thumb|240px|Hugo Radau's line-art for a letter from Ilī-ippašra, named on the third line, to Enlil-kidinni, called Illiliya on the first line, the governor of Nippur
thumb|240px|Hugo Radau's line-art for a letter from Ilī-ippašra, named on the third line, to Enlil-kidinni, called Illiliya on the first line, the governor of Nippur
Ilī-ippašra, inscribed DINGIRmeš-ip-pa-aš-ra, and meaning "My god(s) became reconciled with me", was a Babylonian who may have been adopted or apprenticed during the reign of Kassite king Kurigalzu I, ending , and rose to become an official, possibly the governor of Dilmun, during the later reign of Burna-Buriaš II, c. 1359–1333 BC (short chronology). He may have been a successor for Usi-ana-nuri-?, the viceroy of Dilmun who was attested in the cylinder seal of his grandson, Uballissu-Marduk.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).