This article presents a newly discovered cuneiform text from the site of üçtepe in Diyarbaklr province in southeastern Turkey. The text bears a previously unknown inscription of the Assyrian king Shalmaneser I. While incomplete, it never-theless gives the most extensive lists of the conquests of Shalmaneser I yet known, including a number of previously unattested toponyms. This is in itself an important contribution to the historical documentation of the Middle Assyrian period. Furthermore, the fact that the text was written to record Shalmaneser's rebuilding of the city wall of Sinamu allows us to propose that üçtepe is to be identified with the site of ancient Šinamu, known to have been an important centre from the late third millennium B...
Frontal view of the hieroglyphic Luwian inscription No. A Ia found at Karkamış. This is a limestone ...
Many recent studies have dealt with the nature of the Assyrian imperial frontiers, demonstrating how...
Both the textual record and the archaeological record from the ancient Mesopotamia provide evidence ...
The Assyrian Rock Relief at Yaǧmur in the Tur Abdin publishes a newly discovered rock relief in the ...
Abstract : According to the cuneiform tablets found in Anatolia, the names of many cities, large and...
The city of Kahramanmaraş, in southeastern Turkey (ancient Marqasi), was the capital of the Luwian k...
This paper reviews the results of the archaeological investigations at Ziyaret Tepe, located on the ...
The Assyrians actively engaged themselves in construction in the heartland and in the numerous provi...
Šamuḫa was an ancient cultic center and regional capital in the Hittite state. Thanks to recently ex...
This study is a critical discussion and analysis of the campaign annals of the Assyrian king Shalman...
The research aims at shedding light on the city of Madaktu, which is the second capital of Elam duri...
Drawings and illustration of the hieroglyphic Luwian inscription No. A Ia found at Karkamış with Hat...
International audienceAvailable online: https://www.cairn.info/revue-d-assyriologie-2019-1.html.In t...
International audienceThe site of Kültepe, the ancient city of Kaneš, near Kayseri in Anatolia, incl...
Frontal view of the hieroglyphic Luwian inscription No. A Ia found at Karkamış. This is a limestone ...
Many recent studies have dealt with the nature of the Assyrian imperial frontiers, demonstrating how...
Both the textual record and the archaeological record from the ancient Mesopotamia provide evidence ...
The Assyrian Rock Relief at Yaǧmur in the Tur Abdin publishes a newly discovered rock relief in the ...
Abstract : According to the cuneiform tablets found in Anatolia, the names of many cities, large and...
The city of Kahramanmaraş, in southeastern Turkey (ancient Marqasi), was the capital of the Luwian k...
This paper reviews the results of the archaeological investigations at Ziyaret Tepe, located on the ...
The Assyrians actively engaged themselves in construction in the heartland and in the numerous provi...
Šamuḫa was an ancient cultic center and regional capital in the Hittite state. Thanks to recently ex...
This study is a critical discussion and analysis of the campaign annals of the Assyrian king Shalman...
The research aims at shedding light on the city of Madaktu, which is the second capital of Elam duri...
Drawings and illustration of the hieroglyphic Luwian inscription No. A Ia found at Karkamış with Hat...
International audienceAvailable online: https://www.cairn.info/revue-d-assyriologie-2019-1.html.In t...
International audienceThe site of Kültepe, the ancient city of Kaneš, near Kayseri in Anatolia, incl...
Frontal view of the hieroglyphic Luwian inscription No. A Ia found at Karkamış. This is a limestone ...
Many recent studies have dealt with the nature of the Assyrian imperial frontiers, demonstrating how...
Both the textual record and the archaeological record from the ancient Mesopotamia provide evidence ...