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Dur-Sharrukin

Dur-Sharrukin ("Fortress of Sargon"; Arabic: دور شروكين, Syriac: ܕܘܪ ܫܪܘ ܘܟܢ), present day Khorsabad, was the Assyrian capital in the time of Sargon II of Assyria. Khorsabad is a village in northern Iraq, 15 km northeast of Mosul. The great city was entirely built in the decade preceding 706 BC. After the unexpected death of Sargon in battle, the capital was shifted 20 km south to Nineveh.

Dur-Šharru-ukin
ܕܘܪ ܫܪܘ ܘܟܢ (in Syriac)
دور شروكين (in Arabic)
A human-headed winged bull known as a lamassu from Dur-Sharrukin. Neo-Assyrian Period, ca. 721–705 BC
Shown within Iraq
Alternative nameKhorsabad
LocationKhorsabad, Nineveh Governorate, Iraq
RegionMesopotamia
Coordinates36°30′34″N 43°13′46″E / 36.50944°N 43.22944°E / 36.50944; 43.22944
TypeSettlement
Length1,760 m (5,770 ft)
Width1,635 m (5,364 ft)
Area2.88 km2 (1.11 sq mi)
History
FoundedIn the decade preceding 706 BC
AbandonedApproximately 605 BC
PeriodsNeo-Assyrian Empire
CulturesAssyrian
Site notes
Excavation dates1842–1844, 1852–1855 1928–1935, 1957
ArchaeologistsPaul-Émile Botta, Eugène Flandin, Victor Place, Edward Chiera, Gordon Loud, Hamilton Darby, Fuad Safar
ConditionSeverely Damaged
Public accessInaccessible

History

 
Lamassu found during Botta's excavation, now in the Louvre Museum.
 
Mesopotamia in the Neo-Assyrian period (place names in French)

Sargon II ruled from 722 to 705 BC. The demands for timber and other materials and craftsmen, who came from as far as coastal Phoenicia, are documented in contemporary Assyrian letters. The debts of construction workers were nullified in order to attract a sufficient labour force. The land in the environs of the town was taken under cultivation, and olive groves were planted to increase Assyria's deficient oil-production. The great city was entirely built in the decade preceding 706 BC, when the court moved to Dur-Sharrukin, although it was not completely finished yet. Sargon was killed during a battle in 705. After his unexpected death his son and successor Sennacherib abandoned the project, and relocated the capital with its administration to the city of Nineveh, 20 km south. The city was never completed and it was finally abandoned a century later when the Assyrian empire fell.[1]

Destruction by ISIL

On 8 March 2015 the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant reportedly started the plunder and demolition of Dur-Sharrukin, according to the Kurdish official from Mosul Saeed Mamuzini.[2] The Iraqi Tourism and Antiquities Ministry launched the related investigation on the same day.[2] Only one looting tunnel has been found.[3]

Description

 
Plan of Palace of Sargon Khorsabad Reconstruction 1905
 
Reconstructed Model of Palace of Sargon at Khorsabad 1905

The town was of rectangular layout and measured 1758.6 by 1635 metres. The enclosed area comprised 3 square kilometres, or 288 hectares. The length of the walls was 16280 Assyrian units, which according to Sargon himself corresponded to the numerical value of his name.[4] The city walls were massive and 157 towers protected its sides. Seven gates entered the city from all directions. A walled terrace contained temples and the royal palace. The main temples were dedicated to the gods Nabu, Shamash and Sin, while Adad, Ningal and Ninurta had smaller shrines. A temple tower, ziggurat, was also constructed. The palace complex was situated on the northern wall of the city. At the entrance of the palace were a ramp and a large doorway with the god-protector of the city Lamassu on one side.[5] The palace was adorned with sculptures and wall reliefs, and the gates were flanked with winged-bull shedu statues weighing up to 40 tons. Sargon supposedly lost at least one of these winged bulls in the river.

In the south-west corner of the city was located a secondary citadel, used as a control point against internal riots and foreign invasions.[5] In addition to the great city, there was a royal hunting park and a garden that included "all the aromatic plants of Hatti[6] and the fruit-trees of every mountain", a "record of power and conquest", as Robin Lane Fox has observed.[7] Surviving correspondence mentions the moving of thousands of young fruit trees, quinces, almonds, apples and medlars.[8]

On the central canal of Sargon's garden stood a pillared pleasure-pavilion which looked up to a great topographic creation: a man-made Garden Mound. This Mound was planted with cedars and cypresses and was modelled after a foreign landscape, the Amanus mountains in north Syria, which had so amazed the Assyrian kings. In their flat palace-gardens they built a replica of what they had encountered.[9]

Archaeology

Dur-Sharrukin is roughly a square with a border marked by a city wall 24 meters thick with a stone foundation pierced by seven massive gates. A mound in the north-east section marks the location of the palace of Sargon II. At the time of its construction, the village on the site was named Maganuba. [10]

