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ORIENTAL INSTITUTE of the University of Chicago, a major
research center devoted to the study of the history, languages, and archaeology of the ancient Near East and Egypt.
The origins of the Oriental Institute can be traced back
to 1892 and the foundation of the new University of Chicago in its
present location in Hyde Park (Daniels 1979). The first president of
the University, William Rainey Harper was also a professor of Semitic
languages. Upon moving from Yale to Chicago to assume his new position,
Harper invited a pupil of his, James Henry Breasted, and his younger
Assyriologist brother Robert Francis Harper, to join him in the new
Department of Semitic Languages.
William Harper nurtured a strong interest in the ancient
Near East (called the Orient in those days) and set Oriental studies as
a major goal for the University of Chicago. In doing so, in addition to
his own intellectual aspirations, Harper was also joining up a trend
that was sweeping across American institutions of higher education in
the latter part of the nineteenth century (Kuklick 1996), so that
Chicago would not fall behind other major schools such as Harvard,
Yale, Johns Hopkins, and especially the University of Pennsylvania,
which were already actively engaged in Oriental studies (Meade 1974).
During his first few years as the president of the
University of Chicago, Harper raised funds for a series of new
buildings, including one to house his own Department. In 1896, the
Department of Semitic Languages moved into the Haskell Oriental Museum
whose construction had just finished with financial support from John
D. Rockefeller, Sr. and Mrs. Caroline Haskell.
With a museum in need of antiquities and one of the
strongest departments in the country in those days, which included an
Egyptologist (Breasted) and two Assyriologists (Robert Harper and Ira
Price), William Harper personally traveled to Constantinople in 1903 to
negotiate with the Ottoman officials to secure a permit for excavations
at Bismaya (ancient Adab), a Sumerian site in southern Mesopotamia. The
next year, the University of Chicago Oriental Exploration Fund
commenced its first season of fieldwork in the Near East at Adab, with
Robert Harper as epigrapher (Banks 1912). Two years later, an
Epigraphic Survey was launched as part of an ambitious project to
record and publish all the Pharaonic inscriptions from Egypt and Nubia.
While the Adab expedition soon encountered a series of problems and
came to a halt, the Epigraphic Survey, headed by James Henry Breasted,
flourished and turned into the most enduring American expedition to
Egypt.
The success of the Epigraphic Survey can largely be
attributed to the virtuosity of James Henry Breasted (1865-1935), the
father of American Egyptology and founder of the Oriental Institute
(Breasted 1943). Originally trained as a pharmacist, Breasted later
turned to Oriental studies and after earning an M.A. at Yale under
William Harper, he traveled to Berlin to study Egyptology. Upon
receiving his Ph.D. in 1894, Breasted was appointed by Harper the
professor of Egyptology at the University of Chicago, the first such
chair in the U.S.A. After Harper passed away in 1906, Breasted became
the chairman of the Department of Semitic Languages and, despite
financial constraints imposed by the University’s new administration,
pushed forward with Near Eastern studies.
Building upon Harper’s ideas, Breasted stressed the
significance of the ancient civilizations of the Near East and Egypt
and emphasized their profound contributions to the foundations of the
Western civilization. His comprehensive and absorbing book Ancient Times
(Breasted 1916) - in which he coined the famous term “The Fertile
Crescent” to refer to the region from the eastern Mediterranean coast
up to southern Anatolia to Mesopotamia and western Persia - became an
instant best-seller, fueling interest in the Near East in the U.S.A.
Breasted further underlined the importance of a holistic
study, incorporating textual and archaeological evidence in its
broadest sense, in order to arrive at a better understanding of
Oriental civilizations. Breasted envisioned a scientific center with
philologists, archaeologists, and historians where these scholars could
work together towards the common goal of a more in-depth understanding
of Oriental civilizations (Breasted 1922).
