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Baal I

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Closeup of the supplicant ruler (right) who may be Baal I, from the Victory stele of Esarhaddon.

Baal I was the king of Tyre (680–660 BC). His name is the same as that of the Phoenician deity, Baal. He was tributary to the Assyrians, who had conquered the rest of Phoenicia, and sent his son Yehawmelek to Ashurbanipal (r. 668–627 BC) with heavy tribute. He also may have assisted the Assyrians in their war against Elam.[citation needed]

In c. 675 BC he entered into a treaty with Assyrian king Esarhaddon, currently in the British Museum. These two rulers are possibly depicted together on the Victory stele of Esarhaddon, issued in c. 670 BC.[1]

References

  1. ^ Spalinger, Anthony (1974). "Esarhaddon and Egypt: an analysis of the First Invasion of Egypt". Orientalia. 43: 295–326.

See also