The so-called Islamic State (ISIS) released a video that shocked the
world last month by showing the fiery destruction of the Temple of
Baalshamin, one of the best-preserved ruins at the Syrian site of Palmyra.
Last weekend, explosions were reported at another Palmyra temple,
dedicated to the ancient god Baal; a United Nation agency says satellite
images show that larger temple has largely been destroyed.
The destruction is part of a propaganda campaign that includes videos of militants rampaging through Iraq's Mosul Museum with pickaxes and sledgehammers, and the dynamiting of centuries-old Christian and Muslim shrines.
ISIS controls large stretches of Syria, along with northern and
western Iraq. There's little to stop its militants from plundering and
destroying sites under their control in a region known as the cradle of
civilization.
The militant group is just one of many factions fighting for control
of Syria, where a civil war has left more than 230,000 dead and millions
more homeless.
The group claims the destruction of ancient sites is religiously
motivated; Its militants have targeted well-known ancient sites along
with more modern graves and shrines belonging to other Muslim sects,
citing idol worship to justify their actions. At the same time, ISIS has
used looting as a moneymaking venture to finance military operations.
“It’s both propagandistic and sincere,” says Columbia University historian Christopher Jones, who has chronicled the damage on his blog. “They see themselves as recapitulating the early history of Islam.”
A guide to cultural sites that ISIS has damaged or destroyed so far:
Palmyra
Palmyra thrived for centuries in the desert east of Damascus as an
oasis and stop for caravans on the Silk Road. Part of the Roman Empire,
it was a thriving, wealthy metropolis. The city-state reached its peak
in the late 3rd century, when it was ruled by Queen Zenobia and briefly
rebelled against Rome.
Zenobia failed, and Palmyra was re-conquered and destroyed by Roman
armies in A.D. 273. Its colonnaded avenues and impressive temples were
preserved by the desert climate, and in the 20th century the city was
one of Syria’s biggest tourist destinations.
ISIS seized the modern town of Palmyra and the ancient ruins nearby
were seized in May. The militants initially promised to leave the site’s
columns and temples untouched. Those promises were empty: In August, they publicly executed Khaled al-Asaad, a Syrian archaeologist who oversaw excavations at the site for decades, and hung his headless body from a column.
And the group released photos last month of militants rigging the
1,900-year-old Temple of Baalshamin with explosives and blowing it up.
It was one of Palmyra’s best-preserved buildings, originally dedicated
to a Phoenician storm god. Now it is nothing but rubble.
Just days later, explosions were reported at the Temple of Baal, a nearby structure that was one of the site’s largest, and a United Nations agency says the building was flattened.
Mar Elian Monastery
The Christian monastery was captured in August, when ISIS militants
captured the Syrian town of al-Qaryatain near Palmyra. Dedicated to a
4th-century saint, it was an important pilgrimage site and sheltered
hundreds of Syrian Christians. Bulldozers were reportedly used to topple
its walls, and ISIS posted pictures of the destruction on Twitter.
Apamea
A rich Roman-era trading city, Apamea
has been badly looted since the beginning of Syria's civil war, before
ISIS appeared. Satellite imagery shows dozens of pits dug across the
site; previously unknown Roman mosaics have reportedly been excavated
and removed for sale. ISIS is said to take a cut from sales of ancient
artifacts, making tens of millions of dollars to fund their operations.
Dura-Europos
A Greek settlement on the Euphrates not far from Syria's border with Iraq, Dura-Europos
later became one of Rome's easternmost outposts. It housed the world's
oldest known Christian church, a beautifully decorated synagogue, and
many other temples and Roman-era buildings. Satellite imagery shows a
cratered landscape inside the city's mud-brick walls, evidence of
widespread destruction by looters.
Mari
Mari
flourished in the Bronze Age, between 3000 and 1600 B.C. Archaeologists
have discovered palaces, temples, and extensive archives written on
clay tablets that shed light on the early days of civilization in the
region. According to reports from locals and satellite imagery, the
site, especially the royal palace, is being looted systematically.
Hatra
Built in the third century B.C., Hatra
was the capital of an independent kingdom on the outskirts of the Roman
Empire. Its combination of Greek- and Roman-influenced architecture and
Eastern features testify to its prominence as a trading center on the
Silk Road. Hatra was named a UNESCO World Heritage site in 1985.
