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The king of Babylon (Akkadian: šakkanakki Bābili, later also šar Bābili) was the ruler of the ancient Mesopotamian city of Babylon and its kingdom, Babylonia, which existed as an independent realm from the 19th century BC to its fall in the 6th century BC. For the majority of its existence as an independent kingdom, Babylon ruled most of southern Mesopotamia, composed of the ancient regions of Sumer and Akkad. The city experienced two major periods of ascendancy, when Babylonian kings rose to dominate large parts of the Ancient Near East: the First Babylonian Empire (or Old Babylonian Empire, c. 1894/1880–1595 BC) and the Second Babylonian Empire (or Neo-Babylonian Empire, 626–539 BC). Babylon was ruled by Hammurabi, who created the Code of Hammurabi.
King of Babylon | |
---|---|
šakkanakki Bābili šar Bābili | |
Details | |
First monarch | Sumu-abum |
Last monarch | Nabonidus (last native king) Shamash-eriba or Nidin-Bel (last native rebel) Artabanus III (last foreign ruler attested as king) Artabanus IV (last Parthian king in Babylonia) |
Formation | c. 1894 BC |
Abolition | 539 BC (last native king) 484 BC or 336/335 BC (last native rebel) AD 81 (last foreign ruler attested as king) AD 224 (last Parthian king in Babylonia) |
Appointer | Various:
|
Many of Babylon's kings were of foreign origin. Throughout the city's nearly two-thousand year history, it was ruled by kings of native Babylonian (Akkadian), Amorite, Kassite, Elamite, Aramean, Assyrian, Chaldean, Persian, Greek and Parthian origin. A king's cultural and ethnic background does not appear to have been important for the Babylonian perception of kingship, the important matter instead being whether the king was capable of executing the duties traditionally ascribed to the Babylonian king: establishing peace and security, upholding justice, honouring civil rights, refraining from unlawful taxation, respecting religious traditions, constructing temples, providing gifts to the gods in the temples and maintaining cultic order. Babylonian revolts of independence during the times the city was ruled by foreign empires probably had little to do with the rulers of these empires not being Babylonians and more to do with the rulers rarely visiting Babylon and failing to partake in the city's rituals and traditions.
Babylon's last native king was Nabonidus, who reigned from 556 to 539 BC. Nabonidus's rule was ended through Babylon being conquered by Cyrus the Great of the Achaemenid Empire. Though early Achaemenid kings continued to place importance on Babylon and continued using the title 'king of Babylon', later Achaemenid rulers being ascribed the title is probably only something done by the Babylonians themselves, with the kings themselves having abandoned it. Babylonian scribes continued to recognise rulers of the empires that controlled Babylonia as their kings until the time of the Parthian Empire, when Babylon was gradually abandoned. Though Babylon never regained independence after the Achaemenid conquest, there were several attempts by the Babylonians to drive out their foreign rulers and re-establish their kingdom, possibly as late as 336/335 BC under the rebel Nidin-Bel.
Throughout the city's long history, various titles were used to designate the ruler of Babylon and its kingdom, the most common titles being 'viceroy of Babylon', 'king of Karduniash' and 'king of Sumer and Akkad'.[2] Use of one of the titles did not mean that the others could not be used simultaneously. For instance, the Neo-Assyrian king Tiglath-Pileser III (r. 729–727 BC in Babylon), used all three of the aforementioned titles.[3]
The Babylonian kings derived their right to rule from divine appointment by Babylon's patron deity Marduk and through consecration by the city's priests.[16] Marduk's main cult image (often conflated with the god himself), the statue of Marduk, was prominently used in the coronation rituals for the kings, who received their crowns "out of the hands" of Marduk during the New Year's festival, symbolizing them being bestowed with kingship by the deity.[17] The king's rule and his role as Marduk's vassal on Earth were reaffirmed annually at this time of year, when the king entered the Esagila, Babylon's main cult temple, alone on the fifth day of the New Year's Festival each year and met with the high priest. The high priest removed the regalia from the king, slapped him across the face and made him kneel before Marduk's statue. The king would then tell the statue that he had not oppressed his people and that he had maintained order throughout the year, whereafter the high priest would reply (on behalf of Marduk) that the king could continue to enjoy divine support for his rule, returning the royal regalia.[18] Through being a patron of Babylon's temples, the king extended his generosity towards the Mesopotamian gods, who in turn empowered his rule and lent him their authority.[16]
Babylonian kings were expected to establish peace and security, uphold justice, honor civil rights, refrain from unlawful taxation, respect religious traditions and maintain cultic order. None of the king's responsibilities and duties required him to be ethnically or even culturally Babylonian. Any foreigner sufficiently familiar with the royal customs of Babylonia could adopt the title, though they might then require the assistance of the native priesthood and the native scribes. Ethnicity and culture does not appear to have been important in the Babylonian perception of kingship: many foreign kings enjoyed support from the Babylonians and several native kings were despised.[19] That the rule of some foreign kings was not supported by the Babylonians probably has little to do with their ethnic or cultural background, but rather that they were perceived as not properly executing the traditional duties of the Babylonian king.[20]
As with other monarchies, the kings of Babylon are grouped into a series of royal dynasties, a practice started by the ancient Babylonians themselves in their king lists.[21][22] The generally accepted Babylonian dynasties should not be understood as familial groupings in the same vein as the term is commonly used by historians for ruling families in later kingdoms and empires. Though Babylon's first dynasty did form a dynastic grouping where all monarchs were related, the dynasties of the first millennium BC, notably the Dynasty of E, did not constitute a series of coherent familial relationships at all. In a Babylonian sense, the term dynasty, rendered as palû or palê, related to a sequence of monarchs from the same ethnic or tribal group (i.e. the Kassite dynasty), the same region (i.e. the dynasties of the Sealand) or the same city (i.e. the dynasties of Babylon and Isin).[22] In some cases, kings known to be genealogically related, such as Eriba-Marduk (r. c. 769–760 BC) and his grandson Marduk-apla-iddina II (r. 722–710 BC and 703 BC), were separated into different dynasties, the former designated as belonging to the Dynasty of E and the latter as belonging to the (Third) Sealand dynasty.[23]
Among all the different types of documents uncovered through excavations in Mesopotamia, the most important for reconstructions of chronology and political history are king-lists and chronicles, grouped together under the term 'chronographic texts'. Mesopotamian king lists are of special importance when reconstructing the sequences of monarchs, as they are collections of royal names and regnal dates, also often with additional information such as the relations between the kings, arranged in a table format. In terms of Babylonian rulers, the main document is the Babylonian King List (BKL), a group of three independent documents: Babylonian King List A, B, and C. In addition to the main Babylonian King Lists, there are also additional king-lists that record rulers of Babylon.[24]
