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Topic: Shuttarna II


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In the News (Wed 23 Dec 09)

  
  Shuttarna - Shuttarna II
Shuttarna II Shuttarna II, also spelled Å uttarna, was a king of the Hurrian kingdom of Mitanni in the early 14th century BC.
Shuttarna II, also spelled Å uttarna, was a king of the Hurrian kingdom of Mitanni in the early 14th century BC.
Shuttarna´s daughter Kilu-Hepa was given to Amenhotep III in marriage to seal the alliance between the two royal houses.
www.alphasearch.org /Shuttarna-II.html   (239 words)

  
  Mitanni - Biocrawler   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-14)
Artatama I and Shuttarna II Later on, Egypt and Mitanni became allies, and King Shuttarna II himself was received at the Egyptian court.
Shuttarna had sent men to strengthen the troops and chariots of the district of Irridu, but the Hittite army won the battle, and the people of Irridu sued for peace.
Shattuara II In the reign of Shalmaneser I (1270s-1240s) King Shattuara II of Mitanni, a son or nephew of Wasahatta, rebelled against the Assyrian yoke with the help of the Hittites and the nomadic Ahlamu around 1250 BC.
www.biocrawler.com /encyclopedia/Mitanni   (4674 words)

  
 YourArt.com >> Encyclopedia >> Mitanni   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-14)
During the reign of Shuttarna in the early fourteenth century BC the relationship was very amicable, and he sent his daughter Kilu-Hepa to Egypt for a marriage with Pharaoh Amenhotep III.
Shattuara II In the reign of Shalmaneser I (1270s-1240s) King Shattuara of Mitanni, a son or nephew of Wasahatta, rebelled against the Assyrian yoke with the help of the Hittites and the nomadic Ahlamu around 1250 BC.
Shattuara II, son or nephew of Wasashatta 1280 BC-1270 BC, or maybe the same king as Shattuara I. All dates must be taken with caution since they are worked out only by comparison with the chronology of other ancient Near Eastern nations.
www.yourart.com /research/encyclopedia.cgi?subject=/Mitanni   (4681 words)

  
 Shuttarna II - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Shuttarna II, also spelled Šuttarna, was a king of the Hurrian kingdom of Mitanni in the early 14th century BC.
Shuttarna was a descendant and probably son of king Artatama.
He was an ally of the Egyptian Pharaoh Amenhotep III and the diplomatic dealings of the kings are recorded in the Amarna letters.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Shuttarna_II   (199 words)

  
 Mitanni Information
During the reign of Shuttarna in the early fourteenth century BC the relationship was very amicable, and he sent his daughter Kilu-Hepa to Egypt for a marriage with Pharaoh Amenhotep III.
Artatama I and Shuttarna II Later on, Egypt and Mitanni became allies, and King Shuttarna II himself was received at the Egyptian court.
Shattuara II In the reign of Shalmaneser I (1270s-1240s) King Shattuara of Mitanni, a son or nephew of Wasahatta, rebelled against the Assyrian yoke with the help of the Hittites and the nomadic Ahlamu around 1250 BC.
www.bookrags.com /wiki/Mitanni   (4560 words)

  
 Mitanni - Information at Halfvalue.com
During the reign of Shuttarna in the early fourteenth century BC the relationship was very amicable, and he sent his daughter Gilukheppa to Egypt for a marriage with Pharaoh Amenhotep III.
Later on, Egypt and Mitanni became allies, and King Shuttarna II himself was received at the Egyptian court.
In the unrest that followed, the Assyrians asserted their independence under Ashur-uballit, and with the Alsheans invaded the country; and the pretender Artatama/Atratama II gained ascendancy, followed by his son Shuttarna.
www.halfvalue.com /wiki.jsp?topic=Mitanni   (4947 words)

  
 Mitanni - Japan
During the reign of Shuttarna in the early fourteenth century BC the relationship was very amicable, and he sent his daughter Gilukheppa to Egypt for a marriage with Pharaoh Amenhotep III.
Later on, Egypt and Mitanni became allies, and King Shuttarna II himself was received at the Egyptian court.
Shattuara II, son or nephew of Wasashatta 1280 BC-1270 BC, or maybe the same king as Shattuara I. All dates must be taken with caution since they are worked out only by comparison with the chronology of other ancient Near Eastern nations.
mitanni.zdnet.co.za /zdnet/Mitanni   (5075 words)

