Ishme-Dagan II
| Ishme-Dagan II | |
|---|---|
| Issi'ak Assur | |
| King of Assur | |
| Reign | 16 years c. 1579–1564 BC |
| Predecessor | Shamshi-Adad II |
| Successor | Shamshi-Adad III |
| Issue | Shamshi-Adad III |
| Father | Shamshi-Adad II |
Ishme-Dagan II or Išme-Dagān II, inscribed miš-me dda-gan and meaning “(the god) Dagan has heard,” was a rather obscure ruler of Assyria, sometime during the first half of the 16th century BC in the midst of a dark age (Edzard's "dunkles Zeitalter"), succeeding his father, Shamshi-Adad II, and in turn succeeded by Shamshi-Adad III from whose reign extant contemporary inscriptions resume. According to the Assyrian Kinglist, he reigned sixteen years.