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Nineveh Region
Location: Nineveh, Nineveh Province, Iraq
Era: Hassuna-Roman
Site Description: The Digital Nineveh Archives Project is the first CyArk project to feature original excavation records which were recently digitized in order to make them more widely available. This project is the first of its kind for CyArk in that no high definition documentation techniques were used to collect the data.
Statement of Data Quality
Nineveh RegionStatsCountry: IraqState: Nineveh, Nineveh Province Location: 36° 21' 36" N - 43° 9' 46" E Project Date(s): April 1st, 2007 Release Date(s): January 7th, 2009 Time Range: 6000 BCE - 600 CE Era: Hassuna-Roman Site Authority: Iraq State Board of Antiquities and Heritage Heritage Listing: World Heritage-Tentative Site DescriptionThe ancient walls of Nineveh form a rectangular shape approximately 1 mi by 3 mi (about 2 km by 5 km) enclosing an area 1,875 acres (750 ha) in size. The site is located 205 mi (410 km) north of Baghdad on the eastern bank of the Tigris River and is now within the developed area of the modern city of Mosul. The Khosr River bisects the site west to east as it flows into the Tigris, which runs parallel to the western ramparts. Two high mounds dominate an extensive lower town, and some of the lower mounded area was likely given over to agriculture, parks, or was simply left undeveloped in ancient times. The larger mound, known as Kuyunjik, is over 100 acres (40 ha) in size and rises about 90 ft (30 m) above the surrounding plain. The smaller mound known as Nebi Yunis is situated south of the River Khosr and, with Kuyunjik, formed part of the city's western fortifications. Occupied almost continuously from the 7th millennium B.C. well into the 1st millennium A.D., the ancient city achieved legendary status in the 7th century B.C. when the greatly expanded and embellished city became the imperial capital of the Assyrian empire under the king Sennacherib. In addition to figuring prominently in the Book of Jonah, Nineveh appears often in the written records of Egypt and other major contemporary powers as well as in the literature of subsequent epochs. As the last great capital of the world's first territorial empire, the site of Nineveh occupies a unique position in human history. The surrounding countryside was, and remains today, fertile and favored by rainfall, so large populations could be sustained by agriculture. Moreover, the site's significance was ensured by it's location at an easy river crossing and at a natural road junction within a vast regional transportation and communication network. Nineveh is one of the longest excavated sites in the world. The history of archaeological investigation dates back to 1847 when A.H. Layard, assisted by H. Rassam, began the first systematic excavations at the site. Subsequent excavations were undertaken by H. Rassam (1852-54, 1878-1882), W. Loftus (1854-1855), G. Smith (1873-1874), E.A.W. Budge (1889-1891), L. King (1903-1904), R.C. Thompson (1904-1905, 1927-1932). Many of these expeditions were sponsored by the British Museum. Early in the 1950s the Iraq State Board of Antiquities and Heritage began a limited program of excavation under the direction of M.A. Mustafa (1951-1958). Then, after another hiatus, a second major programme of investigation was initiated in a series of campaigns at the site headed by the Iraqi archaeologists T. Madhloom (1965-1971), Ghanim Wahida (1965-71), Farouk Al-Rawi (1967-71), A. Suleiman (1966-), A. as-Satar (1987), and M. Jabur (1971,1980,1989). The University of California at Berkeley Expedition to Nineveh, directed by David Stronach, investigated the site in 1987, 1989 and 1990 before the first Gulf war brought their work to a halt. In 2002, the Sennacherib's "Palace Without Rival" Project began a program of recording, involving the Centro Ricerche Archeologiche e Scavi di Torino per il Medio Oriente e l'Asia, led by Giuseppe Proietti, together with the State Board of Antiquities and Heritage of Iraq, the Iraq Museum, the Central Restoration Institute in Rome and the Director General for the Archaeological Heritage of Italy's Ministry of Cultural Heritage and Activities. Today, the Iraq SBAH, directed by Amira Eidan, leads the preservation of the site in conjunction with Salim Youniss Hussein, Director General of Antiquities, Nineveh Province, and Mozahim Mahmoud Houssien, Director of Excavations, Nineveh. HistoryNineveh RegionThe earliest occupation at Nineveh has been found on the high mound known as Kuyunjik. Pottery recovered from a deep sounding in 1931-32 dated back to the Hassuna and Halaf periods (6500-5500 BC). By the Ubaid period (5500-4000 BC), the