In the Louvre exhibition, this can be seen in the basalt head of a lion from
Carchemish (Fig.
The Viceroy of
Carchemish, as Bryce calls him, was the king of kings for the Syrian region and served a bureaucratic function as the go between for the Great King with his subjects.
Wilkinson, Peltenburg, and Wilkinson present this summary of the 2006-2010 Land of
Carchemish Project, applying remote sensing techniques for the first time to the larger area around the ancient city of
Carchemish on the present day Turkish-Syrian border.
Presenting a thoughtful and thorough analysis, and heavily illustrated with superb drawings, plans, and b&w plates of the sculpture, this volume describes the meaning and possible ceremonial uses of monumental sculpture at the Iron Age sites of
Carchemish and Zincirli.
Both men wrote about their explorations: Lawrence in Crusader Castles,
Carchemish and The Wilderness of Zin; Almasy in scholarly papers and monographs.
Following the battle of
Carchemish (605 B.C.E.) a terrible chaos ensued ("the shroud that is cast over all peoples" (25:7) with the Babylonians becoming preeminent.
This time, she visited the ancient Hittite city of
Carchemish and recorded countless inscriptions there, then stumbled upon the spectacular yet undocumented fortress ruin of Ukhaidir where she set about taking photographs and drawing precise plans.
His early work in the field included excavations at
Carchemish (1912-14) and the Egyptian site of Tel-el-Amarna (1921-22).
Then, in 1909, she set out on a seven-month trip to view little-known archaeological remains at
Carchemish, Babylon, Seleucia and Ctesiphon.
Lawrence attended Oxford University, where he joined an expedition excavating the Hittite settlement of
Carchemish on the Euphrates, working there from 1911 to 1914.
Born at Tremadoc, Caernarvonshire (August 15, 1888), the natural son of Sir Robert Chapman by his daughters' governess, Sara Maden, with whom he had eloped; educated at Jesus College, Oxford, and traveled to the Middle East to study Crusader castles (1909), the subject of his thesis when he took first-class honors in modern history (1910); obtained a traveling endowment from Magdalen College, which enabled him to join the expedition excavating
Carchemish (Barak) on the Euphrates (1911-1914); explored northern Sinai with Leonard Woolley and Capt.