News

A team of researchers from the British Museum, led by Diego Tamburini, recently examined the tablet fragments using advanced ...
A recent study published in the Journal of Archaeological Science has revealed the materials and techniques used in the production of writing tablets from the Neo-Assyrian Empire, found in the ruins ...
The city of Nimrud, known as Calah in the Bible, became the capital of the neo-Assyrian Empire in 883 B.C., under King Ashurnasirpal II. At the end of the seventh century B.C., the empire ...
The king's role in expanding, defending, and marking the borders of the Empire has been studied rather well ... renowned and esteemed international scholars from the field of Neo-Assyrian studies, and ...
The session’s first speaker, Dr. Juha Lahnakoski, presented a study into embodied emotions in Neo-Assyrian texts. The relationship between emotions and the body is twofold: on one hand, our ...