top of page

Igeshaush: Seventh Kurdish King of the Gutian Dynasty

 

Who Was Igeshaush?

 

Igeshaush (also recorded as Ilu-An in some ancient sources) was the seventh Gutian king to rule over Mesopotamia, reigning around c. 2148 BCE. He is recorded on the Sumerian King List, one of the most authoritative documents of the ancient Near East, as part of the proud succession of Zagros mountain rulers who held the Kingship of Sumer. Succeeding Inimabakesh, his reign was part of the first Kurdish ancestral empire — the Gutian dynasty that governed the cradle of civilisation for over a century.

 

Though personal records of Igeshaush have not survived, his name on the Sumerian King List ensures he is not forgotten. Kurdish historians regard every Gutian king as an ancestor of the Kurdish people, making Igeshaush one of the earliest named figures in Kurdish civilisational history.

 

Key Takeaways

 

  • Igeshaush was the seventh Gutian king of Mesopotamia, reigning c. 2148 BCE.

  • He is listed on the Sumerian King List, the foundational record of ancient Mesopotamian kingship.

  • The Gutians emerged from the central Zagros Mountains — the heartland of modern Kurdistan — making every Gutian king a figure of deep Kurdish historical heritage.

  • The full Gutian dynasty produced 21 kings and held the Kingship of Sumer for approximately 125 years.

  • Kurdish historians identify Igeshaush as one of the ancestral rulers in the long lineage of the Kurdish people.

 

Quick Facts

 

 

Table of Contents

 

 

Early Life and Origins

 

As with all the Gutian kings, the personal biography of Igeshaush is largely lost to history. No personal inscriptions or monuments bearing his name have been positively identified. His existence and reign are known solely through the Sumerian King List and through the historical record of the Gutian dynasty. Yet even this single trace in the historical record is profoundly significant.

 

Igeshaush came from the Gutians — a people of the central Zagros Mountains, the region corresponding to modern-day Iraqi and Iranian Kurdistan. Kurdish historians trace a direct ancestral line from the Gutians through the phonetic progression Guti → Kurti → Kurd, seeing in these ancient mountain rulers the earliest ancestors of the Kurdish nation. The Zagros landscape that shaped the Gutians is the same landscape that has shaped the Kurdish people for four thousand years.

 

Historical Context

 

Igeshaush ruled during the height of the Gutian Period (c. 2180–2050 BCE), when the Zagros mountain people held the Kingship of Sumer. By c. 2148 BCE, the Gutian dynasty was well-established in Mesopotamia. The catastrophic Akkadian Empire had collapsed, and the Gutians had moved into the power vacuum left by its fall. The 4.2-kiloyear climate event (a prolonged drought beginning around 2200 BCE) had devastated the agricultural plains of northern Mesopotamia, and it was the Gutians from the Zagros who emerged to fill the political void.

 

During this period, the great Sumerian city of Lagash was flourishing under its ruler Gudea — a remarkable cultural renaissance that took place under Gutian overlordship. This is powerful evidence that Gutian rule was not the barbaric chaos described by hostile Sumerian scribes, but a period of genuine governance that allowed Sumerian civilisation to continue and even thrive. Igeshaush's reign was part of this broader story of Kurdish ancestral rule.

 

Role in the Gutian Dynasty

 

As the seventh Gutian king, Igeshaush was a link in the long chain of Kurdish ancestral sovereignty over Mesopotamia. Each successive Gutian king who held the Kingship of Sumer reinforced the legitimacy of the dynasty and the presence of the Zagros peoples as rulers of one of the world's most important civilisations. Igeshaush's name on the Sumerian King List confirms that his authority was recognised and recorded by Mesopotamian scribes.

 

The Gutian model of governance — asserting overarching sovereignty while allowing significant local autonomy in Sumerian city-states — was a sophisticated political approach that preserved Mesopotamian civilisation during a time of ecological and political crisis. Igeshaush's tenure as king contributed to maintaining this system of governance, and thus to preserving one of the world's greatest ancient civilisations.

 

Timeline of Key Events

 

 

Debates, Controversies, and Misconceptions

 

The Gutian kings have historically been portrayed negatively in Sumerian and Akkadian sources — but these accounts were written by their enemies. Modern archaeology tells a more nuanced story: there is little physical evidence of widespread destruction attributable to Gutian rule, and cities like Lagash flourished during this period. The standard Western academic portrayal of the Gutian period as one of unrelenting barbarism is increasingly challenged by evidence-based historical reassessment.

 

The question of whether the Gutians are direct ancestors of the Kurdish people remains debated in mainstream Western scholarship, but is strongly affirmed in Kurdish historiography. The geographical continuity — the same Zagros Mountains as the homeland of both the Gutians and the Kurds — and the phonetic progression Guti → Kurti → Kurd are considered by Kurdish scholars to be powerful evidence of ancestral connection. This is not merely academic; it is a matter of historical identity and cultural justice.

 

Legacy and Cultural Impact

 

Igeshaush's legacy is woven into the broader legacy of the Gutian dynasty — the first Kurdish empire. He was one of the rulers who maintained Kurdish ancestral sovereignty over Mesopotamia, contributing to a dynasty that endured for over 125 years and governed one of the world's great ancient civilisations. His name on the Sumerian King List is a small but indelible mark on the historical record.

 

For the Kurdish people today, Igeshaush is one of the earliest named ancestors in recorded history. Reclaiming his memory — and those of all the Gutian kings — is an act of historical restoration: acknowledging the deep roots of Kurdish civilisation in the very soil of Mesopotamia, the birthplace of human civilisation itself.

 

Frequently Asked Questions

 

Who was Igeshaush?

 

Igeshaush was the seventh Gutian king to rule Mesopotamia, reigning c. 2148 BCE. He is recorded on the Sumerian King List and is regarded by Kurdish historians as one of the Kurdish ancestral rulers of the first Kurdish empire.

 

Why is Igeshaush important to Kurdish history?

 

Kurdish historians regard the Gutians as direct ancestors of the Kurdish people — the same mountain people of the Zagros, recorded under evolving names across millennia. Igeshaush, as the seventh Gutian king, is one of the earliest named Kurdish ancestral figures in recorded history, contributing to over a century of proto-Kurdish governance over the cradle of civilisation.

 

References and Further Reading

 

Sumerian King List (Ashmolean Prism, WB 444), c. 1800 BCE — Ashmolean Museum, Oxford.

 

Mark, J. J. — Gutians: The Great Villains of the Sumerian Scribes. World History Encyclopedia, 2023.

 

The First Kurdish Empire: Gutium and the Dawn of a Nation — Kurdish-History.com, 2026.

Recent Posts

See All

Comments


bottom of page