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| Â | [No title] |
 | | Ashuruballit, noting the departure of the main forces of Media and Babylon, planned to retake his city. |  | | Modern historians have supplied the name of the Egyptian ally of Ashuruballit, and have added detail to the story of the counter-siege of Harran, thanks to Jewish archivists who document in the Hebrew Bible a particularly relevant incident. |  | | Nineveh had fallen to the combined armies of Media and Babylon in the month of Abu (July/Aug) of 612 B.C.., an event which resulted in the death of Sinsharishkun and the ascendancy of Ashuruballit. |
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http://www.kent.net/DisplacedDynasties/According_to_the_Chronicle_and_the_Hebrew_Bible.html
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| Â | [No title] |
 | | Though we have suggested the possibility, it is not necessary that we credit Ashuruballit with political ambitions or view his state as a renegade from the Assyrian empire. |  | | The letters from Mitanni and Karduniash (Babylon?), supposedly lesser kingdoms than that ruled by Ashuruballit I, speak of the giving of daughters in marriage to cement their relationship with Egypt. |  | | The criticism will surely be raised that we have said very little about the Mitanni. |
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http://www.kent.net/DisplacedDynasties/Possible_Objections.html
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| Â | [No title] |
 | | Ashuruballit, notwithstanding his Assyrian name, was a Mitannian; and the so-called Middle Assyrian state he founded is but a new phase of the Mitanni/Medish [sic] rule in Assyria. |  | | The wealthiest satrapy won by Kurtiwaza was Assyria, and indeed he must have had an Assyrian throne-name, though this is supposedly unknown. |  | | That Ashuruballit was king of Mitanni (or Hanigalbat) is in any case no secret, as he states the fact very clearly in a well-known letter to Akhnaton, |
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http://www.specialtyinterests.net/el_amarnas_mesopotamians.html
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| Â | "Forgotten Empires" Remembered - Text |
 | | The question of which Assyrian king supported Shuttarna III against Shattiwaza is unclear. |  | | When the Assyrian Ashuruballit I claimed that his ancestors were kings of Hanigalbat, he simply meant to say that his Mitannian overlords were once Assyrian subjects: kings over Hanigalbat. |  | | Much time and energy has been put into trying to show this Ashuruballit to be someone other than the middle-Assyrian Ashuruballit I, [14] but given that the names of his successors given in Hittite records match those of the AKL, this is rather unlikely. |
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http://www.starways.net/lisa/essays/mitanni.html
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| Â | [No title] |
 | | If you want to find out the secret power your names have had on your life, we recommend you have a detailed Name Report prepared for yourself. |  | | Your name of Ashuruballit indicates that you have an analytical nature with an interest in political and economic issues. |  | | Click here to find out additional characteristics of the name of Ashuruballit |
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http://www.kabalarians.com/../../male/ashuruballit.htm
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| Â | [No title] |
 | | This also explains why Babylon was called the capital of the Chaldean Empire, and why the Babylonian armies were called the Chaldean armies (Jeremiah 37:11), while the Chaldeans did not form the population but a small fraction of reigning class (cf. |  | | Centuries later, the Babylonian king Nabopolassar warred against an alliance of Ashuruballit of Assyria and Psammetikhos of Egypt. |  | | The Chaldean king Merosar warred against an alliance of Ashuruballit of Assyria with Seti of Egypt. |
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http://www-oi.uchicago.edu/OI/ANE/ANE-DIGEST/2000/v2000.n042
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| Â | Ashuruballit II |
 | | In alliance with a large Egyptian force, Ashuruballit's army was able to defend Harran from Babylonian-Median attack for a brief period following the destruction of Nineveh; however, when the Egyptian army returned to their homeland in 610 BC, the Babylonians and Medians swept into Harran and plundered it, bringing an end to the Assyrian empire. |  | | Ashuruballit II Ashuruballit II, or Assuruballit II, was the last king of the Assyrian empire. |  | | While it is clear that he was a member of the Assyrian royal family, and that he was a general of the Assyrian army before declaring himself king, there is some disagreement as to whether or not Ashuruballit II was the brother of Sinsharishkun who ruled the empire from 623 BC to 612 BC. |
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http://encyclopedia.codeboy.net/wikipedia/a/as/ashuruballit_ii.html
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| Â | Mitanni |
 | | Assyria, previously under Mitanni control, was able to assert its independence during the reign of Ashuruballit I in approximately 1330 BC. |  | | By approximately 1350 BC, the Mitanni kingdom had weakened, and had become practically dependent on the Hittites, then under the rule of Shuppiluliuma I. |  | | They seem to have venerated Vedic deities and their nobility used Indo-Aryan names, and worshipped Indo-Aryan gods. |
