Template:Short description Template:Infobox person Mursili I (also known as Mursilis; sometimes transcribed as Murshili) was a king of the Hittites Template:C. 1620-1590 BC, as per the middle chronology, the most accepted chronology in our times<ref>Manning, Sturt W., et al. (2016). "Integrated Tree-Ring-Radiocarbon High-Resolution Timeframe to Resolve Earlier Second Millennium BCE Mesopotamian Chronology", in PLOS ONE, Published: July 13, 2016.</ref> (or alternatively c. 1556–1526 BC, short chronology), and was likely a grandson of his predecessor, Hattusili I. His sister was Ḫarapšili and his wife was queen Kali.<ref>Shoshana R. Bin-Nun, The Tawananna in the Hittite kingdom. Online version.</ref><ref>Margalit Finkelberg, Greeks And Pre-Greeks: Aegean Prehistory And Greek Heroic Tradition.</ref>
AccessionEdit
Mursili came to the throne as a minor. Having reached adulthood, he renewed Hattusili I's warfare in northern Syria.<ref name="Bryce2005">Template:Cite book</ref>
CampaignsEdit
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Conquest of Yamhad (Aleppo)Edit
He conquered the kingdom of Yamhad and its capital, Aleppo, which had eluded Hattusili. He then led an unprecedented march of 2,000 km south into the heart of Mesopotamia, where in 1595 BC he sacked the city of Babylon. Mursili's motivation for attacking Babylon remains unclear, though William Broad has proposed that the reason was obtaining grain because the clouds from the Thera eruption decreased the Hittites' harvests.<ref>Broad, William J. "It Swallowed a Civilization. " New York Times, D1. 21 October 2003.</ref>
Sack of BabylonEdit
The raid on Babylon could not have been intended to exercise sovereignty over the region; it was simply too far from Anatolia and the Hittites' center of power. It is thought, however, that the raid on Babylon brought an end to the Amorite dynasty of Hammurabi and allowed the Kassites to take power, and so might have arisen from an alliance with the Kassites or an attempt to curry favor with them.<ref>Bryce, The Kingdom of the Hittites, 99.</ref> It might also be that Mursili undertook the long-distance attack for personal motives, namely as a way to outdo the military exploits of his predecessor, Hattusili I.<ref>Bryce, "The Kingdom of the Hittites," 99–100.</ref>
AssassinationEdit
When Mursili returned to his kingdom, he was assassinated in a conspiracy led by his brother-in-law, Hantili I (who took the throne), and Hantili's son-in-law, Zidanta I.<ref>The Hittites and their World</ref> His death inaugurated a period of social unrest and decay of central rule, followed by the loss of the conquests made in Syria.
In popular cultureEdit
Mursili I is a playable leader (as the Latinized form "Mursilis") of the Hittite state in the 2001 video game Civilization III.
See alsoEdit
ReferencesEdit
- Reign of Mursili I
- Trevor Bryce, The Kingdom of the Hittites, Oxford: University Press (1998)
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