high mound was probably fortified by mudbrick walls on at least northern and eastern sides. During the period of from ca. 4000-3000 BC, the site seems to have been part of a flourishing commercial network linking the Tigris Valley with the Euphrates Valley and southern Mesopotamia. At this point, the entire mound of Kuyunjik may have been occupied. By the early 3rd millennium BC, it is likely that urban settlement had developed below the high mound as well. Two bodies of evidence support a lower town just north of Kuyunjik during the Ninevite 5 period (ca. 3000-2500 BC ). UC Berkeley excavations on Kuyunjik Mound (Kuyunjik Gully, area KG) indicate occupation outside of the perimeter wall during this period. Additionally, in the1960s, Ninevite 5 pottery sherds were recovered in an area just north of Kuyunjik mound during repair of a deep well about 80m southeast of the Mashki Gate. The spatial arrangement of upper mound with related lower town would subsequently become a signature of northern Assyrian town planning, characteristic of all Neo-Assyrian capital cities except for Assur. Other city builders apart from the Assyrians adopted this arrangement as well, but it seems to have been particularly well-suited to the Assyrian administrative and ideological tradition. The earliest coherent architecture found at the site were located beneath a building recognized as the Temple of Ishtar on Kuyunjik. It, too, appears to have been a temple, illustrating the long sequence of sacred significance held not only by that particular spot on the high mound, but by the city of Nineveh itself, as any long-time home to a temple of this goddess, so important in the Mesopotamian pantheon, would have held national significance. The first time the Temple of Ishtar is mentioned in a written work is in a text of Shamshi-Adad I (1813-1781 BC), which relates that the temple was being renovated as early as the time of Manishtushu, king of Akkad (2269-2255 BC), so it is likely that it existed since at least the early 3rd millennium BC. R. Campbell Thompson, the archaeologist who uncovered the possible remains of the Ninevite 5 temple, emphasized that an even earlier temple may have occupied the same location. Kuyunjik Gully (Berkeley Area KG)In the first half of the twentieth century there were two minor archaeological operations in the area of the eastern Kuyunjik gullies. In 1904 L. W. King began probing parts of the Kuyunjik mound. He sank shafts at 50 to 80 foot intervals and also dug a number of horizontal tunnels along the eastern edge. Evidence of one such excavation area with a partially filled tunnel extending from it, was discovered by the U.C. Berkeley team. In 1942 during World War II, M. Rowton did a sounding about 90 feet from the mouth of one of the eastern gullies. The sounding went to a depth of approximately 30 feet below the local level of the surface of the mound. He uncovered two early occupation levels, one of which contained Ninevite 5 pottery sherds. From Rowton'€™s drawings his sounding appears to have been on the north side of the same bifurcated gully as that excavated by the U.C. Berkeley team. However, they could no longer find any visible traces of Rowton'€™s sounding. UC Berkeley Area KS EastThe initial discovery and excavation of the Eastern Building occurred in 1904 when R. C. Thompson joined L. W. King at Nineveh. They uncovered what they thought was a building that had been destroyed and its stones removed. They found a paved chamber toward the east with a mud-brick wall on its southwest side. In the pavement was a limestone block that projected a foot above the level of the pavement. It was bored transversely. Further west were traces of two single sections of pavement. These pavements consisted of blocks of limestone that had been laid on a platform of large baked bricks that were inscribed with the name of Sennacherib. King and Thompson also found a stone orthostat with relief carvings of the lower halves of apotropaic figures. They uncovered the remains of an inscribed bull colossus in situ and scattered pieces from another bull. They found a total of 11 fragments of the bull text that Thompson noted was similar to other Sennacherib building inscriptions. The text included a description of palace building stones and their apotropaic qualities. One of these fragments included the term bit nakkapti - a term which Thompson took to refer to a type of building and he suggested that this was the name of the structure they had discovered on the eastern edge of Kuyunjik. Halzi Gate (Berkeley Area HZ)In particular, the recent excavations revealed that the Halzi Gate was the scene of dramatic events during the final siege of Nineveh. The