Ishtartv.com
– rudaw.net
14 October, 2023
ERBIL, Kurdistan Region - After
two months of extensive work, the historical archeological park of the ancient
Assyrian King Sennacherib in Duhok province’s Khinis was officially opened to
tourists.
The 2,700-year-old monument is
regarded as the most extensive historical carving in Iraq. Restoration efforts
were undertaken by a team from the University of Udine in Italy, in
coordination with the Duhok Archeological Directorate, and the opening ceremony
on Thursday was attended by the Italian ambassador and consul general in
Baghdad and Erbil, as well as local Duhok province officials.
With the restoration, important
artifacts of the Assyrian empire were saved from destruction, dedicated to King
Sennacherib who ruled the Assyrian empire from 704 to 681 BC.
The Sennacherib Archaeological
Park comprises a water wall, intricately carved depictions of Sennacherib, his
family, and 22 others on a substantial rock surface, as well as statues of
winged bulls.
“First of all, the opening of this park will
make this place an important tourist destination. At the same time, it will be
an important source of income for Duhok province,” Bekas Brifkani, head of
Duhok’s archeological directorate, told Rudaw’s Naif Ramadhan.
The University of Udine and
Duhok’s archeological directorate have worked together for almost a decade
since 2012, spending three months of the year researching archeological sites
in the region.
The University of Udine has so far
recorded nearly 1,140 archeological sites in Duhok province, according to
Brifkani.
In a similar ceremony in October
last year, Kurdish and Italian officials opened another Assyrian archeological
park in Duhok province's Faida area, the first of its kind across Iraq and the
Kurdistan Region, in the presence of UNESCO.
The park is located in Faida,
south of Dohuk and comprises 13 two-meter-height sculptures engraved on its
walls dating back to the reign of the Assyrian king Sargon II (705-721 BC) and
his son Sennacherib.
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