Ashur (Qal'at Sherqat) (original) (raw)

Outstanding Universal Value

Brief synthesis

The ancient city of Ashur is located on the Tigris River in northern Mesopotamia in a specific geo-ecological zone, at the borderline between rain-fed and irrigation agriculture. The site is surrounded to the east by the Tigris, to the north by a plain with a wadi (valley) corresponding to a former branch of the Tigris and to the west and south by hilly landscapes.

The city dates back to the 3rd millennium BC. From the 14th to the 9th centuries BC, it was the first capital of the Assyrian Empire, a city-state and trading platform of international importance. It also served as the religious capital of the Assyrians, associated with the god Ashur. The city was destroyed by the Babylonians, but revived during the Parthian period in the 1st and 2nd centuries AD.

The area of the entire archaeological site of Ashur (70 ha) includes temples, three ziggurats, palaces, graves and private houses within the city walls, as well as the area of the Assyrian New Year’s festival building to the north-west. In addition, a 100-ha buffer zone has been defined 500 m from the western and southern boundaries of the archaeological site.

It gained its reputation because it was the city of the god Ashur, the national deity of the Assyrians. Before the Assyrians, that is from the first half of the 3rd millennium BC, the existence of substantial cultic buildings is attested. This means that the site was already a developed and organized urban system, the only one of this size known in the entire area.

It was also the place where the Assyrian kings were crowned and buried. As one of the few archaeological multi-period sites in Assyria of its kind, the remains of its buildings and their furnishings have been extensively excavated. The architectural and artistic record is accompanied by a large corpus of cuneiform texts which attest a leading role of Ashur in religion and scholarship, especially during the Middle- and Neo-Assyrian periods.

Within the framework of the other three Assyrian capitals (Nimrud, Dur-Sharrukin and Nineveh), Ashur is the only example of an urban site where continuity and change of the Assyrian civilization pertaining to religious, public and domestic architecture, artistic production, urban planning, religious and political systems, economic subsistence and social patterns is revealed by the archaeological and textual evidence throughout the recorded archaeological periods.

At Ashur, the early steps towards a systematic shaping of Assyrian cities could be observed for the first time within the limits of an extremely restricted space and a grown urban system, this in contrast to all the later Assyrian capitals.

The tight and complex cultural identity is expressed by the fact that the land, the god and the city bore the same name: Ashur. It is clear that, already during pre-Assyrian periods, the site played an important role in the land of Subartu, since it was a desired place for foreign control over the region during the Akkad and Ur III periods (last quarter of the 3rd millennium BC).

Ashur has an outstanding density of excavated architectural remains from different parts of the Assyrian periods without comparison. The ensemble of public buildings (temples, palaces, city walls) finds its counterpart in several areas of domestic architecture. As for the religious architecture, the presence of three ziggurats erected of mud bricks and two double temples should be mentioned as well as the temple of the national god Ashur. Of them, the impressive ziggurat of the god Ashur is still standing today and is a visible landmark. Whereas these buildings embody the Assyrian architectural tradition, the temple of Ishtar alone features a different building tradition (bent axis), which has its origin possibly in the area southeast of Assyria. At two places, a sequence of royal palaces was observed, one of them saved later as burial place for Assyrian kings.

Hellenistic remains and those of the Arab Hatrene kings are attested. The surface of the site is partly covered by the excavation debris from several generations of archaeological excavations.

More than 1,000 inhumations in graves and tombs from the Parthian period, mainly located inside the buildings, provide important information on aspects of burial rites and funerary culture. The Parthian palace and a temple close to the ziggurat are architectural testimonies of this period. Presently, residential areas of the Parthian period are being excavated.

Criterion (iii): Ashur, founded in the 3rd millennium BC, is an exceptional testimony to succeeding civilizations from the Sumerian period in the 3rd millennium BC to the Assyrian empire from the 14th to 9th centuries, and, later, the Parthian revival in the 2nd century BC. Its most important role was from the 14th to 9th century BC when it was the first capital of the Assyrian empire, the religious capital of Assyrians, and the place for crowning and burial of its kings.

Criterion (iv): The excavated remains of the public and residential buildings of Ashur provide an outstanding record of the evolution of building practice from the Sumerian and Akkadian period through the Assyrian empire, as well as including the short revival during the Parthian period.

Integrity

Ashur contains all the attributes that express its Outstanding Universal Value, such as the archaeological monuments and elements of urban planning within its boundaries and its integrity is fundamentally unimpaired. These attributes are though vulnerable or potentially vulnerable to threats or to the impacts of restoration and reconstruction.

Authenticity

The site of Ashur had been abandoned at the end of the Parthian period (2nd century BC), and, in contrast to many other sites in the region, there was no further occupation. Therefore, the authenticity of the remains is unquestionable and the attributes clearly and fully reflect Outstanding Universal Value. There are two major structures built in the 19th and 20th centuries: Ottoman military barracks at the north-eastern edge of the site, used until 1991 as the site museum, and the excavation house, erected by the German expedition and restored by the State Board of Antiquities and Heritage. There are also two small guard houses at the site. As for restoration works, traditional techniques and materials (mudbricks and plaster) have been applied in the 1980s for partial reconstruction of the Old Palace, the temple of Anu and Adad and parts of the city wall, based on the excavated evidence. The walls stand up to a height of ca. 2 m. Baked bricks have been used for the Tabira gate, the temple of Ishtar and parts of the Parthian palace. Gypsum and as little concrete as possible served as mortars.

Protection and management requirements

The city of Ashur is the property of the State of Iraq, and it is taken care of by the staff of the State Board of Antiquities and Heritage, within the Ministry of Culture. It had been protected under the 1937 Law of Antiquities and its further amendments, and is now protected, as well as its buffer zone, under the Law of Antiquities and Heritage No 55, dated October 2002.

The protection and management of the site is the responsibility of the State Board of Antiquities and Heritage (former Directorate General of Antiquities). Locally, the archaeological site is under the responsibility of the Inspector of Antiquities in the province of Salah Addin. Excavations are conducted by the Department of Excavations and Archaeological Investigation of the State Board of Antiquities and Heritage, Ministry of Culture. The site has 10 guards in charge of its protection.

Excavations by the Iraqi expedition are financed annually from the central budget of the State Board of Antiquities and Heritage, Government of Iraq. The Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft has financed the German expedition.

In the late seventies of the 20th century, the State Board of Antiquities and Heritage started a scientific programme in order to resume work in the city by archaeological excavations and some restoration to maintain and consolidate what had been exposed. This is at the city wall (NW), the Tabira Gate, some private houses, the temple of Anu and Adad, the Old Palace and the royal burial. However, since the restored and partly reconstructed buildings and walls are equally exposed to erosion, they need continuous care. In view of the present situation and in continuation of the work which began in the late 70s, it is planned to develop a detailed restoration and conservation programme for the site and its monuments.

The threat to the property from the construction of a Makhool Dam has now been removed by the cancellation of the dam project. The Iraqi Ministry of Water Resources released a formal decision to abandon the idea of building Makhool dam permanently and will provide the official notification to confirm that the project’s plan will never be put on the table again. There is therefore no need to construct a retaining wall or any protective measures.