Ibbi-Sin ๐ญ๐ฟ๐๐ญ๐๐ช | |
---|---|
King of the Neo-Sumerian Empire | |
Reign | c. 2028โ2004 BCE
(Middle Chronology) c. 1964โ1940 BCE (Short Chronology) |
Predecessor | Shu-Sin |
Successor | Kindattu (Elamite) |
Dynasty | Third Dynasty of Ur |
Father | Shu-Sin |
Ibbi-Sin (Sumerian: ๐ญ๐ฟ๐๐ญ๐๐ช, Di-biโ-Dsuen), son of Shu-Sin, was king of Sumer and Akkad and last king of the Ur III dynasty, and reigned c. 2028โ2004 BCE (Middle chronology) or possibly c. 1964โ1940 BCE (Short chronology). During his reign, the Sumerian empire was attacked repeatedly by Amorites. As faith in Ibbi-Sin's leadership failed, Elam declared its independence and began to raid as well.[1]
Ibbi-Sin ordered fortifications built at the important cities of Ur and Nippur, but these efforts were not enough to stop the raids or keep the empire unified. Cities throughout Ibbi-Sin's empire fell away from a king who could not protect them, notably Isin under the Amorite ruler Ishbi-Erra. Ibbi-Sin was, by the end of his kingship, left with only the city of Ur. In 2004 or 1940 BCE, the Elamites, along with "tribesmen from the region of Shimashki in the Zagros Mountains"[2] sacked Ur and took Ibbi-Sin captive; he was taken to the city of Elam where he was imprisoned and, at an unknown date, died.
Amorite invasion
The Amorites were considered a backward people by Mesopotamian standards; Ibbi-Sin's 17th year was officially named "Year the Amorites, the powerful south wind who, from the remote past, have not known cities, submitted to Ibbi-Sin the king of Ur." However, despite his father Shu-Sin having built a "wall of Martu" across Mesopotamia against Amorite incursions, these were penetrated early in Ibbi-Sin's reign.
Scholars have suggested that, by the reign of Ibbi-Sin, the empire was already in decline due to long-term drought โ in fact, the same drought that helped to take down the Akkadian Empire c. 2193 BCE may have been responsible for the fall of Ur III.
Studies of Persian Gulf sediments indicate that the stream flow of the Tigris and Euphrates was very low around 2100โ2000 BCE. [...] Any damage to the agricultural system by enemy raids, bureaucratic mismanagement, or an inattentive ruler would result in food shortages
In years seven and eight of Ibbi-Sin's kingship, the price of grain increased to 60 times the norm, which means that the success of the Amorites in disrupting the Ur III empire is, at least in part, a product of attacks on the agricultural and irrigation systems.
Invasion by Elam
These attacks brought famine and caused an economic collapse in the empire, paving the way for the Elamites under Kindattu to strike into Ur and capture the king. The Lament for Sumer and Ur describe the fall of Ur and the fate of Ibbi-Sin:
An, Enlil, Enki and Ninhursaja have decided its fate -- to overturn the divine powers of Sumer, to lock up the favourable reign in its home, to destroy the city, to destroy the house, to destroy the cattle-pen, to level the sheepfold; (...) that Shimashki and Elam, the enemy, should dwell in their place; that its shepherd, in his own palace, should be captured by the enemy, that Ibbi-Sin should be taken to the land Elam in fetters, that from Mount Zabu on the edge of the sea to the borders of Ancan, like a swallow that has flown from its house, he should never return to his city"
Year names
All the year names of Ibbi-Sin are known, documenting the major events of his reign. The main year names are:
1. Year: Ibbi-Suen is king
2. Year: (Ibbi-Suen) chose by means of the omens the en-priest of Inanna in Uruk
3. Year: Ibbi-Suen, the king of Ur, destroyed Simurrum
4. Year: Enamgalanna was installed as en-priest of Inanna
5. Year: The governor of Zabลกali married Tukin-hatti-migrisha, the king's daughter
6. Year: Ibbi-Suen, the king of Ur, built for Nippur and Ur their great walls
9. Year: Ibbi-Suen, the king of Ur, went with massive power to Huhnuri, the bolt to the land of Anลกan and like โฆ
14. Year: "Ibbi-Suen, the king of Ur, overwhelmed Susa, Adamdun and Awan like a storm, subdued them in a single day and seized the lords of their people"
17. Year: "The Amorites, the powerful south wind who from the remote past have not known cities, submitted to Ibbi-Suen, the king of Ur"
23. Year: "The stupid monkey in the foreign land struck against Ibbi-Suen, the king of Ur"
24. Year: "Ibbi-Suen, the king of Ur, โฆ struck"โโMain year names of the reign of Ibbi-Sin.[4]
Inscriptions
- Ibbi-Sin cylinder seal, with Ibbi-Sin enthroned. Inscription: "Ibbi-Sin the strong king, king of Ur, King of the four quarters [of the world] // Ilum-bani the overseer, son of Ili-ukin [is] your servant".[5]
- Administrative tablet of the reign of Ibbi-Sin, Third Dynasty of Ur, 2026 BC.
- Votive bead dedicated to the Moon god by Ibbi-Sin, god-king of Ur, in recognition for saving his life: "To (the god) Nanna, his master, Ibbi-Sin, god of his country, strong king, king or Ur, king of the four regions, has, for his life, dedicated this bead."
- Name of Ibbi-Sin (๐ญ๐ฟ๐๐ญ๐๐ช) in inscription and standard cuneiform.
References
- โ Jacobsen, Thorkild (1953). "The reign of Ibbฤซ-Suen". Journal of Cuneiform Studies. 7 (2): 36โ47.
- โ Stiebing, p. 79
- โ "The Electronic Text Corpus of Sumerian Literature". etcsl.orinst.ox.ac.uk.
- โ "Ibbi-Suen". cdli.ox.ac.uk.
- โ "Cylinder seal: seated figure approached by a goddess leading a worshiper". www.metmuseum.org.
- โ "tablet". British Museum.
- โ Transcription: "CDLI-Archival View". cdli.ucla.edu.
Stiebing, William H. Jr. (2003). Ancient Near Eastern History and Culture. New York, NY: Pearson Education. ISBN 0-321-06674-X.