Niqmi-Epuh
Niqmi-Epuḫ, also given as Niqmepa was the king of Yamḫad succeeding his father Yarim-Lim II.
Reign
Little of Aleppo has been excavated by archaeologists. Knowledge about Niqmi-Epuh comes from tablets discovered at Alalaḫ. His existence is confirmed by a number of tablets with his seal on their envelopeYarim-Lim king of Alalakh, uncle of Yarim-Lim II and vassal of Yamhad, died during Niqmi-Epuh's reign and was succeeded by his son Ammitakum, who started to assert Alalakh's semi-independence.
The tablets mention Niqmi-Epuh's votive status which he dedicated to Hadad and placed it in that deity's Temple. Tablet AlT*11 informs of his return from Nishin, a place not known before, but certainly inside the territory of Yamhad because the tablet seems to refer to travel and not a military campaign.
Niqmi-Epuh's most celebrated deed was his conquest of the town Arazik, near Charchemish, the fall of this city was important to the extent of being suitable for dating several legal cases.