HOME WEB NEWS IMAGES CLASSIFIEDS YELLOW PAGESPOLLS - SURVEYS WIKI COUNTRIES PHOTOS US UK INDIA
Avoo.com provides meta search results from various sources

Larsa


Google


News, World News by www.WorldOfNews.com
 Archaeological sites in southern Iraq haven't been looted, say experts - aniin.com 
More >>

1

Coordinates: 31°17′9″N, 45°51′13″E

Mesopotamia in the time of Hammurabi

Larsa (also Larag or Larak, modern Tell as-Senkereh, Iraq, possibly the Biblical Ellasar), was an important city of ancient Sumer. It lies some 25 km southeast of the ruin mounds of Uruk (biblical Erech), near the east bank of the Shatt-en-Nil canal (modern day southern Iraq).

Larsa is mentioned in Sumerian inscriptions as early as the time of Ur-Gur[citation needed], 2700 or 2800 BC[citation needed], who built or restored the ziggurat of E-babbara, the temple of Utu, the sun god.

History

According to the Sumerian king list, Larsa was one of the five cities to "exersize kingship" in pre-dynastic times (before ca. 2900 BC).

The city again became a political force during the so-called Isin-Larsa period. After the Third Dynasty of Ur collapsed ca. 1940 BC, Ishbi-Erra, an official of Ibbi-Sin, the last king of the Ur III Dynasty, relocated to Isin and set up a government which purported to be the successor to the Ur III dynasty. From there Ishbi-Erra recaptured Ur as well as the cities of Uruk and Lagash, which Larsa was subject to. Subsequent Isin rulers appointed governors to rule over Lagash; one such governor was an Amorite named Gungunum. He eventually broke with Isin and established an independent dynasty in Larsa. To legitimize his rule and deliver a blow to Isin, Gungunum captured the city of Ur. As the main center of trade with the Arab-Persian gulf, Isin lost an enormously important portal to a profitable trade route, not to mention a city with much cultic significance. Beyond these few details, the precise reason for Gungunum\'s break with Isin are largely unknown. One group of scholars theorizes that Isin\'s internal problems were to blame; it does seem that Isin\'s rulers

"The Worshipper of Larsa", a votive statuette dedicated to the god Amurru for Hammurabi\'s life, early 2nd millennium BC, Louvre

allowed the once burgeoning irrigation and agricultural systems to wane. It is possible this was due to sheer neglect, but there is evidence that acquiring access to water in this arid region posed quite a problem for most of southern Mesopotamia in this period.

Gungunum\'s two successors, Abisare (ca. 1841 - 1830 BC) and Sumu-el (ca. 1830 - 1801 BC), both took steps to cut Isin completely off from access to canals. After this period, Isin quickly lost political and economical force.

Larsa grew powerful, but it never accumulated a huge tract of land. At its peak under king Rim-Sin I (ca. 1758 - 1699 BC), Larsa controlled only about 10-15 other city-states, nowhere near the territory controlled by other dynasties in Mesopotamian history. Nevertheless, huge building projects and agricultural undertakings can be validated by archaeological evidence.

Archaeology

Loftus conducted excavations at this site in 1854[citation needed]. He describes the ruins as consisting of a low, circular platform, about 4.5 miles in circumference, rising gradually from the level of the plain to a central mound 70 ft. high. This represents the ancient ziggurat of the temple of E-babbara, which was in part explored by Loftus. From the inscriptions found there it appears that, besides the kings already mentioned, Hammurabi, Burna-buriash and Nebuchadnezzar II of Babylon restored or rebuilt the temple to Shamash. The excavations at Senkereh were peculiarly successful in the discovery of inscribed remains, consisting of clay tablets, chiefly contracts, but including also an important mathematical tablet and a number of tablets of a description almost peculiar to Senkereh, exhibiting in bas-relief scenes of everyday life. Loftus found also the remains of an ancient Babylonian cemetery. From the ruins it would appear that Senkereh ceased to be inhabited at or soon after the Persian conquest.

List of the kings of Larsa, 39th year of Hammurabi\'s reign, Louvre

Kings of Larsa (Short chronology):

Naplanumca. 1961 - 1940 BC
Emisumca. 1940 - 1912 BC
Samiumca. 1912 - 1877 BC
Zabaiaca. 1877 - 1868 BC
Gungunum (broke with Isin)ca. 1868 - 1841 BC
Abisareca. 1841 - 1830 BC
Sumuelca. 1830 - 1801 BC
Nur-Adadca. 1801 - 1785 BC
Sin-Iddinamca. 1785 - 1778 BC
Sin-Eribamca. 1778 - 1776 BC
Sin-Iqishamca. 1776 - 1771 BC
Silli-Adadca. 1771 - 1770 BC
Warad-Sinca. 1770 - 1758 BC
Rim-Sin Ica. 1758 - 1699 BC
conquered by Babylonca. 1699 - 1686 BC
Rim-Sin IIca. 1686 BC

References

Wikimedia Commons has media related to:

Larsa

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from Wikipedia


Advertise with Us | Search Marketing | Help | Suggest a Site | Privacy Policy
© 2008 www.avoo.com. All rights reserved.