Adad-Nirari of Qatna

Adad-Nirari or H̱addu-Nirari,[1] was a king of Qatna in the 14th century BC.

Reign

Adad-Nirari is an Akkadian name.[2] The king reigned for 45 years in the 14th century BC,[3][4] and was mentioned in the inventories of Ninegal, found in Qatna.[5] A tablet from Qatna records him stationing an army of chariot archers in the city of Tukad, in Mount Lebanon.[4][6] The name of his queen was Pizallum.[7]

Identity

Michael Astour suggested identifying Adad-Nirari with Adad-Nirari of Nuhašše; a hypothesis supported by Thomas Richter,[8] who believes that Adad-Nirari ruled Qatna through a šakkanakku (military governor) called Lullu, citing that the latter's name appears in the Qatanite inventories at the time of Adad-Nirari.[9] According to Richter, Adad-Nirari of Nuhašše ruled the second Syrian power after Mitanni,[10] and was removed by the Hittites which gave Qatna back its independence.[11]

This theory is debated; the Shattiwaza treaty between Mitanni and the Hittites mentioned Qatna independently from Nuhašše during the Hittite king Šuppiluliuma I's first Syrian war; If Qatna was part of the Nuhaššite kingdom, its submission to the Hittites would not have been mentioned separately.[12] Jacques Freu rejected Richter's hypothesis; citing different arguments, he concluded that Adad-Nirari of Nuhašše was a contemporary of Idadnda of Qatna who ruled during the first Syrian war, a successor of the Qatanite Adad-Nirari.[13]

References

Citations

Sources

  • Freu, Jacques (2009). Al-Maqdissi, Michel, ed. "Qatna et les Hittites". Studia Orontica (in French). la Direction Générale des Antiquités et des Musées de Syrie. 6. OCLC 717465740.
  • Gromova, Daria (2007). "Hittite Role In Political History of Syria In the Amarna Age Reconsidered". Ugarit-Forschungen. Ugarit-Verlag. 39. ISBN 978-3-86835-001-2.
  • Gromova, Daria (2012). Kogan, Leonid, ed. "Idanda Archive and the Syrian Campaigns of SuppiluliumaI: New Pieces for the Puzzle". Babel und Bibel. Eisenbrauns. 6. ISBN 978-1-575-06228-0.
  • Novák, Mirko (2004). "The Chronology of the Royal Palace of Qatna". Ägypten und Levante / Egypt and the Levant. Austrian Academy of Sciences Press. 14. ISSN 1015-5104.
  • Pfälzner, Peter (2007). "Archaeological Investigations in the Royal Palace of Qatna". In Morandi Bonacossi, Daniele. Urban and Natural Landscapes of an Ancient Syrian Capital. Settlement and Environment at Tell Mishrifeh/Qatna and in Central-Western Syria (Proceedings of the International Conference held in Udine9-11 December 2004). Studi archeologici su Qatna. 1. Forum Editrice Universitaria Udinese. ISBN 978-88-8420-418-9.
  • Richter, Thomas (2005). "Qatna in the Late Bronze Age: Preliminary Remarks". In Owen, David I.; Wilhelm, Gernot. General Studies and Excavations at Nuzi 11/1. Studies on the Civilization and Culture of Nuzi and the Hurrians. 15. CDL Press. ISBN 978-1-883-05389-5. ISSN 1080-9686.
  • Richter, Thomas (2008). "Šuppiluliumas I. in Syrien. Der 'Einjährige Feldzug' und Seine Folgen". In Wilhelm, Gernot. Ḫattuša-Boğazköy. Das Hethiterreich im Spannungsfeld des Alten Orients. Colloquien der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft. 6. Harrassowitz Verlag. ISBN 978-3-447-05855-1.
  • Roßberger, Elisa (2014). Pfälzner, Peter, ed. "Things to Remember – Jewellery, Collective Identity and Memory at the Royal Tomb of Qaṭna". Qaṭna Studien Supplementa: Übergreifende und vergleichende Forschungsaktivitäten des Qaṭna-Projekts der Universität Tübingen. Harrassowitz Verlag. 3: Contextualising Grave Inventories in the Ancient Near East. Proceedings of a Workshop at the London 7th ICAANE in April 2010 and an International Symposium in Tübingen in November 2010, both Organised by the Tübingen Post-Graduate School „Symbols of the Dead“. ISBN 978-3-447-10237-7. ISSN 2195-4305.
  • Van Soldt, Wilfred H. (2004). "De mazzel" en Andere Zaken: de Verspreiding van de Mesopotamische Cultuur na 1500 v.Chr (Inaugural lecture: 20 Jan. 2004) (in Dutch). Universiteit Leiden. OCLC 66587912.
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