See also

Family of Nabopolassar II + and OF SISTAN

Husband: Nabopolassar II + (658-605)
Wife: OF SISTAN (645- )
Children: Nebuchadnezzer II + (634-562)
OF BABYLON (630- )

Husband: Nabopolassar II +

Name: Nabopolassar II +
Sex: Male
Father: Bel-Ibnai + of BABYLON (683- )
Mother: -
Birth 0658 B.C.
Occupation King of Babylon
Title frm 0625 B.C. to 0605 B.C. (age 32-53) King of Babylon
Death 0605 B.C. (age 52-53)
Cause: natural causes

Wife: OF SISTAN

Name: OF SISTAN
Sex: Female
Father: Rustam I + AL-AKBAR (670- )
Mother: Thanimeh + (665- )
Birth 0645 B.C.

Child 1: Nebuchadnezzer II +

Name: Nebuchadnezzer II +
Sex: Male
Spouse 1: Nitocris + of EGYPT (570- )
Spouse 2: Amytis of MEDIA (635- )
Birth 0634 B.C.
Occupation King of Babylon
Title King of Babylon
Death 0562 B.C. (age 71-72)

Child 2: OF BABYLON

Name: OF BABYLON
Sex: Male
Birth 0630 B.C.
Occupation Prince of Babylon
Title Prince of Babylon

Note on Husband: Nabopolassar II +

Nabopolassar (Akkadian:NabĂ»-apal-usur) (c.658 BC - 605 BC) was the king of the Babylonia and played a key role in the demise of the Assyrian Empire following the death of the last powerful Assyrian king, Ashurbanipal.[1] He ruled over Babylon for 20 years (625 - 605 BC).

Nabopolassar rose in revolt against the Assyrian Empire (which had ruled Babylon for the previous 200 years), after the last effective Assyrian king, Ashurbanipal died some time between 631 BC and 627 BC. Following his successful revolt, he took on the title of King of Babylonia.

 

[edit] Destruction of AssyriaAssyria, weakened by internal strife and ineffectual rule following the death of Ashurbanipal, was unable to resist the alliance of Chaldeans and Medes, who combined to sack the Assyrian capital of Nineveh in 612 BC, following the Battle of Nineveh which involved a prolonged siege of the city. Nabopolassar was left in control of Nineveh. His army and its allies destroyed the remnants of the Assyrian army at Carchemish in 609 BC.

 

[edit] Other CampaignsNabopolassar waged war against Egypt from 610 BC until his death. In 608 BC, Nabopolassar took the Assyrian city of Harran, where Assyrian forces had retreated after the fall of Nineveh. Later that year, his son Nebuchadnezzar fought against the Pharaoh Necho II of Egypt, shortly before Nabopolassar died.

 

[edit] Later yearsOnce his forces had defeated the Assyrians and their Egyptian allies, Nebopolassar gave up the throne in favour of his son, Nebuchadnezzar II. Within months of his abdication in 605 BC, Nebopolassar died of natural causes. He was about 53 years old.