Tushhan


Tushhan is a Kurdish village known as or by residents and It was an ancient city that Assyrian have ruled for some time in Mesopotamia. It was a provincial capital in the upper Tigris river valley, on the south bank and inhabited since the Mitanni period, and mainly during the Neo-Assyrian period during the Iron Age.
It is now believed to be located at the site of the modern Ziyaret Tepe, Diyarbakır Province, Turkey.

History

The site of Ziyaret Tepe was occupied as early as the Early Bronze Age. Most of the urban development uncovered to date is from the Late Bronze and Iron Ages. In late Assyrian times it was known as Tushhan, until circa 612 BC to 605 BC, when that empire fell. The site is expected to be inundated by the Ilısu Dam around 2014.

Archaeology

Work at the location began with 3 years of surface survey and remote sensing in 1997
From 2000 until 2014 the site was being excavated by a team directed by Timothy Matney of the University of Akron.
An important assemblage of cuneiform clay tablets was found there, translated by Simo Parpola of Helsinki University.

Controversial Neo-Assyrian tablet

A cuneiform tablet was discovered in 2009 at Ziyaret Tepe that contained a list of around 60 names. It was a list of women deported from an unknown location around 800 BC, during the Neo Assyrian Empire period. According to John MacGinnis of the University of Cambridge McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research, these women may have come from around the Zagros Mountains. He said that the most likely possibility was that these names belonged to Shubrians, a people speaking a dialect of Hurrian. This contention received little support.

Üçtepe

Ziyaret Tepe is quite close to the town of Üçtepe, located near Bismil, where in 1861 John George Taylor found the famous Kurkh Monoliths, Assyrian monuments that contain a description of the Battle of Qarqar — of interest to biblical and Ancient Near East studies. In fact, Üçtepe was believed to have been the location of Tushan by some scholars in the past. Today the monoliths are located at the British Museum.