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Topic: Tukulti-Ninurta I


    Note: these results are not from the primary (high quality) database.


In the News (Wed 23 Dec 09)

  
 ninurta
Ninurta appears in a double capacity in the epithets bestowed on him, and in the hymns and incantations addressed to him.
Ninurta 'Lord Plough' in Sumerian and Akkadian mythology was the god of Nippur, identified with Ningirsu with whom he may always have been identical.
In Nippur Ninurta was worshipped as part of a triad of deities including his father Enlil and his mother Ninlil.
www.yourencyclopedia.net /ninurta.html

  
 Urartu - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
In 714 BC, the Urartu kingdom suffered heavily from Cimmerian raids and the campaigns of Sargon II.
He moved the capital to the ancient city of Tushpa (modern Van, on the shore of Lake Van), fortifying it.
820-800 BC) annexed the neighbouring state of Musasir and made his son Sardur II viceroy; Ispuini was in turn attacked by Shamshi-Adad V.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Urartu

  
 Compendium of World History - Vol. 1
Upon the defeat and death of Nazi-bugash the throne was restored to Kurigalzu the Younger, a son of Kadashman-harbe II.
Burnaburiash II's long reign began in the closing years of the life of Amenhotpe III of Egypt and extended to the early years of Tut-ankhamen.
Agum II is the fifth generation after Gandhe in about a century and a quarter.
cgca.net /coglinks/wcglit/hoehcompendium/hhc1ch14.htm

  
 Conclusive evidence against Rohl's proposed New Chronology
Adad-nirari II (912-891 B.C.) was succeeded by Tukulti-ninurta II (891-884 B.C.), and in 859 B.C. Salmanassar III (859-824 B.C) started to reign.
It was only after seven generations following on Salmanassar II that another Assyrian king by the name of Tukulti-ninurta (II) came into power.
Also Babu-ahu-iddina cannot possibly have lived in the time of Salmanassar II and Tukulti-ninurta II.
www.bga.nl /en/discussion/engbaboe.html

  
 MSN Encarta - Search Results - Tukulti-Ninurta I
Basic math, geometry, and algebra I & II.
Help with Spanish, French, German, and Italian homework.
encarta.msn.com /Tukulti-Ninurta_I.html

  
 MSN Encarta - Print Preview - Assyria
Ashurnasirpal II, the son of Tukulti-Ninurta II, ruled from 884 to 859 bc and extended Assyrian rule to the north and east.
In campaign after campaign he devastated with fierce and deliberate cruelty the lands on the borders of his empire but was prudent enough not to attack his more powerful neighbors, Urartu to the north, Babylonia to the south, and Aram to the west.
On the File menu, click Print to print the information.
ca.encarta.msn.com /text_761564347___6/Assyria.html

  
 LIBRARY
Ninurta, the hero, who destroys the wicked and the enemy, who causes every man to attain to all that the heart desires; (217)
Ninurta and Nergal who love my priesthood, gave me the beasts of the plain.
The temple of Ninurta, my lord, I founded therein.
intranet.dalton.org /ms/6th/archaeotype_library/royal.html

  
 Ashurnasirpal II --  Encyclopædia Britannica
Ashurnasirpal II king of Assyria 883–859 BC, whose major accomplishment was the consolidation of the conquests of his father, Tukulti-Ninurta II, leading to the establishment of the New Assyrian Empire.
, whose major accomplishment was the consolidation of the conquests of his father, Tukulti-Ninurta II, leading to the establishment of the New Assyrian Empire.
Bhaskara II was born in 1114 in Biddur, India.
www.britannica.com /eb/article?tocId=9009857

  
 The dark age - yes or no?
Another similarity is the occurrence of so-called Dipylon shields in the time of Ramses II and on Greek pottery of the 9th-8th century.
An argument which I mentioned on another page is that the type of ship that the Sea Peoples used in the time of Ramses III, with animal heads on both the bow and the poop, is depicted on the bronze door ornaments from the palace of Shalmaneser III (858-824) in Balawat.
Shalmaneser I was a contemporary of Ramses II.
home.tiscali.nl /~meester7/engirrefutable.html