first indication of this was the narrowing of the entryway and the central corridor. The second was the discovery in the central corridor of more than twelve skeletons of individuals who had died violent deaths. Amongst the tangled skeletons the work revealed bronze and iron arrowheads, a piece of iron armor, the remains of a dagger, a spearhead and a pike as well as other small personal objects. The third was the fact that these bodies and objects were directly covered by ash and fallen burnt debris Project NarrativeNineveh RegionThe United States National Endowment for the Humanities has provided funding for a two-year digitization project directed by Eleanor Barbanes Wilkinson and David Stronach (UC Berkeley). With this grant, the Berkeley Expedition field records are serving as the basis for the first comprehensive reckoning of the past present and future of archaeology at Nineveh. All of the available Berkeley field records, as well as primary and interpretive data from other contributors, are currently being digitized, geographically coordinated within a three-dimensional matrix, and incorporated into a searchable database, which will then be made accessible to the public via the internet. Our objective is to establish the main context for meaningful analysis of currently unlinked sets of data from different areas of the site, allowing the fundamental data to be immediately accessible to researchers who would otherwise have to wait years for the reports to be published conventionally, if they were able to obtain them at all. Kuyunjik Gully (Berkeley Area KG)The work of the U.C. Berkeley team in the Kuyunjik Gully provides new information on both the second and third millennium B.C.E. settlements at Nineveh, specifically the Akkadian and the Ninevite 5 periods. There is evidence for a substantial Akkadian occupation on Kuyunjik in the third millennium. This level may even have covered the entire mound as Akkadian mud-brick buildings were found to run right up to the inner face of the city wall. These discoveries regarding the Akkadian settlement are particularly important as Mallowan's deep sounding in the center of the mound was sunk from a post-Akkadian, Ninevite 5 level. UC Berkeley Area KS EastAn important question regarding this enigmatic building is whether or not it was an extension of Sennacherib's Southwest Palace or whether it was a separate gate structure. Initially the U.C. Berkeley team thought it likely that the Eastern Building was part of the palace since its dimensions, added to that of the palace, matched the length given in Sennacherib's 694-693 B.C.E. building account (that of 914 cubits or approximately 500 meters). However, the measurements made during the 1989 excavations proved inconclusive. Another problem was that the bull colossi faced the wrong direction if they were part of the eastern entrance to Sennacherib's Southwest palace. They faced the southwest whereas if they had been part of the entrance to the palace they would have faced the northeast. The direction the bulls faced definitely makes more sense if the gateway was part of a separate structure. At all events, it does seem highly likely that this monumental gateway was part of the main approach to the palace, possibly the culmination of the paved road that ran from the Nergal Gate to Kuyunjik. Halzi Gate (Berkeley Area HZ)Prior to the work of the University of California, Berkeley Expedition at the Halzi Gate, there had been only one previous excavation in that location: that of Dr. Tariq Mahdloom in 1965. A narrow trench 8 meters long and 2 meters wide was cut in an east-west direction along the axis of the gateway. Although the trench did not reach the cobbled surface of the inner corridor it did reveal the narrow width of the central corridor in what we now know to have been its final form. Northwest MoundOver the course of three seasons of exploration in the north sector of the city the UC Berkeley team attempted to document at least part of the history of settlement in this area. Ceramic finds from deep trenches previously cut by local farmers on the old town mound provided evidence of pre-7th century Neo-Assyrian levels of occupation and there appear to be levels of even earlier occupation lying beneath the Neo-Assyrian overburden. The northern boundary of pre-7th century Nineveh may well be indicated by the point where the ground drops off along the edge of the old town mound. But although Madhloom reported finding Hellenistic sherds in the highest part of the old town mound to the southeast of the Mashki Gate, the Berkeley team failed to encounter any signs of a Hellenistic occupation in this same vicinity. But in view of the presence