his son, Ashurnasirpal I.
Inscriptions
References
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Further reading
- {{cite book |author=Albert Kirk Grayson |url=https://archive.org/details/assyrian-rulers-of-the-early-first-millennium-bc-i-1114-859-bc |title=Assyrian Rulers of the Early First Millennium BC I (1114–859 BC) |publisher=University of Toronto Press |year=1991}}
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{{succession box|title=King of Assyria|before=Eriba-Adad II|after=Ashurnasirpal I|years=1054–1050 BC}}
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{{Assyrian kings}}
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Category:11th-century BC Assyrian kings