Assyrians

Although Assyrian civilization, centred in the fertile Tigris
valley of northern Iraq, can be traced back to at least the third
millennium BC, some of its most spectacular remains date to the
first millennium BC when Assyria dominated the Middle East.
The Assyrian king Ashurnasirpal II (883-859 BC) established
Nimrud as his capital. Many of the principal rooms and courtyards
of his palace were decorated with gypsum slabs carved in relief
with images of the king as high priest and as victorious hunter and
warrior. Many of these are displayed in the British
Museum.
Later kings continued to embellish Nimrud, including
Ashurnasirpal II’s son, Shalmaneser III who erected the Black
Obelisk depicting the presentation of tribute from Israel.
During the eighth and seventh centuries BC Assyrian kings
conquered the region from the Persian Gulf to the borders of Egypt.
The most ambitious building of this period was the palace of king
Sennacherib (704-681 BC) at Nineveh. The reliefs from Nineveh in
the British Museum include a depiction of the siege and capture of
Lachish in Judah.
The finest carvings, however, are the famous lion hunt reliefs
from the North Palace at Nineveh belonging to Ashurbanipal (668-631
BC). This king is also renowned for the vast library he created at
Nineveh.
Copies of some of the greatest literary works from ancient Iraq,
including the “Epic of Gilgamesh” as well as writings on
divination, astrology, medicine and mathematics, are among the
thousands of tablets now in the British Museum.
Image caption: The Dying Lion, a stone
panel from the North Palace of Ashurbanipal
Nineveh, northern Iraq. Neo-Assyrian, around 645 BC