As years in Babylon were named after the current king, and the current year of their reign, date formulas in economic, astronomical and literary cuneiform texts written in Babylonia also provide highly important and useful chronological data.[34][35]
In addition to the king lists described above, cuneiform inscriptions and tablets confidently establish that the Babylonians continued to recognise the foreign rulers of Babylonia as their legitimate monarchs after the fall of the Neo-Babylonian Empire and throughout the rule of the Achaemenid (539–331 BC), Argead (331–310 BC), and Seleucid (305–141 BC) empires, as well as well into the rule of the Parthian Empire (141 BC – AD 224).[36]
Early Achaemenid kings greatly respected Babylonian culture and history, and regarded Babylonia as a separate entity or kingdom united with their own kingdom in something akin to a personal union.[17] Despite this, the Babylonians would grow to resent Achaemenid rule, just as they had resented Assyrian rule during the time their country was under the rule of the Neo-Assyrian Empire (722–626 BC).[17] Babylonian resentment of the Achaemenids likely had little to do with the Achaemenids being foreigners, but rather that the Achaemenid kings were perceived to not be capable of executing the duties of the Babylonian king properly, in line with established Babylonian tradition. This perception then led to frequent Babylonian revolts, an issue experienced by both the Assyrians and the Achaemenids. Since the capitals of the Assyrian and Achaemenid empires were elsewhere, these foreign kings did not regularly partake in the city's rituals (meaning that they could not be celebrated in the same way that they traditionally were) and they rarely performed their traditional duties to the Babylonian cults through constructing temples and presenting cultic gifts to the city's gods. This failure might have been interpreted as the kings thus not having the necessary divine endorsement to be considered true kings of Babylon.[37]
The standard regnal title used by the early Achaemenid kings, not only in Babylon but throughout their empire, was 'king of Babylon and king of the lands'. The Babylonian title was gradually abandoned by the Achaemenid king Xerxes I (r. 486–465 BC), after he had to put down a major Babylonian uprising. Xerxes also divided the previously large Babylonian satrapy into smaller sub-units and, according to some sources, damaged the city itself in an act of retribution.[17] The last Achaemenid king whose own royal inscriptions officially used the title 'king of Babylon' was Xerxes I's son and successor Artaxerxes I (r. 465–424 BC).[38] After Artaxerxes I's rule there are few examples of monarchs themselves using the title, though the Babylonians continued to ascribe it to their rulers. The only known official explicit use of 'king of Babylon' by a king during the Seleucid period can be found in the Antiochus cylinder, a clay cylinder containing a text wherein Antiochus I Soter (r. 281–261 BC) calls himself, and his father Seleucus I Nicator (r. 305–281 BC), by the title 'king of Babylon', alongside various other ancient Mesopotamian titles and honorifics.[39] The Seleucid kings continued to respect Babylonian traditions and culture, with several Seleucid kings recorded as having "given gifts to Marduk" in Babylon and the New Year's Festival still being recorded as a contemporary event.[40][41][42] One of the last times the festival is known to have been celebrated was in 188 BC, under the Seleucid king Antiochus III (r. 222–187 BC), who prominently partook in the rituals.[42] From the Hellenistic period (i. e. the rule of the Greek Argeads and Seleucids) onwards, Greek culture became established in Babylonia, but per Oelsner (2014), the Hellenistic culture "did not deeply penetrate the ancient Babylonian culture, that persisted to exist in certain domains and areas until the 2nd c. AD".[43]
Under the Parthian Empire, Babylon was gradually abandoned as a major urban centre and the old Babylonian culture diminished.[44] The nearby and newer imperial capitals cities of Seleucia and later Ctesiphon overshadowed the ancient city and became the seats of power in the region.[45] Babylon was still important in the first century or so of Parthian rule,[44] and cuneiform tablets continued to recognise the rule of the Parthian kings.[46] The standard title formula applied to the Parthian kings in Babylonian documents was "ar-ša-kâ LUGAL.LUGAL.MEŠ" (Aršakâ šar šarrāni, "Arsaces, king of kings").[47] Several tablets from the Parthian period also in their date formulae mention the queen of the incumbent Parthian king, alongside the king, the first time women were officially recognised as monarchs of Babylon.[48] The few documents that survive from Babylon in the Parthian period indicate a growing sense of alarm and alienation in Babylon as the Parthian kings were mostly absent from the city and the Babylonians noticed their culture slowly slipping away.[49]
When exactly Babylon was abandoned is unclear. The Roman author Pliny the Elder wrote in AD 50 that proximity to Seleucia had turned Babylon into a "barren waste" and during their campaigns in the east, Roman emperors Trajan (in AD 115) and Septimius Severus (in AD 199) supposedly found the city destroyed and deserted. Archaeological evidence and the writings of Abba Arikha (c. AD 219) indicate that at least the temples of Babylon may still have been active in the early 3rd century.[45] If any remnants of the old Babylonian culture still existed at that point, they would have been decisively wiped out as the result of religious reforms in the early Sasanian Empire c. AD 230.[50]
Due to a shortage of sources, and the timing of Babylon's abandonment being unknown, the last ruler recognised by the Babylonians as king is not known. The latest known cuneiform tablet is W22340a, found at Uruk and dated to AD 79/80. The tablet preserves the word LUGAL (king), indicating that the Babylonians by this point still recognised a king.[51] At this time, Babylonia was ruled by the Parthian rival king (i. e. usurper) Artabanus III.[52] Modern historians are divided on where the line of monarchs ends. Spar and Lambert (2005) did not include any rulers beyond the first century AD in their list of kings recognised by the Babylonians,[36] but Beaulieu (2018) considered 'Dynasty XIV of Babylon' (his designation for the Parthians as rulers of the city) to have lasted until the end of Parthian rule of Babylonia in the early 3rd century AD.[53]
The list below includes the names of all the kings in Akkadian, as well as how the Akkadian names were rendered in cuneiform signs. Up until the reign of Burnaburiash II (r. c. 1359–1333 BC) of the Kassite dynasty (Dynasty III), Sumerian was the dominant language for use in inscriptions and official documents, with Akkadian eclipsing it under the reign of Kurigalzu II (r. c. 1332–1308 BC), and thereafter replacing Sumerian in inscriptions and documents.[54] For consistency purposes, and because several kings and their names are known only from king lists,[55] which were written in Akkadian centuries after Burnaburiash II's reign, this list solely uses Akkadian, rather than Sumerian, for the royal names, though this is anachronistic for rulers before Burnaburiash II.
