Kings of Babylon 

Ancient
Mesopotamia
Lion image on Ishtar Gate
Euphrates · Tigris
Empires / Cities
Sumer
Eridu · Kish · Uruk · Ur
Lagash · Nippur · Ngirsu
Elam
Susa
Akkadian Empire
Akkad · Mari
Amorites
Isin · Larsa
Babylonia
Babylon · Chaldea
Assyria
Assur · Nimrud
Dur-Sharrukin · Nineveh
Mesopotamia
Sumer (king list)
Kings of Assyria
Kings of Babylon
Enûma Elish · Gilgamesh
Assyro-Babylonian religion
Sumerian · Elamite
Akkadian · Aramaic
Hurrian · Hittite

The following is a list of the kings of Babylonia, a major city and empire in ancient lower Mesopotamia, compiled from the traditional Babylonian king lists and modern archaeological findings.

Contents

The Babylonian king list

The Babylonian King List is not merely a list of kings of Babylon, but is a very specific ancient list of supposed Babylonian kings recorded in several ancient locations, and related to the Sumerian king list. As with its predecessor, the Sumerian King List, contemporaneous dynasties are listed chronologically without comment.

There are two versions, known as "King List A" (all kings from the First Dynasty of Babylon to the Neo-Assyrian king Kandalanu) and "King List B" (only the two first dynasties). A third version of the list was written in Greek by Berossus. The "Babylonian King List of the Hellenistic Age" is a continuation that mentions all kings from Alexander the Great to Demetrius II Nicator.[1]

Middle Bronze Age

Early Amorite city-states

First Dynasty of Isin

Further information: Isin

Kings of Larsa

Further information: Larsa

Babylonian Empire (Middle Bronze Age)

First Dynasty of Babylon

First Dynasty of Babylon (ca. (1728 – 1531 BC)
First Dynasty of Babylon (ca. (1728 – 1531 BC)
Hammurabi (ca. 1728 – 1686 BC)
Hammurabi (ca. 1728 – 1686 BC)
Further information: First Dynasty of Babylon

Sealand Dynasty (Dynasty II of Babylon)

These rulers did not rule Babylon itself, but rather the Sumerian regions south of it. Nevertheless, it is traditionally numbered the Second Dynasty of Babylon, and so is listed here.

Early Kassite Monarchs

Further information: Kassites

This dynasty also did not actually rule Babylon, but their numbering scheme was continued by later Kassite Kings of Babylon, and so they are listed here.

Late Bronze Age

Kassite Dynasty (Third Dynasty of Babylon)

Kassite Dynasty (ca. 1374 – 1155 BC)
Kassite Dynasty (ca. 1374 – 1155 BC)
King Meli-Shipak presents his daughter to the goddess Nanaja
King Meli-Shipak presents his daughter to the goddess Nanaja
Further information: Kassites

Iron Age

Dynasty IV of Babylon, from Isin

Further information: Isin

Dynasty V of Babylon

Dynasty VI of Babylon

Dynasty VII of Babylon

Dynasty VIII of Babylon

Dynasty IX of Babylon

Dynasty X of Babylon (Assyrian)

Further information: Neo-Assyrian Empire and Kings of Assyria

Dynasty XI of Babylon (Neo-Babylonian or Chaldean)

Neo-Babylonian Empire and neighbors, ca. 600 BC
Neo-Babylonian Empire and neighbors, ca. 600 BC
Further information: Neo-Babylonian Empire

Persian Babylonia

Further information: Persian Mesopotamia and Achaemenid Empire

In 539 BC, Babylon was captured by Cyrus the Great of Persia. His son was crowned one year later formally as King of Babylonia

Hellenistic Babylonia

Further information: Seleucid Empire

Babylon was captured by Alexander the Great in 330 BC.

See also

Ancient Near East portal

References

  1. ^ Meissner, Bruno (1990). Reallexikon der Assyriologie 6. Berlin: Walter de Gruyter, 90. ISBN 3110100517.