Family tree Bas » Eriba-Marduk van Babylon

Personal data Eriba-Marduk van Babylon 

  • (Levens event) .
    Eriba-Marduk, inscribed mri-ba [dAMAR.UTU][i 1], was the king of Babylon, very speculatively ca. 769 – 761 BC. He was one of three Chaldaean tribal leaders to occupy the Babylonian throne during the course of the 8th century and would be looked back as the ancestor figure during future reigns of members of this group. A member of the Bit-Yakin tribe, who was later to be given the title “re-establisher of the foundation(s) of the land,”[i 2] he was credited with restoring stability to the country after years of turmoil.[1]
    Biography

    He was described as the son or descendant of Marduk-šakin-šumi, an otherwise unknown individual who one might speculate to have been one of the five unknown kings from the earlier period of interregnum.[2] According to the Dynastic Chronicle,[i 3] Eriba-Marduk was the single member of a dynasty of the Sealand (kurA.AB.BA) and succeeded Marduk-apla-u?ur, the first king clearly identified as Chaldean. He was eventually succeeded by Nabû-šuma-iškun, the sequence of these three kings confirmed by a fragment of an Assyrian Synchronistic Kinglist.[i 4] There are legal documents dated to his ninth year and to the thirteenth year of his successor, which has led historians to conclude that he must have ascended the throne by 770 BC at the latest, as his successor is known to have ruled until 748 BC.[3] The legal document[i 5] dated to his ninth year records the sale of a large expanse of grazing land, eqel ša bit ikkari, “the field of the house of the farmer.” The land apparently bordered property belonging to an Aramean sheikh, or nasiku, evidence of permanent settlement rather than opportunistic raiding by this tribal group.[4]

    He participated in the Akitu, or new year festival, first in the beginning of the second year of his reign, as his rule extended into northern Babylonia and he suppressed the incursions of nomads around Babylon and Borsippa, restoring fields and orchards to their former owners. His religious devotions included restoring Marduk’s throne in the Esagila in Babylon.[i 6] An inscription of Esarhaddon of Assyria (681–669 BC), relates how part of the temple of Ištar in the Eanna at Uruk, the shrine of the goddess Nanaya originally built by Nazi-Maruttaš in the 13th century, had been restored by Eriba-Marduk. Not all restorations, however, were to the liking of his successors. According to the Harran stele of Nabonidus (555–539 BC), his reign witnessed a sacrilegious reform of the cult of Ištar {beltu ša Uruk, “lady of Uruk”), when the people of Uruk replaced her statue with an unsuitable one, unyoking its team of lions and removing its shrine.[5] This may have been part of a program of suppressing the licentious cults of the goddesses in southern Babylonia.[6]

    The only extant royal inscriptions from his reign are two duck-weights[i 7] endorsed by Eriba-Marduk’s palace administration, and a part of a solid clay cylinder[i 8] thought to be commemorating the inauguration of cultic idols, their decoration and transport upstream on the river Euphrates to Uruk
  • A child of Marduk-Sadin-Sumi van Babylon

Household of Eriba-Marduk van Babylon


Child(ren):


Do you have supplementary information, corrections or questions with regards to Eriba-Marduk van Babylon?
The author of this publication would love to hear from you!

Ancestors (and descendant) of Eriba-Marduk van Babylon


    Show complete ancestor table

    With Quick Search you can search by name, first name followed by a last name. You type in a few letters (at least 3) and a list of personal names within this publication will immediately appear. The more characters you enter the more specific the results. Click on a person's name to go to that person's page.

    • You can enter text in lowercase or uppercase.
    • If you are not sure about the first name or exact spelling, you can use an asterisk (*). Example: "*ornelis de b*r" finds both "cornelis de boer" and "kornelis de buur".
    • It is not possible to enter charachters outside the standard alphabet (so no diacritic characters like ö and é).



    Visualize another relationship

    The data shown has no sources.

    About the surname Van Babylon


    The Family tree Bas publication was prepared by .contact the author
    When copying data from this family tree, please include a reference to the origin:
    Andre Bas, "Family tree Bas", database, Genealogy Online (https://www.genealogieonline.nl/stamboom-bas/I2757.php : accessed January 21, 2026), "Eriba-Marduk van Babylon".