Though its location is probably near to the confluence of the river Radānu to the Tigris, on a route along the Tigris northwest of Seleucia.[3] According to Isidore of Charax, it was crossed by the river Sillas (Diyala) and is located about ca. 90 km from Seleucia, and was already known since Tiglathpileser III in Assyriancuneiform sources (second half of 8th century BCE) as Kār Aššur and later as Chalasar (Tabula Peutingeriana, Manî).[3][1] Later it was settled again under the Greeks (Macedonian),[4] but might have been considered Parthian. In AD 31, It welcomed the Arsacid pretender Tiridates II.[5]
Artemita was the birthplace of the historian Apollodorus of Artemita.
^ abcKarlheinz Kessler, Kār Aššur, Chalas(s)ar, Artemita. Assyrische Festung und griechische Polis in der Apolloniatis, in Mélanie C. Flossmann-Schütze et al. (eds.): Kleine Götter — Große Götter. Festschrift für Dieter Kessler zum 65. Geburtstag. (= Tuna el-Gebel 4). Brose, Haar 2013, S. 273–285 ISBN978-3-944207-02-5.