ISIS attack couldn’t ‘erase all that history’
| | Monday, October 31, 2022 | | | | |
| PHOTOGRAPH BY ZAID AL-OBEIDI, AFP/GETTY | | Ninevah once was the biggest city in the world—and a center of stunning, rule-breaking art. Then it became a target—first pillaged by Babylonians and, more recently, pummeled by the Islamic State.
But seven awe-inspiring works have been uncovered by archaeologists digging around the ruins of an ancient palace gate destroyed by ISIS in 2016. The gypsum panels (one shown above), found behind a sealed door underground, had not been seen since the palace was sacked 2,634 years ago.
The discovery brings joy to those recovering from the horror of ISIS. There is no way, says one art and archaeological specialist, “that you can erase all that history.”
Read the full story here.
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| PHOTOGRAPH BY MICHAEL DANTI | | Everlasting story: This slab buried on its side, like the other art just discovered, tells an ancient story. This work depicts Assyrian archers; the conical pattern in the background indicates they are in a hilly or mountainous environment. Read more. | | | |
| PHOTOGRAPH BY TIMOTHY FADEK/CORBIS/GETTY IMAGES | | | |
| PHOTOGRAPH VIA CHICAGO SUN-TIMES, AP PHOTO | | Never forget: Mamie Till (pictured above) did not want the world to forget the brutal lynching of her young son, Emmett. She ordered that his casket be opened at the funeral, so that all could witness the brutality of a gang of white men in Mississippi. The murder—and Mamie Till’s bravery—helped spur the civil rights movement and is the subject of a new movie, Nat Geo reports. | | | |
| PHOTOGRAPH BY JODI COBB, NAT GEO IMAGE COLLECTION | | | |
Readers, a staggering number of pumpkins end up in landfills. How do you avoid pumpkin waste—compost them, eat the seeds, make a pie or bread? Let us know at sarah.gibbens@natgeo.com — and Happy Halloween!
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