Nimrud: Materialities of Assyrian Knowledge Production
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1. About the project
1.1. Nimrud, from Mound to Museum: Making Knowledge from Archaeological Objects
1.2. The Genies on the Stairs: a 3000 year journey from Assyria to Cambridge
1.3. Discovering Ancient Assyria at the Fitzwilliam Museum
1.4. Kings and Scholars: Politics and Science in the Ancient Assyrian city of Kalhu (Nimrud)
1.5. Tablets on Tablets: Reusable Mobile-Friendly Museum Resources on Ancient Mesopotamia
1.6. Downloadable resources for teaching and events
2. Catalogues
2.1. Nimrud Inscribed Objects Database
2.2. Nimrud Virtual Text Corpus
2.3. Museums in the United Kingdom with objects from Nimrud
2.3.1. Nimrud objects at Cambridge's Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology
2.4. Museums worldwide holding material from Nimrud
2.5. Online resources related to Nimrud
3. Ancient Kalhu
3.1. The ancient Assyrian royal city of Kalhu
3.1.1. Kalhu: from prehistoric settlement to royal capital
3.1.2. Kalhu as imperial capital
3.1.3. Kalhu from the 7th century to the post-Assyrian period
3.1.4. Assurnasirpal's Northwest Palace
3.1.5. The ziggurat and its temples
3.1.6. Ezida, the god Nabu's temple of scholarship
3.1.7. The Governor's Palace
3.1.8. Fort Shalmaneser, the royal arsenal
3.2. The people involved in producing knowledge in ancient Kalhu
3.2.1. Assurnasirpal II, king of Assyria (r. 883-859 BC)
3.2.2. Shalmaneser III, king of Assyria (r. 858-824 BC)
3.2.3. Sargon II
3.2.4. Sennacherib
3.2.5. Esarhaddon
3.2.6. Assurbanipal
3.2.7. Aššur, divine embodiment of Assyria
3.2.8. Ištar
3.2.9. Nabu, god of wisdom
3.2.10. Ninurta, god of victory
3.2.11. Scholarly families
3.2.12. Assyrian scholarly professions
3.2.13. Temple staff
3.2.14. Palace Scribe
3.3. Writing practices in ancient Kalhu: languages, scripts, media and genres
3.3.1. Cuneiform script
3.3.2. Writing cuneiform on clay
3.3.3. Writing cuneiform on other media
3.3.4. Akkadian
3.3.5. The Sumerian language
3.3.6. Aramaic and Hebrew in alphabetic scripts
3.3.7. Egyptian in hieroglyphic script
3.3.8. Royal inscriptions
3.3.9. Legal documents
3.3.10. State letters
3.3.11. Scholarly works
4. Biographies of Nimrud objects
4.1. The Standard Inscription of Assurnasirpal II
4.2. The Black Obelisk of Shalmaneser III
4.2.1. Rediscovery and modern reception of the Black Obelisk
4.2.2. Replicas of the Black Obelisk of Shalmaneser III
4.2.3. Selfie Tumblr
4.3. The Succession Treaties of Esarhaddon
4.3.1.
4.4. The Nimrud ivories: forgotten treasures
4.5. Anzu the monstrous lion-eagle
4.6. The genies on the stairs: stone carvings in the Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge
4.7. The model dog that became a cat
4.8. Royal goblets and broken pots
5. Modern Nimrud, from mound to museum
5.1. On and in the mound of Nimrud
5.1.1. Timeline of excavations at Nimrud
5.1.2. Imperial splendour: views of Kalhu in 1850
5.1.3. Abandoned antiquity: views of Kalhu in 1900
5.1.4. Remnants of empire: views of Kalhu in 1950
5.1.5. Nimrud resurgent? Views of Kalhu in the new millennium
5.1.6. In the headlines, out of bounds: Kalhu in 2015
5.2. Research at the museum
5.2.1. Displaying Nimrud to the public: people and processes
5.2.2. Conserving Birmingham Museum's Nimrud ivories
5.2.3. Displaying and redisplaying Nimrud at the Iraq Museum
5.2.4. Displaying Nimrud at the Ashmolean Museum, Oxford
5.2.5. Investigating the materiality of inscriptions at the British Museum
5.2.6. Deciphering cuneiform tablets for the GKAB project
6. People, gods & places
7. Technical terms
8. About this website: re-use, privacy, accessibility
8.1. Access keys
8.2. Site map
8.3. Compliance with accessibility standards
8.4. Cookies
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