- was the
position of
vizier (
sukkallu). From at
least the time of
Shalmaneser I onward,
there were
grand viziers (
sukkallu rabi’u),
superior to the ordinary...
- cupbearer), rab ša-rēši (chief officer/eunuch),
sartinnu (chief judge),
sukkallu (grand vizier) and
turtanu (commander-in-chief).
There is some evidence...
- and generals,
included individuals appointed to
positions termed sukkallu,
sukkallu rabi’u,
tartennu and nāgiru.
Generals were
generally recruited from...
-
outside the city. In a
single text from
Ugarit he is
referred to as the
sukkallu (messenger or
attendant deity) of Kumarbi. However,
elsewhere he was chiefly...
- father, Aššur-iddin, and grandfather, Qibi-Aššur, as
grand vizier, or
sukkallu rabi’u, of ****yria and king of the
dependant state of Ḫanigalbat. Qibi-Aššur...
- side-branch of the ****yrian
royal family who
served as
grand vizier, or
sukkallu rabi’u, of ****yria, and also as king, or šar, of the
dependent state of...
-
apparently one of the K****ite specialties.
Among the high dignitaries, the
sukkallu (a
vague term that can be
translated as "minister") were
still present...
- received.
Junior officers of the
royal administration had such
titles as
sukkallu (often
translated as "vizier", the
second governor), "district manager"...
-
similar to
their Mesopotamian counterparts. The word
sukkal (Akkadian:
sukkallu) has
Sumerian origin and at
first denoted a
class of
human officials, responsible...
- Libur-zanin-Ekur, ša rēši (lúSAG), a
court official Lūṣa-ana-nūri-Marduk,
sukkallu ṣīru,
grand vizier or first-rank
courtier Iqīša-Bau, "son of Arad-Ea,"...