Early Excavations

While Dur-Sharrukin was abandoned in antiquity and thus did not attract the same level of attention as other ancient Assyrian sites, there was some awareness of the origins of the mound well before European excavation. For instance, the medieval Arab geographer Yaqut Al-Hamawi recorded that the site was called Saraoun or Saraghoun, which demonstrates the original Assyrian name was not completely forgotten before the city's rediscovery.[11] He also reported that shortly after the early Muslim conquests, "considerable treasures were found amongst the ruins," though the extent of these early excavations are unknown.[12] It was during the medieval period as well when the village of Khorsabad was founded on the top of the mound. Once the European presence in northern Iraq became more substantial in the mid-nineteenth century, archaeological exploration of the site of Dur-Sharrukin was neglected in favor of seemingly more promising sites such as Nineveh or Nimrud. This situation changed in April 1843, when the French Consul General at Mosul, Paul-Émile Botta, who had been excavating at Kuyunjik (the contemporary village atop the mound of Nineveh) without success, was approached by a resident of the village of Khorsabad.[13] The English archaeologist Austen Henry Layard recorded the event as follows:

"The small party employed by M. Botta were at work on Kouyunjik, when a peasant from a distant village chanced to visit the spot. Seeing that every fragment of brick and alabaster uncovered by the workmen was carefully preserved, he asked the reason of this, to him, strange proceeding. On being informed that they were in search of sculptured stones, he advised them to try the mound on which his village was built, and in which, he declared, many such things as they wanted had been exposed on digging for the foundations of new houses. M. Botta, having been frequently deceived by similar stories, was not at first inclined to follow the peasant's advice, but subsequently sent an agent and one or two workmen to the place. After a little opposition from the inhabitants, they were permitted to sink a well in the mound; and at a small distance from the surface they came to the top of a wall which, on digging deeper, they found to be built of sculptured slabs of gypsum. M. Botta, on receiving information of this discovery, went at once to the village, which was called Khorsabad. He directed a wider trench to be formed, and to be carried in the direction of the wall. He soon found that he had entered a chamber, connected with others, and surrounded by slabs of gypsum covered with sculptured representations of battles, sieges, and similar events. His wonder may easily be imagined. A new history had been suddenly opened to him-the records of an unknown people were before him." [14]

The interplay between local mediators and European archaeologists in Layard's account effectively captures the necessary cooperation which enabled these early discoveries. With this initial excavation, the archaeological investigation of ancient Mesopotamia began in earnest. Unlike Kuyunjik, the Assyrian ruins at Khorsabad were much closer to the surface of the mound, and therefore it was not long before Botta and his team reached the ancient palace, leading to the discovery of numerous reliefs and sculptures. Unfortunately, this excitement was somewhat dulled by the destruction of many of these early discoveries due to sudden exposure to the outside environment.[15] Botta's consular duties also took up a majority of his time, preventing him from organizing systematic excavations of the site, and local Ottoman authorities grew suspicious of the true intentions behind the excavations, which at this time were technically illegal, as Botta had yet to receive official permission from Constantinople for his work, a common situation with early European excavations.[16] These difficulties caused formal excavations to cease by October 1843. Still, Botta's initial reports back to France sparked considerable scholarly interest in the project, and eventually he received more funding and an artist, Eugène Flandin, from France.[17][18][19] By spring of 1844 then, Botta resumed further excavations of the site, which required him to purchase the village of Khorsabad itself and resettle it at the foot of the mound. However, this new site was in swampy terrain, and malaria and other diseases were a constant threat to the residents and workers.[20] The extensive finds convinced Botta that he had uncovered the true site of Nineveh, though this would be subsequently refuted by excavations at Kuyunjik by Layard and others.[21] By October of that year, Botta had uncovered enough of the palace to cease further excavations and attempt to deliver some of the findings to France, which required an extensive operation of carts to transport the reliefs and sculptures to Mosul, which were then transported by raft and ship to Basra on the Persian Gulf and then to Paris, where they arrived in 1847.[22] These were the first major Assyrian finds to arrive in Europe, and they fuelled a growing fascination with the ancient civilization which would lead to further excavations.

The Qurnah Disaster

 
Convoy of rafts (Keleks) floating down the Tigris river loaded with antiquities in 1855 (V Place 1867)

By 1852, excavations of the site had been resumed by the new French consul, Victor Place, and in 1855 another shipment of antiquities was ready to be sent back to Paris.[23][24] A cargo ship and four rafts were prepared to carry the artifacts, but even this substantial effort was over-whelmed by the sheer number of items to be transported. Additionally, shortly after the convoy reached Baghdad, Place was summoned to his new consular post in Moldavia due to the ongoing Crimean War, and had to leave the shipment in the hands of a French schoolteacher, M. Clement to finalise its return to Paris.[25][26]

More antiquities from Rawlinson's expedition to Kuyunjik and Fresnel's to Babylon were also added to the shipment.[27] The troubles began once the convoy left Baghdad in May 1855, as the banks of the river Tigris were controlled by local sheikhs who were hostile to the Ottoman authorities and frequently raided shipping sailing by.[28] During the journey, the convoy was boarded several times, forcing the crew to relinquish most of their money and supplies in order to be allowed further passage on the river.[25][27]

