- Adad-nirari III
Adad-nirari III (also Adad-narari) was
King of Assyria from 811 to 783 BC. He was the son and successor ofShamshi-Adad V , and was apparently quite young at the time of his accession, because for the first five years of his reign his motherShammuramat acted as regent, which may have given rise to the legend ofSemiramis .Adad-nirari's youth, and the struggles his father had faced early in his reign, caused a serious weakening for the Assyrian rulership over Mesopotamia, and gave way to the ambitions of the most high officers, the governors and the local rulers.
According to Adad-nirari's inscriptions, he led several military campaigns with the purpose of regaining the strength Assyria enjoyed in the times of his grandfather,
Shalmaneser III . According to the eponym canon, he campaigned in all directions until the last of his 28 years of reign, and he was the builder of the temple ofNabu atNineveh . Among his actions was a siege ofDamascus in the time ofBen-Hadad III in 796 BC, which led to the eclipse of theAramaean Kingdom of Damascus and allowed the recovery of Israel under Jehoash (who paid the Assyrian king tribute at this time) andJeroboam II . Additionally, he is thought by some to be the "King of Nineveh" who, upon receivingJonah 's prophecy of forthcoming doom, dressed himself insackcloth and ordered a fast throughout the city in a successful attempt to prevent it. (Jonah 3:6–9)In spite of Adad-nirari's vigor, Assyria entered a several decades long period of weakness following his death.
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