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Gindibu

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in 841 BCE, but his inscriptions mentioned neither the Qedarite kingdom nor Gindibu himself or any successor of his. The Qedarites were not mentioned either in the list of rulers, including those of distant places such as
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power in the 9th century BCE meant that the desert and border routes where Gindibu had economic interests were under threat of Assyrian interference, due to which he allied with his powerful neighbours, the kings
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of Damascus in 796 BCE. This reason for absence the Assyrian records is that the kingdom of Gindibu was far from the campaign routes of the Assyrians during the later 9th century BCE.
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Although Gindibu's kingdom was not on the Assyrian campaign routes and therefore was not in danger of being attacked by the Assyrians, the rise of
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of Israel, against the Assyrian Empire. Fearing disruptions by the Assyrians, Gindibu led 1000
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The Ancient Arabs: Nomads on the Borders of the Fertile Crescent, 9th-5th Centuries B.C
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Gindibu ruled over an Arab kingdom located in the northeastern parts of present-day
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in 853 BCE on the side of the alliance led by Aram-Damascus and Israel against
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The Arabs in Antiquity Their History from the Assyrians to the Umayyads
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Index


single source
talk page
improve this article
introducing citations to additional sources
"Gindibu"
news
newspapers
books
scholar
JSTOR
Zabibe
North Arabian polytheism
Akkadian
Qedarite
Jordan
Hauran
Tiglath-Pileser III
Azraq oasis
Wadi Sirhan
Neo-Assyrian
Bar-Hadad II
Ahab
camelry
Battle of Qarqar
Shalmaneser III
Shalmaneser III
Damascus
Ḥawrān
Philistia

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