Culture A 3,400-year-old city emerges from the Tigris River


1654003386346.png

Aerial view of the excavations at Kemune with Bronze Age architecture partly submerged in the lake.

A team of German and Kurdish archaeologists have uncovered a 3,400-year-old Mittani Empire-era city once located on the Tigris River. The settlement emerged from the waters of the Mosul reservoir early this year as water levels fell rapidly due to extreme drought in Iraq. The extensive city with a palace and several large buildings could be ancient Zakhiku—believed to have been an important center in the Mittani Empire (ca. 1550–1350 BC).

Iraq is one of the countries in the world most affected by climate change. The south of the country in particular has been suffering from extreme drought for months. To prevent crops from drying out, large amounts of water have been drawn down from the Mosul reservoir—Iraq's most important water storage—since December. This led to the reappearance of a Bronze Age city that had been submerged decades ago without any prior archaeological investigations. It is located at Kemune in the Kurdistan Region of Iraq.

This unforeseen event put archaeologists under sudden pressure to excavate and document at least parts of this large, important city as quickly as possible before it was resubmerged. The Kurdish archaeologist Dr. Hasan Ahmed Qasim, chairman of the Kurdistan Archaeology Organization, and the German archaeologists Jun.-Prof. Dr. Ivana Puljiz (University of Freiburg) and Prof. Dr. Peter Pfälzner (University of Tübingen) spontaneously decided to undertake joint rescue excavations at Kemune. These took place in January and February 2022 in collaboration with the Directorate of Antiquities and Heritage in Duhok (Kurdistan Region of Iraq).

1654003420522.png

The excavated large buildings from the Mittani period are measured and archaeologically documented.

A team for the rescue excavations was put together within days. Funding for the work was obtained at short notice from the Fritz Thyssen Foundation through the University of Freiburg. The German-Kurdish archaeological team was under immense time pressure because it was not clear when the water in the reservoir would rise again.

Within a short time, the researchers succeeded in largely mapping the city. In addition to a palace, which had already been documented during a short campaign in 2018, several other large buildings were uncovered—a massive fortification with wall and towers, a monumental, multi-story storage building and an industrial complex. The extensive urban complex dates to the time of the Empire of Mittani (approx. 1550–1350 BC), which controlled large parts of northern Mesopotamia and Syria.

"The huge magazine building is of particular importance because enormous quantities of goods must have been stored in it, probably brought from all over the region," says Ivana Puljiz. Hasan Qasim concludes, "The excavation results show that the site was an important center in the Mittani Empire."

1654003450642.png

One of the vessels with cuneiform tablets is inspected before being recovered.

The research team was stunned by the well-preserved state of the walls—sometimes to a height of several meters—despite the fact that the walls are made of sun-dried mud bricks and were under water for more than 40 years. This good preservation is due to the fact that the city was destroyed in an earthquake around 1350 BC, during which the collapsing upper parts of the walls buried the buildings.

Of particular interest is the discovery of five ceramic vessels that contained an archive of over 100 cuneiform tablets. They date to the Middle Assyrian period, shortly after the earthquake disaster struck the city. Some clay tablets, which may be letters, are even still in their clay envelopes. The researchers hope this discovery will provide important information about the end of the Mittani-period city and the beginning of Assyrian rule in the region. "It is close to a miracle that cuneiform tablets made of unfired clay survived so many decades under water," Peter Pfälzner says.

1654003481530.png

View into one of the pottery vessels with cuneiform tablets, including one tablet which is still in its original clay envelope.

To avert further damage to the important site by the rising water, the excavated buildings were completely covered with tight-fitting plastic sheeting and covered with gravel fill as part of an extensive conservation project funded by the Gerda Henkel Foundation. This is intended to protect the walls of unbaked clay and any other finds still hidden in the ruins during times of flooding. The site is now once more completely submerged.




That is so cool.

 
Stuff like this is what affirms in me that we're really misinformed about human history. This stuff has been sitting in a modern reservoir being actively used and no one knew about the things hidden beneath the surface. The city was buried by rubble before being submerged - how many times has that happened in history? How many communities or even entire cities were lost to time like that, and how much of it will we never see ever? Really cool stuff.
 
How dare you post something fascinating, informative, and not politically toxic!!? Don't you know where you are?

Seriously though. That is awesome. Salvage archeologists are goddamn heroes in my book. Snatching precious history from the jaws of destruction.
 
Stuff like this is what affirms in me that we're really misinformed about human history. This stuff has been sitting in a modern reservoir being actively used and no one knew about the things hidden beneath the surface. The city was buried by rubble before being submerged - how many times has that happened in history? How many communities or even entire cities were lost to time like that, and how much of it will we never see ever? Really cool stuff.
Imagine how many entire civilizations are lost because they built stuff out of wood instead of stone.
 
Stuff like this is what affirms in me that we're really misinformed about human history. This stuff has been sitting in a modern reservoir being actively used and no one knew about the things hidden beneath the surface. The city was buried by rubble before being submerged - how many times has that happened in history? How many communities or even entire cities were lost to time like that, and how much of it will we never see ever? Really cool stuff.
I had a similar feeling when I heard that some old famous city (I think it was Troy) was like in his fifth iteration by the time it became famous and then other versions came after it was destroyed. "It was so old, that even Alexander the Great considered an old myth."
 
