Asīnum may have been mentioned (name completely restored) in VAT 9812 [/riao/KingLists/FragmentVAT9812/index.html], a fragmentary Assyrian king list discovered at Aššur that deviates significantly from the better preserved copies of the Assyrian King List [/riao/KingLists/AssyrianKingList/index.html] (AKL). From that document, assuming that the restoration of his name proves correct, it is presumed that Asīnum was the last member of the dynasty of Samsī-Addu I (see below); he is named in this fragmentary text together with two other successors of Išme-Dagān I not included in the "standard" version of the AKL, Mut-aškur, and Rīmu-x.[1] E. Weidner and B. Landsberger have both noted that there must have been a gap between the reigns of Išme-Dagān I and the man who the AKL records as his immediate successor, Aššur-dugul. Moreover, Landsberger suggests that those rulers were excluded from later versions of the AKL for political reasons.
Puzur-Sîn, another ruler who does not appear in the AKL, states in an inscription of his that he ascended the throne in Aššur after he defeated Asīnum, the "offspring of Samsī-Addu I" (text no. 1). This infers that Asīnum held authority in Aššur, but this is not certain as no inscriptions of his survive today.
[1] J. Reade has proposed that Asīnum and Rīmu-x might be one and the same person.
Poppy Tushingham
Poppy Tushingham, 'Asīnum', RIA 1: Inscriptions from the Origins of Assyria to Arik-dīn-ili, The RIA Project, 2024 [http://oracc.org/OldAssyrianPeriod/Samsi-AdduDynasty/Asinum/]