Ammi-ditana

Mapa Mezopotamii w czasach panowania I dynastii z Babilonu (od Hammurabiego do Samsu-ditany)

Ammi-ditana (Ammī-ditāna)[1] – dziewiąty król Babilonii z I dynastii z Babilonu, syn i następca Abi-eszuha; panował przez 37 lat (1683–1647 p.n.e. – chronologia średnia). Znany z nielicznych zachowanych inskrypcji budowlanych.

Przypisy

  1. Frayne D.R., Old Babylonian Period (2003-1595 BC), The Royal Inscriptions of Mesopotamia – Early Periods, tom 4, University of Toronto Press, 1990, s. 411.

Bibliografia

  • hasło Ammi-ditana, [w:] Gwendolyn Leick, Who’s Who in the Ancient Near East, London and New York 2002, s. 14.

Linki zewnętrzne

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Babylone 1.PNG
Autor: , Licencja: CC BY-SA 3.0
Map of the kingdom of the First Dynasty of Babylon from the beginning of the reign of Hammurabi (1792-1750 BC according to middle chronology) to the fall of Babylon in 1595 BC. The maximal extension of the kingdom under the reigns of Hammrabi and his son Samsu-iluna includes cities that have been taken by those kings, but probably dominated at best a few years, like Tuttul, Nineveh and Shekhna. The domination of Terqa by the successors of Samsu-iluna is probable because of some of them appear in the name years of tablets excavated there (Ammi-saduqa, Samsu-ditana).
Kings Larsa Louvre AO7025.jpg
List of the kings of Larsa. Terracotta, Larsa, ca. 2025–1763 (39th year of the reign of Hammurabi).