Once the convoy reached Al-Qurnah (Kurnah) it was assaulted by local pirates led by Sheikh Abu Saad, whose actions sank the main cargo ship and forced the four rafts aground shortly afterwards.[27] The entire shipment was almost completely lost with only 28 of over 200 crates eventually making it to the Louvre in Paris.[29][30] Subsequent efforts to recover the lost antiquities, including a Japanese expedition in 1971-2, have largely been unsuccessful.[27]

20th Century Excavations

The site of Khorsabad was excavated between 1928–1935 by American archaeologists from the Oriental Institute in Chicago. Work in the first season was led by Edward Chiera and concentrated on the palace area. A colossal bull estimated to weigh 40 tons was uncovered outside the throne room. It was found split into three large fragments. The torso alone weighed about 20 tons. This was shipped to Chicago. The preparation and shipment of the bull back to the Oriental Institute was incredibly arduous. The remaining seasons were led by Gordon Loud and Hamilton Darby. Their work examined one of the city gates, continued work at the palace, and excavated extensively at the palace's temple complex.[31] Since Dur-Sharrukin was a single-period site that was evacuated in an orderly manner after the death of Sargon II, few individual objects were found. The primary discoveries from Khorsabad shed light on Assyrian art and architecture.

In 1957, archaeologists from the Iraqi Department Antiquities, led by Fuad Safar excavated at the site, uncovering the temple of Sibitti.[32]

Gallery

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Marc Van De Mieroop, A History of the Ancient Near East ca. 3000 - 323 BC, (Wiley-Blackwell) 2006, ISBN 1-4051-4911-6
  2. ^ a b "Ancient site Khorsabad attacked by Islamic State: reports". Toronto Star. 8 March 2015. from the original on 22 February 2018. Retrieved 8 March 2015.
  3. ^ "ASOR Cultural Heritage Initiatives مبادرات التراث الثقافي". www.facebook.com. from the original on 2021-03-08. Retrieved 2021-01-25.
  4. ^ Fuchs, Die Inschriften Sargons II. aus Khorsabad, 42:65; 294f. See the discussion by Eckart Frahm, "Observations on the Name and Age of Sargon II and on Some Patterns of Assyrian Royal Onomastics," NABU 2005-2.44 2016-05-10 at the Wayback Machine
  5. ^ a b Lewis, Leo Rich; Tenney, Charles R. (2010). The Compendium of Weapons, Armor & Castles. Nabu Press. p. 142. ISBN 978-1146066846.
  6. ^ Hatti: in this context, all the areas to the west of the Euphrates controlled by Neo-Hittite kingdoms.
  7. ^ D.D. Luckenbill, Ancient Records of Assyria and Babylonia, vol II:242, quoted in Robin Lane Fox, Travelling Heroes in the Epic Age of Homer 2008, pp26f.
  8. ^ Lane Fox 2008:27; texts are in Luckenbill 1927:II.
  9. ^ Lane Fox 2008:27, noting D. Stronach, "The Garden as a political statement: some case-studies from the Near East in the first millennium BC", Bulletin of the Asia Institute 4 (1990:171-80). The garden mount first documented at Dur-Sharrukin was to have a long career in the history of gardening.
  10. ^ Cultraro M., Gabellone F., Scardozzi G, Integrated Methodologies and Technologies for the Reconstructive Study of Dur-Sharrukin (Iraq), XXI International CIPA Symposium, 2007
  11. ^ Austen Henry Layard, Nineveh and Its Remains, Vol. I, 2nd ed. (London: John Murray, 1849), 149.
  12. ^ Layard, Nineveh and Its Remains, 149.
  13. ^ Mogens Trolle Larsen, The Conquest of Assyria: Excavations in an Antique Land (New York: Routledge, 1996), pp. 12-3.
  14. ^ Layard, Nineveh and Its Remains, pp. 10-1.
  15. ^ Larsen, Conquest of Assyria, 23-4.
  16. ^ Zainab Bahrani, Zeynep Çelik, and Edhem Eldem, Scramble for the Past: A Story of Archaeology in the Ottoman Empire, 1753-1914, (Istanbul: SALT, 2011), 132-4.
  17. ^ Paul Emile Botta and Eugene Flandin, Monument de Ninive, in 5 volumes, Imprimerie nationale, 1946-50
  18. ^ E. Guralnick, New drawings of Khorsabad sculptures by Paul Émile Botta, Revue d'assyriologie et d'archéologie orientale, vol. 95, pp. 23-56, 2002
  19. ^ Larsen, Conquest of Assyria, 26-30
  20. ^ During his visit several years later, Layard reports that "the place is consequently very unhealthy, and the few squalid inhabitants who appeared, were almost speechless from ague. During M. Botta's excavations, the workmen suffered greatly from fever, and many fell victims to it." See Layard, Nineveh and its Remains, 148.
  21. ^ Carine Harmand, "Sparking the imagination: the rediscovery of Assyria's great lost city," (February 1, 2019), https://blog.britishmuseum.org/sparking-the-imagination-the-rediscovery-of-assyrias-great-lost-city/ 2021-01-28 at the Wayback Machine
  22. ^ Larsen, Conquest of Assyria, 32.
  23. ^ Victor Place, Nineve et l'Assyie, in 3 volumes, Imprimerie impériale, 1867–1879
  24. ^ Joseph Bonomi, Ninevah and Its Palaces: The Discoveries of Botta and Layard, Applied to the Elucidation of Holy Writ, Bohn, 1957 (2003 Reprint, Gorgias Press LLC, ISBN 1-59333-067-7)
  25. ^ a b Larsen, M.T. (1996). The Conquest of Assyria: Excavations in an Antique Land (1st ed.). Routledge. doi:10.4324/9781315862859 pp. 344-9
  26. ^ Potts, D. T. "Potts 2020. 'Un coup terrible de la fortune:' A. Clément and the Qurna disaster of 1855. Pp. 235-244 in Finkel, I.L. and Simpson, St J., eds. In Context: The Reade Festschrift. Oxford: Archaeopress". from the original on 2021-04-11. Retrieved 2021-04-11. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  27. ^ a b c d [1]Namio Egami, "The Report of The Japan Mission For The Survey of Under-Water Antiquities At Qurnah: The First Season," (1971-72), 1-45
  28. ^ Pillet, Maurice (1881-1964) Auteur du texte (1922). L'expédition scientifique et artistique de Mésopotamie et de Médie, 1851-1855 / Maurice Pillet,... from the original on 2021-04-11. Retrieved 2021-04-11.
  29. ^ Samuel D. Pfister, "The Qurnah Disaster: Archaeology & Piracy in Mesopotamia," Bible History Daily, (January 20, 2021), https://www.biblicalarchaeology.org/daily/the-qurnah-disaster/ 2021-03-02 at the Wayback Machine
  30. ^ Robert William Rogers, A history of Babylonia and Assyria: Volume 1, Abingdon Press, 1915
  31. ^ [2] 2010-06-18 at the Wayback Machine OIC 16. Tell Asmar, Khafaje and Khorsabad: Second Preliminary Report of the Iraq Expedition, Henri Frankfort, 1933; [3] 2010-06-18 at the Wayback Machine OIC 17. Iraq Excavations of the Oriental Institute 1932/33: Third Preliminary Report of the Iraq Expedition, Henri Frankfort, 1934; [4] 2010-06-18 at the Wayback Machine Gordon Loud, Khorsabad, Part 1: Excavations in the Palace and at a City Gate, Oriental Institute Publications 38, University of Chicago Press, 1936; [5] 2010-06-18 at the Wayback Machine Gordon Loud and Charles B. Altman, Khorsabad, Part 2: The Citadel and the Town, Oriental Institute Publications 40, University of Chicago Press, 1938
  32. ^ F. Safar, "The Temple of Sibitti at Khorsabad", Sumer 13 (1957:219-21).

