Kadashman-harbe I
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Kadašman-Ḫarbe I, inscribed in
cuneiform Cuneiform is a logo-syllabic script that was used to write several languages of the Ancient Middle East. The script was in active use from the early Bronze Age until the beginning of the Common Era. It is named for the characteristic wedge-sh ...
contemporarily as ''Ka-da-áš-ma-an-Ḫar-be'' and meaning “he believes in Ḫarbe (a Kassite god equivalent to Enlil),” was the 16th King of the
Kassite The Kassites () were people of the ancient Near East, who controlled Babylonia after the fall of the Old Babylonian Empire c. 1531 BC and until c. 1155 BC (short chronology). They gained control of Babylonia after the Hittite sack of Babylon ...
or 3rd dynasty of Babylon, and the kingdom contemporarily known as Kar-Duniaš, during the late 15th to early 14th century, BC. It is now considered possible that he was the contemporary of Tepti Ahar, King of Elam, as preserved in a tabletTablet H.T. 38 (472) with seal of Tepti Ahar at the end of the text. found at Haft Tepe in Iran. This is dated to the “year when the king expelled Kadašman-KUR.GAL,”The year name reads: “MU EŠŠANA KA''-da-aš-ma-an'' dKUR.GAL ''ú-sà-aḫ-ḫi-ru''” where KUR.GAL is taken as a metonym for Ḫarbe. thought by some historians to represent him although this identification (KUR.GAL = Ḫarbe) has been contested. If this name is correctly assigned to him, it would imply previous occupation of, or suzerainty over, Elam.


His provenance

His immediate predecessor may have been Karaindaš, but he was certainly father to the better known King,
Kurigalzu I Kurigalzu I (died c. 1375 BC), usually inscribed ''ku- ri- gal-zu'' but also sometimes with the m or d determinative, the 17th king of the Kassite or 3rd dynasty that ruled over Babylon, was responsible for one of the most extensive and widesprea ...
, who succeeded him, as attested by his son in his autobiographical inscription, of which there are two copies, one a hexagonal prismPrism BM 108982. and the other a cylinder.Cylinder NBC 2503. Two baked-clay conesCones BM 91036 and BM 135743 in the British Museum. report Kadašman-Enlil’s honoring a land deed to Enlil-bānī made by Kurigalzu ''son of Kadašman-Ḫarbe''. A legal text,Tablet CBS 12914. dating perhaps to the reign of Nazi-Maruttaš, refers to him as the father of Kurigalzu.


Campaign against the Sutû

The most significant event of his reign appears to have been his aggressive campaign against the Sutû, a nomadic people along the middle Euphrates related to the Arameans, and is described in the ''
Chronicle P Chronicle P, known as ''Chronicle 22'' in Grayson’s ''Assyrian and Babylonian Chronicles'' and ''Mesopotamian Chronicle 45'': "Chronicle of the Kassite Kings" in Glassner's ''Mesopotamian Chronicles'' is named for T. G. Pinches, the first edito ...
'', in a somewhat garbled passage which superimposes events relating to the accession of Kurigalzu II, four generations later. He claims to have “annihilated their extensive forces", then constructed fortresses in a mountain region called Ḫiḫi, in the Syrian desert as security outposts, and “he dug wells and settled people on fertile lands, to strengthen the guard”. These events seem to be confirmed in the opening six lines of text from an unpublished kudurru in the Yale Babylonian CollectionKudurru YBC 2242. which describes his efforts to expel the Suteans from Babylonia. It has been suggested that the Babylonian work “King of all Habitations”, which is commonly referred to as the ''Epic of the plague-god
Erra Erra can refer to: * Erra (god), a Babylonian god * Erra, Estonia, a settlement in Sonda Parish, Ida-Viru County, Estonia * Erra, the purported home planet of the pleiadean aliens described by ufologist Billy Meier * Pizzo Erra, a mountain in Switz ...
'', is a Kassite period-piece which includes the description of a raid on
Uruk Uruk, also known as Warka or Warkah, was an ancient city of Sumer (and later of Babylonia) situated east of the present bed of the Euphrates River on the dried-up ancient channel of the Euphrates east of modern Samawah, Al-Muthannā, Iraq.Harm ...
by the Sutû and the subsequent cries for vengeance upon them. The epic consists of five tablets comprising some 750 lines and reached its final form with the Assyrians in the eighth century, but includes older elements.


The canal of Diniktum

On a tabletTablet Ni. 3199, the earliest known Kassite economic text. which was found at Nippur, a date “the year
n which N, or n, is the fourteenth letter in the Latin alphabet, used in the modern English alphabet, the alphabets of other western European languages and others worldwide. Its name in English is ''en'' (pronounced ), plural ''ens''. History ...
Kadašman-Ḫarbe, the king, dug the canal of Diniktum”,mu ''Ka-da-áš-ma-an-Ḫar-be'' lugal-˹e˺ íd ''Di-nik-tum'' ˹mu˺-un-b l?/ref> is attested. Diniktum has tentatively been identified as Tell Muḥammad. Kadašman-Ḫarbe’s reign has been identified as the point when literary activity resumed at Nippur after three centuries of silence.


Inscriptions


Notes


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Kadashman-harbe I 15th-century BC Babylonian kings 14th-century BC Babylonian kings Kassite kings 15th-century BC rulers 14th-century BC rulers