Also known as Lugal-ushumgal, Lugal-ušumgal, Lugalušumgal
thumb|260px|Lugal-ushumgal was governor of Lagash, at the extreme south of Mesopotamia thumb|260px|The name "Lugal-ushumgal" on seal impressions, and with standard Sumero-Akkadian cuneiforms thumb|260px|A seal of "Sibni (𒉺𒇻𒀭𒉌), policeman (𒋼𒇲𒃲, gallagal), servant of Lugal-ushumgal, ensi of Lagash"
thumb|260px|Lugal-ushumgal was governor of Lagash, at the extreme south of Mesopotamia thumb|260px|The name "Lugal-ushumgal" on seal impressions, and with standard Sumero-Akkadian cuneiforms thumb|260px|A seal of "Sibni (𒉺𒇻𒀭𒉌), policeman (𒋼𒇲𒃲, gallagal), servant of Lugal-ushumgal, ensi of Lagash"
thumb|260px|Contract in the name of "Governor Lugal-ushumgal" Lugal-ushumgal (, lugal-ušumgal; died 2210 BC) was a Sumerian ruler (ensi, formerly read "Patesi") of Lagash ("Shirpula"), BC. Several inscriptions of Lugal-ushumgal are known, particularly seal impressions, which refer to him as governor of Lagash and at the same time a vassal (, arad, "servant" or "slave") of the Akkadian Empire rulers Naram-Sin and his successor Shar-Kali-Sharri.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).