Ashur-nirari II | |
Issi'ak Assur | |
Succession: | King of Assur |
Reign: | 1424–1418 BC[1] |
Predecessor: | Enlil-nasir II |
Successor: | Ashur-bel-nisheshu |
Father: | Enlil-nasir II |
Issue: | Ashur-bel-nisheshu |
Aššur-nērārī II, inscribed maš-šur-ERIM.GABA (=DÁḪ), "(the god) Aššur is my help,"[2] was the king of Assyria, the 68th to appear on the Assyrian Kinglist, ca. 1424–1418 BC or 1414–1408 BC depending on a later uncertainty in the chronology, at the tail end of the Old Assyrian period. The small city state of Aššur was a vassal state of the Mitanni empire at this time and still recovering from their sacking of the city under Šauštatar.
He was the son of Enlil-nāṣir II, who had preceded him on the Assyrian throne. According to the Khorsabad Kinglist[3] he reigned for seven years, the corresponding columns on the Nassouhi and SDAS Kinglists are damaged at this point.[4] A legal text[5] from Aššur is dated to the “Eponym of Ber-nādin-aḫḫe, son of Aššur-nērārī, supreme judge” and another[6] gives the witness “Šamaš-kidinnu, son of Ibaši-ilu, son of Ber-nādin-aḫḫe, supreme judge.” The title and genealogy suggest Ber-nādin-aḫḫe may have been an otherwise unattested successor to Aššur-nērārī.[7]
He was succeeded by his son, Aššur-bēl-nišešu.