In this Monday, March 7, 2016 file photo, Iraqis visit the Assyrian Hall surrounded by ancient artifacts of at the Iraq National Museum in Baghdad. After the destruction wreaked on archaeological sites by Islamic State group, the collections at the Iraq
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After
the destruction wreaked on archaeological sites by Islamic State group, the
collections at the Iraq's National Museum in Baghdad have become even more
important. It's now one of the only places you can find relics from the ancient
cities that fell into the extremists' hands.
As many as 4,000 archaeological sites are still under the domination of IS and
around 100 sites have been destroyed, according to Iraqi Cuture Minister Firyad
Rwandzi. The sites in their grip show the multiple civilizations that rose and
fell during Iraq's history, ranging from mosques, churches and small shrines to
large sites of old cities.
Among
the most significant ancient sites the militants captured were several capitals
of the Assyrian Empire during its height between the 10th and 6th centuries
B.C.—sites known as Nimrud and Khorsabad—as well as Hatra, a well-preserved
Roman-era city of temples. Videos put out by the Islamic State group showed its
militants blowing up or smashing relics and structures at the sites.
But
some of the relics from those sites had been moved long ago to the National
Museum. In its Assyrian Hall tower two great winged bulls with human heads,
protective deities known as Lamassu, framing a statue from the temple of Nabu,
the god of wisdom. Along the walls run bas-reliefs from the palace of King
Sargon in Khorsabad.
Rwandzi
said museums are more important than ever. "A nation without a museum is
like a human without eyes," he said.
Here
is a series of photos of the museum's halls and relics by Associated Press
photographers.
This file photo taken on Monday, Sept. 15, 2014, shows a detail of a statue of Lamassu, the great winged bull from the Assyrian period displayed at the Iraq National Museum in Baghdad. After the destruction wreaked on archaeological sites by Islamic State group, the collections at the Iraq
In this Sunday, March 13, 2016 photo, stone figures from the ancient site of Hatra line a corridor of the Iraq National Museum the Iraqi capital. They remain some of the only treasures from Hatra, which the Islamic State group destroyed along with several ancient sites in Iraq and Syria as part of its campaign to cleanse the territory it controls of items the extremists deem as non-Islamic. After the destruction wreaked on archaeological sites by Islamic State group, the collections at the Iraq
In this Sunday, March 13, 2016 photo, Iraqi workers mop the floor at the Assyrian Hall of the Iraq National Museum Baghdad. Assyria was a civilization located near the modern-day city of Mosul, now held by the Islamic State group, who published videos online showing the destruction of key Assyrian sites Nimrud and Hatra along with many other religious and cultural sites.(AP Photo/Maya Alleruzzo)
In this Monday, March 14, 2016 photo, Iraq's Culture Minister Firyad Rwandzi speaks to The Associated Press in Baghdad, Iraq. At a time when the Islamic State group has taken control of and destroyed many key archaeological sites in Iraq and Syria, Rwandzi says museums are more important than ever. "A nation without a museum is like a human without eyes," he said. (AP Photo/Maya Alleruzzo)
In this Wednesday, July 29, 2015 file photo, an Assyrian artifact is displayed at the Iraqi National Museum in Baghdad, Iraq. After the destruction wreaked on archaeological sites by Islamic State group, the collections at the Iraq
In this Sunday, March 13, 2016 photo, a detail of a stone wall panel fo at the Assyrian Hall of the Iraq National Museum Baghdad. Assyria was a civilization located near the modern-day city of Mosul, now held by the Islamic State group, who published videos online showing the destruction of key Assyrian sites Nimrud and Hatra along with many other religious and cultural sites.(AP Photo/Maya Alleruzzo)
This Saturday, March 19, 2016 photo shows an inaugural leaflet from the grand opening of the Iraq Museum on Nov. 9, 1966. Established after WW1, the country
In this Sunday, March 13, 2016 photo, two women visit the Islamic Hall of the Iraq National Museum the Iraqi capital. Iraq was home to some of the most important cities of early Islam including Kufa and Karbala, and Baghdad was the capital of the Abbasid Caliphate during its golden age in the 8th and 9th centuries. The Islamic hall displays pieces of Islamic art and architecture, including a burial casket of Imam Moussa Kadhim, a major figure in Shiite Islam. Elaborate stonework from the Grand Mosque in the northern city of Mosul, now under the Islamic State group
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