Naqiþa or Naqia (Akkadian: , also known as Zakà «tu (), was a wife of the Assyrian king Sennacherib (705âÂÂ681 BC) and the mother of his son and successor Esarhaddon (681âÂÂ669). Naqiþa is the best documented woman in the history of the Neo-Assyrian Empire and she reached an unprecedented level of prominence and public visibility; she was perhaps the most influential woman in Assyrian history. She is one of the few ancient Assyrian women to be depicted in artwork, to commission her own building projects, and to be granted laudatory epithets in letters by courtiers. She is also the only known ancient Assyrian figure other than kings to write and issue a treaty.
Naqiþa must have been married to Sennacherib before he became king (705) since she gave birth to his son Esarhaddon 713. Whether she ever held the position of queen is debated; Assyrian kings had multiple wives but the evidence suggests that only one of them could be the queen at any one given time. Sennacherib is known to have had another queen, Taà ¡mÃÂtu-à ¡arrat. Naqiþa might have become queen late in Sennacherib's reign. She is referred to as the "queen of Sennacherib" in documents from the reign of her son. In 684, Sennacherib, perhaps influenced by Naqiþa, designated Esarhaddon as his crown prince despite having older sons.
During the reign of her son, Naqiþa reached her most prominent position, bearing the title (). Under Esarhaddon, Naqiþa secured ownership of several estates throughout the empire and grew enormously wealthy, perhaps wealthier than Esarhaddon's own queen Eà ¡arra-ḫammat. Naqiþa might have governed her own set of territories surrounding the Babylonian city of Lahira. The last known attestation of Naqiþa is from 669, in the months after Esarhaddon's death. After her son's death, Naqiþa wrote a treaty which forced the royal family, aristocracy and all of Assyria to swear loyalty to her grandson Ashurbanipal (669âÂÂ631). After this, Naqiþa appears to have retired from public life.
Though nothing certain can be said of her origins, Naqiþa having two names could point to her originating outside of Assyria proper, possibly in Babylonia or in the Levant. The name is originally of Aramaic, or at the very least West Semitic, origin while is Akkadian. The name , used only sometimes, was probably adopted when she became associated with the Assyrian royal family; both names have the same meaning, interpreted as "purity", "pure" or "the pure one". Naqiþa is known to have had a sister, Abirami ( or ), attested as purchasing land in the city of Baruri in 674 BC.
Given the age at which she gave birth to Esarhaddon, Naqiþa cannot have been born later than 728. Naqiþa was one of the consorts of the Assyrian king Sennacherib (705âÂÂ681), with the marriage taking place by the late 8th century due to the birth of their son in 713. This was before Sennacherib's accession to the throne, when he was still crown prince under his father Sargon II. Except for Esarhaddon, it is unknown which of Sennacherib's many children were also the children of Naqiþa. It is probable that Naqiþa was also the mother of Sennacherib's only daughter known by name, à  additu, since à  additu retained a prominent position under Esarhaddon. Naqiþa was not the mother of Sennacherib's elder sons, such as Arda-Mulissu.
It is possible that Naqiþa gained influence already in Sennacherib's reign; in 684 she may have been responsible for the king dismissing Arda-Mulissu as heir and instead proclaiming their son Esarhaddon as crown prince. Despite growing reports that Esarhaddon suffered from various illnesses, Sennacherib at no point changed the succession after Esarhaddon's appointment as crown prince, also perhaps due to Naqiþa's influence. She is recorded as employing divination and astrology to bolster Sennacherib's opinion of Esarhaddon. Throughout her life, Naqiþa seems to have maintained a close relationship with prophets active in the city of Arbela.
