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The Discovery of the Tablets at Nineveh by Layard, Rassam and
Smith.
In 1845–47 and again in 1849–51 Mr. (later Sir) A. H. Layard
carried out a series of excavations among the ruins of the ancient city of
Nineveh, "that great city, wherein are more than sixteen thousand persons that
cannot discern between their right hand and their left; and also much
cattle" (Jonah iv, II). Its ruins lie on the left or east bank of the Tigris,
exactly opposite the town of Al-Mawsil, or Môsul, which was founded by the
Sassanians and marks the site of Western Nineveh. At first Layard thought that
these ruins were not those of Nineveh, which he placed at Nimrûd, about 20 miles
downstream, but of one of the other cities that were builded by Asshur (see
Gen. x, 11, 12). Thanks, however, to Christian, Roman and Muhammadan tradition,
there is no room for doubt about it, and the site of Nineveh has always been
known. The fortress which the Arabs built there in the seventh century was known
as "Kal'at-Nînawî, i.e., "Nineveh Castle," for many centuries, and all
the Arab geographers agree in saying that tile mounds opposite Môsul contain the
ruins of the palaces and walls of Nineveh. And few of them fail to mention that
close by them is "Tall Nabi Yûnis," i.e., the Hill from which the Prophet
Jonah preached repentance to the inhabitants of Nineveh, that "exceeding great
city of three days' journey" (Jonah iii, 3). Local tradition also declares that
the prophet was buried in the Hill, and his supposed tomb is shown there to this
day.
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