Another incredible find of an ancient Black civilization, just like their Black cousins in Sumer, Babylonia, Assyria, and Egypt.

WE WUZ MITTANI KANGZ

I wonder what's on the tablets. Cool that one is still in its envelope. We may be the first to read it since it was inscribed.
 
Stuff like this is what affirms in me that we're really misinformed about human history. This stuff has been sitting in a modern reservoir being actively used and no one knew about the things hidden beneath the surface. The city was buried by rubble before being submerged - how many times has that happened in history? How many communities or even entire cities were lost to time like that, and how much of it will we never see ever? Really cool stuff.
Pretty much all we know about shit from 3000+ years ago is massive shots in the dark. Hell we know there were large cities somewhere in Southern Arabia that traded in spice and incense but no idea where they are.

Lucky for this archeological site it is in Iraq not Turkey and therefore unlikely to be bulldozed to make a carpark or something. Only threat to it is looters and some Jihadi deciding it is haram.
 
WE WUZ MITTANI KANGZ

I wonder what's on the tablets. Cool that one is still in its envelope. We may be the first to read it since it was inscribed.
“We’ve been trying to reach you about your donkey’s extended warranty…”

Seriously though, anything would be cool. Especially if it’s more customer service complaints like that copper merchant guy.
 
Stuff like this is what affirms in me that we're really misinformed about human history. This stuff has been sitting in a modern reservoir being actively used and no one knew about the things hidden beneath the surface. The city was buried by rubble before being submerged - how many times has that happened in history? How many communities or even entire cities were lost to time like that, and how much of it will we never see ever? Really cool stuff.
Or coastal settlements that were submerged in the span between LGM and the YD period, and northern and southern cultures that predated the ice age that were ground into dust by the glaciers. I am of the opinion that agriculture and specialization go back far earlier than the ancient Middle East, and the Neolithic age was actually the rebuilding from the small number of survivors of a catastrophic mass extinction event.
 
Stuff like this is what affirms in me that we're really misinformed about human history. This stuff has been sitting in a modern reservoir being actively used and no one knew about the things hidden beneath the surface. The city was buried by rubble before being submerged - how many times has that happened in history? How many communities or even entire cities were lost to time like that, and how much of it will we never see ever? Really cool stuff.
The Great Flood myth is almost universal in its spread, reading between the lines its clear that the "flood" is merely the end of the ice age and the massive deluge of the ice melt filling in lowland areas. The Persian Gulf is suspected to host a dozen or so cities beneath its waters and the biblical site of "Eden" talks about 4 great rivers that meet. You can make this work by using the Tigris and Euphrates and extend it into where the Persian Gulf is located. There are two extinct rivers that ran West-East from the Arabian peninsula that would fit the bill of the Pishon and Gishon, one leading "to an area that produces gold" which the region between Mecca and Medina certainly was historically, and "leads to a land called Kush" which is an ancient civilization we know hugged the Red Sea almost on the border of Yemen. Likely the dam at the Strait of Hormuz broke apart because of the ice age ending, just like the Strait of Gibraltar and filled the Persian Gulf. 'Eden' was probably a prehistoric or Bronze age city that is now buried in the rather shallow waters of the Persian Gulf along with others that were unfortunate enough to choose the region to live in.
 
Or coastal settlements that were submerged in the span between LGM and the YD period, and northern and southern cultures that predated the ice age that were ground into dust by the glaciers. I am of the opinion that agriculture and specialization go back far earlier than the ancient Middle East, and the Neolithic age was actually the rebuilding from the small number of survivors of a catastrophic mass extinction event.
It's really cool to think that modernity predates itself by Millenia. There are so many unthinkable events that could have occurred prior to when we mark human history as beginning. I like to imagine the possibility that an advanced civilization did exist on earth and was basically liquidated by a force of nature. It could explain the few odds and ends we find throughout ancient civilization like the Antikythera Mechanism or the Swiss Watch Artifact in the Ming Dynasty Tomb (afaik not deboonked, still not explained though).
 
Stuff like this is what affirms in me that we're really misinformed about human history. This stuff has been sitting in a modern reservoir being actively used and no one knew about the things hidden beneath the surface. The city was buried by rubble before being submerged - how many times has that happened in history? How many communities or even entire cities were lost to time like that, and how much of it will we never see ever? Really cool stuff.
Bro, there's still subspecies of humans that we only know exist because of DNA studies. There's no physical evidence of them that we've found. There used to be a land bridge to Britain called Doggerland which was blood massive. A recent - 2019 - exploration of the seabed found flint tools pretty much instantly. Meaning there's probably lots down there waiting to be found. There could be countless civilisations in the past we simply haven't found yet.
 
Bro, there's still subspecies of humans that we only know exist because of DNA studies. There's no physical evidence of them that we've found. There used to be a land bridge to Britain called Doggerland which was blood massive. A recent - 2019 - exploration of the seabed found flint tools pretty much instantly. Meaning there's probably lots down there waiting to be found. There could be countless civilisations in the past we simply haven't found yet.
Is that the denisovans? Those are a cool find, and we've only recently collected physical evidence of them.
 
Back