  
 Egyptian New Kingdom, Babylonia, Assyria, Hittites, etc.
After Rusa II things get very obscure, and the only certain thing (more or less) is that the Medes end up in possession of the area, variously stated as by 590 or 585 -- part of the campaign that led to Lydia and the Battle of the Eclipse.
Psusennes II but of course the Persians are in the same line as the original Persian XXVII Dynasty, and Manethô himself didn't give the Ptolemaic Dynasty a number, even though he lived under it.
Iuput II Sheshonq VI The Ark would remain safely in Jerusalem, at least until the destruction of the Temple by Nebuchadnezzar in 587 BC.
www.friesian.com /notes/newking.htm   (7982 words)

  
 Umm el-Marra
The Akkadian text concerns the granting of Mitannian citizenship to several individuals, a process conducted in the presence of the Mitannian king Shuttarna II (ca.
The tablet was impressed with the cylinder seal of Shuttarna’s forebear Saustatar, a sealing also known from Tell Brak and Nuzi.
The very occasional recovery of White Slip II pottery imported from Cyprus in LB contexts at Umm el-Marra indicates at least a minor connection to the sea-borne trade of the eastern Mediterranean.
www.jhu.edu /neareast/uem/page6.html   (322 words)

  
 "Forgotten Empires" Remembered - Text
The former would be a grandson of Shuttarna II and the latter a great-grandson.
Shattiwaza told Shuppiluliumas I that Shuttarna III was the son of Artatama II.
Judging from the letter sent by Burnaburiash II to the king of Egypt,[36] in which he demands that he do no business with the Assyrian, his servant, it seems that we have the same system of tiered authority as in Israel and Syria at this time.
www.starways.net /lisa/essays/mitanni.html   (7113 words)

  
 New Page 1
Thuthmosis II 1494-1490 married to Hatshepsut, the daughter of Thuthmosis I, and to Isis, his concubine and mother of Thuthmosis III.
Thutmosis III son of Thuthmosis II by a lesser wife Isis 1490-1436 ANET 22-23, 234-245, 373-375, 446-447; Annals COS 2.2A, pp.
Amenophis III married daughter of Shuttarna II, king of Mittani.
fontes.lstc.edu /~rklein/Documents/lb.htm   (992 words)

  
 [No title]
That Ashurnasirpal II was a patricide would probably not come as too great a surprise to anyone who knows much about this most cruel of kings.
There was an Aramaean Eriba-Adad (so-called II), conqueror of Assyria, who nicely matches my reconstructed Ben-Hadad conquest-wise in that this Eriba-Adad II "claims to have ruled Assyria and the Aramaeans, and catalogs conquests far and wide that have been compared with those of Tiglath-pileser I" [2900].
Ashurnasirpal II, we are told, reigned for twenty-five years as king of Assyria, and took part in military action almost every summer for the first nine years; after which no further expeditions are recorded.
www.specialtyinterests.net /el_amarnas_mesopotamians.html   (8229 words)

  
 The Mitanni (Naharin)
The daughter of King Artatama was married to Tuthmose, and the daughters of Shuttarna II (Gilukhipa) and Tushratta (Tadukhipa) were married to Amenhotep III.
Suppiluliumas removed that threat by replacing Artatama with Mattiwaza, a son of Tushratta, who became king of the new vassal state of the Hittites, which was then called Hanigalbat.
Soon afterward, however, it was captured by the Assyrian Adad-nirari I (probably during the reign of Horemheb) and later by Shalmaneser I (during the reign of Ramesses II), at which time the area east of the Euphrates was turned into an Assyrian province.
www.geocities.com /Athens/Acropolis/7987/mitann_1.html   (546 words)

  
 Mitanni History   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-14)
The Egyptian pharaoh Amenhotep II reached some kind of understanding with Saustatar.
One of Artatama's daughters was given in marriage to the Egyptian king and later the duaghters of Shuttarna II and Tushratta were married to Amenhotep III.
The Hittite king Tudhaliyas II drove the Mitannin back eastward to the eastern Hurrian homeland.
idcs0100.lib.iup.edu /WestCivI/mitanni_history.htm   (1074 words)

  
 CHRONOLOGICAL MODEL OF THE FIRST AND SECOND MILLENNIUM Part 2: REVISED CHRONOLOGY AND ASSYRIA
Level III and II were dated to the 14th because of the presence of cuneiform tablets of Artashumara and Tushratta who were authors of Amarna letters.
In Level II (10/9th) there are ivory, parallel to Alalakh IV, and texts of Late Mitanni Kings Artashumara and Tushratta {14th}.
Furthermore, Assuruballit's role as spoiler of Shuttarna II, the Mitanni King is doubtful.
www.ldolphin.org /alanm/chron2.html   (6086 words)

