- contracted.
Every province was
headed by a
provincial governor (bel pāḫete, bēl
pīhāti or šaknu) who was
responsible for
handling local order,
public safety and...
- the top of the
provincial administration was the
provincial governor (bēl
pīhāti or šaknu). Second-in-command was
probably the šaniu (translated as "deputy"...
-
toppled and
killed (dīk) in an
insurrection led by a
provincial official (bēl
pīḫati)
named Nabû-šuma-ukīn, who in turn was to
retain the
throne for
little more...
- is
unattested in
Arabian languages and is a
loanword from
Akkadian bel
pīḫati, thus
implying that the
region was
under Achaemenid rule),
being evidence...
- of land and tax
exemptions during his reign. Marduk-zākir-šumi, the bēl
pīḫati, or
provincial governor, was the
beneficiary of a
piece of land as a perquisite...
- vát, vanout,
foukat duť, fúkať, vanúť dmuchać, dąć, wiać dúvati, dúhati
pihati да дува da duva to
breathe *dyxati v. дышать dyshat' дихати dýxaty ди́шам...
- K****ite king of
Babylon Marduk-apla-iddina I (c. 1171–1159 BC) to his bēl
pīḫati (inscribed lúEN NAM and
meaning "person responsible"), or a
provincial official...
- on King's
instructions Takil-ana-ilīšu, the son of Ninurta-riṣûa, a bēl
pīḫāti,
provincial governor, an
official sharing the name of the deceased, uncertain...
-
descendants were
recorded in the
genealogy of Marduk-zâkir-šumi, the bēl
pīḫati, “person responsible” or
provincial governor, who was the
beneficiary of...
- grandfather's 31st year,
although this
individual is
identified as the bēl
pīḫati, or a "provincial administrator," a "son" of Arad-Ea.: 192 The kudurru...