of a thick layer of grey ash on the surface of the roadway that ran eastwards from the Mashki Gate, the latest level of this elite quarter of the city may well have been consumed by fire in 612 B.C.E. PreservationNineveh RegionNineveh is currently controlled by the United States military, but the Iraq State Board of Antiquities and Heritage has continued efforts to protect and preserve the archaeological remains. The following quoted observations come from T.J. Wilkinson, May 2003: Nationalgeographic.com; and a report by Wilkinson and M. Altaweel to UNESCO, "Report on the situation of cultural heritage in Iraq up to 30 May 2003": Damage to the Kuyunjik Mound: "The Sennacherib SW Palace is near total destruction and needs immediate intervention. At Sennacherib's SW palace there were three forms of damage: a) general decay of the reliefs which appears to have taken place over the roughly the 10-year duration of the sanctions period and the two Gulf Wars", b) deliberate vandalism of reliefs in the two galleries on display, c) illegal digging in the floor of the chambers (specifically a small room at the SE end of the main hall) apparently for the purpose of recovering artifacts (gold or ivory?) from beneath the floors of the rooms" ["Photographic records were made of the damage to the palace reliefs."]. Damage to the walls and gates of Nineveh: "The Nergal gate museum at Nineveh was not broken into, (the would-be looters having failed to get in through the locked doors)." Damage to the Nebi Yunus area: "The area of Nebi Yunus was also undamaged." Overall, "Although there is a US military guard at Nineveh (on Kuyunjuk itself) these are currently only in place from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. A storage facility at Nineveh as well as the Nineveh excavation house show no obvious loss of stone relief fragments and we were told that no artifacts remained in the excavation house. Remaining sculptures and walls need comprehensive conservation treatment. Furthermore, as evidenced by the Quickbird (satellite) image, nearly half of the top of the site is covered by modern residential development. Suzanne Bott, a conservation expert with the U.S. State Department's Provincial Reconstruction Team in Ninevah, reported to the Christian Science Monitor, "There are new houses going up" and the construction of water and sewer lines for these homes is some of the most destructive action taking place. As such, the site is in immediate danger of being subsumed by the expanding metropolis of Mosul. Very little has been done at the site outside of the main mound of Kuyunjik and the city walls. The other mound, called Nabi Yunus (Prophet Jonah) is currently a Muslim dedicatory shrine site." Kuyunjik Gully (Berkeley Area KG)This area of steep-sided gullies, formed by natural erosion, have exposed sections showing material from the Parthian period (ca. 140 B.C.-224 C.E.) down to the Early Hassuna period (7th B.C.) and several archaeological teams have investigated here. Halzi Gate (Berkeley Area HZ)The discovery of an inscription of Sennacherib on the reverse side of one of the stone orthostats revealed that the Halzi Gate was indeed coeval with his construction of the walls of Nineveh. Sections of the curtain wall and Tower 3 of the gate illustrate the original high quality of late 8th/early 7th century Assyrian masonry. When the gate was partly rebuilt or repaired, especially on the eastern façade of the central section which includes Tower 4, the stonework proved to be of a much inferior quality. Repairs at the entryway occurred at least twice with the axial entrance and the adjacent portion of the central corridor being narrowed by stretches of mud-brick blocking from 7 to 2 meters. Then the entranceway alone was narrowed once again to a width of a little over 1 meter. Area DescriptionsNineveh Description:The ancient walls of Nineveh, which are now within the expanded modern city of Mosul, enclose an area 1,875 acres (750 hectares), forming a roughly rectangular shape approximately 1 mi (2 km) by 3 mi (5 km) in size.return to area list Bridge outside Halzi Gate Description:Indications of one or more constructions over a waterway were found here, described by T. Madhloom in Sumer 23 (1967).return to area list Bridges outside Shamash Gate Description:Cut into the conglomerate in alignment with the gate, these features were recorded by T. Madhloom in Sumer 23 (1967): 77.return to area list Kuyunjik Description:Excavations on this high mound have revealed a continuous occupation sequence spanning from about 6500 B.C. though 2500 B.C. along with a series of major palaces and temples.return to area list Ishtar Temple Description:The goddess Ishtar held great significance in the Mesopotamian pantheon, and this temple ensured Nineveh's importance as a national religious center throughout the millennia.return to area list Kuyunjik Gully (Berkeley Area KG) Description:Where the Khosr River winds past the eastern edge of the high mound of Kuyunjik, natural erosion channels have formed deep, steep-sided gullies. These gullies have exposed sections with materials from the Parthian period (ca. 140 B.C.E.