Divine Kingship & the Mandate to Rule
Kingship was lowered from heaven — a sacred office on loan, withdrawn the moment the gods chose another.
In Mesopotamian thought, kingship was not invented by people but 'lowered from heaven' by the gods — a divine office bestowed on one man and, through him, on his city. The king ruled as the gods' chosen steward: he was called, named, and equipped by them, and his duty was to maintain justice, build and feed the temples, and defend the land. When a dynasty fell, it was because the gods had withdrawn kingship and granted it elsewhere. Some kings (notably in the Ur III period) were even deified, but kingship as such was always understood as a sacred trust held on the gods' behalf.
Key passages(20)
A praise poem of Enlil-bāni (Enlil-bāni A)
A praise poem of Išme-Dagan (Išme-Dagan A + V)
A praise poem of Lipit-Eštar (Lipit-Eštar B)
A praise poem of Iddin-Dagan (Iddin-Dagan B)
A praise poem of Lipit-Eštar (Lipit-Eštar A)
A prayer to An for Rīm-Sîn (Rīm-Sîn C)
A prayer to Asarluḫi for Ḫammu-rābi (Ḫammu-rābi D)