The momentum arrived in 1919, when Breasted persuaded John
D. Rockefeller, Jr., to contribute a generous sum towards the
foundation of the Oriental Institute of the University of Chicago
(hereafter OI). To initiate the OI, in 1920 Breasted personally led a
reconnaissance mission to Mesopotamia, Syria, Palestine, and Egypt to
acquire artifacts for the OI Museum and to search for promising sites
for excavations.
With the completion of its new building in 1931, the OI
moved into its permanent headquarters on the southeast corner of East
58th Street and South University Avenue. As part of expanding the OI’s
overseas outreach, in 1924, the Epigraphic Survey established a
permanent headquarters in Luxor (the Chicago House) from which work on
Egyptian monuments has continued to the present.
Breasted laid the groundwork for a number of major long-term projects of philological nature at the OI, first and foremost the Chicago Assyrian Dictionary
(commenced in 1921, expected to be completed by 2006) (Reiner 2002).
This initiative was followed in the following decades by the Chicago Hittite Dictionary and the Chicago Demotic Dictionary, transforming the OI into the undisputed center for the study of ancient Near Eastern languages. The Chicago Assyrian Dictionary
brought together a stellar group of scholars, many expatriates from
Europe, who proved to be instrumental in promoting Near Eastern studies
in the U.S.A. and training the early generations of American students
of the ancient Near East. The most notable of this group included D. D.
Luckenbill, Arno Poebel, Edward Chiera, A. Leo Oppenheim, Thorkild
Jacobsen, and Ignace J. Gelb (Assyriology), Benno Landsberger and
Samuel N. Kramer (Sumerology), George G. Cameron and Richard T. Hallock
(Elamitology), Albert T. Olmstead and Nelson Debevoise (ancient
history), and Hans Güterbock (Hittitology).
An institute of this caliber required a comprehensive
publications program. While at Yale, William Harper had founded the
journal Hebraica in 1884. He transferred Hebraica to the University of Chicago where it was renamed American Journal of Semitic Languages and Literatures in 1895 and Journal of Near Eastern Studies in 1941. Over the years, JNES assumed a vital position in the field as the flagship journal for Near Eastern studies in the U.S.A. While AJSL and later JNES
continued to publish scholarly papers of analytical nature, Breasted
felt the need to launch publications series devoted to straightforward
philological and archaeological studies. In consultation with his
editorial staff, he therefore introduced five series of publications:
1. Oriental Institute Communications (OIC) to present preliminary field reports in a non-technical language to a general audience; 2. Oriental Institute Publications (OIP) as specialized and detailed reports of field expeditions; 3. Studies in Ancient Oriental Civilization (SAOC) as collections of papers discussing a certain topic; 4. Assyriological Studies (AS) on presentation and discussion of topics based on cuneiform sources; 5. Ancient Records
(AR) presenting the English translation of ancient documents. More
recently, other series have been added to the OI publications,
including Oriental Institute Essays (OIE) described as “monographs on special subjects, comprehensive in scope and interpretive in character”; and the Oriental Institute Museum Publications,
including “illustrated educational brochures, catalogues, pamphlets,
and books describing the various Near Eastern Collections in the OI
Museum” (for a comprehensive and annotated list of OI publications up
to 1991 see Holland 1991).
With philological research at the OI well underway and an
extensive publications program, Breasted turned his attention to
archaeology, somewhat eclipsed after the failure of the Adab expedition
and World War I. In 1925, the OI launched an ambitious series of
excavations at the site of Megiddo in Palestine that, under a series of
directors, especially Gordon Loud, cleared a large portion of the site
prior to the outbreak of World War II (Lamon and Shipton 1939; Loud
1948). The Hittite Survey (1926-27) and the Anatolian Expedition
(1927-1934), both under Hans Henning von der Osten, surveyed parts of
central Anatolia and explored the sites of Alishar Höyük, Kerkenesdag,
Gavurkale, and Terzili Hamam (cf. von der Osten 1927, 1932). In
Mesopotamia proper, the OI resumed excavations at Khorsabad in 1928.
