-
Luwian Moon-god Armas.
Wasusarmas is
referred to in Neo-****yrian
Akkadian sources as W****urme or U****urme (𒁹𒌑𒊍𒋩𒈨).
Wasusarmas was the son of the previous...
-
Tuwaddis II was
succeeded by his son,
Wasusarmas, who was also a tribute-paying v****al of the Neo-****yrian Empire.
Wasusarmas regarded himself as the
local hegemon...
- in the
incorporation into his
kingdom of the
territories once
ruled by
Wasusarmas of
Tabal proper in the
northwestern part of his
kingdom corresponding...
-
attacked and
removed king
Wasusarma of
Tabal from
power after he
stopped paying tribute,
writing in his
annals that
Wasusarma "acted as if he were the...
- to the
Topada inscription of the king
Wasusarmas of Tabal, with the
inscriptions of both Ḫartapus and
Wasusarmas possibly depicting different conflicts...
- mid-8th
century BCE, the
kingdom of
Tabal proper was
ruled by a king
named Wasusarmas, who
regarded himself as the
regional hegemon of the
Tabalian region,...
- (de:Felsinschrift von Topada) as one of the
kings who were
allied with
Wasusarma of Tabal. the
Aksaray Castle was a four-cornered, stone-built, solidly...
-
state at this time.
Kiyakiyas might have been a v****al of the
great king
Wasusarmas of
Tabal proper, and
Kiyakiyas was one of the
three kings who
helped him...
-
ruled sometime in the mid 8th
century BC and was
succeeded by his son,
Wasusarma.
Trevor Bryce: The
World of the Neo-Hittite Kingdoms: A
Political and...
- Harr****owitz Verlag. ISBN 978-3-447-05885-8. Weeden, Mark (2010). "Tuwati and
Wasusarma:
Imitating the
Behaviour of ****yria". Iraq. 72.
British Institute for...