Ilu-shuma or Ilu-šūma, inscribed DINGIR-šum-ma, son of Shalim-ahum was a king of Assyria in the early 20th century BC. The length of his reign is uncertain though he died in 1975 BC,, as the Assyrian King List records him as one of the "six kings whose names were written on bricks, but whose eponyms are not known", referring to the lists of officials after which years were named.
via Open Library + Wikidata
5 total works indexed
· 2023 · cited 83x
· 1997 · cited 80x
· 2021 · cited 77x
· 2016 · cited 65x
· 1987 · cited 64x
via Crossref · CC0
via Wikipedia infobox
via Wikidata · CC0
via Wikidata · CC0
Ilu-shuma or Ilu-šūma, inscribed DINGIR-šum-ma, son of Shalim-ahum was a king of Assyria in the early 20th century BC. The length of his reign is uncertain though he died in 1975 BC,, as the Assyrian King List records him as one of the "six kings whose names were written on bricks, but whose eponyms are not known", referring to the lists of officials after which years were named.
His son, Erishum I, is identified as the king who succeeded him and reigned for 40 years (or 30, depending on the copy of the Assyrian King List), followed by Ilu-shuma's other son, Ikunum. He titled himself "vice-regent of Assur, beloved of the god Ashur and the goddess Ishtar." The Synchronistic King List records, "eighty-two kings of Assyria from Erishum I, son of Ilu-shuma, to Ashurbanipal, son of Esarhaddon", in the concluding colophon.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).