These excavations continued until 1935 under Edward Chiera and Gordon
Loud, clearing parts of the capital city of Sargon II (Loud 1936; Loud
and Altman 1938). From 1929 to 1931, Chiera was assisted by a young
Pinhas Pierre Delougaz (1906-1975), who later traveled south to join
the Diyala project. The winged human-headed bull now forming the
centerpiece of the OI Museum’s Mesopotamian gallery was discovered
during these excavations and shipped to Chicago by Delougaz. In
conjunction with the OI project in Khorsabad, Thorkild Jacobsen and
Seton Lloyd conducted a study of the Assyrian aqueduct system, the
first example of a landscape archaeology research combining
archaeological and epigraphic evidence (Jacobsen and Lloyd 1935; Ur
2005).
The most important OI project in Mesopotamia in pre-World
War II years was in the Diyala region where, from 1930 to 1937, a large
and well-equipped OI team conducted a series of large-scale excavations
at the sites of Tell Asmar (ancient Eshnunna), Tell Agrab, Khafajeh,
and Ischali in the Diyala region to the northeast of Baghdad. The main
reasons for choosing this region, as opposed to southern Mesopotamia
where most excavations were carried out in those days, were the
unexplored nature of the Diyala compared to southern and northern
Mesopotamia, and the flow of an increasing number of objects from this
region to the antiquities market. Further, Edward Chiera had already
picked up from the surface of Tell Asmar some inscribed bricks with the
names of the rulers of Eshnunna, a discovery that pointed to the
significance of the site and the region. The Diyala expedition brought
together a group of remarkable scholars: Henri Frankfort as the
director of expedition, Thorkild Jacobsen as epigrapher, and Gordon
Loud (who left in 1935 to direct the ongoing excavations at Megiddo),
Seton Lloyd, and Pinhas Delougaz as archaeologists.
The Diyala excavations were important in raising the bar
in Mesopotamian archaeology. The OI expedition advanced the excavations
techniques developed by the Germans at the turn of the century at sites
such as Ashur and Babylon, especially the painstaking task of
uncovering mud-brick structures, as well as accurate and detailed
recording of finds based on excavation loci. As a result, the numerous
publications presenting the results of the OI excavations at the Diyala
region (cf. Frankfort 1939, 1943, 1955; Frankfort et al. 1940; Delougaz
1940, 1952; Delougaz and Lloyd 1942; Delougaz et al. 1967; Hill et al.
1990) are still highly regarded in Near Eastern archaeological
community as models of superb reports.
By 1930, the OI expeditions were engaged in field research
in Mesopotamia, Anatolia, Palestine, and Egypt. The only major land not
yet explored was Persia. Establishing a foothold in Iran was important
for the OI for two reasons: first, the French had held a monopoly on
Iranian archaeology since 1896, an obstacle that the Americans were
eager to remove and begin exploring an archaeologically-rich land (Majd
2003); second, the long-time rivalry between the OI and the University
of Pennsylvania Museum of Anthropology and Archaeology (henceforth
Penn) was reaching a critical point, especially over the most precious
prize to be claimed: the permit for excavations at Perseoplis.
The catalyst for the OI to enter into the field of
Iranian archaeology was Ernst Herzfeld, a noted scholar of many skills,
who had already been active in Iran for some thirty years (Gunter and
Hauser 2004). Breasted and Herzfeld knew each other through Eduard
Meyer, Herzfeld’s mentor at Berlin. When they met in Oxford in 1928,
Herzfeld shared with Breasted his plans for excavations at Persepolis
(Mousavi, 2004, p. 463). He also expressed his desire to work for the
OI, as opposed to Penn which was also entertaining the idea of
excavations at Persepolis and was apparently willing to provide
Herzfeld with more funding.
