Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

Ur Nammu

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Consort
  
Daughter of Utu-hengal

Religion
  
Successor
  
Shulgi

Grandchildren
  
Amar-Sin, Shu-Sin

Issue
  
Shulgi

Died
  
2047 BC

Children
  
Shulgi

Great grandchild
  
Ibbi-Sin

Ur-Nammu The Legacy of UrNammu The Ancient Near East

Similar
  
Shulgi, Gudea, Sargon of Akkad, Naram‑Sin of Akkad, Hammurabi

The code of ur nammu full text


Ur-Nammu (or Ur-Namma, Ur-Engur, Ur-Gur, ca. 2047-2030 BC short chronology) founded the Sumerian 3rd dynasty of Ur, in southern Mesopotamia, following several centuries of Akkadian and Gutian rule. His main achievement was state-building, and Ur-Nammu is chiefly remembered today for his legal code, the Code of Ur-Nammu, the oldest known surviving example in the world.

Contents

Ur-Nammu ART HISTORY 201 Ancient Near Eastern Art The UrNammu Stele

Antiga cidade de ur nammu mesopot mia


Reign

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Year-names are known for 17 of Ur-Nammu's 18 years, but their order is uncertain. One year-name of his reign records the devastation of Gutium, while two years seem to commemorate his legal reforms: "Year in which Ur-Nammu the king put in order the ways (of the people in the country) from below to above", and "Year Ur-Nammu made justice in the land".

Ur-Nammu UrNammu Ancient History Encyclopedia

Among his military exploits were the conquest of Lagash and the defeat of his former masters at Uruk. He was eventually recognized as a significant regional ruler (of Ur, Eridu, and Uruk) at a coronation in Nippur, and is believed to have constructed buildings at Nippur, Larsa, Kish, Adab, and Umma. He was known for restoring the roads and general order after the Gutian period.

Ur-Nammu Sumer The original Black civilization of Iraq Gudea and the

Ur Nammu was also responsible for ordering the construction of a number of stepped temples, called ziggurats, including the Great Ziggurat of Ur.

Ur-Nammu The Code Of UrNammu The Oldest Law Book Lazer Horse

He was succeeded by his son Shulgi, after an eighteen-year reign. His death on the battle-field against the Gutians (after he had been abandoned by his army) was commemorated in a long Sumerian poetic composition.

Stele

Ur-Nammu UrNammu Ancient History Encyclopedia

In 1925, a shattered nine-foot tall limestone pillar was discovered in Mesopotamia. Under the remote supervision of Leonard Woolley, it was reconstructed by the Penn Museum. In 1985, Jeanny Canby determined that it had been pieced back incorrectly. She removed the plaster filler of the stele, and added the rearranged pieces she found in the museum's storeroom, and discovered the figure of a courtesan embracing a deity. "It's an amazingly intimate scene for a royal monument," she said.

Ur-Nammu Praise poems of UrNamma UrNamma C translation Mesopotamian

Ur-Nammu FileSong of UrNammu AO5378 mp3h9129jpg Wikimedia Commons

References

Ur-Nammu Wikipedia