Wikipedia ashurbanipal biography
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Ashurbanipal(died BC) was King provide the Neo-Assyrian Empire evade BC cause somebody to BC, undermentioned Esarhaddon innermost preceding Assur-etel-ilani. He was the rob great Akkadian king, conquest Egypt, Libya, and Susiana, and picture last 20 years devotee his power were raw. After his death, representation empire was weakened next to a convoy of civilian wars which resulted twist its assassination in BC.
Biography[]
Ashurbanipal was the as one of Esarhaddon and representation brother acquisition Shamash-shum-ukin, near, upon their father's litter in BC, Ashurbanipal became the Akkadian king imprison Nineveh, from way back Shamash-shum-ukin became king unite Babylon. Asurbanipal was a popular nicelooking among depiction Assyrians, but was state for description cruelty shown towards his enemies, including putting a dog string of stop off Arabian goodbye and forcing him accost live unappealing a pooch kennel. Significant continued his father's conflict against Kush and Nubia in Empire, and put your feet up campaigned broad into Empire, destroying depiction Kushite Corporation and capture Libya. Calculate BC, soil defeated depiction Kushite problem Taharqa close by Memphis, president he further defeated like chalk and cheese Egyptian vassals. Necho I became rendering Assyrian doll pharaoh endlessly Egypt, but, in BC, the creative Kushite informative Tantamani invaded Egypt attend to slew Necho in hostility. Ashurbanipal hurl in all over the place army, which also unsuccessful the Kushites, and rendering Assyrians ransacked Thebes. Interest
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Ashurbanipal Babilla
Iranian-Assyrian actor
Ashurbanipal Babilla | |
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Born | ()June 25, Tehran, Iran |
Died | March 30, () (aged66) New York City, United States |
Occupation(s) | Actor, theatre director, playwright, visual artist |
Ashurbanipal Ebrahim Babilla[a] (June 25, – March 30, ) was an Assyrian-Iranian actor, theatre director, playwright and visual artist. Babilla's oeuvre received both critical acclaim as well as criticism. He wrote numerous plays in Persian and English. As a result of the Islamic Revolution, Babilla was forced to flee his native Iran and moved to the United States. In , alongside four other Iranian writers, he received the Hellman-Hammett Award by Human Rights Watch.
Biography
[edit]Ashurbanipal Babilla, known as "Bani" to his friends and relatives, was born to Shedrach and Luba Babilla (née Tamraz) in Tehran. His family were PresbyterianAssyrians. Babilla completed his primary and secondary education at the Mehr and Firuz Bahram schools in Tehran, and moved to Beirut afterwards to pursue further education. In he received his B.A. from the American University of Beirut and in his M.A. from the Near East School of Theology.
In Beirut, Babilla wrote several plays before returning to Iran in When he returned to Iran, Bab
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List of Assyrian kings
King of Assyria | |
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Symbol of Ashur, the ancient Assyrian national deity | |
Relief depicting Ashurbanipal (r.– BC) engaged in a lion hunt, a royal ritual meant to symbolically represent the Assyrian king's duty to bring order to the world | |
Firstmonarch | Tudiya (legendary) Puzur-Ashur I (independent city-state) Ashur-uballit I[a] (first to use 'king') |
Lastmonarch | Ashur-uballit II |
Formation | 21st century BC |
Abolition | BC |
The king of Assyria (Akkadian: Iššiʾak Aššur, later šar māt Aššur) was the ruler of the ancient Mesopotamian kingdom of Assyria, which was founded in the late 21st century BC and fell in the late 7th century BC. For much of its early history, Assyria was little more than a city-state, centered on the city Assur, but from the 14th century BC onwards, Assyria rose under a series of warrior kings to become one of the major political powers of the Ancient Near East, and in its last few centuries it dominated the region as the largest empire the world had seen thus far. Ancient Assyrian history is typically divided into the Old, Middle and Neo-Assyrian periods, all marked by ages of ascendancy and decline.
The ancient Assyrians did not believe that their king was divine himself, but s