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Kish (Sumer)

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Babylonia in the time of Hammurabi, showing his empire at the start and end of his reign

32°33′N 44°39′E / 32.550°N 44.650°E / 32.550; 44.650

Not to be confused with Kesh (Sumer)

Kish (Sumerian: KIŠKI, modern Tell al-Uhaymir, Iraq) was an ancient city of Sumer, situated some 12 km east of Babylon, now ca. 80 km south of Baghdad, in the Babil Governorate, Iraq. The Sumerian king list states it was the first city to have kings after a flood mentioned in the king list. The city's patron deity was Zababa in Akkadian times.

"King of Kish" is one of the early titles assumed by Sumerian rulers of other city states used to indicate hegemony over the region. Kish had a Semitic population from earliest times, discernible from some early dynastic king names from the list that are considered to be Semitic[1].

A French archaeological team under Henri de Genouillac excavated there between 1912 and 1914, and later an Anglo-American team under Stephen Langdon from 1923 to 1933.

Sources

  • Karen Rhea Nemat-Nejat Daily Life in Ancient Mesopotamia (Greenwood, 1998, ISBN 0-313-29497-6; Hendrickson, 2002, ISBN 1-56563-712-7)
  • N.K. Sanders (trans) The Epic of Gilgamesh (Penguin Classics, 1974, ISBN 0-14-044100-X)
  • Nissen, Hans The early history of the ancient Near East, 9000-2000 B.C. (Chicago/London: University of Chicago Press, 1988. ISBN 0-226-58656-1, ISBN 0-226-58658-8) Elizabeth Lutzeir, trans.