Timeline of excavations at Nimrud

This page gives a brief summary of archaeological work carried out at the site of Nimrud over the past two centuries. For more detail see (1) and Chapters 1–3, 5–12 of (2).

Before excavation | The Victorian era | The early twentieth century | The Cold War era | The Saddam era | The twenty-first century

Before excavation

Image 1: Layard's plan of his excavations at the Northwest Palace (3), marked in bright and pale blue to indicate which sculptures had been fully or partially removed by 1850 (4). (Rooms A, J, K, M, O, R, U, V, W, X, Y AA, BB did not contain figural bas-reliefs TT .) View large image.

1815
The Ottoman TT  provincial governor TT  of Mosul PGP , Ahmed Pasha Jalili PGP , quarries for building stone
1816
James Silk Buckingham PGP  visits the site ("Nimrod-Tuppe") on 8 September, noting that it might contain ancient ruins
1821
Claudius James Rich PGP  — the East India Company's TT  Resident TT  in Baghdad PGP  — visits the site on 4 March, noticing the remains of the ziggurat and collecting fragments of inscribed bricks TT  from the surface
1837
Two brief visits by members of the British expedition TT  to chart the Euphrates PGP , on 9 March and 3 June, each noting many fragmentary antiquities on the surface of the mound
1844
British missionary TT  Rev George Badger PGP  surveys the site in March and proposes its excavation to Sir Stratford Canning PGP ; another missionary, Rev James Fletcher PGP , digs for inscribed bricks

The Victorian era

Image 2: Layard's plan of his excavations at the Northwest Palace (5), marked in bright and pale blue and green to indicate which sculptures had been fully or partially removed by 1850 and 1900 respectively (6). (Rooms A, J, K, M, O, R, U, V, W, X, Y AA, BB did not contain figural bas-reliefs.) View large image.

1845–47
Austen Henry Layard PGP  excavates parts of the Southwest Palace PGP  and the ceremonial areas of king Assurnasirpal II's PGP  Northwest Palace, by tunnelling along the edges of walls lined with stone bas-reliefs TT ; his most spectacular finds include the Black Obelisk
1849-51
Layard returns to Nimrud, assisted by Hormuzd Rassam PGP  and the artist Frederick Cooper PGP , focusing especially on the ziggurrat and surrounding shrines. Solomon Malan PGP  and the Hon. Robert Clive PGP  each visit in 1850
1852
Felix Jones PGP  maps Nimrud and its surroundings for the East India Company; Rawlinson PGP  visits to study the inscriptions that are still in situ
1852-53
Rassam digs mostly at Nineveh PGP  but also at Nimrud and Sherif Khan PGP  (ancient Tarbiṣu PGP )
1854–55
William Kennett Loftus PGP , with artist William Boutcher PGP , dig on behalf of the British Museum TT  and the private Assyrian Excavation Fund TT , at the "Southeast Palace", i.e., the Burnt Palace PGP  and Nabu's temple, and probably also at king Tiglath-pileser III's PGP  Central Palace PGP ; they find many ivories
1860-61; 1864
Julius Weber PGP , a Swiss entrepreneur, visits Nimrud to acquire reliefs
1862
Henri-Pacifique Delaporte PGP , the French consul TT  at Baghdad, vists Nimrud and sends reliefs to the Louvre TT 
1873
George Smith PGP  excavates briefly on behalf of The Daily Telegraph TT  and the British Museum
1878
Rassam returns to Nimrud, commissioning photographs too

The early twentieth century

Image 3: Layard's plan of his excavations at the Northwest Palace (7), marked in bright and pale blue, green and purple to indicate which sculptures had been fully or partially removed by 1850, 1900 and 1950 respectively (8). (Rooms A, J, K, M, O, R, U, V, W, X, Y AA, BB did not contain figural bas-reliefs.) View large image.

1906
Walter Andrae PGP , a German archaeologist excavating at Assur PGP , visits and photographs Nimrud
1909
The archaeologist and explorer Gertrude Bell PGP  visits Nimrud, taking photographs
1926
British archaeologists, including Max Mallowan PGP , visit Nimrud from Reginald Campbell Thompson's PGP  excavations at Nineveh PGP 

The Cold War era

1949–53
Max Mallowan directs large-scale excavations on the citadel TT  for BSAI TT , first extending the plan of the Northwest Palace, then working on the Governor's Palace, the citadel walls and associated housing, and the Burnt Palace PGP 
1956-59
Behnam Abu es-Soof PGP  directs excavation and restoration TT  work on the Northwest Palace
1955-56
Mallowan resumes excavations for BSAI, at Nabu's temple, and Ninurta's temple and its ziggurat, and begins work on Fort Shalmaneser
1958-62
David Oates PGP  directs BSAI's excavations at Fort Shalmaneser, replaced by Jeffrey Orchard PGP  in 1963
1969-77
Said al-Iraqi PGP  and Hazim Abd el-Hamid PGP  re-excavate and restore much of the Northwest Palace for the Iraqi Department of Antiquities, including excavation of many ivories from the Well in courtyard AJ
1974-76
Janusz Meuszyński PGP  directs Polish archaeological work at the Northwest Palace and the central part of the royal citadel

The Saddam and post-Saddam era

Image 4: Layard's plan of his excavations at the Northwest Palace (9), marked in bright and pale blue, green, purple and yellow to indicate which sculptures had been fully or partially removed by 1850, 1900, 1950 and 2000 respectively (10). (Rooms A, J, K, M, O, R, U, V, W, X, Y AA, BB did not contain figural bas-reliefs.) View large image.

