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  1. Mar 7, 2019 · Sargon II – Founder of Dur-Sharrukin. Sargon II was an Assyrian ruler who lived during the last century of the Assyrian Empire and is considered to be one of its great rulers. He came to the throne in 721 BC, after the death of Shalmaneser V. Sargon is believed to have been a younger son of Tiglath-Pileser III, which would make him a younger ...

  2. Jul 20, 2021 · Sargon's Nineveh letters. With about 1,200 letters surviving in the original, the correspondence of Sargon II of Assyria (721–705 BC) uncovered in the royal archives of Nineveh has firmly secured its place among the most fascinating letter collections preserved from antiquity. The texts are an invaluable source for the reconstruction of the ...

  3. Jun 30, 2014 · The Neo-Assyrian Empire (912-612 BCE) was the final stage of the Assyrian Empire, stretching throughout Mesopotamia, the Levant, Egypt, Anatolia, and into parts of Persia and Arabia. Beginning with the reign of Adad Nirari II (912-891 BCE), the Neo-Assyrian kings made great territorial expansions to forge the greatest empire in the world up to ...

  4. The Neo-Assyrian king Sargon II was one of the most important and famous rulers of ancient Mesopotamia. In this volume of critically important ancient documents, Grant Frame presents reliable, updated editions of Sargon’s approximately 130 historical inscriptions, as well as several from his wife, his brother, and other high officials.

  5. Sargon II was ported to a variety of personal computers popular in the early 1980s. [6] The game engine has multiple levels of lookahead to make it more accessible to beginning chess players. BYTE in 1980 estimated that Sargon II had a 1500 rating at the highest tournament-time difficulty level, and speculated that it was the best chess program ...

  6. The second passage, in Sargon's Great Display Inscription from Khorsabad, refers to Sargon's treatment of undeported Samaritans. It should be translated “I trained the remnant in their crafts." The historical reality behind this claim is the shift in agricultural techniques and activities in Samaria as a result of the Assyrian conquest.

  7. Sargon II, "King of the World". He believed he had been endowed by the gods with an exceptional intelligence, superior to that of the previous kings, including the famous Sargon of Akkad himself. He was convinced that his gods approved his policies. He was a king of justice and, therefore, his wars were just.

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