It is not uncommon for there to be several different spellings of the same name in Akkadian, even when referring to the same individual.[56][57] To examplify this, the table below presents two ways the name of Nebuchadnezzar II (r. 605–562 BC) was spelt in Akkadian (Nabû-kudurri-uṣur). The list of kings below uses more concise spellings when possible, primarily based on the renditions of names in date formulae and king lists.
Even if the same spelling is used, there were also several different scripts of cuneiform signs: a name, even if spelt the same, looks considerably different in Old Babylonian signs compared to Neo-Babylonian signs or Neo-Assyrian signs.[60] The table below presents different variants, depending on the signs used, of the name Antiochus in Akkadian (Antiʾukusu). The list of kings below uses Neo-Babylonian and Neo-Assyrian signs, given that those scripts are the signs primarily used in the king lists.
Date formulae (Neo-Babylonian signs) | Antiochus cylinder[lower-alpha 2] | Antiochus cylinder (Neo-Babylonian signs) | Antiochus cylinder (Neo-Assyrian signs) |
---|---|---|---|
An - ti - ʾ - i - ku - su[62] |
An - ti - ʾ - ku - us[63] |
An - ti - ʾ - ku - us[64] |
An - ti - ʾ - ku - us[64] |
Per BKLb, the native name for this dynasty was simply palû Babili ('dynasty of Babylon').[65] To differentiate it from the other dynasties that later ruled Babylon, modern historians often refer to this dynasty as the 'First Dynasty of Babylon'.[65] Some historians refer to this dynasty as the 'Amorite dynasty'[66] on account of the kings being of Amorite descent.[67] While the king list gives a regnal length of 31 years for the final king, Samsu-Ditana, the destruction layer at Babylon is dated to his 26th year and no later sources have been found.[68]
King | Akkadian | Reigned from | Reigned until | Succession | Ref |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Sumu-abum[lower-alpha 3] | Šumu-abum |
c. 1894 BC | c. 1881 BC | First king of Babylon in BKLa and BKLb | [70] |
Sumu-la-El | Šumu-la-El |
c. 1880 BC | c. 1845 BC | Unclear succession | [70] |
Sabium | Sabūm |
c. 1844 BC | c. 1831 BC | Son of Sumu-la-El | [70] |
Apil-Sin | Apil-Sîn |
c. 1830 BC | c. 1813 BC | Son of Sabium | [70] |
Sin-Muballit | Sîn-Muballit |
c. 1812 BC | c. 1793 BC | Son of Apil-Sin | [70] |
Hammurabi | Ḫammu-rāpi |
c. 1792 BC | c. 1750 BC | Son of Sin-Muballit | [70] |
Samsu-iluna | Šamšu-iluna |
c. 1749 BC | c. 1712 BC | Son of Hammurabi | [70] |
Abi-Eshuh | Abī-Ešuḫ |
c. 1711 BC | c. 1684 BC | Son of Samsu-iluna | [70] |
Ammi-Ditana | Ammi-ditāna |
c. 1683 BC | c. 1647 BC | Son of Abi-Eshuh | [70] |
Ammi-Saduqa | Ammi-Saduqa |
c. 1646 BC | c. 1626 BC | Son of Ammi-Ditana | [70] |
Samsu-Ditana | Šamšu-ditāna |
c. 1625 BC | c. 1595 BC | Son of Ammi-Saduqa | [70] |
Both BKLa and BKLb refer to this dynasty as palû Urukug ('dynasty of Urukug'). Presumably, the city of Urukug was the dynasty's point of origin. Some literary sources refer to some of the kings of this dynasty as 'kings of the Sealand', and thus modern historians refer to it as a dynasty of the Sealand. The designation as the first Sealand dynasty differentiates it from Dynasty V, which the Babylonians actually referred to as a 'dynasty of the Sealand'.[65] This dynasty overlaps with Dynasty I and Dynasty III, with these kings actually ruling the region south of Babylon (the Sealand) rather than Babylon itself.[22] For instance, the king Gulkishar of this dynasty was actually a contemporary of Dynasty I's last king, Samsu-Ditana.[71] It is possible that the dynasty was included in Babylon's dynastic history by later scribes either because it controlled Babylon for a time, because it controlled or strongly influenced parts of Babylonia or because it was the most stable power of its time in Babylonia.[72] The dates listed below are highly uncertain, and follow the timespan listed for the dynasty in Beaulieu (2018), c. 1725–1475 BC, with the individual dates based the lengths of the reigns of the kings, also as given by Beaulieu (2018).[73]
King | Akkadian | Reigned from | Reigned until | Succession | Ref |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Ilum-ma-ili | Ilum-ma-ilī |
c. 1725 BC | ?? | Unclear succession | [74] |
Itti-ili-nibi | Itti-ili-nībī |
?? | Unclear succession | [74] | |
...[lower-alpha 4] | — [lower-alpha 5] |
?? | Unclear succession | [75] | |
Damqi-ilishu | Damqi-ilišu |
[26 years(?)] | Unclear succession | [74] | |
Ishkibal | Iškibal |
[15 years] | Unclear succession | [74] | |
Shushushi | Šušši |
[24 years] | Brother of Ishkibal | [74] | |
Gulkishar | Gulkišar |
[55 years] | Unclear succession | [74] | |
mDIŠ-U-EN[lower-alpha 6] | [Uncertain reading] |
?? | Unclear succession | [74] | |
Peshgaldaramesh | Pešgaldarameš |
c. 1599 BC | c. 1549 BC | Son of Gulkishar | [74] |
Ayadaragalama | Ayadaragalama |
c. 1548 BC | c. 1520 BC | Son of Peshgaldaramesh | [74] |
Akurduana | Akurduana |
c. 1519 BC | c. 1493 BC | Unclear succession | [74] |
Melamkurkurra | Melamkurkurra |
c. 1492 BC | c. 1485 BC | Unclear succession | [74] |
Ea-gamil | Ea-gamil |
c. 1484 BC | c. 1475 BC | Unclear succession | [74] |