Though often identified as a queen of Sennacherib, it is not clear whether Naqiþa held that position in Sennacherib's lifetime. The chief issue is that Naqiþa is known to have been associated with Sennacherib before he became king and with Esarhaddon throughout his subsequent reign (681âÂÂ669), but Sennacherib is known to also have been married to another woman, Taà ¡mÃÂtu-à ¡arrat, who is securely attested with the title of queen. The general assumption among researchers is that while kings could have multiple wives, only one of them was at any given time recognized as the queen since administrative documents always use the title without qualification (implying that there was no ambiguity).
Naqiþa is referred to as Sennacherib's queen () in multiple documents, but all of them, perhaps with a single exception, were written in Esarhaddon's reign, meaning that she might have been bestowed the title retroactively by her son. The single possible exception is a single bead with a fragmentary inscription that calls her " of Sennacherib" and then breaks off; it is possible that it was written in Sennacherib's reign. Another possibility is that Naqiþa achieved the status of queen only late in Sennacherib's reign. Taà ¡mÃÂtu-à ¡arrat is not mentioned in any documents from Esarhaddon's reign. Perhaps the promotion of Naqiþa's son as crown prince means that she was queen around 684 and that Taà ¡mÃÂtu-à ¡arrat (otherwise attested only securely in 694) was dead at that point in time. After Esarhaddon became crown prince, Sennacherib granted some tax-exempt lands to Naqiþa. In the document describing the grant, she is however titled only as the "mother of the crown prince".
Naqiþa's authority grew in the reign of her son; early on she built a palace for him in Nineveh, the Assyrian capital, and made an inscription commemorating the construction. Constructing palaces was an unusual activity for a queen to engage in, usually done only by kings. The inscription documenting the project is bombastic and clearly takes inspiration from those of the kings. In most sources from Esarhaddon's time, Naqiþa is referred simply to as the queen mother (ummi à ¡ari, ). Naqiþa retained this title in the reign of Esarhaddon's son (and her grandson) Ashurbanipal (669âÂÂ631), despite then no longer being the mother of the reigning king. In terms of surviving sources she was by far the most prominent queen mother in Assyrian history; most known occurrences of the title are from her lifetime.
As queen mother, the basic structure of Naqiþa's household was similar to that of the queen and other officials. In addition to Nineveh, Naqiþa probably had residencies in other cities, including some in Babylonia. Naqiþa appears to have had significant estates in the Babylonian city of Lahira (Laḫiru), which she perhaps governed herself; a 678 document describes the city as part of "the queen mother's domain". All queens also appear to have had large holdings in the western city of Harran. Some mentions exist of a statue of Naqiþa being built in the city of Gadisê, near Harran.
Naqiþa was likely very wealthy, perhaps even wealthier than Esarhaddon's queen Eà ¡arra-ḫammat. Naqiþa is recorded to have made numerous donations to temples, to have provided the royal palace with horses from her estates and to have employed a large and extensive staff. It is clear that she held an exceptional position; in letters addressed to her numerous flattering epithets, such as "able like Adapa", are used. A legal document from Esarhaddon's reign claims that "the verdict of the mother of the king, my lord, is as final as that of the gods". Such statements are highly unusual given that they usually only applied to kings. Numerous letters from courtiers refer to the health of Naqiþa. Her security appears to have been a matter of great concern as one document containing a query to the sun-god Shamash asks whether a person who might be appointed to her guard would guard Naqiþa "like his own self.
