As
Islamic Militants Destroy Iraq Heritage, a Stunning Find in Kurdistan
By Alexandra
Di Stefano Pironti [ ] 2
hours ago
At the temple, the columns are made of green basalt, and
some with sandstone, limestone and marble
BARCELONA,
Spain – While the history of civilization is being demolished by war and
religious zealots in the rest of Iraq, in the Kurdistan Region archeologists
are marveling at a stunning discovery: the remains of a long-lost temple from
the biblical kingdom of Urartu, dating back to the 9th century BC.
Kurdish
archaeologist Dlshad Marf Zamua, who has studied the columns and other
artifacts at the find, told Rudaw
these were unearthed piecemeal over the past four decades by villagers going
about their lives, digging for cultivation or construction.
But
only recently, after the discovery of life-size human statues and the unearthed
columns, Zamua realized that the villagers had stumbled upon the temple of
Haldi. That was one of the most important gods of Urartu, an Iron-Age kingdom
around Lake Van in the Armenian highlands.
The
temple was found in the village of Mdjeser, in the district of Bradost-Sidekan,
the most northeastern corner of Iraq and bordering Iran and Turkey.
“The
temple was recorded very well in the Assyrian and Urartian inscriptions,”
explained Zamua, a doctoral student at Leiden University in the Netherlands who
also teaches at Salahaddin University in Erbil.
“One
of the reliefs depicts the plunder of the temple by the Assyrian King Sargon II
in 714 BC,” said the researcher, who spent from 2005 to 2012 working on the
site.
According
to historical evidence and the recently uncovered sites, the ancient city of
Musasir, located where Mdjeser is today, was home to Haldi’s temple.
Mdjeser
was one of more than 4,000 villages destroyed during the Anfal campaign of
former Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein, which especially targeted the Kurds and
is gaining international recognition as an act of genocide.
Even
now some villagers will not return to rebuild their homes because of the
troubles in Iraq, which have made things worse in this border region.
The
ancient capital was known as Musasir by the Assyrians and as Ardini by the
Urartians themselves. It was among the lands that formed a string of
buffer states between the two powers of the time, Assyria and Urartu.
Zamua
also studied eleven human-size statues unearthed in the same area, which he believes
are from the Scythian state of the 7th-6th century BC. They were originally
erected above the graves of chieftains and warrior leaders.
“Most
of the uncovered statues at Mdjeser and the neighboring Topzawa Valley have
also a typical Scythian iconography,” Zamua said, explaining the figures were
shown in real-life situations, such as holding a cup, strapping on a dagger or
holding a hatchet, the preferred Scythian weapon.
At
the temple, the columns are made of green basalt, and some with sandstone,
limestone and marble.
“The
importance of my research is that is the first time on the base of
archaeological and textual data that we can show the penetration of the
Scythians into Kurdistan during the 8th -7th centuries BC,” Zamua said.
“Kurdistan
is one of the richest areas in the world in archaeology. There are thousands of
archaeological sites -- caves, settlements, cities, citadels, castles, rock
reliefs, bridges -- covering almost all the history and the lives of humans on
earth from the stone ages to modern times.”
Luckily,
the archaeological sites in Brodost-Sidekan are far from the rebellion and war
raging across Iraq for more than a month.
Still,
being an archeologist in Kurdistan is not easy, Zamua said, listing the dangers
to include tens of thousands of unexploded land mines, especially from the
1980-88 Iran-Iraq war.
Other
hazards are Iranian shelling of the area, Zamua said, which happened last in
June. Turkish jets also have bombed the area several times in the
past.
As
an archaeologist, Zamua worries about the impact of war and the Islamic State
(IS) on sites that are some of the earliest records of civilization.
IS
fighters have been destroying historical sites during their military conquests,
especially targeting Shiite shrines.
“In
this chaotic situation they may loot ancient objects and sell them in the
international black market to fund these groups,” Zamua said, voicing a growing
concern.
He
said that in this regard Kurdistan was acting very responsibly.
“Kurdistan
is protecting its borders very well and the directorates of antiquities
actively are trying to look at the archaeological sites to protect them,” he
said.
He applauded the Kurdistan
Regional Government (KRG) for allowing foreign archeologists to work on sites.
But he complained that, “there is no special fund for local archaeologists to
start big projects.” http://rudaw.net/english/culture/22072014
No comments:
Post a Comment