- that city,
after a hiatus.
Later rule
shifted to the new city of Dur-
Kurigalzu. By the time of Babylon's fall, the K****ites had
already been part of...
- Dur-
Kurigalzu (modern `Aqar-Qūf عَقَرْقُوف in
Baghdad Governorate, Iraq) was a city in
southern Mesopotamia, near the
confluence of the
Tigris and Diyala...
-
Kurigalzu I (died c. 1375 BC),
usually inscribed ku-ri-gal-zu but also
sometimes with the m or d determinative, the 17th king of the K****ite or 3rd dynasty...
-
Kurigalzu II (c. 1332–1308 BC
short chronology) was the 22nd king of the K****ite or 3rd
dynasty that
ruled over Babylon. In more than
twelve inscriptions...
-
Dynasty of
Babylon (complete list) – Kadashman-Harbe I, King (c.1400 BC)
Kurigalzu I, King (d.c.1375 BC) Kadashman-Enlil I, King (c.1374–1360 BC), contemporary...
-
death of the K****ite king
Burnaburiash II, Ashur-uballit
established Kurigalzu II on the
Babylonian throne, in the
first of what
would become a series...
- of this
period are also scanty; they come
mainly from the site of Dur-
Kurigalzu,
where the only
monumental complex of the K****ite
period was found, consisting...
-
Karaindash built a bas-relief
temple in Uruk and
Kurigalzu I (1415–1390 BC)
built a new
capital Dur-
Kurigalzu named after himself,
transferring administrative...
-
removing the
usurper appointed by the K****ites, the ****yrians
appointed Kurigalzu as king. The latter's
connection to the ****yrians is unclear. It is not...
- been Karaindaš, but he was
certainly father to the
better known King,
Kurigalzu I, who
succeeded him, as
attested by his son in his
autobiographical inscription...