Limestone foundation peg of Lugal-kisalsi, from Uruk, Iraq. C. 2380 BCE.
Pergamon Museum VA 4855. The inscription reads "For (goddess)
Namma, wife of (the god)
An, Lugalkisalsi, King of Uruk, King of Ur, erected this temple of Namma".[3]
Lugal-kisalsi, also Lugaltarsi (๐๐ฆ๐, lugal-kisal-si, also ๐๐ป๐, lugal-tar-si, lugal-sila-si)[4] was a King of
Uruk and
Ur who lived towards the end of the 25th century BCE, succeeding his father
Lugal-kinishe-dudu, according to contemporary inscriptions,[5] although he does not appear in the
Sumerian King List (but his father does in some versions).[6][7] In one of his inscriptions, he appears as "Lugalkisalsi, the first-born son of Lugalkigenedudu, king of Uruk and Ur".[8]
He had a son named Lubarasi, and a grandson named Silim-Utu.[9] Numerous inscriptions in his name are known.[10]
Inscriptions
Lugal-kisalsi is known from several inscriptions.[11] Lugal-kisalsi was also called "King of
Kish" in some of his inscriptions:
A vase fragment with the name "Lugal-kisal-(si)": {d}en-lil / lugal kur-kur-ra / lugal-kisal-si / [dumu]-sag# (๐ญ๐๐ค / ๐๐ณ๐ณ๐ / ๐๐ฆ๐ / ๐๐) "For Enlil, king of all the lands, by Lugalkisalsi, the first-born son [of
Lugalkigenedudu, king of Uruk and Ur]".[13][14]
Votive tablet of Lugal-kisalsi, recording that he built the courtyard wall of a temple complex for the gods An and Inanna. British Museum, BM 91013.[15]
Statuary
Lugal-kisalsi is known for a foundation peg with effigy and inscription, and several similar statuettes, although without inscriptions. The foundation peg reads:
"For
Namma, the wife of
An, Lugalkisalsi, king of Uruk and king of Ur, the temple of Namma he built."
โ Inscription of Lugal-kisalsi on his foundation peg.[3][16]
A statue in the
Louvre Museum is in the name of the grandson of Lugal-kisalsi, bearing the inscription: "Satam, son of Lu-Bara, son of Lugal-kisal-si, king of Uruk, attendant of Girim-sim, prince of Uruk."[17]
Lugal-kisalsi foundation peg (close-up). Inscription: "For (goddess)
Namma, wife of (the god)
An, Lugalkisalsi, King of Uruk, King of Ur, erected this temple of Namma".[3]
Male bust, perhaps Lugal-kisal-si, king of Uruk. Limestone, Early Dynastic III. From Adab (Bismaya).
Statue of Satam, grandson of Lugal-kisal-si.
Louvre Museum
^Hayes, William (1950).
Chronology. Cambridge Ancient History. p. 51.
^"In Unug, En-cakanca-ana became king; he ruled for 60 years. Lugal-ure (ms. P3+BT14 has instead: Lugal-kinice-dudu (?)) ruled for 120 years. Argandea ruled for 7 years. (ms. L1+N1 has:) 3 kings; they ruled for (ms. L1+N1 has:) 187 years. Then Unug was defeated (ms. TL has instead: destroyed) and the kingship was taken to Urim." in
"The Sumerian king list: translation". etcsl.orinst.ox.ac.uk.
^"Satam, le fils de Lu-Bara, fils de Lugal-kisal-si, roi d'Uruk, serviteur de Girim-si, le prince d'Uruk." in
"Site officiel du musรฉe du Louvre". cartelfr.louvre.fr.
Limestone foundation peg of Lugal-kisalsi, from Uruk, Iraq. C. 2380 BCE.
Pergamon Museum VA 4855. The inscription reads "For (goddess)
Namma, wife of (the god)
An, Lugalkisalsi, King of Uruk, King of Ur, erected this temple of Namma".[3]
Lugal-kisalsi, also Lugaltarsi (๐๐ฆ๐, lugal-kisal-si, also ๐๐ป๐, lugal-tar-si, lugal-sila-si)[4] was a King of
Uruk and
Ur who lived towards the end of the 25th century BCE, succeeding his father
Lugal-kinishe-dudu, according to contemporary inscriptions,[5] although he does not appear in the
Sumerian King List (but his father does in some versions).[6][7] In one of his inscriptions, he appears as "Lugalkisalsi, the first-born son of Lugalkigenedudu, king of Uruk and Ur".[8]
He had a son named Lubarasi, and a grandson named Silim-Utu.[9] Numerous inscriptions in his name are known.[10]
Inscriptions
Lugal-kisalsi is known from several inscriptions.[11] Lugal-kisalsi was also called "King of
Kish" in some of his inscriptions:
A vase fragment with the name "Lugal-kisal-(si)": {d}en-lil / lugal kur-kur-ra / lugal-kisal-si / [dumu]-sag# (๐ญ๐๐ค / ๐๐ณ๐ณ๐ / ๐๐ฆ๐ / ๐๐) "For Enlil, king of all the lands, by Lugalkisalsi, the first-born son [of
Lugalkigenedudu, king of Uruk and Ur]".[13][14]
Votive tablet of Lugal-kisalsi, recording that he built the courtyard wall of a temple complex for the gods An and Inanna. British Museum, BM 91013.[15]
Statuary
Lugal-kisalsi is known for a foundation peg with effigy and inscription, and several similar statuettes, although without inscriptions. The foundation peg reads:
"For
Namma, the wife of
An, Lugalkisalsi, king of Uruk and king of Ur, the temple of Namma he built."
โ Inscription of Lugal-kisalsi on his foundation peg.[3][16]
A statue in the
Louvre Museum is in the name of the grandson of Lugal-kisalsi, bearing the inscription: "Satam, son of Lu-Bara, son of Lugal-kisal-si, king of Uruk, attendant of Girim-sim, prince of Uruk."[17]
Lugal-kisalsi foundation peg (close-up). Inscription: "For (goddess)
Namma, wife of (the god)
An, Lugalkisalsi, King of Uruk, King of Ur, erected this temple of Namma".[3]
Male bust, perhaps Lugal-kisal-si, king of Uruk. Limestone, Early Dynastic III. From Adab (Bismaya).
Statue of Satam, grandson of Lugal-kisal-si.
Louvre Museum
^Hayes, William (1950).
Chronology. Cambridge Ancient History. p. 51.
^"In Unug, En-cakanca-ana became king; he ruled for 60 years. Lugal-ure (ms. P3+BT14 has instead: Lugal-kinice-dudu (?)) ruled for 120 years. Argandea ruled for 7 years. (ms. L1+N1 has:) 3 kings; they ruled for (ms. L1+N1 has:) 187 years. Then Unug was defeated (ms. TL has instead: destroyed) and the kingship was taken to Urim." in
"The Sumerian king list: translation". etcsl.orinst.ox.ac.uk.
^"Satam, le fils de Lu-Bara, fils de Lugal-kisal-si, roi d'Uruk, serviteur de Girim-si, le prince d'Uruk." in
"Site officiel du musรฉe du Louvre". cartelfr.louvre.fr.