Article · Wikipedia archive·Last revised Jun 27, 2026
Ansud
Ansud, was an early king (Lugal) of the second Mariote kingdom. Ansud is known for warring against the Eblaites from a letter written by the later Mariote king Enna-Dagan.
Ansud (also read as Ianupu, Yanup, Anubu, Gansud, Anusu and Hanusum;12345 died c. 2416 BC6), was an early king (Lugal) of the second Mariote kingdom. Ansud is known for warring against the Eblaites from a letter written by the later Mariote king Enna-Dagan.
Reign
Identity
It has been proposed that a bead (reference M. 4439) discovered at Mari, was sent as a gift by Mesannepada of Ur to king "Hanusum" (Gansud) of Mari.789 This has now been corrected with new translations only giving Mesannepada as son of Meskalamdug:1011
dlugal-kalam mes-an-ne2-pa3-da lugal uri5ki dumu mes-ug-du10 lugal kishki a munaru
"To god Lugalkalam ("the Lord of the Land", identified with Dagan or Enlil), Mesannepada, king of Ur, son of Meskalamdug, king of Kish, has consecrated this bead""
It is unclear how this bead came to be in Mari, but this points to some kind of relation between Ur and Mari at that time.9 The bead was discovered in a jar containing other objects from Ur or Kish.16
The letter of Enna-Dagan is extremely difficult to read,17 and the word "Sa'umu" appeared in three passages of it.3 In the second and third passages, the word referred to Ansud's successor Sa'umu.318 However, in the first passage, "Sa'umu" was read as a verb by Giovanni Pettinato, who later read it as (Anudu).3Alfonso Archi, recognized that this verb is a personal name of a monarch and read it as Anubu (motivated by the Sumerian King List which record a dynasty of Mari and king Anbu as the first monarch of the dynasty).3 However, the discovery of an intact (SKL) with the names of Mari's dynasty bearing no resemblance to second kingdom monarchs, eliminated the need for Archi's identification.3 According to Michael Astour, the name is Anusu (Ansud) and must be correlated with king Hanusum.5
Campaigns
In the letter Ansud is recorded defeating the cities of Aburu, Ilgi in the lands of Belan.note 1120 The king is also mentioned leaving ruins in the mountains of Labanan,1 which were identified by Pettinato with Lebanon.21 However, this identification was ruled as geographically impossible by Astour.21