Ninurta-apil-Ekur was the eighty-second king of Ashur and, according to some copies of the Assyrian King List [/riao/KingLists/AssyrianKingList/index.html] (AKL), he held authority over Assyria for thirteen years; others record that his reign lasted only three years. An inscription of his (see text no. 1 [/riao/ria2/Q005893/]) and the AKL state that he was a son of Ilī-ipaddu (also read Nabû-dān and Ilī-iḫaddâ; see Brinkmann 1976-1980, 50-51), who was the grand vizier of Assyria and king of Ḫanigalbat during the reign of Aššur-nārārī III, as well as a descendant of the earlier Assyrian king Erība-Adad I [/riao/ria1/OldAssyrianPeriod/Mittanianhegemony/Eriba-AdadI/index.html]. The notion that Ninurta-apil-Ekur's kingship marked some sort of dynastic change is supported by an inscription of Tiglath-pileser I [/riao/ria3/Tiglath-pileserI/index.html] (text no. 1 [/riao/ria3/Q005926/] vii 55-59), in which he traces his lineage all the way back to Ninurta-apil-Ekur and no further (Grayson 1998-2001, 524).
The AKL tells us that Ninurta-apil-Ekur seized the throne from his
predecessor Enlil-kudurrī-uṣur. The relevant passage of that text reads:
Two short inscriptions of Ninurta-apil-Ekur survive (texts no. 1 and 2).
Browse the RIA 2 Corpus [/riao/ria2/pager/]
Fragments of two stone vases from Aššur, one of which is housed in the Vorderasiatisches Museum (Berlin), bear a three-line inscription of Ninurta-apil-Ekur.
Access the composite text [/riao/ria2/Q005893/] of Ninurta-apil-Ekur 1.
A rhomboid-shaped piece of turquoise has a short text of Ninurta-apil-Ekur inscribed on it. The object, which once formed part of a necklace of this Assyrian king, is presumed to still be in the Iraq Museum (Baghdad).
Access the composite text [/riao/ria2/Q005894/] of Ninurta-apil-Ekur 2.
Jamie Novotny & Poppy Tushingham
Jamie Novotny & Poppy Tushingham, 'Ninurta-apil-Ekur', RIA 2: Inscriptions of Adad-nārārī I to Aššur-rēša-iši I, Th RIA Project, 2024 [http://oracc.org/Ninurta-apil-Ekur/]