- 1550–1260 BC),
earlier called Ḫabigalbat in old
Babylonian texts, c. 1600 BC;
Hanigalbat or Hani-Rabbat in ****yrian records, or
Naharin in
Egyptian texts, was...
- The king of
Hanigalbat (Akkadian: šar
Ḫanigalbat) or king of the land of
Hanigalbat (šar māt
Ḫanigalbat) was an ****yrian v****al ruler,
essentially a viceroy...
-
Mitanni (
Hanigalbat) in the
thirteenth century BC,
before the ****yrian conquest. A king
named Shattuara is
suggested to have
ruled Hanigalbat during the...
- him, Piy****ili led a
Hittite army that put
Shattiwaza on the
throne of
Hanigalbat.
According to
Hittite sources, Piy****ili and
Shattiwaza crossed the Euphrates...
-
Hittite v****al
state called Ḫanigalbat.
During the
reign of the
Hittite king Muršili III (better
known as Urḫi-Teššub),
Ḫanigalbat was
subjugated by the ****yrians...
- region,
while the ****yrians
focused on the
middle Euphrates region with
Hanigalbat. Adad-Nirari I:
Shattuara became a v****al of the ****yrian king Adad-nirari...
- the
power vacuum left by the
Amorites brought the rise of the
Mitanni (
Ḫanigalbat) c. 1600 BC. From the 15th
century BC onward, the term
Amurru is usually...
- Jordan.
Trade routes Levantine trade routes 1300 BCE
Egyptian Empire The
Hanigalbat (Mitanni) and Egypt. Map of the
Ancient Near East
during the
Amarna Period...
- the rule of a
viceroy who bore the
title of
grand vizier and king of
Hanigalbat. The
first such
ruler was Shalmaneser's brother, Ibashi-ili,
whose descendants...
-
title 'grand vizier' (sakallu rabi'u) and 'king of the land of
Hanigalbat' (sar mat
Hanigalbat).
During the fall of the ****yrian
Empire (911-605 BC), sections...