TechLost city of Assyria: Groundbreaking discoveries in Khorsabad

Lost city of Assyria: Groundbreaking discoveries in Khorsabad

An international team of archaeologists has begun research in the historic region of Mesopotamia after the end of the Islamic State occupation. They have uncovered an entire forgotten metropolis underground, including a gate, gardens, and a 127-room villa twice the size of the White House.

Lamassu Statue from Ancient Assyria, Louvre
Lamassu Statue from Ancient Assyria, Louvre
Images source: © Licensor | Thomas R. James, Wikipedia
Amanda Grzmiel

All these structures had been hidden and forgotten for nearly three thousand years. However, a new archaeological mission revealed the ancient capital of Assyria, Khorsabad, deep underground. According to the American Geophysical Union (AGU), the international research team used a magnetometer in extremely challenging conditions and discovered a city water gate from 2,700 years ago, royal gardens, and five large buildings, including a villa with 127 rooms that is twice as large as the White House.

Remote sensing has replaced standard excavations

This could have been what King Sargon's palace looked like in Khorsabad, 1905.
This could have been what King Sargon's palace looked like in Khorsabad, 1905.© Licensor | Wikipedia

The research team, led by Jörg Fassbinder from Ludwig-Maximilians-University in Munich, examined the area of Khorsabad using a magnetometer. Their findings challenge previous conclusions that the ancient capital of Assyria remained undeveloped in the 8th century BC.

"All of this was found with no excavation," said Jörg Fassbinder, a geophysicist at Ludwig-Maximilians-University in Munich and the lead author of the research presented on December 9th at the AGU 2024 annual meeting. The research has not yet been published in a peer-reviewed journal. According to the researchers, the magnetometer provides a more comprehensive reconstruction than traditional excavations and does not cause any damage to the sites.

Fassbinder's team conducted a remote sensing operation in 2022. Instead of mounting the magnetometer on a vehicle or drone, which might attract unwanted attention, Fassbinder and his fellow researcher carried the 15-kilogram device back and forth over the buried capital. They worked for seven days, covering 30 hectares—less than 10% of the site. "Every day we discovered something new," Fassbinder stated in a release.

The construction of the ancient capital of Assyria - Khorsabad (originally Dur-Sharrukin, "Fortress of Sargon") was initiated by King Sargon II in 713 BC. After Sargon II died in 705 BC, the capital was moved to Nineveh, and the city fell into oblivion. In the 19th and 20th centuries, French and American archaeological missions uncovered aspects of Assyria and the palace in Khorsabad, including the iconic "Lamassu" statues with human heads, now exhibited in the Louvre. However, the city's layout remained unknown, leading to speculation that Khorsabad was never completed. Only after the Islamic State withdrew from the region in 2017 could archaeologists resume their research.

What do we already know about Assyria and the forgotten capital?

Sargon II, king of ancient Assyria with his son
Sargon II, king of ancient Assyria with his son© Licensor | The British Museum, Wikipedia

The discoveries in Khorsabad mark a significant advancement in studying ancient Assyria. The findings indicate that Khorsabad was a powerful, thriving capital, much more developed than previously assumed. Prior research focused mainly on monumental architecture, which limited the understanding of the lives of ordinary inhabitants. The question remains whether archaeologists will now conduct traditional excavations to physically access the underground or if remote discoveries will suffice.

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