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Parsua

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Zamua (also Mazamua ) was an ancient Pre- Iranian kingdom, corresponding with the earlier kingdom of Lullubi , which stretched from Lake Urmia to the upper reaches of the Diyala River , roughly corresponding with the modern Sulaimania governorate (still called Zamua/Zamwa ) in Iraqi Kurdistan . It was centered at Sharazur plain. Ameka and Arashtua were two southern Zamuan kingdoms. A tribal chief ( Nasiku ) bearing the Akkadian name of NÅ«r-Adad was a Zamuan leader who launched a failed resistance against Assyrian domination. Its inhabitants were most probably related to the Gutians living east and south of Zamua, and the Hurrians living northwest of the Kingdom.

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3-523: Parsua (earlier Parsuash , Parsumash ) was an ancient tribal kingdom/chiefdom (860-600 BC) located between Zamua (formerly: Lullubi ) and Ellipi , in central Zagros to the southwest of Sanandaj , western Iran . The name Parsua is from an old Iranian word Parsava and it is presumed to mean border or borderland . Parsua was distinct from Persis , another region to the southeast, now known as Fars province in Iran . Some accounts suggest that Teispes ,

6-634: The Slemani Museum, Iraq. In the Neo-Assyrian Period , Mazamua was an Assyrian province with the provincial capital of the same name Mazamua (modern Suleimaniya ). Lake Zeribar was considered by the Assyrians as Inner Mazamua. The region of Slemani was known as Zamwa prior to the foundation of the modern city in 1784. It is surrounded by the Azmar (Ezmer), Goizha (Goyje) and Qaiwan (Qeywan) Mountains in

9-700: The ancestor of the Achaemenid dynasty, led a migration from Parsua to Persis, formerly the Elamite state of Anshan . Zamua The northern regions of Zamua (towards lake Urmia) were known as Inner Zamua . Ida was the most important state in Inner Zamua, with Nikdera one of its most important rulers. Stela of Iddi-Sin, King of Simurrum . It dates back to the Old Babylonian Period. From Qarachatan Village, Slemani Governorate, Iraqi Kurdistan. Located in

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