The first ancient king used bricks to print
The first ancient king used bricks to print 1-703
He was the first ancient king to use bricks to print royal inscriptions.
Naram-Sin (Ishtar's husband) and (Sargon's grandson)
King of Akkad between the years 2209 and 2155 BC. His name means “beloved” by the god Sin.
His titles
Naram-Sin is called by the following titles:
King of the four corners of the world
God confirmed
Baal (husband) of Ishtar
His name was written with the sign indicating divinity (Dingir), and oaths were sworn in his name. In the time of the Third Dynasty of Ur, Narm-Sin was represented as one of the gods, just as his grandfather “Sharu-Kino” (Sargon) was. On the Narm-Sin obelisk, he appears with the crown of the gods with centuries.
After Naram-Sin, his son Shar-kali-Shari (Šar-kali-šarri) ruled. The Akkadian state ended after 25 years of his rule. According to ancient Babylonian records, the reason for the end of Akkad was the desecration of the sanctities by Naram-Sin. He destroyed the temple of Enlil in Nippur, so Inanna left Akkad, and “the end has come for the people who do not observe traditions,” and calamity spread throughout the country, where “the mariner cannot steer his boat, the king’s messengers cannot find their way, the fields did not yield grain, the streams yielded no fish, the city gates turned to dust, and thieves settled in the streets.” In the end, the gods decided to destroy Akkad to save the rest of the cities of Sumer and Akkad.


Source: websites