References

  • Bahrani, Zainab, Zeynep Çelik, and Edhem Eldem. Scramble for the Past: A Story of Archaeology in the Ottoman Empire, 1753-1914. Istanbul: SALT, 2011.
  • [6] Buckingham, James Silk, The buried city of the East, Nineveh: a narrative of the discoveries of Mr. Layard and M. Botta at Nimroud and Khorsabad, National Illustrated Library, 1851
  • A. Fuchs, Die Inschriften Sargons II. aus Khorsabad, Cuvillier, 1994, ISBN 3-930340-42-9
  • A. Caubet, Khorsabad: le palais de Sargon II, roi d'Assyrie: Actes du colloque organisé au musée du Louvre par le Services culturel les 21 et 22 janvier 1994, La Documentation française, 1996, ISBN 2-11-003416-5
  • Guralnick, Eleanor, "The Palace at Khorsabad: A Storeroom Excavation Project." In D. Kertai and P. A. Miglus (eds.) New Research on Late Assyrian Palaces. Conference at Heidelberg January 22, 2011, 5–10. Heidelberger Studien zum Alten Orient 15. Heidelberg: Heidelberger Orientverlag, 2013
  • Harmand, Carine, "Sparking the Imagination: The Rediscovery of Assyria's Great Lost City." British Museum Blog. (February 1, 2019). https://blog.britishmuseum.org/sparking-the-imagination-the-rediscovery-of-assyrias-great-lost-city/.
  • Larsen, Mogens Trolle. The Conquest of Assyria: Excavations in an Antique Land, 1840-1860. New York: Routledge, 1996.
  • Layard, Austen Henry. Nineveh and Its Remains. Vol. I. 2nd ed. London: John Murray, 1849.
  • Pfister, Samuel D. "The Qurnah Disaster: Archaeology & Piracy in Mesopotamia." Bible History Daily. (January 20, 2021). https://www.biblicalarchaeology.org/daily/the-qurnah-disaster/.
  • Arno Poebel, The Assyrian King-List from Khorsabad, Journal of Near Eastern Studies, vol. 1, no. 3, pp. 247–306, 1942
  • Arno Poebel, The Assyrian King List from Khorsabad (Continued), Journal of Near Eastern Studies, vol. 1, no. 4, pp. 460–492, 1942
  • Pauline Albenda, The palace of Sargon, King of Assyria: Monumental wall reliefs at Dur-Sharrukin, from original drawings made at the time of their discovery in 1843–1844 by Botta and Flandin, Editions Recherche sur les civilisations, 1986, ISBN 2-86538-152-8

