
Pergamon Museum, CC SA 1.0 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/sa/1.0/, via Wikimedia Commons
In the second half of the ninth century BCE, the political landscape of the Near East was dominated by a single rising power: Assyria. Under kings such as Ashurnasirpal II (r. 883–859 BCE) and Shalmaneser III (r. 858–824 BCE), Assyria had re-established firm control over northern Mesopotamia. The lands east of the Euphrates were effectively under Assyrian authority, either as provinces or as closely supervised client states. From this secure base, Assyrian armies regularly crossed the Euphrates, campaigning across the Levant.
These western regions were politically fragmented. Instead of large territorial kingdoms, the landscape was dotted with small states: Neo-Hittite principalities such as Carchemish, Hamath, and Patina, alongside Aramaean kingdoms like Damascus and Bit-Agusi. Some resisted Assyrian expansion, others chose accommodation, many shifted between the two. Tributary relationships with Assyria became an increasingly common feature of the political order. It was within this environment that the small state of Bit-Gabbari, also known as Ya’diya, centred on the city of Samʾal (modern Zincirli in southern Turkey), emerged as a minor but interesting player.
Continue reading “Kilamuwa of Bit-Gabbari, the king who hired Assyria”