-224 C.E.) down to the Early Hassuna period in the seventh millennium B.C.E.return to area list North Palace Description:Situated on Kuyunjik to the north of the Nabu temple complex, this palace was built by Ashurbanipal and it was first identified and excavated by H. Rassam with W. Loftus in 1853.return to area list Sennacherib's Palace Description:Known to archaeologists as the South-West Palace, Sennacherib called this his palace without rival, and it was the site of the earliest systematic excavations at Nineveh, first by A.H. Layard in 1847, and subsequently by T. Madhloom in the 1960s with UC Berkeley's excavations in 1989 and 1990.return to area list UC Berkeley Area KS East Description:Sennacherib's Eastern Building, often referred to as the bit nakkapti, is on the eastern edge of the Kuyunjik mound on the Khosr River side. It is located just outside the eastern limits of Sennacherib's Southwest Palace proper (300 meters northeast of the façade of Sennacherib's throne room) and to the southeast of the Ishtar temple. Although greatly destroyed, this enigmatic building, which may have been a separate gate structure, had a monumental stone-paved gateway that included a pair of inscribed bull colossi, accompanying stone orthostats with reliefs and a paved chamber.return to area list UC Berkeley Area KS West Description:The western end of Sennacherib's palace, excavated by J. M. Russell, UC Berkeley, in 1990; first excavated by A.H. Layard in 1849.return to area list Lower Town Description:Sometime before the end of the second millennium B.C., settlement at Nineveh spread below the mound of Kuyunjik, but in 704 B.C. Sennacherib expanded the city and surrounded the lower town with walls over 25 m thick and over 12 km in circumference.return to area list Adad Gate Description:Excavated and restored by the University of Mosul under the direction of F. Al-Rawi, this gateway revealed extensive evidence of destruction, probably from the final sack of Nineveh: see F. Al-Rawi, Field Notes; Adab a-Rafidain (1969); Sumer 22 (1966); Sumer 29 (1973); Sumer 37 (1981).return to area list Armoury Gate Description:Excavated by Dr. Behnam Abu Soof in the late 1960s, when the main Mosul-Erbil road was being widened, but no plan or publications are available.return to area list Assur Gate Description:Gate partially excavated by the Iraq State Board of Antiquities and Heritage: see Iraq 43 (1981).return to area list Bit Hilani Description:This building, with columns on sculptured stone bases, was discovered and excavated by M. Jabur in 1980: See Iraq 37 (1981) for preliminary details. Location approximate.return to area list Bridge Across Khosr River - at its entrance to city Description:F. Jones recorded this feature in 1820 and in 1853, referring to it as possibly a pier, bridge, or a dam, and R. Campbell Thompson suggested it was a bridge in 1929; both archaologists agreed that it was probably Assyrian in origin: see Iraq 52 (1990). Location approximate.return to area list Bridge Across Khosr River - in middle of city Description:During an effort to clear the flow of the Khosr in 1981, a number of limestone blocks were found by the Iraq State board of Antiquities and Heritage which appeared to be Assyrian in workmanship: see Iraq 52 (1990). Location approximate.return to area list Campbell Thompson excavations Description:This area was excavated by R. Campbell Thompson and M. Mallowan, and is referred to as the flats below Kuyunjik; see Annals of Archaeology and Anthropology 20 (1933). Location approximate.return to area list Desert Gate Description:On the location and identification of this gate, see J. Reade, Revue d'assyriologie et d'archéologie orientale 72 (1978).return to area list Halahhu Gate Description:Gate in the northeastern quadrant of the site. No excavation recorded.return to area list Halzi Gate (Berkeley Area HZ) Description:The Halzi Gate was one of the largest of the fifteen known city gates of Nineveh. It was the southernmost gate of six gates on the long and well-fortified eastern wall. Built initially during the reign of Sennacherib (704-681 B.C.E.), the entrance and central corridor were later modified. The gate was constructed of well-dressed isodomic limestone masonry, rougher