External links

  • Khorsabad Relief Project - Oriental Institute
  • New York Public Library

sharrukin, fortress, sargon, arabic, دور, شروكين, syriac, ܕܘܪ, ܫܪܘ, ܘܟܢ, present, khorsabad, assyrian, capital, time, sargon, assyria, khorsabad, village, northern, iraq, northeast, mosul, great, city, entirely, built, decade, preceding, after, unexpected, dea. Dur Sharrukin Fortress of Sargon Arabic دور شروكين Syriac ܕܘܪ ܫܪܘ ܘܟܢ present day Khorsabad was the Assyrian capital in the time of Sargon II of Assyria Khorsabad is a village in northern Iraq 15 km northeast of Mosul The great city was entirely built in the decade preceding 706 BC After the unexpected death of Sargon in battle the capital was shifted 20 km south to Nineveh Dur Sharru ukinܕܘܪ ܫܪܘ ܘܟܢ in Syriac دور شروكين in Arabic A human headed winged bull known as a lamassu from Dur Sharrukin Neo Assyrian Period ca 721 705 BCShown within IraqAlternative nameKhorsabadLocationKhorsabad Nineveh Governorate IraqRegionMesopotamiaCoordinates36 30 34 N 43 13 46 E 36 50944 N 43 22944 E 36 50944 43 22944TypeSettlementLength1 760 m 5 770 ft Width1 635 m 5 364 ft Area2 88 km2 1 11 sq mi HistoryFoundedIn the decade preceding 706 BCAbandonedApproximately 605 BCPeriodsNeo Assyrian EmpireCulturesAssyrianSite notesExcavation dates1842 1844 1852 1855 1928 1935 1957ArchaeologistsPaul Emile Botta Eugene Flandin Victor Place Edward Chiera Gordon Loud Hamilton Darby Fuad SafarConditionSeverely DamagedPublic accessInaccessible Contents 1 History 1 1 Destruction by ISIL 2 Description 3 Archaeology 3 1 Early Excavations 3 2 The Qurnah Disaster 3 3 20th Century Excavations 4 Gallery 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 External linksHistory Edit Lamassu found during Botta s excavation now in the Louvre Museum Mesopotamia in the Neo Assyrian period place names in French Sargon II ruled from 722 to 705 BC The demands for timber and other materials and craftsmen who came from as far as coastal Phoenicia are documented in contemporary Assyrian letters The debts of construction workers were nullified in order to attract a sufficient labour force The land in the environs of the town was taken under cultivation and olive groves were planted to increase Assyria s deficient oil production The great city was entirely built in the decade preceding 706 BC when the court moved to Dur Sharrukin although it was not completely finished yet Sargon was killed during a battle in 705 After his unexpected death his son and successor Sennacherib abandoned the project and relocated the capital with its administration to the city of Nineveh 20 km south The city was never completed and it was finally abandoned a century later when the Assyrian empire fell 1 Destruction by ISIL Edit On 8 March 2015 the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant reportedly started the plunder and demolition of Dur Sharrukin according to the Kurdish official from Mosul Saeed Mamuzini 2 The Iraqi Tourism and Antiquities Ministry launched the related investigation on the same day 2 Only one looting tunnel has been found 3 Description Edit Plan of Palace of Sargon Khorsabad Reconstruction 1905 Reconstructed Model of Palace of Sargon at Khorsabad 1905The town was of rectangular layout and measured 1758 6 by 1635 metres The enclosed area comprised 3 square kilometres or 288 hectares The length of the walls was 16280 Assyrian units which according to Sargon himself corresponded to the numerical value of his name 4 The city walls were massive and 157 towers protected its sides Seven gates entered the city from all directions A walled terrace contained temples and the royal palace The main temples were dedicated to the gods Nabu Shamash and Sin while Adad Ningal and Ninurta had smaller shrines A temple tower ziggurat was also constructed The palace complex was situated on the northern wall of the city At the entrance of the palace were a ramp and a large doorway with the god protector of the city Lamassu on one side 5 The palace was adorned with sculptures and wall reliefs and the gates were flanked with winged bull shedu statues weighing up to 40 tons Sargon supposedly lost at least one of these winged bulls in the river In the south west corner of the city was located a secondary citadel used as a control point against internal riots and foreign invasions 5 In addition to the great city there was a royal hunting park and a garden that included all the aromatic plants of Hatti 6 and the fruit trees of every mountain a record of power and conquest as Robin Lane Fox has observed 7 Surviving correspondence mentions the moving of thousands of young fruit trees quinces almonds apples and medlars 8 On the central canal of Sargon s garden stood a pillared pleasure pavilion which looked up to a great topographic creation a man made Garden Mound This Mound was planted with cedars and cypresses and was modelled after a foreign landscape the Amanus mountains in north Syria which had so amazed the Assyrian kings In their flat palace gardens they built a replica of what they had encountered 9 Archaeology EditDur Sharrukin is roughly a square with a border marked by a city wall 24 meters thick with a stone foundation pierced by seven massive gates A mound in the north east section marks the location of the palace of Sargon II At the time of its construction the village on the site was named Maganuba 10 Early Excavations Edit