The entry for this dynasty's name in BKLa is lost, but other Babylonian sources refer to it as palû Kaššī ('dynasty of the Kassites').[76] The reconstruction of the sequence and names of the early rulers of this dynasty, the kings before Karaindash, is difficult and controversial. The king lists are damaged at this point and the preserved portions seem to contradict each other: for instance, BKLa has a king in-between Kashtiliash I and Abi-Rattash, omitted in the Synchronistic King List, whereas the Synchronistic King List includes Kashtiliash II, omitted in BKLa, between Abi-Rattash and Urzigurumash. It also seems probable that the earliest kings ascribed to this dynasty in king lists did not actually rule Babylon, but were added as they were ancestors of the later rulers.[77] Babylonia was not fully consolidated and reunified until the reign of Ulamburiash, who defeated Ea-gamil, the last king of the first Sealand dynasty.[71]
King | Akkadian | Reigned from | Reigned until | Succession | Ref |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Gandash | Gandaš |
c. 1729 BC | c. 1704 BC | Unclear succession | [78] |
Agum I | Agum |
c. 1703 BC | c. 1682 BC | Son of Gandash | [78] |
Kashtiliash I | Kaštiliašu |
c. 1681 BC | c. 1660 BC | Son of Agum I | [78] |
...[lower-alpha 7] | — [lower-alpha 8] |
c. 1659 BC | ?? | Unclear succession | [78] |
Abi-Rattash | Abi-Rattaš |
?? | Son of Kashtiliash I | [80] | |
Kashtiliash II | Kaštiliašu |
?? | Unclear succession | [80] | |
Urzigurumash | Ur-zigurumaš |
?? | Descendant of Abi-Rattash (?)[lower-alpha 9] | [80] | |
Agum II[lower-alpha 10] | Agum-Kakrime |
?? | Son of Urzigurumash | [80] | |
Harba-Shipak | Ḫarba-Šipak |
?? | Unclear succession | [80] | |
Shipta'ulzi | Šipta’ulzi |
?? | Unclear succession | [80] | |
...[lower-alpha 11] | — [lower-alpha 12] |
?? | Unclear succession | [82] | |
Burnaburiash I | Burna-Buriaš |
c. 1530 BC | c. 1500 BC | Unclear succession, earliest Kassite ruler confidently attested as ruling Babylon itself | [83] |
Ulamburiash | Ulam-Buriaš |
[c. 1475 BC] | Son of Burnaburiash I (?), reunified Babylonia through defeating Ea-gamil, the last king of the first Sealand dynasty | [84] | |
Kashtiliash III | Kaštiliašu |
?? | Son of Burnaburiash I (?) | [80] | |
Agum III | Agum |
?? | Son of Kashtiliash III | [80] | |
Kadashman-Sah[lower-alpha 13] | Kadašman-Saḫ |
?? | Unclear succession, co-ruler with Agum III? | [86] | |
Karaindash | Karaindaš |
[c. 1415 BC] | Unclear succession | [80] | |
Kadashman-Harbe I | Kadašman-Ḫarbe |
[c. 1400 BC] | Son of Karaindash (?) | [87] | |
Kurigalzu I | Kuri-Galzu |
?? | Son of Kadashman-harbe I | [80] | |
Kadashman-Enlil I | Kadašman-Enlil |
c. 1374 BC | c. 1360 BC | Son of Kurigalzu I (?)[lower-alpha 14] | [80] |
Burnaburiash II | Burna-Buriaš |
c. 1359 BC | c. 1333 BC | Son of Kadashman-Enlil I (?) | [80] |
Kara-hardash | Kara-ḫardaš |
c. 1333 BC | c. 1333 BC | Son of Burnaburiash II (?) | [80] |
Nazi-Bugash | Nazi-Bugaš |
c. 1333 BC | c. 1333 BC | Usurper, unrelated to other kings | [80] |
Kurigalzu II | Kuri-Galzu |
c. 1332 BC | c. 1308 BC | Son of Burnaburiash II | [80] |
Nazi-Maruttash | Nazi-Maruttaš |
c. 1307 BC | c. 1282 BC | Son of Kurigalzu II | [80] |
Kadashman-Turgu | Kadašman-Turgu |
c. 1281 BC | c. 1264 BC | Son of Nazi-Maruttash | [80] |
Kadashman-Enlil II | Kadašman-Enlil |
c. 1263 BC | c. 1255 BC | Son of Kadashman-Turgu | [80] |
Kudur-Enlil | Kudur-Enlil |
c. 1254 BC | c. 1246 BC | Son of Kadashman-Enlil II | [80] |
Shagarakti-Shuriash | Šagarakti-Šuriaš |
c. 1245 BC | c. 1233 BC | Son of Kudur-Enlil | [80] |
Kashtiliash IV | Kaštiliašu |
c. 1232 BC | c. 1225 BC | Son of Shagarakti-Shuriash | [80] |
Enlil-nadin-shumi[lower-alpha 15] | Enlil-nādin-šumi |
c. 1224 BC | c. 1224 BC | Unclear succession | [80] |
Kadashman-Harbe II[lower-alpha 15] | Kadašman-Ḫarbe |
c. 1223 BC | c. 1223 BC | Unclear succession | [80] |
Adad-shuma-iddina[lower-alpha 15] | Adad-šuma-iddina |
c. 1222 BC | c. 1217 BC | Unclear succession | [80] |
Adad-shuma-usur | Adad-šuma-uṣur |
c. 1216 BC | c. 1187 BC | Son of Kashtiliash IV (?) | [80] |
Meli-Shipak | Meli-Šipak |
c. 1186 BC | c. 1172 BC | Son of Adad-shuma-usur | [80] |
Marduk-apla-iddina I | Marduk-apla-iddina |
c. 1171 BC | c. 1159 BC | Son of Meli-Shipak | [80] |
Zababa-shuma-iddin | Zababa-šuma-iddina |
c. 1158 BC | c. 1158 BC | Unclear succession | [80] |
Enlil-nadin-ahi | Enlil-nādin-aḫe |
c. 1157 BC | c. 1155 BC | Unclear succession | [80] |
Per BKLa, the native name of this dynasty was palû Išin ('dynasty of Isin'). Presumably, the city of Isin was the dynasty's point of origin. Modern historians refer to this dynasty as the second dynasty of Isin to differentiate it from the ancient Sumerian dynasty of Isin.[65] Previous scholarship assumed that the first king of this dynasty, Marduk-kabit-ahheshu, ruled for the first years of his reign concurrently with the last Kassite king, but recent research suggests that this was not the case. This list follows the revised chronology of the kings of this dynasty, per Beaulieu (2018), which also means revising the dates of subsequent dynasties.[90]
King | Akkadian | Reigned from | Reigned until | Succession | Ref |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Marduk-kabit-ahheshu | Marduk-kabit-aḫḫēšu |
c. 1153 BC | c. 1136 BC | Unclear succession | [91] |
Itti-Marduk-balatu | Itti-Marduk-balāṭu |
c. 1135 BC | c. 1128 BC | Son of Marduk-kabit-ahheshu | [91] |
Ninurta-nadin-shumi | Ninurta-nādin-šumi |
c. 1127 BC | c. 1122 BC | Relative of Itti-Marduk-balatu (?)[lower-alpha 16] | [91] |
