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Mursili II



 
 
Mursili II (also spelled Mursilis II) was a king of the Hittite Empire (New kingdom) ca. 1321 – 1295 BC (short chronology). He was the younger son of Suppiluliuma I
Suppiluliuma I

Suppiluliuma I was king of the Hittites . He achieved fame as a great warrior and statesman, successfully challenging the then-dominant New Kingdom for control of the lands between the Mediterranean and the Euphrates....
, one of the most powerful rulers of the Hittite Empire. Before his accession, he served as the Chief of the Royal Bodyguards (GAL MEŠEDI) during the brief reign of his brother, Arnuwanda II
Arnuwanda II

Arnuwanda II was a king of the Hittite Empire ca. 1322 ? 1321 BC . He succeeded his father Suppiluliuma I, who succumbed to the plague which Egyptian captives from his Canaan campaign had brought with them to the Hittite heartland....
.

Life
This prince assumed the throne after the premature death of Arnuwanda II
Arnuwanda II

Arnuwanda II was a king of the Hittite Empire ca. 1322 ? 1321 BC . He succeeded his father Suppiluliuma I, who succumbed to the plague which Egyptian captives from his Canaan campaign had brought with them to the Hittite heartland....
 who, like their father, fell victim to the plague which ravaged the Hatti in the 1320s BCE.






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Mursili II (also spelled Mursilis II) was a king of the Hittite Empire (New kingdom) ca. 1321 – 1295 BC (short chronology). He was the younger son of Suppiluliuma I
Suppiluliuma I

Suppiluliuma I was king of the Hittites . He achieved fame as a great warrior and statesman, successfully challenging the then-dominant New Kingdom for control of the lands between the Mediterranean and the Euphrates....
, one of the most powerful rulers of the Hittite Empire. Before his accession, he served as the Chief of the Royal Bodyguards (GAL MEŠEDI) during the brief reign of his brother, Arnuwanda II
Arnuwanda II

Arnuwanda II was a king of the Hittite Empire ca. 1322 ? 1321 BC . He succeeded his father Suppiluliuma I, who succumbed to the plague which Egyptian captives from his Canaan campaign had brought with them to the Hittite heartland....
.

Life


This prince assumed the throne after the premature death of Arnuwanda II
Arnuwanda II

Arnuwanda II was a king of the Hittite Empire ca. 1322 ? 1321 BC . He succeeded his father Suppiluliuma I, who succumbed to the plague which Egyptian captives from his Canaan campaign had brought with them to the Hittite heartland....
 who, like their father, fell victim to the plague which ravaged the Hatti in the 1320s BCE. He was greeted with contempt by Hatti's enemies and faced numerous rebellions early in his reign, the most serious of which were those initiated by the Kaskas
Kaskas

When the Kaska were not raiding or serving as mercenaries, they raised pigs and wove linen, leaving scarcely any imprint on the permanent landscape....
 in the mountains of Anatolia, but also by the kingdom Arzawa
Arzawa

Arzawa was the name of a region or kingdom in Western Anatolia, which later to be known as Lydia in the post-Hittite era. It was the western neighbour and sometimes vassal of the Hittites, and probably bordered on the Assuwa league to the north....
 in southwest Turkey because he was perceived to be an inexperienced ruler who only became king due to the early death of Arnuwanda II. Mursili II records the scorn of his foes in his this Annal document:

While Mursili II was a young and inexperienced king, he was almost certainly not a child when he took the Hittite throne and must have reached an age to be capable of ruling in his own right. If he was indeed a child, other arrangements would have been made to secure the stability of the Empire; Mursili after all had two surviving elder brothers who served as the viceroys of Carchemish (ie: Sarri-Kush) and Aleppo respectively. Mursili II would prove to be more than a match for his successful father, Suppiluliuma I, in his military deeds and diplomacy. The Annals for the first Ten years of his reign have survived and record that he carried out punitive campaigns against the Kaska tribes in the first two years of his reign in order to secure his kingdom's northern borders. The king then turned to the West to resist the aggression of Uhhaziti, king of Arzawa who was attempting to lure away Hittite allies into his camp. The Annals also reveal that an "omen of the sun," or solar eclipse
Solar eclipse

A solar eclipse occurs when the Moon passes between the Sun and the Earth so that the Sun is wholly or partially obscured. This can only happen during a new moon, when the Sun and Moon are in conjunction as seen from the Earth....
, occurred in his tenth year as king, just as he was about to launch his campaign against the Kaska peoples. While Mursili II's highest confirmed date was his twenty-second year, he is believed to have lived beyond this date for a few more years and died after a reign of around 25 to 27 years. He was succeeded by Muwatalli.

The eclipse

Mursili's Year 10 solar eclipse is of great importance for the absolute dating of the Hittite Empire within the chronology of the Ancient Near East
Chronology of the Ancient Near East

The chronology of the Ancient Near East is a framework of dates for various events, rulers and dynasties of the 3rd millennium BC and 2nd millennium BC millennia BC....
. There are only two possible dates for the eclipse: 13 April 1308 BCE or 24 June 1312 BCE. The 1312 date is accepted by most Hittitologists such as Trevor Bryce
Trevor R. Bryce

Trevor Robert Bryce is a Hittitologist specializing in ancient and classical Near-eastern history. His book, The Kingdom of the Hittites, is much read among English speaking readers since the study of the Hittites has predominantly been a German-dominated field....
 (1998), while Paul Åström
Paul Åström

Paul ?str?m was a Swedish archaeology and classics. He is mostly known for his achievements in the prehistoric archaeology of Cyprus....
 (1993) has suggested the 1308 BCE date. Most scholars accept the 1312 BCE event because this eclipse's effects would have been particularly dramatic with a near total eclipse over the Peleponesus region and Anatolia--where Mursili II was campaigning--around Noon. In contrast, the 1308 BCE astronomical event began in Arabia and then travelled eastwards in a northeasterly direction; it only reached its maximum impact over Mongolia and Central Asia. Its effects over Anatolia would have been wholly unremarkable according to various astronomical programs such as Win Ecl and from this NASA chart..

See also

  • History of the Hittites
    History of the Hittites

    Hittites is the conventional English-language term for an ancient people who spoke an Indo-European language and established a kingdom centered in Hattusa in northern Turkey from the 18th century BC....


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