List of rulers in the 18th century BC Chr.

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Overview
20th century BC Chr.  | 19th century BC Chr.  | List of rulers in the 18th century BC Chr.17th century BC Chr.16th century BC Chr.
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This is a synchronous representation of the reigns of pre-ancient rulers in the 18th century BC , visualized in the form of equally scaled timelines.

The dates follow medium chronology and are neither certain nor final nor complete. Please note general information!

Egypt
Aja I. Jaib Sobekhotep V. Sobekhotep IV. Neferhotep I. Sobekhotep III. Seth (König) Anjotef IV. Emramescha Chendjer Sobekhotep II. Amenemhet VII. Kay Hor I. Renseneb Chaanchre Sobekhotep Nedjemibre Sewadjkare Nebennu Amenemhet VI. Efni Sehetepibre Sechemrechuitaui Amenemhet V. Wegaf Nofrusobek Amenemhet IV.
Old Assyrian Empire
Adasi Adad-salulu Ipqi-Ištar Sin-namir Nasir-Sin Aššur-apla-iddina Aššur-dugul Išme-Dagan I. Šamši-Adad I.
Old Babylon
Abi-ēšuḫ Šamšu-iluna Hammurapi I. (Babylon) Sin-muballit
Isin
Abi-ēšuḫ Šamšu-iluna Hammurapi I. (Babylon) Rim-Sin I. Damiq-ilīšu
Larsa
Abi-ēšuḫ Rim-Sin II. Šamšu-iluna Hammurapi I. (Babylon) Rim-Sin I.
Elam
Siwe-Palar-Khuppak
Approximate areas of influence around 1800 ...
... and around 1700 BC Chr.

Remarks

Rulers' periods marked as unexplained: For neither of the two rulers concerned before and after this period, information on the assumption or cession of government is possible, so that in the period marked in this way, the ruler before or after could have ruled.

Siwe-palar-huhpak was a contemporary of Hammurabi.

For the period 1800-1700 BC, there are further details about rulers, which are not listed here for various reasons. This includes mythical ancestral kings but also rulers who cannot be precisely fixed in time. See for example the lists of the kings of Ireland , Byblos , Argos , Sikyon , Ešnunna , Korea , as well as the Xia dynasty and the Shang dynasty . The kings of Elam are only partially reproduced here.

Deputies and viceroys are only listed here if the territory they administer formed an independent state before or afterwards.

General

In the timeline, a gap of one year symbolizes that the transition between two rulers will be assumed around this time. If the transition period can be determined more precisely, this is indicated by a thinner line. Larger gaps between two names do not necessarily mean that there was no ruler; but indicate an uncertainty. If no colored bars are displayed, the relevant rulers cannot be dated more precisely according to the latest research. The representation does not claim to be complete.

Specifically, the dating according to Nissen (2012) is used here for the information on ancient oriental kings and the dating according to Beckerath (1994) for the information on Egyptian kings. There is no reliable information for other parts of the world at this time, not even for China (compare chronological project Xia-Shang-Zhou ), where the Shang dynasty is said to have come to power in northern China between the 18th and 16th centuries.

General note: Due to the problems with ancient oriental and Egyptian chronology, the information in this list has not been finalized. This is based on the Middle Chronology , which is commonly used as a convention among ancient orientalists. Specialist authors usually state which assumptions / chronologies their writings are based on: Depending on the opinion, the dating of great kings and pharaohs can be in the period before the 14th century BC. By several decades from the information used here.

Due to new archaeological findings, the state of research and current doctrine on dating can occasionally change abruptly. If more recent findings are incorporated, the simultaneity of rulers must be checked (this should be guaranteed according to archaeological evidence) and the chronology used and the source / place of discovery must be indicated.

Individual evidence

  1. a b Hans Jörg Nissen : History of the Ancient Near East . Oldenbourg Verlag, 2nd edition 2012, Munich. ISBN 3-486-59223-8 .
  2. Jürgen von Beckerath : Chronology of the Pharaonic Egypt. The timing of Egyptian history from prehistoric times to 332 BC BC (= Munich Egyptological Studies . Vol. 46). von Zabern, Mainz 1997.