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From 1923 to 1933, the Chicago Field Museum and the University of
Oxford conducted archaeological excavations at the site of Kish,
located on the floodplain of the Euphrates River in modern Iraq
approximately 80 kilometres south of Baghdad. Over the course of
ten years of work, the expedition explored seventeen different
mounds both inside and outside the ancient boundaries of Kish. The
finds were divided at the end of each season, with the Iraq Museum
retaining half of the objects and any one-of-a-kind items and the
two excavating institutions splitting the remainder. Beginning in
2004, the Field Museum undertook a re-evaluation of its Kish
holdings. To highlight new research and insights into the material
culture from Kish and our understanding of the importance of the
site to Mesopotamian archaeology, the Field Museum held a symposium
in 2008 that brought together an international group of scholars
who presented papers on various aspects of the ancient city. This
volume, which grew out of that symposium, presents a wide array of
studies on the excavated material remains from Kish, including
cuneiform texts, animal figurines, human remains, lithics, figural
stucco wall decorations, and more.
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