| Shalmaneser II | |
|---|---|
| King of Assyria | |
| King of theMiddle Assyrian Empire | |
| Reign | 1031–1019 BC |
| Predecessor | Ashurnasirpal I |
| Successor | Ashur-nirari IV |
| Issue | Ashur-nirari IV |
| Father | Ashurnasirpal I |
Shalmaneser II (Salmānu-ašarēd II, inscribedmdSILIM-ma-nu-MAŠ/SAG, meaning "Being peaceful is foremost") was the king ofAssyria in 1030–1019 BC, the 93rd to appear on theKhorsabad copy[i 1] of theAssyrian Kinglist, although he has been apparently carelessly omitted altogether on theNassouhi copy.[i 2]

In recent years, there has been a trend towards reading theSILIM in his name assal rather thanšul onphilological grounds.[1] He succeeded his father,Aššur-nāṣir-apli I and ruled for 12 years according to the Assyrian Kinglist and confirmed by a heavily damaged fragment of aneponym list (pictured).[i 3] Of the twelvelimmu officials listed, only the names of the first two have been substantially preserved, that of Shalmaneser himself, who took the eponymy in his first year, andMU.ŠID-mu-šab-[ši]. The twelfth entryša ar[ki si...] indicates that thelimmu "which is after" (the previous name) either suggesting that the original from which this list was copied was defective in this place or the gap in the office coincides with a period of turbulence.[2]
In theSynchronistic Kinglist[i 4] he is listed beside hisBabylonian counterpart,Eulmash-shakin-shumi (1004–988 BC) of the Bῑt-Bazi dynasty, an unlikely pairing reflecting perhaps the isolation of the two kingdoms at the time. In all likelihood, he reigned concurrently withNabu-shum-libur (1033–1026 BC) andSimbar-shipak (1025–1008 BC), whose reigns were characterized by droughts, crop failures and incursions byArameans, migrating under the pressure from climate change. The later king,Aššur-dān II (935–912 BC), recalled Shalmaneser 's own losses to this tribal group:
[...who] from the time of Shalmaneser , king of [Assyria, my forefather], had destroyed [people of Assyria by …] and murder, had sold [all] their [sons (and) daughters].[3]
Another retrospective reference can probably be found in an inscription ofAshurnasirpal II unless it refers to the earlier king by this name. It relates "I repossessed the cities of Sinabu (and) Tidu—fortresses which Salmānu-ašarēd, king of Assyria, a prince who preceded me, had garrisoned against the land ofNairi (and) which the Arameans had captured by force."[3]
There are few inscriptions which may be attributed for certainty to him as several may belong to theShalmaneser I who preceded him, or to one of the three who followed.[4] Of those that can be reliably attributed, a monumental stele (number 14) from Aššur, from the Stelenreihe, "row of stelae," provides his genealogy thus permitting identification but nothing else. It reads: "Shalmaneser , great king, king of the universe, king of Assyria, son of Aššur-nāṣir-apli (I), king of Assyria, son ofŠamši-adad (IV), who was also king of Assyria". A temple endowment[i 5] lists quantities of cedar balsam (dam erêni) donated by the king to the Assurtemple and its "temples" and includes the provision of a quantity of aromatics to Idiglat, the deified riverTigris.[5] There is a long dedication inscription of Shalmaneser , II or III undetermined, toIštar composed for the consecration of a temple.[i 6] A gold and a silver disk are inscribed with the name "Salmānu-ašarēd" and could possibly represent this king or his predecessor.[6]
He was succeeded by his son, the briefly reigningAshur-nirari IV, and then his brotherAshur-rabi II.
| Preceded by | King of Assyria 1031–1019 BC | Succeeded by |