Nebuchadnezzar I | Nabû-kudurri-uṣur |
c. 1121 BC | c. 1100 BC | Son of Ninurta-nadin-shumi | [91] |
Enlil-nadin-apli | Enlil-nādin-apli |
c. 1099 BC | c. 1096 BC | Son of Nebuchadnezzar I | [91] |
Marduk-nadin-ahhe | Marduk-nādin-aḫḫē |
c. 1095 BC | c. 1078 BC | Son of Ninurta-nadin-shumi, usurped the throne from Enlil-nadin-apli | [91] |
Marduk-shapik-zeri | Marduk-šāpik-zēri |
c. 1077 BC | c. 1065 BC | Son of Marduk-nadin-ahhe (?)[lower-alpha 17] | [91] |
Adad-apla-iddina | Adad-apla-iddina |
c. 1064 BC | c. 1043 BC | Usurper, unrelated to previous kings | [94] |
Marduk-ahhe-eriba | Marduk-aḫḫē-erība |
c. 1042 BC | c. 1042 BC | Unclear succession | [91] |
Marduk-zer-X | Marduk-zēra-[—][lower-alpha 18] |
c. 1041 BC | c. 1030 BC | Unclear succession | [91] |
Nabu-shum-libur | Nabû-šumu-libūr |
c. 1029 BC | c. 1022 BC | Unclear succession | [91] |
Per BKLa, the native name of this dynasty was palû tamti ('dynasty of the Sealand'). Modern historians call it the second Sealand dynasty in order to distinguish it from Dynasty II.[65]
King | Akkadian | Reigned from | Reigned until | Succession | Ref |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Simbar-shipak | Simbar-Šipak |
c. 1021 BC | c. 1004 BC | Probably of Kassite descent, unclear succession | [96] |
Ea-mukin-zeri | Ea-mukin-zēri |
c. 1004 BC | c. 1004 BC | Probably of Kassite descent (Bit-Hashmar clan), usurped the throne from Simbar-Shipak | [96] |
Kashshu-nadin-ahi | Kaššu-nādin-aḫi |
c. 1003 BC | c. 1001 BC | Probably of Kassite descent, son of Simbar-shipak (?) | [96] |
BKLa refers to this dynasty as palû Bazu ('dynasty of Baz') and the Dynastic Chronicle calls it palû Bīt-Bazi ('dynasty of Bit-Bazi'). The Bit-Bazi were a clan attested already in the Kassite period. It is likely that the dynasty derives its name either from the city of Baz, or from descent from Bazi, the legendary founder of that city.[97]
King | Akkadian | Reigned from | Reigned until | Succession | Ref |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Eulmash-shakin-shumi | Eulmaš-šākin-šumi |
c. 1000 BC | c. 984 BC | Possibly of Kassite descent (Bit-Bazi clan), unclear succession | [96] |
Ninurta-kudurri-usur I | Ninurta-kudurrῑ-uṣur |
c. 983 BC | c. 981 BC | Possibly of Kassite descent (Bit-Bazi clan), unclear succession | [96] |
Shirikti-shuqamuna | Širikti-šuqamuna |
c. 981 BC | c. 981 BC | Possibly of Kassite descent (Bit-Bazi clan), brother of Ninurta-kudurri-usur I | [96] |
BKLa dynastically separates Mar-biti-apla-usur from other kings with horizontal lines, marking him as belonging to a dynasty of his own. The Dynastic Chronicle also groups him by himself, and refers to his dynasty (containing only him) as the palû Elamtu ('dynasty of Elam').[98]
King | Akkadian | Reigned from | Reigned until | Succession | Ref |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Mar-biti-apla-usur | Mār-bīti-apla-uṣur |
c. 980 BC | c. 975 BC | Elamite, or more likely of Elamite ancestry, unclear succession | [96] |
Per BKLa, the native name of this dynasty was palû E ('dynasty of E'). The meaning of 'E' is not clear, but it is likely a reference to the city of Babylon, meaning that the name should be interpreted as 'dynasty of Babylon'. The time of the dynasty of E was a time of great instability and the unrelated kings grouped together under this dynasty even belonged to completely different ethnic groups. Another Babylonian historical work, the Dynastic Chronicle (though it is preserved only fragmentarily), breaks this dynasty up into a succession of brief, smaller, dynasties.[99]
King | Akkadian | Reigned from | Reigned until | Succession | Ref |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Nabu-mukin-apli | Nabû-mukin-apli |
c. 974 BC | c. 939 BC | Babylonian, unclear succession | [100] |
Ninurta-kudurri-usur II | Ninurta-kudurrῑ-uṣur |
c. 939 BC | c. 939 BC | Babylonian, son of Nabu-mukin-apli | [100] |
Mar-biti-ahhe-iddina | Mār-bῑti-aḫḫē-idinna |
c. 938 BC | ?? | Babylonian, son of Nabu-mukin-apli | [100] |
Shamash-mudammiq | Šamaš-mudammiq |
?? | c. 901 BC[lower-alpha 19] | Babylonian, unclear succession | [100] |
Nabu-shuma-ukin I | Nabû-šuma-ukin |
c. 900 BC[lower-alpha 19] | c. 887 BC[lower-alpha 20] | Babylonian, unclear succession | [100] |
Nabu-apla-iddina | Nabû-apla-iddina |
c. 886 BC[lower-alpha 20] | c. 853 BC[lower-alpha 20] | Babylonian, son of Nabu-shuma-ukin I | [100] |
Marduk-zakir-shumi I | Marduk-zâkir-šumi |
c. 852 BC[lower-alpha 20][lower-alpha 21] | c. 825 BC[lower-alpha 21] | Babylonian, son of Nabu-apla-iddina | [100] |
Marduk-balassu-iqbi | Marduk-balāssu-iqbi |
c. 824 BC[lower-alpha 21] | 813 BC[lower-alpha 22] | Babylonian, son of Marduk-zakir-shumi I | [100] |
Baba-aha-iddina | Bāba-aḫa-iddina |
813 BC[lower-alpha 22] | 812 BC[lower-alpha 22] | Babylonian, unclear succession | [100] |
Babylonian interregnum (at least four years)[lower-alpha 23][lower-alpha 24] | |||||
Ninurta-apla-X | Ninurta-apla-[—][lower-alpha 25] |
?? | Babylonian, unclear succession | [100] | |
Marduk-bel-zeri | Marduk-bēl-zēri |
?? | Babylonian, unclear succession | [100] | |
Marduk-apla-usur | Marduk-apla-uṣur |
?? | c. 769 BC[lower-alpha 26] | Chaldean chief of an uncertain tribe, unclear succession | [100] |
Eriba-Marduk | Erība-Marduk |
c. 769 BC[lower-alpha 26] | c. 760 BC[lower-alpha 26] | Chaldean chief of the Bit-Yakin tribe, unclear succession | [100] |
