Gulf Today

UK returns 3,000-year-old tablet to Iraq

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A 3,000-year-old carved stone tablet from Babylonia, which promises a curse on those who would destroy it, is to be flown home from Britain ater being looted during the Iraq War.

British Museum boss Hartwig Fischer handed over the priceless work to Iraqi Ambassador Salih Husain Ali during a ceremony on Tuesday ater museum experts had verified its provenance.

“It is a very important piece of Iraq’s cultural heritage,” said Fischer, praising the “extraordin­ary and tireless work” of border officials.

They spoted the object at London’s Heathrow airport in 2012 and contacted the museum ater being presented with fake documents.

“They seized this item when they saw it at a British port and several years later, ater a lot of legal work, we are able to effect this transfer,” said Michael Ellis, Britain’s Minister for Arts, Heritage and Tourism.

“It’s a very important and significan­t moment.” It is still not clear how the object was taken out of Iraq, “but we believe it was probably stolen about 15 years ago during troubles in Iraq,” he said.

The kudurru is a ceremonial stone tablet recording the legal giting of land by the Babylonian king Nebuchadne­zzar I to one of his subjects in return for distinguis­hed service, according to curator Jonathan Taylor.

On one side are depictions of the great Babylonian gods Enlil and Marduk, and on the other, legal text writen in cuneiform, the Babylonian alphabet.

Taylor said the object also carried “terrible curses” for anyone trying to claim the land or damage the tablet.

Fewer that 200 such objects are known to exist, and the one handed over on Tuesday was broken in antiquity and eroded, presenting a problem for sleuths trying to establish its history.

“The basic identifica­tion is quite straighfor­ward,” said Taylor.

“More difficult is tying down exactly who the king is and what the circumstan­ces are, for that we need to read the inscriptio­n and it’s quite worn, there’s a lot of damage in the middle of the text,” he said.

“It’s old fashioned bookwork. We have a few clues.”

They establishe­d the king was Nebuchadne­zzar I, “a kind of national hero, a legend in his own life time.”

The stone is thought to have originally been on display in the ancient city of Nippur, now in central Iraq.

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