While Dur Sharrukin was abandoned in antiquity and thus did not attract the same level of attention as other ancient Assyrian sites there was some awareness of the origins of the mound well before European excavation For instance the medieval Arab geographer Yaqut Al Hamawi recorded that the site was called Saraoun or Saraghoun which demonstrates the original Assyrian name was not completely forgotten before the city s rediscovery 11 He also reported that shortly after the early Muslim conquests considerable treasures were found amongst the ruins though the extent of these early excavations are unknown 12 It was during the medieval period as well when the village of Khorsabad was founded on the top of the mound Once the European presence in northern Iraq became more substantial in the mid nineteenth century archaeological exploration of the site of Dur Sharrukin was neglected in favor of seemingly more promising sites such as Nineveh or Nimrud This situation changed in April 1843 when the French Consul General at Mosul Paul Emile Botta who had been excavating at Kuyunjik the contemporary village atop the mound of Nineveh without success was approached by a resident of the village of Khorsabad 13 The English archaeologist Austen Henry Layard recorded the event as follows The small party employed by M Botta were at work on Kouyunjik when a peasant from a distant village chanced to visit the spot Seeing that every fragment of brick and alabaster uncovered by the workmen was carefully preserved he asked the reason of this to him strange proceeding On being informed that they were in search of sculptured stones he advised them to try the mound on which his village was built and in which he declared many such things as they wanted had been exposed on digging for the foundations of new houses M Botta having been frequently deceived by similar stories was not at first inclined to follow the peasant s advice but subsequently sent an agent and one or two workmen to the place After a little opposition from the inhabitants they were permitted to sink a well in the mound and at a small distance from the surface they came to the top of a wall which on digging deeper they found to be built of sculptured slabs of gypsum M Botta on receiving information of this discovery went at once to the village which was called Khorsabad He directed a wider trench to be formed and to be carried in the direction of the wall He soon found that he had entered a chamber connected with others and surrounded by slabs of gypsum covered with sculptured representations of battles sieges and similar events His wonder may easily be imagined A new history had been suddenly opened to him the records of an unknown people were before him 14 The interplay between local mediators and European archaeologists in Layard s account effectively captures the necessary cooperation which enabled these early discoveries With this initial excavation the archaeological investigation of ancient Mesopotamia began in earnest Unlike Kuyunjik the Assyrian ruins at Khorsabad were much closer to the surface of the mound and therefore it was not long before Botta and his team reached the ancient palace leading to the discovery of numerous reliefs and sculptures Unfortunately this excitement was somewhat dulled by the destruction of many of these early discoveries due to sudden exposure to the outside environment 15 Botta s consular duties also took up a majority of his time preventing him from organizing systematic excavations of the site and local Ottoman authorities grew suspicious of the true intentions behind the excavations which at this time were technically illegal as Botta had yet to receive official permission from Constantinople for his work a common situation with early European excavations 16 These difficulties caused formal excavations to cease by October 1843 Still Botta s initial reports back to France sparked considerable scholarly interest in the project and eventually he received more funding and an artist Eugene Flandin from France 17 18 19 By spring of 1844 then Botta resumed further excavations of the site which required him to purchase the village of Khorsabad itself and resettle it at the foot of the mound However this new site was in swampy terrain and malaria and other diseases were a constant threat to the residents and workers 20 The extensive finds convinced Botta that he had uncovered the true site of Nineveh though this would be subsequently refuted by excavations at Kuyunjik by Layard and others 21 By October of that year Botta had uncovered enough of the palace to cease further excavations and attempt to deliver some of the findings to France which required an extensive operation of carts to transport the reliefs and sculptures to Mosul which were then transported by raft and ship to Basra on the Persian Gulf and then to Paris where they arrived in 1847 22 These were the first major Assyrian finds to arrive in Europe and they fuelled a growing fascination with the ancient civilization which would lead to further excavations The Qurnah Disaster Edit Main article Qurnah Disaster Convoy of rafts Keleks floating down the Tigris river loaded with antiquities in 1855 V Place 1867 By 1852 excavations of the site had been resumed by the new French consul Victor Place and in 1855 another shipment of antiquities was ready to be sent back to Paris 23 24 A cargo ship