She is known only from a single fragmentary inscription and it has as of yet not been possible to confidently identify which king was her husband.
[4] The vessel, given the designation 55-12-5, 252, in the British Museum, is a shallow dish made for some specific, though unknown, purpose.
[4] The inscription was first examined and identified as recording a previously unknown Assyrian queen by Irving Finkel in 2000[6] during a project of editing and compiling cuneiform inscriptions for a study on Assyrian stone vessels by Julian E. Reade and Ann Searight.
[5] She has variously been suggested by different authors to have been the wife of every king during the period when Nineveh was the capital.
[3][4][6][7] It is known that both Aššur-etil-ilāni and Sîn-šar-iškun were married, as queens are attested for both of them in administrative documents, though no known inscriptions preserve their names.