In 2014, Hatra was taken over by ISIS and reportedly used as an ammo
dump and training camp. A video released by ISIS in April 2015 showed
fighters using sledgehammers and automatic weapons to destroy sculptures
in several of the site’s largest buildings. "The destruction of Hatra
marks a turning point in the appalling strategy of cultural cleansing
underway in Iraq," UNESCO head Irina Bokova said at the time.
Nineveh
Ancient Assyria was one of the first true empires, expanding
aggressively across the Middle East and controlling a vast stretch of
the ancient world between 900 and 600 B.C. The Assyrian kings ruled
their realm from a series of capitals in what is today northern Iraq. Nineveh was one of them, flourishing under the Assyrian emperor Sennacherib around 700 B.C. At one point, Nineveh was the largest city in the world.
Its location on the outskirts of Mosul—part of the modern city is
built over Nineveh's ruins—put it in ISIS's crosshairs when the group
took over the city in 2014. Many of the site's sculptures were housed in
the Mosul Museum (see entry below), and some were damaged during the
rampage through the museum documented on video. Men were also shown
smashing half-human, half-animal guardian statues called lamassus on
Nineveh's ancient Nirgal Gate. “I’m not sure there’s much left to
destroy in Mosul,” says Columbia’s Jones.
Mosul Museum and Libraries
Reports of looting at Mosul's libraries and universities began to
surface almost as soon as ISIS occupied the city last summer.
Centuries-old manuscripts were stolen, and thousands of books
disappeared into the shadowy international art market. Mosul
University's library was burned in December. In late February, the ISIS campaign escalated:
Mosul's central public library, a landmark built in 1921, was rigged
with explosives and razed, together with thousands of manuscripts and
instruments used by Arab scientists.
The book burning coincided with the release of the video showing ISIS
fighters rampaging through the Mosul Museum, toppling statues and
smashing others with hammers. The museum was Iraq's second largest,
after the Iraq Museum in Baghdad. Statues included masterpieces from
Hatra and Nineveh.
Margarete van Ess, head of the German Archaeological Institute's Iraq
field office, says that a trained eye can tell that about half of the
artifacts destroyed in the video are copies; many of the originals are
in the Iraq Museum.
Nimrud
Nimrud
was the first Assyrian capital, founded 3,200 years ago. Its rich
decoration reflected the empire's power and wealth. The site was
excavated beginning in the 1840s by British archaeologists, who sent
dozens of its massive stone sculptures to museums around the world,
including New York's Metropolitan Museum of Art and the British Museum
in London. Many originals remained in Iraq.
The site itself is massive: An earthen wall surrounds 890 acres. The
Iraqi Ministry of Tourism and Antiquities says ISIS bulldozed parts of
the site, but the extent of the damage isn't yet clear. Some of the city
was never uncovered and remains underground—protected, one hopes.
Khorsabad
Khorsabad
is another ancient Assyrian capital, a few miles from Mosul. The palace
there was built between 717 and 706 B.C. by Assyria's King Sargon II.
Its reliefs and statues were remarkably well preserved, with traces of
the original paint still decorating depictions of Assyrian victories and
royal processions.
Most of the reliefs and many of the statues were removed during
French excavations in the mid-1800s and by teams from Chicago's Oriental
Institute in the 1920s and '30s, and are now in the Iraq Museum in
Baghdad as well as in Chicago and the Louvre in Paris. It's not clear
what part of the site ISIS targeted.
"We don't have photography showing how far the damage might go," van
Ess says. "The only information right now is from local people and Iraqi
antiquities ministry."
Mar Behnam Monastery
Established in the 4th century, the monastery was dedicated to an
early Christian saint. The holy site, maintained since the late 1800s by
Syriac Catholic monks, survived the Mongol hordes in the 1200s but fell
to ISIS in March. The extremists used explosives to destroy the saint’s
tomb and its elaborate carvings and decorations.
Mosque of the Prophet Yunus
Mosul's Mosque of the Prophet Yunus was dedicated to the biblical
figure Jonah, considered a prophet by many Muslims. But ISIS adheres to
an extreme interpretation of Islam that sees veneration of prophets like
Jonah as forbidden. On July 24, ISIS fighters evacuated the mosque and demolished it with explosives.
Like many of Iraq's sites, the mosque was a layer cake of history,
built on top of a Christian church that in turn had been built on one of
the two mounds that made up the Assyrian city of Nineveh.
Imam Dur Mausoleum
The Imam Dur Mausoleum,
not far from the city of Samarra, was a magnificent specimen of
medieval Islamic architecture and decoration. It was blown up last
October.
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