Posted on 04/18/2020 2:02:28 PM PDT by nickcarraway
ISIS fighters discovered an ancient Assyrian palace under the ruins of Mosul, but unfortunately, they looted and sold off the tantalising treasures they discovered.
Professor Peter Miglus, the archaeologist who has led work at the site, said that gold kept by Sennacherib may have been discovered by ISIS.
He said: We can presume many very valuable objects must now be on the black market."
The archaeologists found gold objects littered within the tunnels that were discarded by ISIS.
Gold from ancient Egypt, such as a gold scarab ring and a small sceptre with the ankh, the pharaonic symbol that represents life are still at the site.
An Assyrian engraving
Professor Miglus maintains the fact Isis overlooked these objects suggests it seized and sold many more.
The archaeologists also uncovered two panels that, unusually, show women facing outwards, and carrying plants.
Nearly all Assyrian reliefs are of men, in profile.
Professor Miglus, of Heidelberg University, said the excavations carried out by Isis had identified the palace throne room, the largest of any in the palaces.
He acknowledged the irony that this work was possible only because of Isiss attempts to destroy history.
He said: It makes me unhappy to say that this work makes me happy."
Sales of looted antiquities were the second-biggest source of income for the jihadists, after oil smuggling.
Attempts to excavate the site in the 19th and 20th centuries were curtailed for fear of disturbing the shrine and offending local people.
Modern-day Mosul stands on the ruins of the city of Nineveh.
Nineveh was an ancient Assyrian city of Upper Mesopotamia, located on the outskirts of Mosul in modern-day northern Iraq.
Until the year of its sacking in 612 BC, it was the largest city in the world.
Ping
Could ISIS have done something useful, by accident? I’m just glad it wasn’t destroyed as pagan.
Interesting.
That oil was traded with the Erdogan family for safe passage of ISIS volunteers, medical care for their wounded, ammunition and other war materials. that trade continues in NW Syria.
Thanks, that’s very interesting.
Thanks nickcarraway.
Note the picture at the link (Getty, so can’t repost) of a bearded muscular Assyrian man carrying a pocketbook.
Some things never change.
A whole trove of kings!
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