stonework and mud-bricks.The plan for most of the outer portion of the Halzi Gate is now known. It was one of two known city gates that extended well beyond the line of the city wall. The eastern façade (more accurately northeastern) was 70 meters long with the entry point at its center. This façade, with its buttresses and recesses, had at least six, possibly eight projecting towers. From the entry point a corridor led to a large inner court that measured 45 meters from north to south and 19 meters from east to west. The walls of the court were lined with large, undecorated stone orthostats while the corners held foundation boxes and apotropaic figurines. return to area list Handuri Gate Description:On the location and identification of this gate, see J. Reade, Revue d'assyriologie et d'archéologie orientale 72 (1978).return to area list Hermes Temple Description:Discovered by M. A. Mustafa in 1954, this multi-chambered shrine contained a statue identified as Hermes, dated by the excavator to the Hellenistic period: see Sumer 10 (1954): 280-3 (Arabic) and Iraq 52 (1990): 69. Location approximate.return to area list Inscribed Horse Troughs Description:Three stone horse troughs with inscriptions including the name of Sennacherib were found here during the demolition of a section of the city wall just north of Nebi Yunus: see Iraq 5 (1989). Location approximate.return to area list Kar-Mulissi Gate Description:Gate at the point on the eastern ramparts where the Khosr River enters the city. No excavation recorded.return to area list Khosr River Wall I Description:Planned but not excavated by J.D.A.P. MacGinnis and M. L. Scott in 1987, this wall is possibly the remains of a quay and a retaining wall: see Iraq 52 (1990). Location approximate.return to area list Khosr River Wall II Description:Along with Khosr River Wall I, the only remaining stretch of wall visible on the banks of the Khosr within the city limits: see Iraq 52 (1990). Location approximate.return to area list Lower Town Project Survey Area Description:Directed by S. Lumsden, UC Berkeley, and initiated in 1990 this project comprised a surface survey of about 300 hectares of farmland north of the Khosr river, investigations of Well Holes A & B, and recording of other features of the intramural terrain.return to area list Madhloom soundings north of Kuyunjik Description:In the late 1960s T. Madhloom excavated two soundings; one a few meters east of the Mashki Gate, and one just north of Kuyunjik: see Sumer 24 (1968). Location approximate.return to area list Mashki Gate General Description:Known as Gate of the Watering Places, this gate has been excavated and restored by the Iraqi State Board of Antiquities and Heritage; See Sumer 24 (1968), 25 (1969); 26 (1970); 27 (1971); 29 (1973); 30 (1974); 31 (1975); Iraq 34 (1972).return to area list UC Berkeley Area MG22 General Description:In 1989 and 1990 the UC Berkeley team uncovered a residential area just inside the gateway probably from the time of Sennacherib's enlargement of the city during the 7th century B.C., with indications of occupation dating in the 9th century or earlier.return to area list UC Berkeley Area MG22 Trenches Description:Excavations near this gate by S. Lumsden and L. Bedal, UC Berkeley, revealed a sequence of 3 successive buildings dated to the 7th century B.C., along with evidence of occupation both immediately before and after.return to area list Mushlalu Gate Description:Gate on the eastern side of the city wall. No excavation recorded.return to area list Nergal Gate Description:Excavated and restored by the Iraq State Board of Antiquities and Heritage: see Sumer 12 (1956); Sumer 22 (1966); 23 (1967); Iraq 10 (1948).return to area list Northwest Mound Description:The area south of the Sin Gate in the northwest corner of the lower town included a stretch of land that had been densely populated in Neo-Assyrian times. The Berkeley team excavated 300 meters to the south of the Sin Gate where the dwellings were small and crowded together. The artisans seem to have lived and worked in this area in as much as it contained kilns that were probably used for pottery and metal production. Directly south of the Sin Gate quantities of kiln slag were also observed, indicating that more than the Northwest Mound (NWM) was part of this industrial district. An additional discovery in the latest occupation level was a shallow pit with a child's grave.Other features in the north lower town included the last vestiges of a Late Assyrian cemetery that was apparently exposed by chance in the 1970s in a location inside the north city wall near the Nergal Gate. There was also evidence of an important road that ran directly from the