1985-92
Muzahim Mahmoud Hussain PGP  re-excavates and restores Nabu's temple and further areas of the Northwest Palace, for the State Board of Antiquities and Heritage TT  (SBAH), finding the famous queens' TT  tombs in 1988 and Well 4 in 1992
1987-89
Paolo Fiorina PGP  leads Italian excavation work in Fort Shalmaneser and the nearby city walls
1989
John Curtis directs small-scale excavations at Fort Shalmaneser for the British Museum
1990
International projects at Nimrud are stopped in the run-up to the Gulf War TT 
2001
Muzahim Mahmoud Hussain re-excavates Ištar's temple for the SBAH
2002
The BSAI and British Museum hold a large conference to re-evaluate the archaeology of Nimrud (11)

The twenty-first century

Image 5: Layard's plan of his excavations at the Northwest Palace (12), marked in black and grey to indicate where complete or partial sculptures were still in situ before the destruction of the palace in early 2015 (13). (Rooms A, J, K, M, O, R, U, V, W, X, Y AA, BB did not contain figural bas-reliefs.) View large image.

Spring 2003
Iraq War TT ; Nimrud remains safe from post-war looting
Summer 2014
ISIS TT  invades northern Iraq, including Nineveh province TT  in which Nimrud is situated
Spring 2015
ISIS releases a propaganda video which shows the destruction of Northwest Palace; the status of the rest of the site is currently unknown

Content last modified: 18 Dec 2019
nimrud at oracc dot org

References

  1. Postgate, J.N. and J.E. Reade, 1976-1980. "Kalhu", Reallexikon der Assyriologie und Vorderasiatischen Archäologie 5, Berlin: Walter de Gruyter, pp. 303-323. (Find in text ^)
  2. Curtis, J., H. McCall, D. Collon and L. al-Gailani Werr (eds.), 2008. New Light on Nimrud: Proceedings of the Nimrud Conference 11th-13th March 2002, London: British Institute for the Study of Iraq (free PDF from BISI, 22 MB). (Find in text ^)
  3. Layard, A.H., 1849-1853. The Monuments of Nineveh: From Drawings Made on the Spot, vols. I–II, London: John Murray (free online edition of vol. 1 and vol. 2), pp. I plate 99 plan III. (Find in text ^)
  4. Englund, K., 2003. Nimrud und seine Funde: Der Weg der Reliefs in die Museen und Sammlungen (Orient-Archäologie 12), Rahden: Verlag Marie Leidorf, pp. 43-160. (Find in text ^)
  5. Layard, A.H., 1849-1853. The Monuments of Nineveh: From Drawings Made on the Spot, vols. I–II, London: John Murray (free online edition of vol. 1 and vol. 2), pp. I plate 99 plan III. (Find in text ^)
  6. Englund, K., 2003. Nimrud und seine Funde: Der Weg der Reliefs in die Museen und Sammlungen (Orient-Archäologie 12), Rahden: Verlag Marie Leidorf, pp. 43-160. (Find in text ^)
  7. Layard, A.H., 1849-1853. The Monuments of Nineveh: From Drawings Made on the Spot, vols. I–II, London: John Murray (free online edition of vol. 1 and vol. 2), pp. I plate 99 plan III. (Find in text ^)
  8. Englund, K., 2003. Nimrud und seine Funde: Der Weg der Reliefs in die Museen und Sammlungen (Orient-Archäologie 12), Rahden: Verlag Marie Leidorf, pp. 43-160. (Find in text ^)
  9. Layard, A.H., 1849-1853. The Monuments of Nineveh: From Drawings Made on the Spot, vols. I–II, London: John Murray (free online edition of vol. 1 and vol. 2), pp. I plate 99 plan III. (Find in text ^)
  10. Englund, K., 2003. Nimrud und seine Funde: Der Weg der Reliefs in die Museen und Sammlungen (Orient-Archäologie 12), Rahden: Verlag Marie Leidorf, pp. 43-160. (Find in text ^)
  11. Curtis, J., H. McCall, D. Collon and L. al-Gailani Werr (eds.), 2008. New Light on Nimrud: Proceedings of the Nimrud Conference 11th-13th March 2002, London: British Institute for the Study of Iraq (free PDF from BISI, 22 MB). (Find in text ^)
  12. Layard, A.H., 1849-1853. The Monuments of Nineveh: From Drawings Made on the Spot, vols. I–II, London: John Murray (free online edition of vol. 1 and vol. 2), pp. I plate 99 plan III. (Find in text ^)
  13. Englund, K., 2003. Nimrud und seine Funde: Der Weg der Reliefs in die Museen und Sammlungen (Orient-Archäologie 12), Rahden: Verlag Marie Leidorf, pp. 43-160. (Find in text ^)
 
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