  
 Articles - Assyria
Following this, Babylon revolted against Tukulti-Ninurta, and later even made Assyria tributary during the reigns of the Babylonian kings Melishipak II and Marduk-apal-iddin I, another weak period for Assyria.
The next king, Ashurnasirpal II (883-858 BC), embarked on a vast program of merciless expansion, first terrorizing the peoples to the north as far as Nairi, then subjecting the Aramaeans between the Khabur and the Euphrates.
A general called Ashur-uballit II, with military support from the Egyptian Pharaoh Necho II, held out as a remnant of Assyrian power at Harran until 609, after which Assyria ceased to exist as an independent nation.
www.free-biz.org /articles/Assyria

  
 ANE-M-AssyrianEmpire.doc
Assyria in the Early Iron Age A. Tukulti-Ninurta I (1244-1208 bc) B. Tiglath-Pileser I (1115-1077 bc) II.
609 BC: Necho II of Egypt went to N. Syria to oppose Babylonian advance a.
took Samaria, according to Bible, population deported (2 Ki 16:3-6) C. Sargon II (721-705): established “Sargonid” dynasty that lasted until 609 bc 1.
www.wmcarey.edu /browning/Classes/ANE/ANE-M-AssyrianEmpire.doc

  
 The Assyrian Kings List
        Tukulti-Ninurta II       890      884      6                               
        Erishum II               1920     1900     20  
        Tiglath-Pilasar II       966      935      31  
libarts.wsu.edu /anthro/Classes/ackerman/AssyrianKingsList.htm

  
 el_amarnas_mesopotamians.html
According to conventional ideas, this was the first king of that name to rule in Assyria, though five centuries later another Ashurnasirpal, who was also son of a king Tukulti-Ninurta, launched a great age of Assyrian power and expansion.
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.
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

  
 neoassyrian
The city was dedicated to the war god Ninurta.
Ashur-Rabi II (1016-973)-Son of Ashurnasirpal I. Ashur-Resh-Ishi II (973-967)-Son of Ashur-Rabi.
In 853 he entered the plains of Syria and was met by a coalition army led by Iruhuleni of Hama and Adad-Idri (Ben-Hadad II) of Damascus.
www.geocities.com /garyweb65/neoassy.html

  
 Outline of Assyrian history
In spite of the support of Pharaoh Necho II he was defeated by the Babylonians in the battle of Carchemish on the Euphrates.
ADAD-NIRARI II (911-891) fought in the west against the Arameans, in the north against the Nairi and in the south against Babylonia.
ASSURNASIRPAL II (883-859), the first great king of the Neo-Assyrian empire, extended his kingdom to the north, east and west, fought against the mountain peoples of the Zagros, Kurdistan, southern Anatolia and northern Mesopotamia and against the Arameans.
home.tiscali.nl /~meester7/engassyrian2.html

  
 Assyrian History
The four Kings that followed Ashur-dan II were Adad-nerari II (his son), Tukulti-Ninurta II, Ashur-nasir-pal II, and Shalmaneser III.
The earliest of these may have been the observatory of the Ninurta temple at Kalakh in Assyria, which dates back to the 9th century BC; it was destroyed with the city in 612.
Sennacherib was assassinated by one or two of his sons in the temple of the god Ninurta at Kalakh.
www.assyriansocietycanada.org /assyrian_history.htm

  
 Rupert Wace Ancient Art - Near Eastern - Assyrian gypsum relief
On the death of Tukulti-Ninurta II in 883 BC, Ashurasirpal II inherited a large empire.
The palace of Ashurasirpal II, known as the North west Palace, was one of the best preserved when Sir Henry Layard discovered it during the 1840's, with its walls of carved gypsum relief still standing.
From the earliest times of the Assyrian kingdom it was the desire of the kings to show their greatness by building a new palace for themselves.
www.rupertwace.co.uk /pages/ne_stonerelief.html

  
 King List
1049 - 1031 BC Shalmaneser II Ashur-nirari IV
www.neiu.edu /~lojajou/myIndividual/kinglist/KINGLIST.htm

  
 Assyrian civilization - All About Turkey
Tukulti-Ninurta II 890-884 - peace with Babylon, no tributes required
Sargon II 721-705 - captures Egypt, Urartu, Babylon; dies in a battle
Adad-Nirari II 911-891 - captures Babylonia, Anatolia, and Syrian plain
www.allaboutturkey.com /asur.htm

