Tall Siran bottle succession anchor
Use the AUSS Tall Siran bottle article and any original inscription/corpus control to test a narrow succession-anchor inferon.
Not evidence. Requires source reading and counterevidence before promotion.
L1-L2 workbench
L1 leads point toward possible sources or routes. L2 candidates name proposed Inferpedia objects that still need source work, criticism, and review.
Subject page: Ancient Near Eastern inscriptions and succession
Use the AUSS Tall Siran bottle article and any original inscription/corpus control to test a narrow succession-anchor inferon.
Not evidence. Requires source reading and counterevidence before promotion.
Read Rendsburg and inscription controls for Baasha, Baalis/Baalyasha, and adjacent Ammonite royal-name evidence as a contested identity route.
Not evidence. Must preserve counterevidence and avoid asserting identity as fact.
Use synthesis only as a guide; read Assyrian-period source controls before deciding whether any specific Ammonite ruler slot can advance.
Not evidence. Keep as source-route until ruler-by-ruler controls are attached.
Draft lost-text article for Abydenus' Assyrian-Chaldaean historical writing as preserved through later chronographic fragments.
Codex/subagent source reading found explicit later witnesses and fragment routes for a lost historical work. Source title-prior route: route:07b54bd86e70fe5b58100379513eed90795d25043aa69018.
Codex source-reading decision from the pre-1550 mechanical-gap title-prior lane.
Several low-outlink Kings of Ammon pages sit in the same shard across adjacent centuries. The title-only pattern suggests a fragile succession surface where named rulers, inscriptions, and chronological slots may be unevenly represented. Source title-prior route: route:2bf1291c47cb3255228959398a41c077dc7e09da4287b5a8.
A bounded source-reading candidate around the Tall Siran bottle inscription as an anchor for Ammonite royal succession reconstruction.
The Tall Siran evidence item is the clearest direct-attestation component in the broad Ammonite succession packet.
Source-backed inferon for the lost opening or main section implied by the surviving final curse section of the Qalaichi-Bukan Old Aramaic stele.
The title's categories place Qalaichi at the intersection of Mannaean history, Iranian archaeology, and the ancient Near East, while the page carries a more-citations marker; title-only metadata suggests a real site whose evidentiary story is under-controlled. Source title-prior route: route:90e8cd7ed4da502984f394c10ca770ac5df5c1246f99bc19.
A contested lower-level source-route candidate for the Baasha of Ammon/Baalis or Baalyasha identification problem.
Rendsburg supplies both source warrant and caution; the identity route is not ready to become a ruler fact.
Inferon that EA 206 attests Naziba as a toponym or polity while leaving the correspondent unnamed.
A single ancient title is simultaneously categorized as an Amarna letters location and writer, with coordinate-missing and regional ancient-history stub signals. That title pattern is a lead for a thin identification page where person, place, and textual attestation may need explicit separation. Source title-prior route: route:eab53aba20539ca68e0b1746c1ccdb9627092640fa7ed27f.
A source-route candidate for thin Assyrian-period Ammonite ruler slots adjacent to Shanip and related notices.
The broad packet includes low-outlink ruler surfaces, but imported evidence is not ruler-by-ruler enough.
Inferon for Assyrian campaigns against Daiaeni/Diauehi as an inscription-backed event cluster behind the synthetic Diaokhi-Assyrian War label.
Diaokhi-Assyrian War appears as a bare one-outlink historical-conflict title with no visible category or template support in the shard. Ancient Near Eastern conflict topics often depend on sparse inscriptions and reconstructed chronologies, making it a plausible thin evidence-led candidate. Source title-prior route: route:e4c30f2750ab3644317978efe1108494dc00fdc93bc0c35c.