  
 Ashur-uballit I Information
His reign marks Assyria's independence from the kingdom of Mitanni, by defeating Shuttarna II; and the beginning of Assyria's emergence as a powerful empire.
Later on, due to disorder in Babylonia following the death of Burnaburiash II, Ashur-uballit established that king's son or grandson Kurigalzu II on the Babylonian throne, in the first of what would become a series of Assyrian interventions in Babylonian affairs.
From the Amarna letters, a series of diplomatic letters from various Middle Eastern monarchs to Amenhotep III and Akhenaten of Egypt, we find two letters from Ashur-uballit I, the second being a follow-up letter to the first.
www.bookrags.com /wiki/Ashur-uballit_I   (143 words)

  
 A General History of the Near East, Chapter 2, Part 2
The next pharaoh, Amenhotep II (1085-1059 B.C. on the author's chronology), was not a great man, but he was a big one.
The next two Mitannian kings, Artatama I and Shuttarna II, gave their daughters in marriage to Amenhotep's successors, Thutmose IV and Amenhotep III; Shuttarna also made an official visit to Egypt.
It seems that Shuttarna had sought Assyrian aid, and either the force sent in response was disappointing, or he changed his mind, because he refused to let it into the capital.
xenohistorian.faithweb.com /neareast/ne02b.html   (8593 words)

  
 [No title]
Continuing the previous line, Shuttarna is the name of the chief of Naharin.
Gilukhepa, the daughter of Shuttarna, the chief of Naharin.
Shuttarna's daughter Kilu-Hepa (sometimes spelled Gilukhipa) Was given to Amenhotep III in marriage to seal the alliance between the two royal houses in the Pharoah's tenth regnal year, taking with her a great dowry.
www.rostau.org.uk /AEgyptian-L/archives/week521.txt   (1645 words)

  
 España Match - Sphynxual Equality   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-14)
As "Controller of the Affairs of the Kiltwearers", Queen Hetepheres II ran the civil service and, as well as overseers, governors and judges, two women even achieved the rank of vizier (prime minister).
The daughter and wife of a pharaoh (Thutmose I and II), she reigned first as regent to the young Thutmose III and then as pharaoh in her own right.
Gilukhipa, daughter of Shuttarna II, King of Mitanni, arrived in Egypt with a retinue of 317 women.
www.espanamatch.com /article.23.html   (2640 words)

  
 Whose History does the Bible Describe
In the period we are dealing with, 1800 BC, it is unimaginable that ordinary peasants such as Adam as portrayed in the bible and his descendants would have been able to record a list of their families in the detail given to us in Genesis.
If he was truly an Egyptian palace official then the date of his death should correspond to the date of the Pharaoh which he served, since all palace officials were put to death and buried with the Pharaoh.
Exodus is based around the murder of Seti II by his Syrian butler Bey who made Mermeptah-Siptah Pharoah in 1193 and he himself became Chancellor.
dspace.dial.pipex.com /prod/dialspace/town/pipexdsl/t/atmb12/agamemnon/myths/bible/History.htm   (3784 words)

  
 Mitanni: Encyclopedia II - Mitanni - History
As early as Akkadian times, Hurrians are known to have lived east of the river Tigris on the northern rim of Mesopotamia, and in the Khabur valley.
In the reign of Shalmaneser I (1270s-1240s) King Shattuara II of Mitanni, a son or nephew of Wasahatta, rebelled against the Assyrian yoke with the help of the Hittites and the nomadic Ahlamu around 1250 BC.
Please rate this article with 10 as very good and 1 as very poor.
www.experiencefestival.com /a/Mitanni_-_History/id/1452877   (3461 words)

  
 The Hurrian and Mitanni kingdoms
The northern boundary dividing Mitanni from the Hittites and the other Hurrian states was never fixed, even under Saustatar's successors Artatama I and Shuttarna II, who married their daughters to the pharaohs Thutmose IV (1400-1390) and Amenhotep III (1390-1353).
1330), the son of Shuttarna, was able to maintain the kingdom he had inherited for many years.
In his sometimes very long letters--one of them written in Hurrian--to Amenhotep III and Akhenaton (1353-1336), he wrote about commerce, his desire for gold, and marriage.
www.angelfire.com /nt/Gilgamesh/hurrian.html   (937 words)

