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put an end to any potential threat to
Assyria from the southwest after the defeat of queen Te'el-hunu and her "male associate" Ḫazaʾil, pillaged
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along with
Princess Tabua, the relative and successor of Te'el-hunu, who may have been the daughter of Te'el-hunu and Sennacherib.
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became king of
Assyria, he made peace with the Qedarites in Adummatu by sending back the divine statues of
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178:, the first five of them rulers. According to Assyrians texts, she also served as
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with a great booty of camels, divine statues, spices and jewels.
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who ruled in the 7th century BC, circa 690 BC. She succeeded
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She was the fourth of six Arab queens to be attested (as
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238:. Worldwide Guide to Women in Leadership
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7:
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193:and brought the queen captive to
90: end of the 8th century BCE
236:"Women in Power: BCE 1000 - 500"
150:) in Assyrian documents between
298:7th-century BC monarchs in Asia
185:In 690 BC, the Assyrians under
1:
127:) was a queen regnant of the
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182:(priestess) of her people.
139:and was succeeded by queen
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313:Ancient Near Eastern women
308:7th-century BC Arab people
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37:
100:North Arabian polytheism
293:Ancient queens regnant
265:A Companion to Assyria
303:7th-century BC women
318:Ancient priestesses
152:Tiglath-pileser III
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16:(Redirected from
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120:romanized:
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18:Te'el-hunu
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262:Eckart Frahm:
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27:Queen of Qedar
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240:. Retrieved
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156:Assurbanipal
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129:Nomadic Arab
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38:
283:Arab queens
187:Sennacherib
62:Predecessor
277:Categories
242:2009-04-16
220:References
202:Esarhaddon
180:apkal-latu
131:tribes of
116:𒋼𒀪𒂖𒄷𒉡
55: 690
124:Teʾelḫunu
108:Teʾelḫunu
73:Successor
65:Possibly
39:Queen of
33:Teʾelḫunu
191:Adummatu
112:Akkadian
96:Religion
57:–676 BCE
214:Orotalt
195:Nineveh
148:sarratu
77:Ḫazaʾil
288:Midian
206:Alilat
160:Zabibe
210:Nuhay
200:When
172:Tabua
168:Yatie
164:Samsi
141:Tabua
137:Yatie
133:Qedar
67:Yatie
48:Reign
41:Qedar
212:and
176:Adia
174:and
154:and
83:Born
279::
251:^
227:^
208:,
166:,
162:,
158::
143:.
118:,
114::
87:c.
52:c.
245:.
110:(
20:)
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