Mar-biti-apla-usur

[2] Mārbītiaplauṣur reigned from c. 980 to 975 BC and was the sole king of Babylon’s short-lived seventh or Elamite Dynasty.

[i 3] There are no known rulers of Elam bearing Akkadian titles, but his reign coincides with a blank period in Elamite political history.

[1] The Eclectic Chronicle records the month of Nisānu in his fourth year but the event is not preserved.

It may be concerning the suspension of the Akitu festival due to Aramean incursions, as this is the typical subject of the chronicle.

[i 4][3] Four bronze arrowheads from Lorestān have been recovered inscribed with his name and the royal title šar kiššati, “king of the world.”[4] They were held as part of the Foroughi collection in Tehran.