Though letters to Naqiþa were mostly about religious affairs, some concern politics. It is possible that she partook in Esarhaddon's rebuilding project of Babylon, destroyed by his father. Perhaps Naqiþa's prominence resulted from Esarhaddon's own tumultuous accession, when he had to fight a civil war against his brother Arda-Mulissu. In 2014, Philippe Clancier speculated that Naqiþa might have commanded armies during this civil war, though no Assyrian text describes her doing so. The only Assyrian queen, and woman overall, confidently known to have partaken in military campaigns is the earlier Shammuramat. If Naqiþa did lead armies against Arda-Mulissu, omitting this from the records would not be surprising since all battlefield victories were normally ascribed to the Assyrian king personally whether or not the king was at the battle. The civil war is thought to have been the catalyst of Esarhaddon's later paranoia and distrust of his servants, vassals and family members. Although highly distrustful of his male relatives, Esarhaddon seems to not have been paranoid in regards to his female relatives. During his reign his queen Eà ¡arra-ḫammat, his mother Naqiþa and his daughter à  ÃÂrà «Ã¾a-ÃÂá¹Âirat all wielded considerably more influence and political power than women during most earlier parts of Assyrian history, though they never occupied any formal political positions. An explanation for the reverence accorded to Naqiþa by officials of the empire is that the people might have partly credited the empire's successes in Esarhaddon's reign to her. Though capable and energetic, Esarhaddon was chronically ill for the duration of his reign and Naqiþa might have been believed to have had some sort of magical influence, connected to the association between the Assyrian queen and the goddess Ishtar, that kept the empire victorious.
The last evidence of Naqiþa is from around the time of Ashurbanipal's accession, at the end of 669, when she forced the royal family, aristocracy and all of Assyria to swear loyalty to her grandson. The royal treaty forced on the people by Naqiþa, dubbed the Zakutu Treaty by modern historians, is a remarkable document as the only text of its kind written by someone other than the king. Why Naqiþa, and not Ashurbanipal, was the one to implement the treaty is not known. Some aspects of the treaty, for instance its brevity, indicate that it was created relatively hastily after Esarhaddon's death in 669. The Zakutu Treaty reads:
After Ashurbanipal became king without incident, Naqiþa appears to have retired from public life since there is no further evidence of her acting publicly again. Sebastian Fink believes Naqiþa died shortly after Ashurbanipal's accession. According to Gregory D. Cook, Naqiþa was probably dead by the time of Ashurbanipal's Sack of Thebes in 663. Jack Finegan on the other hand believed that Naqiþa was alive by the time of the civil war between Ashurbanipal and Shamash-shum-ukin in 652âÂÂ648 and that she during this conflict again tried to support Ashurbanipal's right to rule.
Naqiþa's career resulted in her achieving, for a woman of her time, an unprecedented level of prominence and public visibility. She is the best documented, and perhaps most influential, woman of the Neo-Assyrian period. Naqiþa stands apart from nearly all other Assyrian queens, who are often rarely mentioned by name in surviving texts. She is the only royal woman, other than Ashurbanipal's queen LibbÃÂli-à ¡arrat, known to have been depicted in royal artwork. In a relief depicting Naqiþa and Esarhaddon, she is depicted seemingly nearly as his equal and as doing the same religious gesture as the king. She is also depicted wearing a "mural crown", a royal crown with features of a castle wall, also included in the artwork of LibbÃÂli-à ¡arrat.
In later Greco-Roman literary tradition, two great queens of Assyria were remembered: Semiramis (based on the earlier queen Shammuramat) and Nitocris. It is possible that the figure of Nitocris, said to have lived five generations after Semiramis and to have conducted building projects in Babylon, was based on Naqiþa. The legend of building work in Babylon could relate to her lands in Babylonia, the possibility that she partook in Esarhaddon's projects in the city, or perhaps to the palace she built for her son in Nineveh early in his reign. The palace at Nineveh could also have served as inspiration since the ancient Greeks sometimes erroneously equated Nineveh and Babylon.
It is possible that some portions of the Semiramis legend were based on Naqiþa, rather than Shammuramat. In particular, one of the legendary tales of Semiramis describes the queen as founding Babylon. While there are no obvious connections between the historical Shammuramat and Babylon, it is, as mentioned, possible to draw connections to Naqiþa and building works in the city or the surrounding region.
Characterizations of Naqiþa vary among modern historians. Some, such as Sarah C. Melville have viewed her as an unselfish mother, who worked to help her son during his reign, whereas others, such as Zafrira Ben-Barak, have viewed her as a politically ambitious woman who exploited every opportunity she could to advance her personal position.