à  irikti-à ¡uqamuna, inscribed phonetically in cuneiform <sup>m</sup>à ¡i-rik-ti-<sup>d</sup>à ¡u-qa-mu-nu and meaning âÂÂgift of (the god) à  uqamunaâÂÂ, 981 BC, succeeded his fellow âÂÂson of Bazi,â Ninurta-kudurrá¿Â-uá¹£ur I, as 3rd king of the Bá¿Ât-Bazi or 6th Dynasty of Babylon and exercised the kingship for just 3 months, an insufficient time to merit an official regnal year.
He was the last monarch of the Bët-Bazi dynasty, which had reigned for 20 years 3 months according to the King List A, and a contemporary of the Assyrian king Aà ¡à ¡ur-rabi II, 1012âÂÂ971 BC. He was named for the Kassite god of war and of the chase, à  uqamuna, one of the two (with à  umalia) associated with the investiture of kings. The Chronicle Concerning the Reign of à  amaà ¡-à ¡uma-ukin, a text containing disconnected passages from writing boards, names him as a brother of Nabû-kudurrë-uá¹£ur, which is probably an error for the Ninurta-kudurrë-uá¹£ur whom he succeeded. A person with this name (which appears nowhere else) appears as the à ¡akin bÃÂb ekalli, palace gate officer, and beneficiary of a land grant on a kudurru but this was during the reign of Marduk-à ¡ÃÂpik-zÃÂri, some eighty years and ten reigns previously.
The Dynastic Chronicle records that he was interred in a palace.