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Topic: Ashur-nirari V


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In the News (Fri 25 Dec 09)

  
 Ashur-nirari V - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Ashur-nirari V was King of Assyria from 754 to 745 BC.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Ashur-nirari_V

  
 Nineveh Gallery
A military coup deposed King Ashur-nirari V and raised a mighty general to the throne.
Of Ashur-nirari V (754-746) little information has of yet been discovered.
This policy failed miserably and the decline of Assyrian power after 780 was notable; Syria and considerable lands in the north were lost.
www.neiu.edu /~lojajou/myIndividual/kinglist/Ashurnirari5.htm

  
 "Forgotten Empires" Remembered - Text
From Shalmaneser III to Ashur-Nirari V, the late-Assyrian kingdom declined steadily, while the middle-Assyrian record from Ashuruballit I to Tukulti-Nimrud I is one of rapid growth.
An early copy, which ends with the reign of Ashur-Nirari V and was presumably composed during the reign of Tiglath-Pileser III, was written by a scribe named Kandalanu from the Arbela section of Ashur.
As pointed out above in the quote from Lambert, it seems that Shamshi-Adad V turned to Babylon for support against Ashur-Danin-Apli (which may even have been the real excuse for Burnaburiash's attempt to kill Shattiwaza).
www.starways.net /lisa/essays/mitanni.html

  
 Ashur - Hutchinson encyclopedia article about Ashur
Many of the Assyrian deities were adopted from existing Babylonian religious beliefs, except for the supreme national god, Ashur.
National god of Assyria, and city god of the early capital Ashur.
He was a god of war and was depicted shooting an arrow from the bow, enclosed in a circle.
encyclopedia.farlex.com /Ashur

  
 Nimrod, Mars and The Marduk Connection
On a stele found in a corner of the wall of the city of Ashur, where stood two rows of slabs recording the names of monarchs and royal officials, her name is recorded as the wife of Shamshi-Adad V, the mother of Adad-Nirari III, the daughter-in-law of Shalmaneser III.
Her stela (memorial stone shaft) has been found at Ashur, while an inscription at Calah (Nimrud) shows her to have been dominant there after the death of her husband, before the rule of her son.
It is apparently within reason to believe that the name Sammu-ramat is the archetype of Semiramis the Greek legend, and is in fact, the exaggerated accounts of the achievements of Semiramis and Ninus; there may be an echo of the times of the regency of Sammu-ramat and of the reign of her son.
www.ldolphin.org /Nimrod.html

  
 Covenants and law-codes - covenantal forms
Ashur-nirari V ruled shortly after a time of weakness for Assyria, and immediately before the strong and expansionist king Tiglath-pileser III.
It begins with personally-directed curses, such as " May Ashur, king of the gods, who determines the fates, decree for you an evil, unpropitious fate, and not grant you fatherhood, old age...
The curse section in the event of failure to keep the requirements is extremely thorough and makes up nearly half the document.
www.oldtestamentstudies.net /sojourn/covenantsformscovenants.asp?item=7&variant=1

  
 Shalmaneser V --  Encyclopædia Britannica
A military coup deposed King Ashur-nirari V and raised a general to the throne.
King Gustavus V of Sweden was born in Drottningholm, near Stockholm, on June 16, 1858.
Henry V is Shakespeare's ideal monarch: brave, eloquent, honorable, and efficient to the point of ruthlessness when necessary.
www.britannica.com /eb/article?tocId=9067100

  
 All Empires - Assyria
There, the earliest of the nation's kings had their residence, until its exposure to the heat of the desert and the attack of the neighboring Babylonians led Ashur's rulers to build a secondary capital in cooler Nineveh, named after Nina, the Ishtar of Assyria.
Shamshi-Adad V was succeeded by his son, Adad-Nirari III (811 B.C.).
The god Ashur gave his name to the city Ashur, and then to the whole of Assyria.
www.allempires.com /empires/assyria/assyria1.htm

  
 shalmaneser iii
Shalmaneser V Shalmaneser V first appears as governor of Zimirra in Phoenicia in the reign of Tiglath-Pileser III and is supposed by H. Winckler to have...
was with difficulty put down by Shamshi-Adad V, Shalmaneser 's second son, who soon afterwards succeeded...
722 Hoshea Hoshea paid tribute to the Assyrian King Shalmaneser V (727 - 722) but rebelled in 725 BC.
www.wikisearch.net /shalmaneser+iii

