-
Diniktum,
inscribed Di-ni-ik-tumKI, was a
still unlocated middle bronze-age town
often thought to be
located somewhere in the
Diyala Governorate of Iraq...
- year [in which] Kadašman-Ḫarbe, the king, dug the
canal of
Diniktum”, is attested.
Diniktum has
tentatively been
identified as Tell Muhammad. Kadašman-Ḫarbe’s...
- be
confused with the Sîn-gamil, son of Sin-semi, who
ruled the city of
Diniktum contemporary with Zimri-Lim of Mari. The name "Sîn-gāmil" on a dedication...
- one of the
patron deities, with the
goddess Bēlit-ilī, of the city of
Diniktum.
Suggestions that
Ninkilim was
equated with
Ningirima can be
found in older...
-
Dadusha and
nephew of Naram-Suen of Eshnunna. He
conquered the
cities of
Diniktum and Rapiqum. With Ḫammu-rāpi of Babylon, and the
Amorite king Shamshi-Adad...
- al-Dhiba'i to the northeast. The
ancient name of the site is
unknown though Diniktum has been suggested. The lost city of
Akkad has also been proposed. Based...
-
against Der and its
neighbor Diniktum, the
tablet mentions the
stationing of 500
Yamhadite warships for
twelve years in
Diniktum, and the
Yamhadite military...
- yet you keep on
selling women from Ešnunna." Tell
Muhammad (possibly
Diniktum) in the south-eastern
suburbs of
Baghdad near the
confluence of the Diyala...
-
Baghdad about 600
meters from the site of Tell
Mohammad (possibly
ancient Diniktum). In the Old
Babylonian period it was part of the
kingdom of Eshnunna....
- Mesopotamia; the
tablet includes a
declaration of war
against Dēr and
Diniktum in
retaliation for
their evil deeds, a
reminder to the king of Dēr about...