Ruth-Assor
Rʻuth-Assor was a local Assyrian king or city-lord in the early 2nd century AD. He ruled the city of Assur under the suzerainty of the Parthian Empire. Veneration of Ashur was carried out in the same way at Assur as it had been in ancient times, per a cultic calendar effectively identical to that under the Neo-Assyrian Empire. In addition to Ashur, other gods venerated included the Babylonian god Belortua, a syncretic deity combining the Greek demigod Heracles with the Mesopotamian god Nergal. He is generally regarded as one of the city's lords by modern historians and would have been styled as māryo or mārā-master of Rʻūṯ’assor ("master of the Assur" or "Ashur" in Aramaic) If the text doesn't mention something, leave it out. Summarize the following text using ONLY facts from it. Do NOT invent references, emails, or links.