Nabu-shuma-ishkun | Nabû-šuma-iškun |
c. 760 BC[lower-alpha 26] | 748 BC | Chaldean chief of the Bit-Dakkuri tribe, unclear succession | [100] |
Nabonassar | Nabû-nāṣir |
748 BC | 734 BC | Babylonian, unclear succession | [100] |
Nabu-nadin-zeri | Nabû-nādin-zēri |
734 BC | 732 BC | Babylonian, son of Nabonassar | [100] |
Nabu-shuma-ukin II | Nabû-šuma-ukin |
732 BC | 732 BC | Babylonian, unclear succession | [100] |
'Dynasty IX' is used to, broadly speaking, refer to the rulers of Babylonia during the time it was ruled by the Neo-Assyrian Empire, including Assyrian kings of both the Adaside dynasty and the subsequent Sargonid dynasty, as well as various non-dynastic vassal and rebel kings. They are often grouped together as a dynasty by modern scholars as BKLa does not use lines to separate the rulers, used elsewhere in the list to separate dynasties.[22] BKLa also assigns individual dynastic labels to some of the kings, though thus not in the same fashion as is done for the more concrete earlier dynasties.[22] The palê designation associated with each king (they are recorded in the list up until Mushezib-Marduk) is included in the table below and follows Fales (2014).[108]
King | Akkadian | Reigned from | Reigned until | palê | Succession | Ref |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Nabu-mukin-zeri | Nabû-mukin-zēri |
732 BC | 729 BC | palê Šapî 'Dynasty of Shapi' |
Chaldean chief of the Bit-Amukkani tribe, usurped the throne | [109] |
Tiglath-Pileser III | Tukultī-apil-Ešarra |
729 BC | 727 BC | palê Baltil 'Dynasty of [Assur]' |
King of the Neo-Assyrian Empire — conquered Babylon | [109] |
Shalmaneser V | Salmānu-ašarēd |
727 BC | 722 BC | King of the Neo-Assyrian Empire — son of Tiglath-Pileser III | [109] | |
Marduk-apla-iddina II (First reign) |
Marduk-apla-iddina |
722 BC | 710 BC | palê Tamti 'Dynasty of the Sealand' |
Chaldean chief of the Bit-Yakin tribe, proclaimed king upon Shalmaneser V's death | [109] |
Sargon II | Šarru-kīn |
710 BC | 705 BC | palê Ḫabigal 'Dynasty of [Hanigalbat]' |
King of the Neo-Assyrian Empire — son of Tiglath-Pileser III (?) | [109] |
Sennacherib (First reign) |
Sîn-ahhe-erība |
705 BC | 703 BC | King of the Neo-Assyrian Empire — son of Sargon II | [109] | |
Marduk-zakir-shumi II | Marduk-zâkir-šumi |
703 BC | 703 BC | A Arad-Ea 'Son [descendant] of Arad-Ea' |
Babylonian rebel of the Arad-Ea family, rebel king | [109] |
Marduk-apla-iddina II (Second reign) |
Marduk-apla-iddina |
703 BC | 703 BC | ERÍN Ḫabi 'Soldier of [Hanigalbat?]' |
Chaldean chief of the Bit-Yakin tribe, retook the throne | [109] |
Bel-ibni | Bel-ibni |
703 BC | 700 BC | palê E 'Dynasty of E' |
Babylonian vassal king of the Rab-bānî family, appointed by Sennacherib | [109] |
Aššur-nādin-šumi | Aššur-nādin-šumi |
700 BC | 694 BC | palê Ḫabigal 'Dynasty of [Hanigalbat]' |
Son of Sennacherib, appointed as vassal king by his father | [109] |
Nergal-ushezib | Nergal-ušezib |
694 BC | 693 BC | palê E 'Dynasty of E' |
Babylonian rebel of the Gaḫal kin family, rebel king | [109] |
Mushezib-Marduk | Mušezib-Marduk |
693 BC | 689 BC | Chaldean chief of the Bit-Dakkuri tribe, rebel king | [109] | |
Sennacherib[lower-alpha 27] (Second reign) |
Sîn-ahhe-erība |
689 BC | 20 October 681 BC |
King of the Neo-Assyrian Empire — retook Babylon | [113] | |
Esarhaddon | Aššur-aḫa-iddina |
December 681 BC |
1 November 669 BC |
King of the Neo-Assyrian Empire — son of Sennacherib | [114] | |
Ashurbanipal[lower-alpha 28] (First reign) |
Aššur-bāni-apli |
1 November 669 BC |
March 668 BC |
King of the Neo-Assyrian Empire — son of Esarhaddon | [110] | |
Šamaš-šuma-ukin | Šamaš-šuma-ukin |
March 668 BC |
648 BC | Son of Esarhaddon, designated by his father as heir to Babylon, invested as vassal king by Ashurbanipal | [110] | |
Ashurbanipal[lower-alpha 29] (Second reign) |
Aššur-bāni-apli |
648 BC | 646 BC | King of the Neo-Assyrian Empire — retook Babylon after rebellion by Šamaš-šuma-ukin | [116] | |
Kandalanu | Kandalānu |
647 BC | 627 BC | Appointed as vassal king by Ashurbanipal | [110] | |
Sin-shumu-lishir[lower-alpha 30] | Sîn-šumu-līšir |
626 BC | 626 BC | Usurper in the Neo-Assyrian Empire — recognised in Babylonia | [110] | |
Sinsharishkun[lower-alpha 30] | Sîn-šar-iškun |
626 BC | 626 BC | King of the Neo-Assyrian Empire — son of Ashurbanipal | [110] |
The native name for this dynasty does not appear in any sources, as the kings of Dynasty X are only listed in king lists made during the Hellenistic period, when the concept of dynasties ceased being used by Babylonians chronographers to describe Babylonian history. Modern historians typically refer to the dynasty as the 'Neo-Babylonian dynasty', as these kings ruled the Neo-Babylonian Empire, or the 'Chaldean dynasty', after the presumed ethnic origin of the royal line.[22] The Dynastic Chronicle, a later document, refers to Nabonidus as the founder and only king of the 'dynasty of Harran' (palê Ḫarran), and may also indicate a dynastic change with Neriglissar's accession, but much of the text is fragmentary.[118][119]
King | Akkadian | Reigned from | Reigned until | Succession | Ref |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Nabopolassar | Nabû-apla-uṣur |
22/23 November 626 BC |
July 605 BC |
Babylonian rebel, defeated Sinsharishkun | [120] |
Nebuchadnezzar II | Nabû-kudurri-uṣur |
