Ninurta-kudurrá¿Â-uá¹£ur II, a name meaning âÂÂO Ninurta, protect my offspringâÂÂ, inscribed in cuneiform as <sup>md</sup><small>MAà  -NÃÂG.DU-PAP</small>, or <sup>md</sup><small>NIN.IB-NÃÂG.DU-PAP</small>, 939 BC, was the 2nd king of the Dynasty of E, a sequence of mixed dynasties, of Babylon; he reigned for 8 months 12 days, according to the King List A. No contemporary documents survive for his reign or that of his successor, his younger brother, MÃÂr-bá¿Âti-aḫḫÃÂ-idinna.
He succeeded his long-reigning father, Nabû-mukin-apli, during whose time he appeared as a witness on a kudurru recording a title deed, dated to either his father's 23rd or 25th year, more than a decade before he ascended the throne, suggesting he was fairly elderly when he became king. The dynastic affiliation of the family is unknown and all three members of the family are recorded as the successive contemporaries of the Assyrian king Tiglath-Pileser II. Two inscriptions on LorestÃÂn bronze arrowheads are inscribed with the name âÂÂNinurta-kudurrá¿Â-uá¹£urâ are generally ascribed to the earlier, similarly obscure monarch, Ninurta-kudurrá¿Â-uá¹£ur I, ca. 987 â 985 BC, to whom Brinkman suggests a possible filiation such as grandfather, while a third possession inscription gives his title as Prince (<small>A LU.GAL</small>) and is thought likely to be this individual, although in fact each of them could refer to either monarch.
The Religious Chronicle may have been written during his reign, as it ends with events relating to the reign of his father although the only copy that we have is written in the Neo-Babylonian script and is consequently late. His reign was possibly too insignificant to warrant mention in the Eclectic Chronicle.