Excavations at Quynajik hill: Past Achievements and Future Hopes | ||
Athar Alrafedain | ||
Article 3, Volume 2, Issue 1, December 2013, Pages 31-40 PDF (0 K) | ||
Document Type: Research Paper | ||
DOI: 10.33899/athar.2013.76815 | ||
Author | ||
Jaber Khalil Ibrahim* | ||
Archeology Department College of Archeology University of Mosul Mosul Iraq | ||
Abstract | ||
Qoynajik hill is of cultural importance, as it includes the palaces and temples of the Assyrian kings. That is why it attracted the first excavators, starting with the British Consul Claudius Rich, who drew an accurate map of the city of Nineveh and conducted scattered excavations in the hill in 1820. His writings on the antiquities of Iraq, especially Quynajik Hill, stimulated European governments, as France sent Paul Emile Botta." To excavate in Nineveh in 1842, followed by Henry Layard, the British prospector, and his assistant, Hormuzd Rassam, in 1845, whose excavations continued until 1851. Because of the importance of his discovery, which adorns the British Museum, the English excavators continued their excavations in this hill, which was characterized by randomness, Until the prospectors corrected their course when Leonard Kink took over, and followed by Campbell Thompson and Max Mallowan. | ||
Keywords | ||
excavation; Quynajik hill; Achievements; the past; the future | ||
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