Preface
List of Illustrations and Maps
Abbreviations
Introduction
Part 1: The Historical Arena
1 The Geographical Setting
2 Nomads and Sedentary Peoples
1 Urban Dwellers and the People of the Steppe
2 Forefathers and Nomadic Groups: The Ḫana, the Simʾalites, and
the Yaminites
3 The Amorite Origins of Samsī-Addu’s Dynasty and the Assyrian
King List
4 The Amorite Descent of Ḫammurāpi’s Dynasty
5 Amorite Populations in Southern Mesopotamia
6 Amorite Tribes as an Example of Enclosed Nomadism
7 The Amorite Tribal System as Reflected in the Mari Documents
8 Major Institutions and Customs among the Amorite Tribes
3 Ethnic Identities in Mesopotamia in the Early Second Millennium
BCE
1 Nation, Ethnic Group, and Ethnic Category
2 The Amorites as Foreigners in Mesopotamian Cities and Their
Self-Perceived Identity
3 Change of Tribal Affiliation as a Political Decision
4 Covenant Terminology and Its Meaning for Tribal Links
5 Language as a Vehicle of Ethnic Distinction
6 The Multiple Faces of Ethnic Identity
4 The Age of the Amorite Dynasties and the Periodization of
Mesopotamian History: Some Basic Observations
1 Periodization of Mesopotamian History according to the
Astronomical Treatise
5 The Chronological Framework of the Amorite Dynasties
1 Relative and Absolute Chronology, Synchronisms, and Astronomical
Anchors
2 The Assyrian King List as a Chronological Source
3 The Kaneš Eponym List and the Relative Chronology of Assyria
4 Year Names in Southern Mesopotamia and the Kings of the First
Dynasty of Babylon
5 Mari: A Kingdom with Two Systems of Year-Reckoning
6 The Sumerian King List
7 From Relative to Absolute Chronology: The Venus Tablets of
Ammī-ṣadūqa and the Solar Eclipse in the Mari Eponym Chronicle
8 Dendrochronology: Tree-Rings as a Chronological Tool
Part 2: Cities, Dynasties, and Kings: Political History
6 The Kingdom of Isin
1 Chronology of the Kings of Isin
2 The Isin Dynasty from Išbi-Erra to Lipit-Ištar
3 A New Royal Line in Isin: Ur-Ninurta and His Descendants
4 Isin’s Struggle against Its Neighbors: Erra-imittī, Enlil-bāni,
and Their Successors
5 The End of Isin
6 Another Successor to the Empire of Ur: The Kingdom of
Simurrum
7 The Kingdom of Larsa
1 The Isin-Larsa Period and the Chronology of the Kings of
Larsa
2 The Early Kings
3 The Dynasty of Nūr-Adad
4 The Dynasty of Kudur-Mabuk
5 The Babylonian Conquest of Larsa
6 Larsa’s Revolt against Babylon
8 The Kingdom of Uruk
1 The Early Kings of Uruk
2 The Sîn-kāšid Dynasty
3 Uruk at the Time of the South Mesopotamian Revolt against
Babylon
9 The Kingdom of Ešnunna
1 Between Ur, Isin, Elam, and the Amorites: The Beginnings of
Ešnunna
2 Ešnunna on the Rise: The Dynasty of Ibāl-pī-El I
3 Ešnunna at Its Apex: The Reigns of Dāduša and Ibāl-pī-El II
4 The Babylonian Conquest of Ešnunna
5 Ešnunna’s Final Attempts to Regain Independence
10 The Kingdom of Malgium
1 The Early Kings of Malgium
2 A Period of Political Upheavals
3 The End of Malgium
11 The Kingdom of Aššur
1 Aššur as a City-State
2 The Rulers of Aššur at Its Apex as a Center of Commerce
3 The Assyrian Trade with Anatolia
4 The Crisis of the Assyrian Trade and Its Recovery
5 The Conquest of Aššur by Samsī-Addu
12 The Kingdom of Samsī-Addu
1 Samsī-Addu’s Family Origins
2 The Early Years of Samsī-Addu: The Escape to Babylon and the
Conquest of Ekallātum, Aššur, and Mari
3 The Kingdom of Upper Mesopotamia
4 The Reign of Išme-Dagān I
13 The Kingdom of Mari
1 The Beginnings of Mari
2 The Early Rulers of the Amorite Dynasty in Mari
3 The Reign of Zimrī-Līm
4 The Babylonian Conquest of Mari
5 Mari’s Successor: The Kingdom of Ḫana
14 The Kingdom of Yamḫad
1 The Beginnings of the Amorite Dynasty of Yamḫad
2 Yamḫad as an Ally of Mari: The Reigns of Yarīm-Līm I and
Ḫammurāpi I
3 Yamḫad from the Death of Ḫammurāpi I to the Hittite Conquest
15 The Kingdom of Qaṭna
1 Archaeological Discoveries at Qaṭna
2 The Dynasty of Išḫī-Addu
3 Qaṭna on the Eve of the Hittite Conquest of Northern Syria
16 The Kingdom of Babylon
1 Chronology of the Kings of Babylon
2 The Beginnings of the Kingdom
3 Babylon at Its Peak: The Reign of Ḫammurāpi
4 Babylon at the Time of Samsu-ilūna
5 The Late Kings of the Amorite Dynasty of Babylon
Concluding Remarks: Instead of an Epilogue
Bibliography
Index
Nathan Wasserman, PhD (1993), the Hebrew University of Jerusalem,
is a Professor of Assyriology at the same university. He
specializes in the Old Babylonian period, especially in literary
and magical texts, and is the author of numerous articles and
several books on these subjects. His latest book, authored jointly
with Elyze Zomer, is Akkadian Magic Literature: Old Babylonian and
Old Assyrian Incantations (Harrassowitz, 2022).
Yigal Bloch, PhD (2013), the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, is a
curator at the Bible Lands Museum Jerusalem. He has published
several dozen articles in the fields of Assyriology and biblical
studies. He is the author of Alphabet Scribes in the Land of
Cuneiform: Sēpiru Professionals in Mesopotamia in the
Neo-Babylonian and Achaemenid Periods (Gorgias Press, 2018).
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