Nabû-nÃÂá¹£ir (simplified in English as Nabonassar) was the king of Babylon from 747 to 734 BC. He deposed a foreign Chaldean usurper named Nabu-shuma-ishkun, bringing native rule back to Babylon after twenty-three years of Chaldean rule. His reign saw the beginning of a new era characterized by the systematic maintenance of chronologically precise historical records. Both the Babylonian Chronicle and the Ptolemaic Canon begin with his accession to the throne. He was contemporary with the Assyrian kings Aà ¡à ¡ur-nirarë V (755âÂÂ745 BC) and Tiglath-Pileser III (745âÂÂ727 BC), under the latter of whom he became a vassal, and the Elamite kings Humban-Tahrah I (reigned until 743 BC) and Humban-Nikaà ¡ I (742âÂÂ717 BC).
Nothing is known of his provenance or origin, although it appears he was a native Mesopotamian. His three predecessors were from the migrant Chaldean tribes settled in the far south east of Babylonia since the 9th century BC. The Dynastic Chronicle may have been composed during his reign as it records the succession of kings from the antediluvian era down to his immediate predecessor, Nabû-à ¡uma-ià ¡kun. It records that the "dynasty of Chaldea was terminated" (with Nabû-à ¡uma-ià ¡kun) and "its kingship was transferred," but the remainder is lost. He may also have commissioned a vituperative chronicle which vilifies his predecessor for his sacrilegious actions and the Chronicle of the Market Prices which mentions the volatile costs of various commodities in reigns up until that of his predecessor. His name appears in the Eclectic Chronicle but the context has not been preserved.
His reign marks the reform of the Babylonian calendar, introducing regular calculated intercalary months, the eighteen-year cycle texts (the 223-month Saros Cycle, named for Edmund HalleyâÂÂs misreading of a passage in Pliny) and perhaps even the zodiac. Berossus of Kos reported, in an account preserved by Syncellus, that it was from the reign of Nabû-nÃÂá¹£ir onward that the movements and duration of the stars were recorded. He noted in his work Babyloniaca that: "He gathered the records of his predecessors and destroyed them, thus ensuring that the history of the Chaldean kings began with him."
According to Claudius Ptolemy in his work Almagest, this gave rise to an era beginning at noon on 26 February 747 BC, when the Anno Nabonassari began, but prior to the Hellenistic period there is no trace of this era. The Babylonian Chronicle, covering the years 747 to 668 BC, the best preserved exemplar of this genre, was possibly collated from Babylonian astronomical diaries, although the earliest exemplar of these dates to 652 BC. The lists of celestial phenomena started with the lunar eclipse of 747âÂÂ746 BC (6 February 747 BC according to Britton and others), a spectacular conjunction of the moon and the planets which may have inspired the commencement of recording of accurate astronomical observations.
The country regained from Nabû-à ¡uma-ià ¡kun was one riven by internal divisions and conflicts with the immigrant tribes of Arameans and Chaldeans, where the central authority was greatly diminished.
In Nabû-nÃÂá¹£ir's third year, the Assyrian general Tukultë-apil-Eà ¡arra, better known under the Hebraic rendition "Tiglath-Pileser III", came to power in the Neo-Assyrian Empire, overthrowing the existing regime, and in the first of two campaigns to secure his southern and eastern frontiers invaded Babylonia. During the first of these (745 BC) he sacked Rabbilu and Hamranu, abducted the gods of à  apazza, subjugated the numerous Aramean and Chaldean tribes, and destroyed the capital of the Chaldean tribe the Bit-Shilani, Sarrabanu, impaling its leader, Nabû-uà ¡abà ¡i. His forces skirted the metropolitan areas of Dur-Kurigalzu and Sippar and may have reached as far as the region of Nippur.
Whether or not he actually solicited military aid from the Assyrians, Nabû-nÃÂá¹£ir seems to have been the main beneficiary of these actions as his regime was stabilized and he was subsequently able to put down a revolt in Borsippa. His hold over Uruk remained tenuous, as two local dignitaries complained of the neglect of the Akëtu temple in their inscription commemorating their own restorations, usurping monarchic privilege.
Twenty-three tablets survive dealing with agricultural production, animal husbandry, weaving and sales from his first to his fourteenth year and these seem to represent a recovery in economic activity. A letter archive excavated in 1973 in Nippur contains the correspondence between Kudurru the à ¡andabakku, or governor, of Nippur and an individual of this name who is greeted as "brother", which may be him.
He is recorded as having succumbed to illness and died in his palace during the fourteenth year of his reign. He was succeeded by his son, Nabû-nÃÂdin-zÃÂri, the only known hereditary succession in Babylonia in a period from 810 BC to the rise of the Neo-Babylonian Empire in 626 BC.
Inscribed in cuneiform as <sup>d</sup><small>AG-PAB</small> or <sup>d</sup><small>AG-à  Eà  -</small>ir, Greek: ÃÂñòÿýìÃÂÃÂñÃÂÿÃÂ, whence "Nabonassar", and meaning "Nabû (is) protector".