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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › ManishtushuManishtushu - Wikipedia

    Manishtushu was the third king of the Akkadian Empire according to Old Babylonian tradition though listed as the 2nd, after Sargon, in the Ur III recension of the Sumerian King List. [ 6 ] [ 7 ] He was the son of Sargon of Akkad and Queen Tashlultum , brother of Enheduanna , Rimush , and Shu-Enlil , and the father of Naram-Sin .

  2. Second, Manishtushu proliferated monumental works, mainly in the form of dedicatory statues of himself, which he had placed in various temples across his empire. Though these monumental works were directly focused at various deities and had theological motivations, they certainly functioned politically to bolster support for his rule among ...

  3. Manishtushu or Manishtusu (or Maništušu) was a king of the Akkadian Empire from 2276 to 2261 BC.Biography Manishtushu was the son of Sargon of Akkad and Queen Tashlultum, brother of En-hedu-ana and the father of Naram-Sin. He was preceded by his younger brother Rimush, was assassinated by members of his own court, and was succeeded by his son ...

  4. Description: The Manistusu obelisk is an inscribed four-sided obelisk made of black diorite. It was found during Jacques de Morgan's excavations at Susa, where it had been brought by the Elamite ruler Shutruk-Nahunte, together with many other iconic Mesopotamian objects. Its inscription deals with the acquisition of eight plots of land by ...

  5. Description: The obelisk is a diorite, four-sided stele that narrows upwards, in a pyramidal-form and bears a long cuneiform inscription in Akkadian. It was commissioned by Maništušu, son of Sargon the Great, King of Akkad. The obelisk was taken to Susa by the Elamite king Šutruk-Nahhunte in the 12th century BCE as a spoil of war.

  6. Whereas the first two Sargonic rulers, Sargon and Rimush, effected such reorganization primarily through military conquests, the third ruler, Manishtushu, was able to reorganize leadership and land ownership through an economic “conquest”—namely, the confiscation or expropriation of land through financial means.

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  8. These tablets record two other Manishtushu texts after the Standard Inscription.38 The first is a six-line dedication that reads, “Manishtushu, king of the world, dedicated [this] to the god Enlil.”39 The second, somewhat longer inscription describes Enlil’s support of Manishtushu’s kingship and concludes with a curse protecting the ...

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