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Kish (Sumer) - Wikipedia
Kish (Sumerian: Kiš; transliteration: Kiš ki; cuneiform: 𒆧𒆠; [1] Akkadian: Kiššatu, [2] near modern Tell al-Uhaymir) is an important archaeological site in Babil Governorate (Iraq), located 80 km (50 mi) south of Baghdad and 12 km (7.5 mi) east of the ancient city of Babylon. The Ubaid period site of Ras al-Amiyah is 8 km (5.0 mi) away.
(PDF) Analysis, Typology, and Chronology of Stuccos in the Palace …
Jun 30, 2018 · The stucco decorations of Kish sits are generally obtained from the courtyard of the palace no. 1, and the torso of Šāp r II, along with a number of engaged -columns were discovered from the ...
Kish – Sasanika: Late Antique Near East Project
Stucco, Jewelry (two solid gold earrings, three figure rings with carnelian and rock crystal), Ceramics: Fieldwork:
Kish: Was This Early Sumerian City Its Own Distinct Civilization?
May 15, 2023 · In modern-day Tall al-Uhaimer, Iraq, sit the remains of an ancient Mesopotamian city-state known as Kish. Kish is located 80km (50mi) south of Baghdad and 12km (7mi) east of the ancient city of Babylon. Kish is believed to have been occupied as early as the Ubaid period (c.5300 – 4300 BC) through the 7th century AD.
基什 - 维基百科,自由的百科全书
基什 (苏美尔语: Kiš, 楔形文字: 𒆧𒆠[1], 阿卡德语:kiššatu [2],英語: Kish)是古代 苏美尔 城邦。 位于今 伊拉克 中部的乌哈亚米尔遗址(Tell al-Uhaymir)附近,距 巴比伦 遗址东12公里, 巴格达 以南80公里。 在苏美尔时代,基什城邦有着重要的意义。 它位于苏美尔地区的北部。 幼发拉底河 与 底格里斯河 在此处距离很近,控制了基什,就意味着控制了两河流域的咽喉。 按照《苏美尔王表》,大洪水之后,王权自天而降,第一个就落到了基什,称为“基什第一王朝”,这表 …
基什 - 百度百科
基什(Kish),古代美索不达米亚重要城邦。 位于巴比伦城东约15公里处,其遗址在今伊拉克乌海米尔,1912年法国人H.de热努亚克首次发掘,1922~1923年英国牛津大学阿什莫利安博物馆和美国芝加哥自然史博物馆联合考古队再次进行了发掘工作。
Ancient Kish Including Tell Uhaimir and Tell Ingharra in Sumer
Mar 23, 2020 · Kish is the collective name for at least 40 tells (mounds) arranged in an oval measuring 1.5 by 5 miles. The important mounds are called Uhaimir and Ingharra. Occupations span the period from circa 3000 BC to AD 650. The major excavation was the joint Oxford-Field Museum of Chicago Expedition of 1923-1933.
great Taq-i-Kisra was entirely covered with stucco and some of it was very richly carved.2 Masses of stucco recovered at Ctesiphon, Kish, Damghan, and by com-mercial diggers at various sites in Persia show how highly developed and how important stucco had become, at least by the middle of the Sasanian period.3
Stucco animal figurines in Tepe Hissar include animals like lion, deer, hind, ram, boar. In this fragments, animal reliefs are presented alone or in combination with geometrical and floral motifs.
STUCCO DECORATION – Encyclopaedia Iranica
Stucco (plaster, painted plaster, gačbori), a versatile medium of decoration, though not unknown in earlier periods in Persia, was widely used from the Parthian until the late Qajar periods in all types of architecture (see GAČ-BORĪ). This entry focuses on the Parthian and Sasanian periods and hints at the continuity in the Islamic period.