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http://www.worldhistory.com/wiki/M/Mitanni.htm
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| Â | Nabataea.net : The Chronology of Jeremiah and the Lachish Letters |
 | | After taking several other Assyrian cities in 611, Nabopolassar, in his 16th year, 610 B.C., advanced against Ashuruballit in Harran. |  | | Throwing off his allegiance to Ashuruballit, Necho marched II to the river Euphrates against "the king of Assyria" in Carchernish. |  | | Ashuruballit, when Nineveh fell, was at once crowned king of Assyria in the city of Harran. |
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http://www.nabataea.net/jeremiah.html
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| Â | Today's Word |
 | | This was also the year Ashuruballit died – the last mighty king of Assyria. |  | | Born about 625 B.C., which was also the birth date of the Neo-Babylonian Empire. |  | | Daniel lived until the fall of the neo-Babylonian Empire under the conquest of Cyrus, King of Persia. |
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http://www.crusade.org/word/word2421.html
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| Â | Ashuruballit I |
 | | Ashuruballit I, or Assuruballit I, was king of the Assyrian empire from 1365 BC to 1330 BC. |  | | Brought to you by TravelSources and the Beaches and Towns Network, LLC. |
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http://www.teachtime.com/en/wikipedia/a/as/ashuruballit_i.html
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| Â | Encyclopedia: Sinsharishkun |
 | | He was the son of Ashurbanipal and (possibly) the brother of Ashuruballit II, the last Assyrian king ( 612 - 607 BC). |  | | He reigned from 623 BC until August 10, 612 BC, when he burnt in his palace in the Babylonia n- Median attack on Nineveh, Assyria's largest city. |
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http://www.nationmaster.com/encyclopedia/Sinsharishkun
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| Â | C&C Review 1998:1: Contents |
 | | Geoffrey Barnard presents a new chronology for the ancient Middle East and reinvestigates questions such as the 'Ashuruballit problem' and Egypt's Third Intermediate Period. |
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http://www.catastrophism.com/cdrom/pubs/journals/review/v1998n1
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| Â | From the Jerusalem siege by Sennacherib till the first Jerusalem fall by Nebuchadrezzar II |
 | | year (610/609 BC), drove Ashuruballit out of Haran. |  | | I am entirely agreeing this view of Finegan told of by Mallet, in comparing number 3 of the Babylonian Chronicle Series, Finegan is mentioning, with my termini post and ante quem of the Megiddo battle. |  | | The next year (609/608 BC) between Duzu (June/July) and Ululu (Aug./Sep.) 609, Ashuruballit and a large army of Egypt tried to reconquer Haran. |
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http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/cplawassist/paper/19011.html
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| Â | Assyria |
 | | Mittanian control was decisively thrown off by about 1365 B.C. by Ashuruballit, who laid the foundation of the first Assyrian empire. |  | | Invaders from the Taurus mountains, north of Assyria, posed a significant threat to Assyria, and occupied Arik-den-ili for a number of years, but were successfully repelled, paving the way for Adad-narari (1307 B.C.) to establish the first Assyrian empire, which lasted until approximately 1248 B.C. |
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http://www.crystalinks.com/assyrian.html
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| Â | Apollonius.Net - Mathematical Analysis Of Ancient History |
 | | E: Foundation of Akhetaton, City of the Sun |  | | E: *Smenkhare (= Peshee) and Banishment and Exile of Akhnaton and Princess Beketaten |  | | A: *Ashuruballit II (= Ammunas), at Harran (in exile) |
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http://www.apollonius.net/synchronology.html
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| Â | The Rise of the Babylonian World Power |
 | | He also may have carried on a long tradition in which Assyrian royalty was honored in the person of Yuya and his wife Tuya, where we have information that Yuya was the alter ego of Ashurnasirpal/ Ben Hadad/ Abdi Ashirta/ Tushrata. |  | | In the same sense the successor of Tutankhamen was Ay, the alter ego of Ashuruballit/ Hazael/ Aziru/ Kurtiwaza. |
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http://www.specialtyinterests.net/babylon.html
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| Â | mesopotamia |
 | | Akkad is not as famous as some of the other civilizations in this report. |  | | In 1472, a Mittanian king, ruled Assyria for the next 70 years. |  | | In 1365, Ashuruballit laid the foundation for the first Assyrian empire. |
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http://www.islavista.goleta.k12.ca.us/0203/rm24/stuartweb/mesopotamia.htm
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| Â | 321ch11 |
 | | One of the "Amarna Letters", cuneiform tablet from King Ashuruballit I of Assyria, c. |
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http://www.rocky.edu/~moakm/321ch11.html
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