Sargon I of the Akkadian Empire

Akkadian Empire

Akkadian Empire

Names

Was also known as Sarru-Kan

Was also known as Sargon the Great

Was also known as Shar-Gani-Sharri

Developments

Family

These names meant great king, or legitimate king

These names meant great king, or legitimate king

Shar-Kali-Sharri

Shar-Kali-Sharri

Father and mother

Sargon never knew his father, but his
mother sent Sargon down the Euphrates
river as could not reveal him

Enheduanna

Sargon's daughter

Sargon's daughter

First named writer

Priestess of Inanna in Ur

Rimush

Sargon's son

First king after Sargon died

Ruled for 9 years, then died

Manishtusu

Sargon's son

Given rule after Rimush

Ruled for 15 years, then died

Naram-Sin

Sargon's grandson

Sargon's grandson

Given rule after Manishtusu

Expanded and developed
the empire

Ruled for 36 years, then died

Shar-Kalli-Sharri

Sargon's great-grandson

Given rule after Naram-Sin

Lost control of the empire

Gutians invaded the empire
along with the Elamites
and the Amorites

Sargon chose his own name

Sargon was
a
Semitic name,
so people assumed
Sargon was a
Semite

Sargon 1

Sargon 1

New Roads

Art

Art

Clay scuptures

Architecture

Science

Fair Taxes

Rise of Sargon

Early Years

His mother couldn't reveal him, so she sent him down the Euphrates River

Sargon was found by Akki

Akki was a gardener of the king of Kish, Ur Zababa

Sargon became the cupbearer of Ur Zababa

Lugalzagesi

Lugalzagesi was conquering Sumer and was getting to Kish
even though he promised to not attack Kish

Ur Zababa sent Sargon as a sacrifice for peace

Lugalzagesi didn't want to kill Sargon so he joined him and destroyed Kish together

Sargon had an affair with Lugalzagesi's wife and they became enemies, Sargon won and Lugalzagesi was humiliated

King

Sargon declared himself king of Sumer

Made a city called Akkad and had authority over military might

Empire

Sargon formed the first empire

Downfall of the Akkadians

Legacy

After Sargon died, Rimush, his son, took over

After Rimush died, Manishtusu, Sargon's other son, took over

After Manishtusu, Naram-Sin took over

Naram-Sin did the best out of all three of them

After Naram-Sin died, Shar-Kalli-Sharri took over

Collapse

When Sargon's great-grandson (Shar-Kali-Sharri) started ruling the empire started to unravel and city states broke away to form their own independent kingdoms

Shar-Kali-Sarri waged almost a
countinuous war against the Amorites, the Elamites, and the invading Gutians

Shar-Kali-Sarri tried holding the empire
but eventually fell apart

Mesopotamians believed that the Gutian invasion
led to the fall of the empire

Mesopotamian writers wrote that the Gutians were the "destroyers of civilization

A famine could have helped the Gutians take over

Postal service

First postal system

Irrigation

Irrigation

Way to grow plants during droughts

Akkadians made streams from the ocean to nourish the plants

Trade

Ur Zababa

Ur Zababa

Mesopotamian Dark Ages

Mesopotamian Dark Ages

Bibliographies

“Sargon of Akkad.” Google, Google, www.google.ca/amp/s/www.ancient.eu/amp/1-625/.