NASIRIYAH, Iraq — After war and insurgency
kept them away from
Iraq for decades, European archaeologists are making an
enthusiastic return in search of millennia-old cultural treasures.
اضافة اعلان
“Come and see!” shouted an overjoyed French
researcher recently at a desert dig in Larsa, southern Iraq, where the team had
unearthed a 4,000-year-old cuneiform inscription.
“When you find inscriptions like that, in situ, it’s
moving,” said Dominique Charpin, professor of Mesopotamian civilization at the
College de France in Paris.
(Photo: AFP)
The inscription in Sumerian was engraved on a brick
fired in the 19th century BC.
“To the god Shamash, his king Sin-Iddinam, king of
Larsa, king of Sumer and Akkad,” Charpin translated with ease.
Behind him, a dozen other European and Iraqi
archaeologists kept at work in a cordoned-off area where they were digging.
They brushed off bricks and removed earth to clear
what appeared to be the pier of a bridge spanning an urban canal of Larsa,
which was the capital of Mesopotamia just before Babylon, at the start of the
second millennium BC.
“Larsa is one of the largest sites in Iraq, it
covers more than 200 hectares,” said Regis Vallet, researcher at
France’s National Center for Scientific Research, heading the Franco-Iraqi mission.
(Photo: AFP)
The team of 20 people have made “major discoveries”,
he said, including the residence of a ruler identified by about 60 cuneiform
tablets that have been transferred to the national museum in Baghdad.
Archaeological ‘paradise’
Vallet said Larsa is like an
archaeological playground and a “paradise” for exploring ancient Mesopotamia,
which hosted through the ages the empire of Akkad, the Babylonians, Alexander
the Great, the Christians, the Persians, and Islamic rulers.
However, the modern history of Iraq — with its
succession of conflicts, especially since the 2003
US-led invasion and its
bloody aftermath — has kept foreign researchers at bay.
Only since Baghdad declared victory in territorial
battles against the Islamic State group in 2017 has Iraq “largely stabilized
and it has become possible again” to visit, said Vallet.
German archaeologist Margarete Van Ess inspects an artifact during a German-Iraqi archaeological expedition in the Warka (ancient Uruk) site in Iraq's Muthanna province, on November 27, 2021.(Photo: AFP)
“The French came back in 2019 and the British a
little earlier,” he said. “The Italians came back as early as 2011.”
In late 2021, said Vallet, 10 foreign missions were
at work in the Dhi Qar province, where Larsa is located.
Iraq’s Council of Antiquities and Heritage Director
Laith Majid Hussein said he is delighted to play host, and is happy that his
country is back on the map for foreign expeditions.
“This benefits us
scientifically,” he told AFP in Baghdad, adding that he welcomes the
“opportunity to train our staff after such a long interruption”.
‘Cradle of civilizations’
Near Najaf in central Iraq,
Ibrahim Salman of the
German Institute of Archaeology is focused on the site of
the city of Al-Hira.
Germany had previously carried out excavations here
that ground to a halt with the 2003 US-led invasion that toppled Saddam
Hussein.
Equipped with a geomagnetic measuring device,
Salman’s team has been at work in the one-time Christian city that had its
heyday under the Lakhmids, a pre-Islamic tribal dynasty of the fifth and sixth
centuries.
“Some clues lead us to believe that a church may
have been located here,” he explained.
(Photo: AFP)
He pointed to traces on the ground left by moisture
which is retained by buried structures and rises to the surface.
“The moistened earth on a strip several meters long
leads us to conclude that under the feet of the archaeologist are probably the
walls of an ancient church,” he said.
Al-Hira is far less ancient than other sites, but it
is part of the diverse history of the country that serves as a reminder,
according to Salman, that “Iraq, or Mesopotamia, is the cradle of
civilizations. It is as simple as that!”
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