inanna.... "For
Inanna-" Nin-e-an-na.... "
Ninanna," NIN-a-ni.... "his Lady" UR-NAMMU.... "Ur-Nammu" NITAH KALAG ga.... "the mighty man" LUGAL URIM KI ma.... "King of Ur" LUGAL ki en gi ki URI ke.... "King of Sumer and Akkad" According to the
Sumerian King List, Ur-Nammu reigned for 18 years. Year-names are known for 17 of these years, but their order is uncertain. One year-name of his reign records the devastation of Gutium, while two years seem to commemorate his legal reforms ("Year in which Ur-Nammu the king put in order the ways [of the people in the country] from below to above", "Year Ur-Nammu made justice in the land"). Among his military exploits were the conquest of
Lagash and the defeat of his former masters at
Uruk. He was eventually recognized as a significant regional ruler (of Ur,
Eridu, and Uruk) at a coronation in
Nippur, and is believed to have constructed buildings at Nippur,
Larsa,
Kish,
Adab, and
Umma. He was known for restoring the roads and general order after the Gutian period. Ur-Nammu was also responsible for ordering the construction of a number of
ziggurats, including the
Great Ziggurat of Ur. It has been suggested, based on a much later literary composition, that he was killed in battle after he had been abandoned by his army. He was succeeded by his son
Shulgi. One known daughter, Ama-barag, married a local man. The other known daughter was consecrated as the en-priestess of Nanna in Ur, taking the clerical name En-nir-gal-an-na (En-nirgal-ana). Two inscriptions found in Ur read: A later Sumerian literary composition known variously as "The Coronation of Ur-Nammu" and "Ur-Namma D" lists canals built by Ur-Nammu. It is known in three Old Babylonian Period recensions, from Nippur, Ur, and of an unknown provenance. There are a number of known Sumerian literary compositions about Ur-Namma, labeled from A to H. The other important later Sumerian literary work is the "Death of Ur-Nammu" (Ur-Namma A), variously described as a "hymn', "lamentation" or "wisdom". It describes the death, funeral, and passage through the underworld of Ur-Nammu. It is known from about 9 damaged tablets and fragments, held in various museums, which together allow restoration of much of the text. The description of Ur-Nammu's death is damaged, vague, and metaphoric, which has not stopped later scholars from interpreting it to say Ur-Nammu died in battle at the hands of his own troops. ==Deification debate==