and four rafts were prepared to carry the artifacts but even this substantial effort was over whelmed by the sheer number of items to be transported Additionally shortly after the convoy reached Baghdad Place was summoned to his new consular post in Moldavia due to the ongoing Crimean War and had to leave the shipment in the hands of a French schoolteacher M Clement to finalise its return to Paris 25 26 More antiquities from Rawlinson s expedition to Kuyunjik and Fresnel s to Babylon were also added to the shipment 27 The troubles began once the convoy left Baghdad in May 1855 as the banks of the river Tigris were controlled by local sheikhs who were hostile to the Ottoman authorities and frequently raided shipping sailing by 28 During the journey the convoy was boarded several times forcing the crew to relinquish most of their money and supplies in order to be allowed further passage on the river 25 27 Once the convoy reached Al Qurnah Kurnah it was assaulted by local pirates led by Sheikh Abu Saad whose actions sank the main cargo ship and forced the four rafts aground shortly afterwards 27 The entire shipment was almost completely lost with only 28 of over 200 crates eventually making it to the Louvre in Paris 29 30 Subsequent efforts to recover the lost antiquities including a Japanese expedition in 1971 2 have largely been unsuccessful 27 20th Century Excavations Edit The site of Khorsabad was excavated between 1928 1935 by American archaeologists from the Oriental Institute in Chicago Work in the first season was led by Edward Chiera and concentrated on the palace area A colossal bull estimated to weigh 40 tons was uncovered outside the throne room It was found split into three large fragments The torso alone weighed about 20 tons This was shipped to Chicago The preparation and shipment of the bull back to the Oriental Institute was incredibly arduous The remaining seasons were led by Gordon Loud and Hamilton Darby Their work examined one of the city gates continued work at the palace and excavated extensively at the palace s temple complex 31 Since Dur Sharrukin was a single period site that was evacuated in an orderly manner after the death of Sargon II few individual objects were found The primary discoveries from Khorsabad shed light on Assyrian art and architecture In 1957 archaeologists from the Iraqi Department Antiquities led by Fuad Safar excavated at the site uncovering the temple of Sibitti 32 Gallery Edit Plan of Dur Sharrukin 1867 The Timber Transportation relief at the Louvre Khorsabad brick Assyria Babylonian Louvre Brooklyn Museum Archives Goodyear Archival Collection Palace of Dur Sharrukin Dur Sharrukin foundation cylinder Sargon II left faces a high ranking official possibly Sennacherib his son and crown prince 710 705 BCE From Khorsabad Iraq The British Museum London Part of a door sill from Khorsabad describing the construction of Sargon II s palace the British Museum Tributary scene from the Royal Palace at Khorsabad Iraq The Iraq Museum Assyrian attendants carrying the throne of Sargon II part of a tributary scene from Khorsabad Iraq Iraq Museum Sargon II in his royal chariot tramping a dead or dying enemy part of a war scene from Khorsabad Iraq The Iraq Museum Assyrian human headed protective spirit from Khorsabad Iraq The Iraq Museum A horse and an Assyrian groom from Khorsabad Iraq Iraq Museum Assyrian archers attacking a city From Khorsabad Iraq The Iraq Museum 1853 excavation of the gate of Sargon s palaceSee also EditCities of the ancient Near East Destruction of cultural heritage by ISIL Short chronology timeline List of megalithic sitesNotes Edit Marc Van De Mieroop A History of the Ancient Near East ca 3000 323 BC Wiley Blackwell 2006 ISBN 1 4051 4911 6 a b Ancient site Khorsabad attacked by Islamic State reports Toronto Star 8 March 2015 Archived from the original on 22 February 2018 Retrieved 8 March 2015 ASOR Cultural Heritage Initiatives مبادرات التراث الثقافي www facebook com Archived from the original on 2021 03 08 Retrieved 2021 01 25 Fuchs Die Inschriften Sargons II aus Khorsabad 42 65 294f See the discussion by Eckart Frahm Observations on the Name and Age of Sargon II and on Some Patterns of Assyrian Royal Onomastics NABU 2005 2 44 Archived 2016 05 10 at the Wayback Machine a b Lewis Leo Rich Tenney Charles R 2010 The Compendium of Weapons Armor amp Castles Nabu Press p 142 ISBN 978 1146066846 Hatti in this context all the areas to the west of the Euphrates controlled by Neo Hittite kingdoms D D Luckenbill Ancient Records of Assyria and Babylonia vol II 242 quoted in Robin Lane Fox Travelling Heroes in the Epic Age of Homer 2008 pp26f Lane Fox 2008 27 texts are in Luckenbill 1927 II Lane Fox 2008 27 noting D Stronach The Garden as a political statement some case studies from the Near East in the first millennium BC Bulletin of the Asia Institute 4 1990 171 80 The garden mount first documented at Dur Sharrukin was to have a long career in the history of gardening Cultraro M Gabellone F Scardozzi G Integrated Methodologies and Technologies for the Reconstructive Study of Dur Sharrukin Iraq XXI International CIPA Symposium 2007 Austen Henry Layard Nineveh and Its Remains Vol I 2nd ed London John Murray 1849 149 Layard Nineveh and Its Remains 149 Mogens Trolle Larsen The Conquest of Assyria Excavations in an Antique Land New York Routledge 1996 pp 12 3 Layard Nineveh and Its