August 605 BC |
7 October 562 BC |
Son of Nabopolassar | [120] |
Amel-Marduk | Amēl-Marduk |
7 October 562 BC |
August 560 BC |
Son of Nebuchadnezzar II | [120] |
Neriglissar | Nergal-šar-uṣur |
August 560 BC |
April 556 BC |
Son-in-law of Nebuchadnezzar II, usurped the throne | [120] |
Labashi-Marduk | Lâbâši-Marduk |
April 556 BC |
June 556 BC |
Son of Neriglissar | [120] |
Nabonidus | Nabû-naʾid |
25 May 556 BC |
13 October 539 BC |
Son-in-law of Nebuchadnezzar II (?), usurped the throne, co-rulers: Nitocris and Belshazzar | [121] |
The concept of dynasties ceased being used in king-lists made after the fall of the Neo-Babylonian Empire, meaning that the native Babylonian designations for the ruling dynasties of the foreign empires that succeeded the Chaldean kings are unknown.[22]
King | Akkadian | Reigned from | Reigned until | Succession | Ref |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Cyrus II the Great | Kuraš |
29 October 539 BC |
August 530 BC |
King of the Achaemenid Empire — conquered Babylon | [122] |
Cambyses II | Kambuzīa |
August 530 BC |
April 522 BC |
King of the Achaemenid Empire — son of Cyrus II | [122] |
Bardiya | Barzia |
April/May 522 BC |
29 September 522 BC |
King of the Achaemenid Empire — son of Cyrus II or an impostor | [122] |
Nebuchadnezzar III | Nabû-kudurri-uṣur |
3 October 522 BC |
December 522 BC |
Babylonian rebel of the Zazakku family, claimed to be a son of Nabonidus | [123] |
Darius I the Great (First reign) |
Dariamuš |
December 522 BC |
25 August 521 BC |
King of the Achaemenid Empire — distant relative of Cyrus II | [122] |
Nebuchadnezzar IV | Nabû-kudurri-uṣur |
25 August 521 BC |
27 November 521 BC |
Babylonian rebel of Armenian descent, claimed to be a son of Nabonidus | [124] |
Darius I the Great (Second reign) |
Dariamuš |
27 November 521 BC |
November 486 BC |
King of the Achaemenid Empire — retook Babylon | [122] |
Xerxes I the Great (First reign) |
Aḫšiaršu |
November 486 BC |
July 484 BC |
King of the Achaemenid Empire — son of Darius I | [122] |
Shamash-eriba | Šamaš-eriba |
July 484 BC |
October 484 BC |
Babylonian rebel | [125] |
Bel-shimanni | Bêl-šimânni |
July 484 BC |
August 484 BC |
Babylonian rebel | [125] |
Xerxes I the Great (Second reign) |
Aḫšiaršu |
October 484 BC |
465 BC | King of the Achaemenid Empire — retook Babylon | [122] |
Artaxerxes I | Artakšatsu |
465 BC | December 424 BC |
King of the Achaemenid Empire — son of Xerxes I | [122] |
Xerxes II | — [lower-alpha 31] |
424 BC | 424 BC | King of the Achaemenid Empire — son of Artaxerxes I | [122] |
Sogdianus | — [lower-alpha 31] |
424 BC | 423 BC | King of the Achaemenid Empire — illegitimate son of Artaxerxes I | [122] |
Darius II | Dariamuš |
February 423 BC |
c. April 404 BC |
King of the Achaemenid Empire — illegitimate son of Artaxerxes I | [122] |
Artaxerxes II | Artakšatsu |
c. April 404 BC |
359/358 BC | King of the Achaemenid Empire — son of Darius II | [122] |
Artaxerxes III | Artakšatsu |
359/358 BC | 338 BC | King of the Achaemenid Empire — son of Artaxerxes II | [122] |
Artaxerxes IV | Artakšatsu |
338 BC | 336 BC | King of the Achaemenid Empire — son of Artaxerxes III | [122] |
Nidin-Bel | Nidin-Bêl |
336 BC | 336/335 BC | Babylonian rebel (?), attested only in the Uruk King List, alternatively a scribal error | [126] |
Darius III | Dariamuš |
336/335 BC | October 331 BC |
King of the Achaemenid Empire — grandson of Artaxerxes II | [122] |
King | Akkadian | Reigned from | Reigned until | Succession | Ref |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Alexander III the Great | Aliksandar |
October 331 BC |
11 June 323 BC |
King of Macedon — conquered the Achaemenid Empire | [127] |
Philip III Arrhidaeus | Pilipsu |
11 June 323 BC |
317 BC[lower-alpha 32] | King of Macedon — brother of Alexander III | [129] |
Antigonus I Monophthalmus[lower-alpha 33] | Antigunusu |
317 BC | 309/308 BC | King of the Antigonid Empire — general (Diadochus) of Alexander III | [132] |
Alexander IV | Aliksandar |
316 BC | 310 BC[lower-alpha 34] | King of Macedon — son of Alexander III | [134] |
King | Akkadian | Reigned from | Reigned until | Succession | Ref |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Seleucus I Nicator | Siluku |
305 BC[lower-alpha 35] | September 281 BC |
King of the Seleucid Empire — general (Diadochus) of Alexander III | [134] |
Antiochus I Soter | Antiʾukusu |
294 BC[lower-alpha 36] | 2 June 261 BC |
King of the Seleucid Empire — son of Seleucus I | [136] |
Seleucus[lower-alpha 37] | Siluku |
281 BC | 266 BC | Joint-king of the Seleucid Empire — son of Antiochus I | [137] |
Antiochus II Theos | Antiʾukusu |
266 BC[lower-alpha 36] | July 246 BC |
King of the Seleucid Empire — son of Antiochus I | [136] |
Seleucus II Callinicus | Siluku |
July 246 BC |
225 BC | King of the Seleucid Empire — son of Antiochus II | [136] |
Seleucus III Ceraunus | Siluku |
225 BC | 223 BC | King of the Seleucid Empire — son of Seleucus II | [138] |
Antiochus III the Great | Antiʾukusu |
223 BC | 3 July 187 BC |
King of the Seleucid Empire — son of Seleucus II | [138] |
Antiochus[lower-alpha 38] | Antiʾukusu |
210 BC | 192 BC | Joint-king of the Seleucid Empire — son of Antiochus III | [140] |
Seleucus IV Philopator | Siluku |
189 BC[lower-alpha 36] | 3 September 175 BC |
King of the Seleucid Empire — son of Antiochus III | [141] |