  
 The Assyrian Kings List
        Ashur-Nirari V           754      745      9   
        Ashur -Rabi II            1010     970      40  
        Ashur -Dan II             934      912      22  
libarts.wsu.edu /anthro/Classes/ackerman/AssyrianKingsList.htm

  
 The Assyrian Kings List
Ashur captured 614 BC Nineveh captured 612 BC History of the Assyrians
www.ancientworlds.net /aw/Post/43335

  
 Bible Query from Jonah
This was either under Ashur-dan III (about 772-754 B.C.) or else his successor Ashur-nirari V (about 754-647 B.C.).
While it cannot be proved that Jonah came during either of these two years, he came at approximately that time, and Jonah’s preaching makes a good explanation for why a whole nation of career soldiers chose not to fight for two years.
Jon 3:7 "And he cried and said in Ninevah by the decree of the king and of his great ones" vs. "And proclamation was made, and it was commanded in Nineveh by the king and by his great men"
www.biblequery.org /jon.htm

  
 750s BC
755 BC - Ashur-nirari V succeeds Ashur-Dan III as king of Assyria
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
Ninety-nine percent of advertising doesn't sell much of anything.
www.brainyencyclopedia.com /encyclopedia/7/75/750s_bc.html

  
 Kings Of Assyria Information
Related Topics: Assyria, Esarhaddon, Nimrud, Shalmaneser I, Shalmaneser II, Ashurnasirpal II, Shalmaneser III, Semiramis, Shalmaneser IV, Shalmaneser V, Sargon II, Sennacherib, Esarhaddon, Ashurbanipal, Nineveh, Medes, Harran, Chronology of Babylonia and Assyria,
topicguide.com /Kings_of_Assyria.html

  
 The Rise of the Babylonian World Power
Adad Nirari II (reigned 909-889) King of Assyria, son of Ashur Dan II Tukulti Ninurta II (reigned 888-884) King of Assyria, son of Adad Nirari II; [Tui?]
Using these years his conventional Assyrian contemporaries should be Eriba Adad I (1390-1380) and Ashur Uballit I (1379-1341).
Ashur Uballit II (regined 611-605) last King of Assyrian Empire, fled to Haran with the support of the Egyptians when Nebuchadnezzar II comes to level Nineveh
specialtyinterests.net /babylon.html

  
 CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Assyria
At Nineveh he rebuilt the temple of Ashur, and in Babylonia, the temples at Ukuk, Sippar, Dur-Ilu, Borsippa, and others, in all about thirty.
A great temple-builder and lover of art he has left us many records and inscriptions.
www.newadvent.org /cathen/02007c.htm

  
 Assyrian civilization - All About Turkey
Asharid-Pal-Ekur II - limited to Nineveh, Irbil, and Ashur province
Shalmaneser V 726-722 - captures Samaria, deports Isrealites
Sargon II 721-705 - captures Egypt, Urartu, Babylon; dies in a battle
www.allaboutturkey.com /asur.htm

  
 The Kassites, the Mitanni, and the rise of Assyria (from Mesopotamia, history of) --  Encyclopædia Britannica
The remaining Semitic states, such as the state of Ashur, became minor states within the sphere of influence of the new states of the Kassites…
Because there are very few written records from this era, the time from about 1560
www.britannica.com /eb/article?tocId=55445

  
 CHAPTER 39 - CHRONOLOGY OF THE ANCIENT NEAR EAST
(2161 B.C. vs. 1996 B.C. for the birth of Abraham.) If that second dating method were carried on back to the beginning, it would yield a date of 4169 B.C. for the Creation, which would still round off to 4,000 years before the birth of Christ, and 6,000 years to the present time.
163 -Judas besieges Acra; fought by Antiochus V
Comparing them, we find a discrepancy of only 165 years between the two!
www.evolution-facts.org /Ev-V3/3evlch39.htm

  
 MESOPOTAMIA IN THE AGE OF THE EMPIRES
Sargon II Younger brother of Shalmaneser V. Completed conquest of Samaria and deported 10 tribes into captivity.
Younger brother of Sargon II, took throne when his brother was assassinated.
www.angelfire.com /nt/theology/13babyln.html

  
 Encyclopedia Overflow pages - 7
Palace V - Its orientation with respect to the previous palaces was entirely different and smaller.
Palace IV - Said to be built at the beginning of the Late Bronze Age on foundations of the mural remains of Middle Bronze Age Palace III.
The chronological context of these finds is divided up between three palaces: Palace IV and V belonged to the kings of Aphek - vassals of Egypt - while the last palace (VI) housed an Egyptian governor.
www.specialtyinterests.net /eop7.html