Remains pp 10 1 Larsen Conquest of Assyria 23 4 Zainab Bahrani Zeynep Celik and Edhem Eldem Scramble for the Past A Story of Archaeology in the Ottoman Empire 1753 1914 Istanbul SALT 2011 132 4 Paul Emile Botta and Eugene Flandin Monument de Ninive in 5 volumes Imprimerie nationale 1946 50 E Guralnick New drawings of Khorsabad sculptures by Paul Emile Botta Revue d assyriologie et d archeologie orientale vol 95 pp 23 56 2002 Larsen Conquest of Assyria 26 30 During his visit several years later Layard reports that the place is consequently very unhealthy and the few squalid inhabitants who appeared were almost speechless from ague During M Botta s excavations the workmen suffered greatly from fever and many fell victims to it See Layard Nineveh and its Remains 148 Carine Harmand Sparking the imagination the rediscovery of Assyria s great lost city February 1 2019 https blog britishmuseum org sparking the imagination the rediscovery of assyrias great lost city Archived 2021 01 28 at the Wayback Machine Larsen Conquest of Assyria 32 Victor Place Nineve et l Assyie in 3 volumes Imprimerie imperiale 1867 1879 Joseph Bonomi Ninevah and Its Palaces The Discoveries of Botta and Layard Applied to the Elucidation of Holy Writ Bohn 1957 2003 Reprint Gorgias Press LLC ISBN 1 59333 067 7 a b Larsen M T 1996 The Conquest of Assyria Excavations in an Antique Land 1st ed Routledge doi 10 4324 9781315862859 pp 344 9 Potts D T Potts 2020 Un coup terrible de la fortune A Clement and the Qurna disaster of 1855 Pp 235 244 in Finkel I L and Simpson St J eds In Context The Reade Festschrift Oxford Archaeopress Archived from the original on 2021 04 11 Retrieved 2021 04 11 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help a b c d 1 Namio Egami The Report of The Japan Mission For The Survey of Under Water Antiquities At Qurnah The First Season 1971 72 1 45 Pillet Maurice 1881 1964 Auteur du texte 1922 L expedition scientifique et artistique de Mesopotamie et de Medie 1851 1855 Maurice Pillet Archived from the original on 2021 04 11 Retrieved 2021 04 11 Samuel D Pfister The Qurnah Disaster Archaeology amp Piracy in Mesopotamia Bible History Daily January 20 2021 https www biblicalarchaeology org daily the qurnah disaster Archived 2021 03 02 at the Wayback Machine Robert William Rogers A history of Babylonia and Assyria Volume 1 Abingdon Press 1915 2 Archived 2010 06 18 at the Wayback Machine OIC 16 Tell Asmar Khafaje and Khorsabad Second Preliminary Report of the Iraq Expedition Henri Frankfort 1933 3 Archived 2010 06 18 at the Wayback Machine OIC 17 Iraq Excavations of the Oriental Institute 1932 33 Third Preliminary Report of the Iraq Expedition Henri Frankfort 1934 4 Archived 2010 06 18 at the Wayback Machine Gordon Loud Khorsabad Part 1 Excavations in the Palace and at a City Gate Oriental Institute Publications 38 University of Chicago Press 1936 5 Archived 2010 06 18 at the Wayback Machine Gordon Loud and Charles B Altman Khorsabad Part 2 The Citadel and the Town Oriental Institute Publications 40 University of Chicago Press 1938 F Safar The Temple of Sibitti at Khorsabad Sumer 13 1957 219 21 References EditBahrani Zainab Zeynep Celik and Edhem Eldem Scramble for the Past A Story of Archaeology in the Ottoman Empire 1753 1914 Istanbul SALT 2011 6 Buckingham James Silk The buried city of the East Nineveh a narrative of the discoveries of Mr Layard and M Botta at Nimroud and Khorsabad National Illustrated Library 1851 A Fuchs Die Inschriften Sargons II aus Khorsabad Cuvillier 1994 ISBN 3 930340 42 9 A Caubet Khorsabad le palais de Sargon II roi d Assyrie Actes du colloque organise au musee du Louvre par le Services culturel les 21 et 22 janvier 1994 La Documentation francaise 1996 ISBN 2 11 003416 5 Guralnick Eleanor The Palace at Khorsabad A Storeroom Excavation Project In D Kertai and P A Miglus eds New Research on Late Assyrian Palaces Conference at Heidelberg January 22 2011 5 10 Heidelberger Studien zum Alten Orient 15 Heidelberg Heidelberger Orientverlag 2013 Harmand Carine Sparking the Imagination The Rediscovery of Assyria s Great Lost City British Museum Blog February 1 2019 https blog britishmuseum org sparking the imagination the rediscovery of assyrias great lost city Larsen Mogens Trolle The Conquest of Assyria Excavations in an Antique Land 1840 1860 New York Routledge 1996 Layard Austen Henry Nineveh and Its Remains Vol I 2nd ed London John Murray 1849 Pfister Samuel D The Qurnah Disaster Archaeology amp Piracy in Mesopotamia Bible History Daily January 20 2021 https www biblicalarchaeology org daily the qurnah disaster Arno Poebel The Assyrian King List from Khorsabad Journal of Near Eastern Studies vol 1 no 3 pp 247 306 1942 Arno Poebel The Assyrian King List from Khorsabad Continued Journal of Near Eastern Studies vol 1 no 4 pp 460 492 1942 Pauline Albenda The palace of Sargon King of Assyria Monumental wall reliefs at Dur Sharrukin from original drawings made at the time of their discovery in 1843 1844 by Botta and Flandin Editions Recherche sur les civilisations 1986 ISBN 2 86538 152 8External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Dur Sharrukin Khorsabad Relief Project Oriental Institute New York Public Library Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Dur Sharrukin amp oldid 1164437258, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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