Monday, January 26, 2026

More on the (proposed) drawing of Hezekiah in Sennacherib's palace

DEBATING A DESTROYED DRAWING: Smashed by ISIS, a 2,700-year-old carving may have been the earliest-known depiction of Jerusalem. New research suggests a long-overlooked bas-relief in King Sennacherib’s palace in modern-day Mosul, Iraq, destroyed with other priceless artifacts, showed the Temple Mount and Bible’s King Hezekiah (Rossella Tercatin, Times of Israel).
Among the treasures broken in the terror group’s campaign of destruction was a slab of stone that had adorned Sennacherib’s opulent throne room, which scholars long ago concluded depicts the Assyrian siege of the Philistine city of Eltekeh.

But new research analyzing photographs and drawings of the largely overlooked bas-relief before its destruction suggests that it actually shows Jerusalem, making it the oldest-known depiction of the city.

Current scholarship holds that the Madaba map, a mosaic found in a sixth-century CE Byzantine church in modern-day Jordan, is the oldest rendering of Jerusalem to survive to modern times. But the study, published in October in the prestigious Journal of Near Eastern Studies by University of South Africa researcher Stephen Compton, suggests that the southwest palace in Nineveh was home to a depiction 1,200 years older than the one in Madaba.

I have already noted this story here. For more on Sennacherib's siege of Jerusalem, its archaeology, and what may have happened there, follow the links from there.

This ToI article includes an interview with the researcher, responses from other specialists, and an update on the ongoing reconstruction of Nineveh's antiquities after the desecration by ISIS.

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