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Royal Museums of Art and History, Brussels Inv. O.276
Fragment of a large stone slab which originates from the Neo Assyrian palace city of Nimrud (Calah or Kalhu) in present Iraq. The slab was originally displayed in the so-called North West Palace. The cuneiform inscription engraved in the stone is a rare variant to the Standard Inscription of Ashurnasirpal II, only 9 other examples are known (see K. Grayson 1991: Assyrian Rulers of the Early First Millennium BC I (1114-859 BC), Toronto-Buffalo-London: A.0.101.35).
The 14 lines of the text give the royal names and titles of Ashurnasirpal, it lists the territories of his empire and describes the building activities at Nimrud commissioned by this Assyrian king.
Several of these Nimrud cuneiform inscriptions can be discovered the Near East gallery of the museum.
(model based on 186 NIKON D800 pictures, processing with Photoscan (v1.0.4.1847), by h.hameeuw@kmkg-mrah.be)
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