Marduk-bel-zeri


Marduk-bēl-zēri, inscribed in cuneiform as dAMAR.UTU.EN.NUMUN or mdŠID.EN. and meaning “Marduk lord of descendants ”, very speculatively ca. 790 – 780 BC, was one of the kings of Babylon during the turmoil following the Assyrian invasions of Šamši-Adad V. He is identified on a Synchronistic King List fragment as Marduk--x, which gives his place in the sequence and reigned around the beginning of the 8th century BC. He was a rather obscure monarch and the penultimate predecessor of Erība-Marduk who was to restore order after years of chaos.

Biography

He is known from a single economic text from the southern city of Udāni dated to his accession year. This city was a satellite cultic center to Uruk, of uncertain location but possibly near Marad, later to be known as Udannu, associated with the deities dIGI.DU and Bēlet-Eanna. The document records the parts of a chariot including the wagon pole which had been entrusted by Belšunu, the šangû or chief administrator of Udāni to the temple of dIGI.DU. He is tentatively restored to the Dynastic Chronicle where he is described as “a soldier” but his circumstances are otherwise unknown.

Inscriptions