  
 Birkleyn 2004
The image is the same as his relief in Cave II.
Compared with the other inscriptions the cuneiform signs are rather unevenly and irregularly carved.
www.vaa.fak12.uni-muenchen.de /Birkleyn/html_englisch/cave_1.htm

  
 Mesopotamia
Muhammad III ibn Tahir II ibn 'Abdallah ibn Tahir I...884-890
www.hostkingdom.net /ancmesop.html

  
 Divkgdoma
Takelot II 850-825; married to Karomama II Karomama II Marriage of Jehoram with Athaliah 867
Osorkon II 874-850; married to Karomama I contemporary with Ahab
Shamash-mudammiq 10/9c fourth king of Dynasty of E; Babylon overrun by Adad-nirari II
prophetess.lstc.edu /~rklein/Documents/divkgdom.htm

  
 A Biblical Interpretation of World History, Appendix 2
Adad-Nirari II Tukulti-Ninurta II Ashurnasirpal II Shalmaneser III
Xerxes II Darius II Artaxerxes II Artaxerxes III
Ptolemy X (Alexander I) Ptolemy XI (Alexander II)
xenohistorian.faithweb.com /worldhis/Histapp2.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?]
The contemporaries of Psammetichus/ Seti the Great during his lengthy reign (665-609 BC) in revised view, were Assurbanipal (668-627 BC) and Assuruballit II (627 to the destruction of Niniveh in 612 BC) in Assyria.
The conquest had elevated both Darius the Mede (Xenophon's Cyaxares II) and his nephew Cyrus from being mere provincial rulers over illiterate rural tribes to that of occupiers of new thrones in urban, ostentatious Babylon.
specialtyinterests.net /babylon.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,
In 610s BCE612 BCE, Nineveh, the Assyrian capital, fell to the Medes and BabylonBabylonians; supported by the ancient EgyptEgyptians, an Assyrian general continued to rule for a few years from Harran as
ca.20th century BCE1975 BCE *Shallim-ahhe *Ilushuma *Erishum I 20th century BCE1939-19th century BCE1900 BCE *Ikunum *Sargon I (rule at the Temple / Castle of Nimud, see Nimrud) *Puzur-Ashur II *Naram-Sin *Erishum II *Shamshi-Adad I 19th century BCE1813-18th century BCE1781 BCE *Ishme-Dagan 18th century BCE1780-18th century BCE1741 BCE *Mut-ashkur *Rimush *Asinum *Puzur-Sin *[six kings] *Adari fl.
topicguide.com /Kings_of_Assyria.html

  
 Articles - Adad-nirari II
Adad-nirari II is generally considered to be the first King of Assyria in the Neo-Assyrian period.
Articles - Adad-nirari II Chandeliers, Lighting Fixtures, Crystal Chandeliers
www.epsona.com /articles/Adad-nirari_II

  
 A timeline of the Ancient Middle-East
1274 BC : the Egyptian king Rameses II is defeated by the Hittite king Muwatallis II at the city of Kadesh
879 BC : king Ashurnazirpal II of Assyria moves the capital from Nineveh to Nimrud (Kalhu), for which a citadel and a seven-km wall are built
Xerxes II Darius II Artaxerxes II Artaxerxes III
www.scaruffi.com /politics/neareast.html

  
 890s BC Article, 890s Information
, king, 890 sbc, dynasty, 890sbc, ii, 89s0 bc, th, 890sb c, tukulti, 809s bc, succeeded, 89s bc, ninurta, 90s bc, reign, 890s c, assyria, 890s cb, adad, 890 bc, megacles, 980s bc, trends, 80s bc, decades, 890s b, death
891 BC - Tukulti-Ninurta II succeeds his father Adad-nirari II as king of Assyria
www.anoca.org /zhou/king/890s_bc.html

  
 Chronology
The next linchpin is the building of Pi-Rameses under Rameses II who succeeded Seti in 1301.
Thus I would date him to the mid years of Akhenaten's administration at c.
How long did they work on it before leaving?
lists.ibiblio.org /pipermail/b-hebrew/2000-February/006621.html

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