Many recent studies have dealt with the nature of the Assyrian imperial frontiers, demonstrating how diversified they have been through time and space, with cases such as Khabur and Upper Tigris regions. On the other hand, the Assyrian periphery along the Iraqi middle Euphrates – ancient region of Suḫu – is archaeologically less known. The archaeological investigations before the construction of the Haditha Dam revealed many sites datable to the Iron Age, some of which seemed to have a marked military nature. The region was therefore seen as a seat for fortresses of the Assyrian Empire. The present paper, through a preliminary analysis of the material culture of the sites, the settlement pattern using GIS and satellite images, aims to sugge...
The Neo-Assyrian Empire was a complex political entity that controlled most of the Near East from th...
The paper describes a dataset of archaeological sites and villages now partially covered by the wate...
The purpose of this paper is to give a bird’s-eye view on the textual and archaeological sources and...
Many recent studies have dealt with the nature of the Assyrian imperial frontiers, demonstrating how...
Since the rise of the first urban centers, the Middle Euphrates has functioned as a routeway between...
The aim of this paper is to outline some of the major features that characterize settlement patterns...
Between the second and first millennium BCE the Middle and especially Neo-Assyrian empires carried o...
Located between the Caucasus, the Syrian-Iraqi border, south-eastern Anatolia and western Iran, the ...
International audienceIn the Middle Assyrian period (14th-11th centuries), the kings of Assur undert...
Flanking the western and northwestern boundaries of the territorial nucleus of Assyria, the Khabur T...
Small polities of marginal borderland regions in the Near East were often pushed and pulled by their...
In this article we discuss the archaeological landscapes of the Erbil plain during the Hellenistic p...
Field research undertaken in recent decades in northern Syria and southeastern Turkey has significan...
The Neo-Assyrian Empire was a complex political entity that controlled most of the Near East from th...
The paper describes a dataset of archaeological sites and villages now partially covered by the wate...
The purpose of this paper is to give a bird’s-eye view on the textual and archaeological sources and...
Many recent studies have dealt with the nature of the Assyrian imperial frontiers, demonstrating how...
Since the rise of the first urban centers, the Middle Euphrates has functioned as a routeway between...
The aim of this paper is to outline some of the major features that characterize settlement patterns...
Between the second and first millennium BCE the Middle and especially Neo-Assyrian empires carried o...
Located between the Caucasus, the Syrian-Iraqi border, south-eastern Anatolia and western Iran, the ...
International audienceIn the Middle Assyrian period (14th-11th centuries), the kings of Assur undert...
Flanking the western and northwestern boundaries of the territorial nucleus of Assyria, the Khabur T...
Small polities of marginal borderland regions in the Near East were often pushed and pulled by their...
In this article we discuss the archaeological landscapes of the Erbil plain during the Hellenistic p...
Field research undertaken in recent decades in northern Syria and southeastern Turkey has significan...
The Neo-Assyrian Empire was a complex political entity that controlled most of the Near East from th...
The paper describes a dataset of archaeological sites and villages now partially covered by the wate...
The purpose of this paper is to give a bird’s-eye view on the textual and archaeological sources and...