  
 BIBLE CHARACTERS MENTIONED IN THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE BIBLE LESSON
SECTION V: Ý Specific Exhortations of Paul (Phil 4: 1-8)
www.csdirectory.com /biblestudy/nw-html/nw-07-25-04.html

  
 The Rise of the Babylonian World Power
Adad Nirari II (reigned 909-889) King of Assyria, son of Ashur Dan II Tukulti Ninurta II (reigned 888-884) King of Assyria, son of Adad Nirari II; [Tui?]
Using conventional dates, Amenhotep III of the 18th Dynasty is upposed to have reigned from ca.
Ashur Nasirpal II (reigned 883-859) King of Assyria, son of Tukulti Ninurta II; [Ben Hadad/ Tushratta/ Yuya?]
www.specialtyinterests.net /babylon.html   (9004 words)

  
 Kings of Assyria -- Facts, Info, and Encyclopedia article
Ashur-nirari I (additional info and facts about 1547) 1547-1522 BC Puzur-Ashur III (additional info and facts about 1521) 1521-1598 BC Enlil-nasir I
(additional info and facts about Adad-nirari III) Adad-nirari III ((additional info and facts about 810) 810 - 783 BC)
(additional info and facts about Shalmaneser III) Shalmaneser III ((additional info and facts about 858) 858 - 824 BC)
www.absoluteastronomy.com /encyclopedia/k/ki/kings_of_Assyria.htm   (868 words)

  
 Ashur-nirari V - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Ashur-nirari V was a son of Adad-nirari III, and succeeded his brother, Ashur-dan III.
In 746 BC a revolt broke out again, and the following year the throne was seized by Tiglath-pileser III, who may have been his brother or his son, or, alternately, a usurper with no relationship to the previous royal house at all.
This page was last modified 13:17, 16 November 2005.
www.wikipedia.org /wiki/Ashur-nirari_V   (174 words)

  
 wiki/Assyrian kings Definition / wiki/Assyrian kings Research
Adad-nirari II Adad-nirari II is generally considered to be the first King of Assyria in the Neo-Assyrian period.
Ashurnasirpal II Ashurnasirpal II was king of Assyria from 883 BC-859 BC.
Ashur-uballit II Ashur-uballit II, or Assur-uballit II, was the last king of the Assyrian empire.
www.elresearch.com /wiki/Assyrian_kings   (174 words)

  
 Isaiah - L1 - Intro to Isaiah
Ashur-dan II (932-910 B.C.) and his son Adad-nirari II (909-889 B.C.) restored Assyria to their prior prominence which had waned since the death of Tiglath-pileser I. During the reign of Adad-nirari, Assyria returned to their policy of the cruel destruction of their enemies by burning of cities, beheading thousands and flaying many alive.
Sargon II (721-705 B.C.); conquered Samaria, took the people captive and replaced them in the land with foreign captives, thus laying the foundation for the race of Samaritans so vilified during Jesus' time.
Ashur-nasir-pal II (883-859 B.C.) ­ built the Assyrian army into the greatest war machine known up to that time.
www.careydillinger.com /isaiah/isal1a.htm   (174 words)

  
 Possible_Objections.html
We can assume therefore, barring evidence to the contrary, that the state of Bit-Adini in the 10th century was ruled by an Assyrian, whether or not a rival to either Ashurdan II or Adad-nirari II.
Why, if the Amarna letters originate from the time of Ashur-dan II and Adad-nirari II, did neither of these two individuals author a letter in the Amarna archives?; and Who is Ashuruballit and from what region did his letters originate?
Thus the 9th/8th century dating of Ramses II and the 9th/8th century dating of the Empire Hittites who were contemporary with Ramses II, as attested by multiple documents, were arrived at independently.
www.kent.net /DisplacedDynasties/Possible_Objections.html   (174 words)

  
 matxt.txt
The scenes portrayed thereon represent incidents in the life and campaigns of Shalmaneser II (860-825 B.C.), the successor of Ashur-nasir-pal, and the first Assyrian king who is known to have come into immediate contact with Israel.
Shalmaneser II (860-825) the successor of Ashur-nasir-pal, also built a palace at Calah, on the south east ofthat of his predecessor ; this palace, known as the ' -\r- /ν 1.
Thus Assyria for the time being lost her position as a world-power, and it was only in the reign of Tukulti- Ninib II (890-885 B.C.) that her fortunes began to re vive.
djvued.libs.uga.edu /text/matxt.txt   (12870 words)

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