Antiochus IV Epiphanes | Antiʾukusu |
3 September 175 BC |
164 BC | King of the Seleucid Empire — son of Antiochus III | [142] |
Antiochus[lower-alpha 38] | Antiʾukusu |
175 BC | 170 BC | Joint-king of the Seleucid Empire — son of Seleucus IV | [143] |
Antiochus V Eupator | Antiʾukusu |
164 BC | 162 BC | King of the Seleucid Empire — son of Antiochus IV | [144] |
Demetrius I Soter (First reign) |
Dimitri |
c. January 161 BC[lower-alpha 39] |
c. January 161 BC |
King of the Seleucid Empire — son of Seleucus IV | [146] |
Timarchus | — [lower-alpha 40] |
c. January 161 BC[lower-alpha 41] |
c. May 161 BC[lower-alpha 41] |
Rebel satrap (vassal governor) under the Seleucids — captured and briefly ruled Babylonia | [147] |
Demetrius I Soter (Second reign) |
Dimitri |
c. May 161 BC |
150 BC | King of the Seleucid Empire — reconquered Babylonia | [148] |
Alexander Balas | Aliksandar |
150 BC | 146 BC | King of the Seleucid Empire — supposedly son of Antiochus IV | [149] |
Demetrius II Nicator | Dimitri' |
146 BC | 141 BC | King of the Seleucid Empire — son of Demetrius I | [150] |
King | Akkadian | Reigned from | Reigned until | Succession | Ref |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Mithridates I | Aršakâ[lower-alpha 42] |
141 BC | 132 BC | King of the Parthian Empire — conquered Babylonia | [156] |
Phraates II (First reign) |
Aršakâ |
132 BC | July 130 BC |
King of the Parthian Empire — son of Mithridates I | [157] |
Rinnu[lower-alpha 43] | Ri-[—]-nu[lower-alpha 44] |
132 BC | July 130 BC |
Mother and regent for Phraates II, who was a minor at the time of his accession | [157] |
Antiochus VII Sidetes | Antiʾukusu |
July 130 BC |
November 129 BC |
King of the Seleucid Empire — son of Demetrius I, conquered Babylonia | [160] |
Phraates II (Second reign) |
Aršakâ |
November 129 BC |
128/127 BC[lower-alpha 45] | King of the Parthian Empire — reconquered Babylonia | [162] |
Ubulna[lower-alpha 46] | Ubulna |
November 129 BC |
128/127 BC | Unclear identity, associated with Phraates II – probably his queen | [162] |
Hyspaosines | Aspasinē |
128/127 BC[lower-alpha 45] | November 127 BC |
King of Characene — captured Babylon in the wake of Antiochus VII Sidetes's campaign | [163] |
Artabanus I | Aršakâ |
November 127 BC |
124 BC | King of the Parthian Empire — brother of Mithridates I, conquered Babylonia | [164] |
Mithridates II | Aršakâ |
124 BC | 91 BC | King of the Parthian Empire — son of Artabanus I | [165] |
Gotarzes I | Aršakâ |
91 BC | 80 BC | King of the Parthian Empire — son of Mithridates II | [166] |
Asi'abatar[lower-alpha 46] | Aši'abatum |
91 BC | 80 BC | Wife (queen) of Gotarzes I | [166] |
Orodes I | Aršakâ |
80 BC | 75 BC | King of the Parthian Empire — son of Mithridates II or Gotarzes I | [167] |
Ispubarza[lower-alpha 46] | Isbubarzâ | 80 BC | 75 BC | Sister-wife (queen) of Orodes I | [168] |
Sinatruces | Aršakâ |
75 BC | 69 BC | King of the Parthian Empire — son or brother of Mithridates I | [169] |
Phraates III | Aršakâ |
69 BC | 57 BC | King of the Parthian Empire — son of Sinatruces | [170] |
Piriustana[lower-alpha 46] | Piriustanâ | 69 BC | ?? | Wife (queen) of Phraates III | [171] |
Teleuniqe[lower-alpha 46] | Ṭeleuniqê' | ?? | 57 BC | Wife (queen) of Phraates III | [171] |
Orodes II | Aršakâ |
57 BC | 38 BC | King of the Parthian Empire — son of Phraates III | [172] |
Phraates IV | Aršakâ |
38 BC | 2 BC | King of the Parthian Empire — son of Orodes II | [173] |
Phraates V[lower-alpha 47] | Aršakâ |
2 BC | AD 4 | King of the Parthian Empire — son of Phraates IV | [174] |
Orodes III | Aršakâ |
AD 4 | AD 6 | King of the Parthian Empire — son of Phraates IV (?) | [175] |
Vonones I | Aršakâ |
AD 6 | AD 12 | King of the Parthian Empire — son of Phraates IV | [176] |
Artabanus II | Aršakâ |
AD 12 | AD 38 | King of the Parthian Empire — grandson of Phraates IV (?) | [177] |
Vardanes I | Aršakâ |
AD 38 | AD 46 | King of the Parthian Empire — son of Artabanus II | [177] |
Gotarzes II | Aršakâ |
AD 38 | AD 51 | King of the Parthian Empire — son of Artabanus II | [177] |
Vonones II | Aršakâ |
AD 51 | AD 51 | King of the Parthian Empire — grandson of Phraates IV (?) | [178] |
Vologases I | Aršakâ |
AD 51 | AD 78 | King of the Parthian Empire — son of Vonones II or Artabanus II | [156] |
Pacorus II | Aršakâ |
AD 78 | AD 110 | King of the Parthian Empire — son of Vologases I | [179] |
Artabanus III[lower-alpha 48] | Aršakâ |
AD 79/80 | AD 81 | Rival king of the Parthian Empire (against Pacorus II) — son of Vologases I | [180] |
Osroes I | — [lower-alpha 49] |
AD 109 | AD 129 | King of the Parthian Empire — son of Pacorus II | [181] |
Vologases III | — [lower-alpha 49] |
AD 110 | AD 147 | King of the Parthian Empire — son of Pacorus II | [182] |
Parthamaspates | — [lower-alpha 49] |
AD 116 | AD 117 | King of the Parthian Empire — son of Osroes I | [183] |
Vologases IV | — [lower-alpha 49] |
AD 147 | AD 191 | King of the Parthian Empire — grandson of Pacorus II | [183] |
Vologases V | — [lower-alpha 49] |
AD 191 | AD 208 | King of the Parthian Empire — son of Vologases IV | [184] |
Vologases VI | — [lower-alpha 49] |
AD 208 | AD 216/228 | King of the Parthian Empire — son of Vologases V | [185] |
Artabanus IV | — [lower-alpha 49] |
AD 216 | AD 224 | King of the Parthian Empire — son of Vologases V | [186] |
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