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Malgium

Malgium is an ancient Mesopotamian city tentatively identified as Tell Yassir which thrived especially in the Middle Bronze Age, ca. 2000 BC - 1600 BC. Malgium formed a small city-state in an area where the edges of the territories controlled by Larsa, Babylon and Elam converged. Inscribed in cuneiform as ma-al-gi-imKI, its chief deities were Ea and Damkina. A temple of Ulmašītum is known to have been there. There was also a temple to the goddess Bēlet-ilī called Ekitusgestu as well as a temple to the god Anum. During the time of one ruler Malgium was written differently, ma3-al-kaKI. The unlacted town of Ibrat is thought to have been near Malgium.

Tell Yassir
Tell Yassir, 20 kilometers northwest of Maškan-šāpir is now generally thought to be the location of ancient Malgium. Note that the site of Tell al-Baghdadya has also been suggested. Tell Yassir (in Wasit Governorate, Iraq) is a single mound covering around 15 hectares and rising to a height of 17.6 meters above the plain. The outer margins of the mound have been much damaged by modern agriculture. A number of small mounds (3-5 hectares in area) are nearby, mainly to the west of the main mound. It is one of a group of tells collectively called Tulūl al-Fāj which have now been identified as the location of Malgium. The current excavators have attempted to rename the site "Tell Qariyah Khamsa I" (as site WS031), after an obscure nearby village, separated the site from inclusion in the Tulūl al-Fāj cluster. After the 2003 invasion Iraqi archaeologists with the Iraqi State Board of Antiquities and Heritage conducted a surface survey at Tell Yassir and found that the site was heavily looted, especially in the central area of the mound, to the extent that administrative, temple, and palatial structures visible from earlier satellite images could no longer be found. An example brick inscription: The area was visited in 2018 by an Italian team from the University of Venice led by Lucio Milano. In 2022 and 2024 archaeological surface surveys were conducted at Tell Yassir (within a radius of2-4 kilometers) and for a 10 kilometer radius around it by the Wasit Archaeological Survey by a University of Florence and Ca' Foscari University of Venice team led by Lucio Milano. Thirty eight brick inscriptions were found, mostly mentioning known rulers including one previosly unknown ruler, Naram-Sin (not to be confused with a number of other rulers with that name). Tulūl al-Fāj Tulūl al-Fāj is a group of archaeological sites one of which is Tell Yassir In 2017 Iraqi archaeologists, led by Abbas Al-Hussainy of the University of Al-Qadisiyah began an archaeological survey of an area east of the Euphrates and in 2019 conducted a surface survey at Tell Yassir. ==History==
History
Occupation at the Tell Yassir, the presumed location of Magium, dates back to the Ubaid 2 period based on finds so clay sickles. Occupation continued in the Uruk period with finds including beveled rim bowls and "tall flowerpots" (Grosse Blumentopfe). There was then an absence of pottery remains until the Early Dynastic III period, suggesting a period of abandonment. Ur III Period Cuneiform tablets from the city of Irisaĝrig (now believed to be the nearby Tell al-Wilayah), now published, show that Malgium conquered that city roughly after year 10 of Ibbi-Sin, the last ruler of the Ur III empire. The tablets also included year names showing that kings Nur-Eštar (previously unknown), dŠu-Kakka, dNabi-Enlil, dŠu-Amurrum, dImgur-Sin, and Ištaran-asu ruled over Irisaĝrig. Isin-Larsa Period The kings of Larsa targeted Malgium in their pursuit of territorial expansion with Gungunum celebrating its defeat in his 19th year name "Year on the orders of An, Enlil and Nanna (the army of) Malgium was defeated by weapons ...", circa 1914 BC, Old Babylonian Period Ḫammu-rāpi of Babylon (c. 1792–1750 BC), in a coalition with Shamshi-Adad I (of Ekallatum)and Ibal-pi-El II (of Eshnunna), campaigned against the city-state until its ruler bought them off with 15 talents of silver. Malgium’s king, dIpiq-Ištar, concluded a treaty and subsequently provided aid and soldiers in Ḫammu-rāpi’s campaign against Larsa. After years of conflict, Ḫammu-rāpi destroyed the city walls of Malgium in his 35th year of reign denoting that year as "Year in which Hammu-rabi the king by the orders of An and Enlil destroyed the city walls of Mari and Malgium". Most of the population of Malgium was deported to Kish, Isin, and especially Pī-Kasî (modern Tell Abu Antiq). Prisoner of war records from Uruk under ruler Rîm-Anum (c. 18th century BC) who was a contemporary of Samsu-iluna of Babylon (son of Ḫammu-rāpi) mention a number of captives from Malgium. Malgium survived in some form until late in the 2nd millennium BC and is recorded in two kudurru of Kassite ruler Meli-Šipak (c. 1186–1172 BC). ==Rulers==
Rulers
A number of rulers of Malgium have been identified, with varying degrees of certainty (note that their names indicated they was "deified"): • dTakil-ilissu - "šàr (lugal) ma-al-gi-imki, dTakil-ilissu, son of Ištaran-asû, • dImgur-Sîn, son of Ili-abi • dIpiq-Ištar (son of Apil-Ilišu), a contemporary of Ḫammu-rāpi of Babylon, who celebrated conflict with the city in two of his year names (10 and 35). • dNabi-Enlil (son of Šu-Kakka) • dŠu-Amurrum (son of Nabi-Enlil) • Naram-Sin • Muhaddum (son of Abumma) Others that have been suggested are Iddin-ilum, Nur-Istar, Warad-Sin, Ili-abi, Istaran-asu, Abumma, Apil-Ilišu, and Ennum-Tispak. ==Tell Abu Antiq==
Tell Abu Antiq
The site of Tell Abu Antiq (geo-coordinates: 32.131602, 44.638840) (also Tell abu Anteak, Tal abu Anteak, Abu Antiq, Tell Abu Anetik) lies about 50 kilometers south of ancient Babylon. Its ancient name is believed to have been Pī-Kasî. Little is known about the city of Pī-Kasî. After its destruction by Hammurabi most of the population of Malgium was deported to Pī-Kasî. It was excavated by an Iraqi team between 1999 and 2007 in response to continued looting and over 1250 Old Babylonian period cuneiform tablets from the reigns of Samsu-iluna and Abi-ešuḫ were recovered as well as other finds. The tablets are of "letters, economic and administrative tablets, lexical lists, literature, mathematical tablets, and lenticular school exercises". Before excavations began the site had been subject to heavy looting by locals beginning before 1913 and a number of cuneiform tablets had entered the antiquities market from that. The results of archaeological excavation have allowed the provenance of about 500 of the pre-1913 tablets to be assigned to Tell Abu Antiq. Many of the texts are held in private and public collections and classed as a group "Yaḫrūrum šaplûm archives". The archive is dated to the reign of Babylonian ruler Samsu-iluna. Some are held in the De Liagre Böhl collection at The Netherlands Institute for the Near East and the Louvre. An example of a newly kinked text is: An example of a tablet from Tell Abu Antiq (bandicoot here refers to the Bunn's short-tailed bandicoot rat): ==See also==
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