Nergal Gate to the northeast corner of Kuyunjik. Since the Nergal Gate was the only city gate to have a pair of lamassu guarding its exterior, and since a paved ramp led up to its outer entrance, the road leading from the gate to Kuyunjik could easily have been paved in its entirety. To add weight to this idea, a number of roughly cut, flat stones worn smooth on one side, were detected at two points near the presumed line of the road. return to area list Palatial Building Description:Described in Sumer 17 (1971), excavations here revealed a building with thick mudbrick walls, a courtyard, stone slabs and cuneiform tablets: see also Iraq 34 (1972). Location approximate.return to area list Quay Gate Description:On the location and identification of this gate, see J. Reade, Revue d'assyriologie et d'archéologie orientale 72 (1978).return to area list Shamash Gate Description:Excavated and extensively reconstructed by the Iraq State Board of Antiquities and Heritage under the direction of T. Madhloom: see Sumer 21 (1965); Sumer 22 (1966); Sumer 23 (1967); Sumer 24 (1968); Sumer 25 (1969); Sumer 37 (1981); Iraq 34 (1972).return to area list Shibaniba Gate Description:Gate in the northeastern quadrant of the site. No excavation recorded.return to area list Sibitti Altar Description:A stone altar with a Greek inscription was found here in, 1954, within an area which may have been a Hellenistic temple. See Sumer 10 (1954): 280-3, Arabic: Location approximate.return to area list Sin Gate Description:Excavated by the Iraq State Board of Antiquities and Heritage: see Sumer 21 (1965); Sumer 23 (1967).return to area list Tombs by Khosr River Description:Vaulted tombs, dated to the Parthian period (ca. 140 B.C.-224 C.E.), were recorded by the Iraq State Board of Antiquities and Heritage after part of the Khosr river bank collapsed during the 1960s: see Sumer 25 (1969). Location approximate.return to area list Tombs north of Shamash Gate Description:About 100 m north of the Shamash Gate, a number of graves were discovered cut into the conglomerate: see Sumer 24 (1968). Location approximate.return to area list Well Hole A Description:One of two deep trenches, cut by local farmers on the old city mound next to Kuyunjik, investigated by the UC Berkeley team in 1989.return to area list Well Hole B Description:Three stone horse troughs with inscriptions including the name of Sennacherib were found here during the demolition of a section of the city wall just north of Nebi Yunus: see Iraq 5 (1989). Location approximate.return to area list Nebi Yunis Description:Nebi Yunis is a natural mound on the western edge of Nineveh, which probably served as the imperial arsenal during the Neo-Assyrian Empire, and it has been traditionally associated with the prophet Jonah.return to area list Area A Description:Excavations in this area were initiated in 1954 by M. A. Mustafa; articles on the monumental gateway and excavated objects found here are published in Sumer 10 (1954), Sumer 11 (1955), Sumer 12 (1956), and Basmachi, Treasures of the Iraq Museum (1975-6).return to area list Mushlalu Gate of the Armoury Description:This stone-paved, multi-chambered gateway guarded the road leading up to the town arsenal during the Neo-Assyrian period: see Iraq 52 (1990): 66, Sumer 10 (1954) and Sumer 11 (1955).return to area list Area B Description:Part of the Iraq State Board of Antiquities and Heritage excavations in 1954, in this trench was found an area of baked brick paving laid in an L-shaped pattern, with one brick inscribed with the name of Sennacherib (704-681 B.C.).return to area list Mosque Description:At the summit of Nebi Yunis is a modern mosque, and the long-standing shrine dedicated to the prophet Jonah remains an important Muslim pilgrimage site.return to area list Wall sections of Sennacherib Description:This section of walling consisted of a course of limestone blocks resting on up to six courses of baked bricks, some of which were inscribed, Palace of Sennacherib, King of the World, King of Assyria: See Iraq 52 (1990):72. Location approximate.return to area list Wash House Description:In the mid-1970s, renovation of the washing facilities of the shrine at Nebi Yunis exposed four stone slabs showing a procession of men leading horses. Photos were archived in the State Board of Antiquities and Heritage: see Iraq 52 (1990): 72. Location approximate.return to area list Winged Bull Description:In 1986 work on Nebi Yunis southeast of the mosque revealed this sculpture of a bull, composed of limestone blocks and left unfinished: see Sumer 45 (1987-88) and Iraq 52 (1990): 71. Location approximate.return to area list | ||
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