Few inscriptions have been recovered for this king although he is mentioned in two of those of his descendant
Tukultī-apil-Ešarra. One of these inscriptions mentions his demolition of the dilapidated temple of
An and
Adad, originally built by
Išme-Dāgan II 641 years earlier. It was not to be reconstructed until 60 years later by Tukultī-apil-Ešarra, who also names him in his genealogy. A dedication for the king appears on a bronze statue votive offering to the Egašankalamma, temple of
Ištar in
Arbail, offered by Šamši-Bēl, a scribe. which provides the initial sequence of Pišqiya, the official during whose reign his predecessor died, Aššur-dān (the king), Atamar-den-Aššur, Aššur-bel-lite, and Adad-mušabši. A harem edict or palace decree was issued giving the penalties for misdemeanors of maidservants, where the first offence is punishable with a beating thirty times with rods by her mistress. records that he seized the cities of Zaban, Irriya, Ugar-sallu and a fourth town name not preserved, plundering them and “taking their vast booty to Assyria.” A fragmentary clay tablet usually assigned to this king lists his military conquests over “[…]yash and the land of Irriya, the land of the
Suhu, the kings of the land Shadani, […y]aeni, king of the land Shelini.” Fresh from their conquest of the Babylonians, it seems the Elamite hordes overwhelmed the Assyrian city of
Arraphe, which was not recovered until late in Aššur-dān’s reign.
War of Succession Two sons of Aššur-dān were to contest the throne after his death,
Ninurta-tukulti-Ashur ruling for less than a year before being overthrown and forced to flee by his brother
Mutakkil-Nusku. A civil war continued where Mutakkil-Nusku controlled the Assyrian heartland, while Ninurta-tukulti-Ashur has support in the provinces. ==Inscriptions==