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Discovery of the Library of the Temple of Nebo at Nineveh.
In the spring of 1852 Layard, assisted by H. Rassam, continued
the excavation of the "South West Palace" at Kuyûnjik. In one part of the
building he found two small chambers, opening into each other, which he called
the "chamber of records," or "the house of the rolls." He gave them this name
because "to the height of a foot or more from the floor they were entirely
filled" with inscribed baked clay tablets and fragments of tablets. Some tablets
were complete, but by far the larger number of them had been broken up into many
fragments, probably by the falling in of the roof and upper parts of the walls
of the buildings when the city was pillaged and set on fire by the Medes and
Babylonians. The tablets that were kept in these chambers numbered many
thousands. Besides those that were found in them by Layard, large numbers have
been dug out all along the corridor which passed the chambers and led to
the river, and a considerable number were kicked on to the river front by the
feet of the terrified fugitives from the palace when it was set on fire. The
tablets found by Layard were of different sizes; the largest were rectangular,
flat on one side and convex on the other, and measured about 9 ins. by 6½ ins.,
and the smallest were about an inch square. The importance of this "find" was
not sufficiently recognized at the time, for the tablets, which were thought to
be decorated pottery, were thrown into baskets and sent down the river loose on
rafts to Basrah, whence they were despatched to England on a British man
o' war. During their transport from Nineveh to England they suffered more damage
from want of packing than they had suffered from the wrath of the Medes. Among
the complete tablets that were found in the two chambers several had colophons
inscribed or scratched upon them, and when these were deciphered by Rawlinson,
Hincks and Oppert a few years later, it became evident that they had formed part
of the library of the Temple of Nebo at Nineveh.
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