  
 Ancients cities beneath the sands
A peace treaty between Egypt and the MITANNI was sealed by the marriage of Amenophis III (1417-1379BC) to Gilu Hepa (the daughter of Shuttarna II, the king of the Mitanni, who by this treaty kept Syria and l
Peace was signed and Ramses II offered the hand of one of his daughters to the future king Hattousil III to seal the Alliance.
Why does Jewish mythology name Nemrod as the instigator of a huge building which was compared to the tower of Babel, which was also built by masses of foreign slaves speaking unknown tongues and like the palace of Assurnarzipal II was the scene of orgies and debauchery.
members.tripod.com /historel/orient/05mesop.htm   (4794 words)

  
 Caananite City-States   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-14)
It is unknown when Ramla became a separate seigneury, although there was an important Baldwin of Ramla who owned large amounts of land there in the early years of the kingdom.
In 1126 Ramla became part of Jaffa, and a separate lordship was created after Hugh II's revolt in 1134, with Baldwin II as lord (although Baldwin I was not a lord in his own right).
Kadesh was normally dominated by the Hittites and in 1275 was the site of a major battle between Rameses II and the Hittite king.
www.hostkingdom.net /Caananites.html   (2971 words)

  
 IM NIN'ALU's Page - HISTORY
The Hittites were split into different groups covering a vast area between Asia Minor and Canaan, and founded a powerful state in Anatolia with capital in Hattusas, located in the area of present-day Bogazköy.
The Hurrians were the oldest of the Indo-European peoples, whose language was the earliest form of Sanskrit.
Related with the Hittites and Hurrians, their territory was kept aside of the conquest targets, which allowed them to keep their own monarchs even under Assyrian rule, until the Persians annexed Urartu and the Macedonians conquered Nairi.
www.imninalu.net /kings02.htm   (437 words)

  
 Whose History does the Bible Describe
As I have shown in previous pages the story of the Exodus 1194-1184 is dated to the period between the end of the reign of Ramses II and the death of Ramses III.
Exodus is based around the murder of Seti II by his Syrian butler Bey who made Mermeptah-Siptah Pharoah in 1193 and he himself became Chancellor.
Bey proceed to exact massive taxation form the people and insulted all of the Egyptian Gods.
www.argyrosargyrou.fsnet.co.uk /myths/bible/History.htm   (3015 words)

  
 shuttarna - OneLook Dictionary Search   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-14)
We found one dictionary with English definitions that includes the word shuttarna:
Tip: Click on the first link on a line below to go directly to a page where "shuttarna" is defined.
Phrases that include shuttarna: shuttarna ii, shuttarna iii
www.onelook.com /?w=shuttarna   (76 words)

  
 Family Tree Maker's Genealogy Site: User Home Page Report: Kinship of Isabella Lucie Rostrup Holdt
King of Media Atropatene, Ariobarzanes II 3rd cousin 64 times removed
King of Neustria and Burgundy, Childeric II 39th great-granduncle
King of Neustria and Burgundy, Clovis II 40th great-grandfather
familytreemaker.genealogy.com /users/h/o/l/Jacob--Holdt/COL8-0058.html   (72 words)

  
 Iraq - The 3rd Millennia Theatre of War by K. Gajendra Singh
Assyrian king Ashur Uballit I (1365 BC to1338 BC) ended the Mittani independence completely by defeating Shuttarna II.
After this defeat, the Mitannis either got absorbed in the region or some of them went up north to form part of the Urartu Kingdom.
Hittite king Muwatallis (1320 to 1294BC) fought at Kadesh (in Syria) in one of the greatest tactical battles of ancient times against Pharaoh Ramses II.
www.boloji.com /analysis/074.htm   (2945 words)

  
 [No title]   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-14)
Amenhotep III is known to have married Gilukhepa (the first of a series of diplomatic brides), daughter of Shuttarna II of Mitanni in the tenth year of his reign.
Around Year 36 of his reign, he married Tadukhepa, the daughter of his ally Tushratta of Mitanni.
Shoshenq I · Piye · Taharqa · Psammetichus I · Necho II · Psammetichus III · Ptolemy I · Cleopatra VII  · Ptolemy XIII
stron.frm.pl /wiki.php?title=Amenhotep_III   (2678 words)

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