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The Babylonian World - Historia Antigua

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— A view from Hattusa —<br />

diplomacy for both Hittites and Kassites alike at this stage of their development.<br />

Most likely, Mursili’s expedition against Babylon was simply a military adventure,<br />

very much in the tradition of the campaigns of destruction and plunder which typified<br />

his grandfather’s reign. 3<br />

Mursili was assassinated a few years after his return from Babylon, an event which<br />

led to serious, ongoing political fragmentation within the kingdom of Hatti, making<br />

it highly vulnerable to enemy invasion. <strong>The</strong> Hurrians, in particular, exploited this<br />

period of weakness in Hatti’s history, which lasted 60 years or more, by sweeping<br />

across the frontiers of the Hittite homeland and plundering its territories. <strong>The</strong> kingdom<br />

was brought to the brink of annihilation. Yet under an enterprising new king, Telipinu<br />

(c.1525–1500), Hatti recovered many of its lost territories, and by the early fourteenth<br />

century had re-emerged as a major international power. Its interest in re-establishing<br />

its influence and authority in northern Syria brought it into direct conflict with the<br />

Hurrian kingdom of Mitanni. <strong>The</strong> showdown between the two great powers finally<br />

came during the reign of the Hittite king Suppiluliuma I (c.1350–1322). In preparation<br />

for this showdown, Suppiluliuma sought to bolster his influence and support in the<br />

Syria–Euphrates region by a series of diplomatic initiatives. This provided the context<br />

for the reappearance of Babylon in Hittite records. A Kassite ruling dynasty was now<br />

firmly established in Babylonia. Suppiluliuma sought to establish close links with<br />

this dynasty by negotiating a marriage between himself and the daughter of the king<br />

of Babylon. At this time Babylon’s throne was occupied by Burnaburiash II, who<br />

must therefore have been the bride’s father.<br />

Apparently by the terms of the marriage agreement, Suppiluliuma had to recognise<br />

the <strong>Babylonian</strong> as his chief wife – which meant disposing of the chief wife he already<br />

had. Her name was Henti. She was the mother of all five of her husband’s sons. A<br />

fragmentary Hittite text may indicate that, to make way for his new wife, Suppiluliuma<br />

banished her, perhaps to a place of exile in the Aegean world. <strong>The</strong> <strong>Babylonian</strong> bride,<br />

whose original name has long been assumed to have been Malnigal (see refs in Bryce<br />

2005: 433 n. 24), took on the new name Tawananna as a personal name. It had<br />

previously been used as the title of the reigning Hittite queen. Adopting this name,<br />

she was associated with her husband on a number of seal impressions, including<br />

several which belong within the context of Suppiluliuma’s alliance with the king of<br />

Ugarit, Niqmaddu II, an alliance which can be dated to Suppiluliuma’s ‘First’ or<br />

‘One-year’ Syrian war (c.1340). 4 <strong>The</strong> legend in Akkadian cuneiform reads: ‘Seal of<br />

Suppiluliuma, the Great King, King of the Land of Hatti, beloved of the Storm God;<br />

seal of Tawananna, the Great Queen, Daughter of the King of Babylon’.<br />

Strategic considerations almost certainly lay behind Suppiluliuma’s marriage alliance<br />

with the <strong>Babylonian</strong> royal family. Very likely, the marriage took place only a year<br />

or so before Suppiluliuma launched his comprehensive military operations against<br />

the Mitannian king Tushratta and his subjects and allies in Syria. If this sequence of<br />

events is correct, it is difficult not to see a connection between the wedding and the<br />

war. But Suppiluliuma may have used his marriage link with Babylon’s royal family<br />

merely as a means of gaining Burnaburiash’s benevolent neutrality, rather than his<br />

active military support, during the Hittite showdown with Mitanni. Throughout its<br />

history, the Kassite dynasty showed little interest in engaging in military campaigns<br />

west of the Euphrates. Further, the marriage union would have strengthened any<br />

assurances which Suppiluliuma gave to Burnaburiash that Hittite military operations<br />

505

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