Ashur-resh-ishi II


Aššūr-reš-iši II, inscribed maš-šur-SAG-i-ši, meaning " Aššur has lifted my head," was the king of Assyria, 971–967 BC, the 96th to be listed on the Assyrian Kinglist. His short five-year reign is rather poorly attested and somewhat overshadowed by the lengthy reigns of his predecessor, Aššur-rabi II, and successor, Tukultī-apil-Ešarra II.

Biography

He succeeded his father, Aššur-rabi II, who had a long 41-year reign. He was probably fairly elderly when the accession took place. He is given in the Synchronistic Kinglist as the counterpart of the Babylonian king Mâr-bîti-apla-uṣur, the sole member of the 7th or Elamite dynasty of Babylon, although conventional chronology would suggest the subsequent king, Nabû-mukin-apli, might be a more likely candidate. The part of the eponym list Cc which would have displayed his limmu officials, was at the top of column V, and is obliterated.
Apart from the references to him in later copies of the Assyrian Kinglists and in the filiation of his grandson, Aššur-dān II, the only contemporary inscriptions referring to him are from his stele at the Stelenreihe, "row of stelae," in Aššur and in the cylinder inscription of Bēl-ereš. His stele is simply inscribed "ṣalam of Aššur-reš-iši, king of Assyria, son of ššur-abi, king of Assyria," where the term ṣalam is taken to mean "statue." Bēl-eriš, the šangû-priest of the temple of the god Samnuha, in the city of Šadikanni, in the Ḫārbūr river valley region, commemorated his construction of a quay-wall for a canal during Aššur-rabi II’s reign, and the reconstruction of the temple during Aššūr-reš-iši’s, in his clay cylinder inscription recovered from Aššur.

Inscriptions