Shortly after the abolition of French monopoly on Iranian
archaeology and the ratification of the new Antiquities Laws in 1930,
Breasted applied to the Iranian government for a permit for excavations
and restorations at Persepolis on behalf of the OI. With permission
granted, Herzfeld was appointed by Breasted as the director of the OI
excavations at Persepolis. Herzfeld led the excavations at Persepolis
from 1931 to 1934 during which he cleared the Gate of All Nations, the
Apadana, the avenue and courtyard between the latter and the Hall of
One Hundred Columns, the so-called Harem building that was turned into
the dighouse, and parts of the fortification on the northern edge of
the terrace that led to the discovery of a large collection of tablets
known as Persepolis Fortification Tablets inscribed mainly in
Achaemenid Elamite (Hallock 1969) and impressed with an array of seals
(Garrison and Root 2002).
A series of mounting problems between Herzfeld and the
Iranian government, on one hand, and Herzfeld and the OI, on the other
(Mousavi 2004) including the fact that he did not publish much about
his excavations (Dusinberre 2004), led to Herzfeld’s replacement in
1934 by Erich F. Schmidt. Schmidt, who had already worked for Penn at
Fara (ancient Shuruppak in Mesopotamia), and Tappeh Hissar and Ray in
Iran, continued with excavations at Persepolis until the outbreak of
World War II in 1939, clearing a large part of the terrace buildings,
especially the Treasury (Schmidt 1939, 1953, 1957, 1970) that led to
the discovery of another, smaller group of tablets called Persepolis
Treasury Tablets (Cameron 1948) and a set of stone tableware with
Aramaic inscriptions (Bowman 1970) among other things.
In addition to Persepolis, Schmidt expanded OI’s field
research in Iran by expanding on Herzfeld’s earlier excavations at
Istakhr (Estaḵr) from 1934 to 1939, leading one of the first
expeditions to Lurestan in 1934-1935 and 1937-1938 (Schmidt, van Loon,
and Curvers 1989) and carrying out the first aerial reconnaissance in
western Iran from 1935 to 1937 (Schmidt 1940). During the excavations
at Persepolis, the OI team also excavated at the nearby site of Bakun
for two seasons, in 1932 under Alexander Langsdorff and Donald McCown
(Langsdorff and McCown 1942) and in 1937 under Schmidt and McCown
(Alizadeh 1992).
WorldWar II brought archaeological fieldwork in the
Near East by foreign expeditions to a halt. But the time was put into
good use by OI researchers on producing excavation reports and
analytical studies. Henri Frankfort (1897-1954) was arguably the
intellectual driving force at the OI in this period. A native of the
Netherlands, Frankfort, who joined the OI at the behest of Breasted to
lead the Iraq project, was already an experienced archaeologist with a
broad interest (van Loon 1995). After the Diyala project came to a
close, Frankfort moved to Chicago as a Research Professor at the OI
where he devoted his time to teaching, research, and writing. In 1939,
he organized a graduate seminar on comparative stratigraphy of
different regions of the Near East that led to two major monographs
synthesizing the available evidence from Iran (McCown 1942) and
Mesopotamia (Perkins 1949), still serving as the framework for the
culture history of the two regions. In his years at the OI, Frankfort
also produced some of his most outstanding analytical contributions to
Near Eastern studies (cf. Frankfort 1948, 1954; Frankfort et al. 1946).
A major development during the early post-War years was
the emergence of a younger generation of more
anthropologically-oriented archaeologists who were instrumental in
introducing the New Archaeology to the Near East. Most important among
the pioneers of the new approach were Robert J. Braidwood, Robert
McCormick Adams, and Karl Butzer. While professors at Department of
Anthropology, they also held positions at the OI (Adams even served as
the Director of the OI, 1962-68 and 1981-83) thus bringing these two
institutions closer together. From this fertile ground rose a new breed
of Near Eastern archaeologists including Frank Hole, Kent Flannery,
Patty Jo Watson, Henry Wright, and Charles Redman who, in turn, played
a crucial role in training students and introducing new concepts and
techniques to the traditionally conservative field of Near Eastern
archaeology (Hole 1995).
The first post-War OI field project was launched in Iran.
Donald McCown, a member of the Persepolis team under both Herzfeld and
Schmidt conducted a survey of the Ram-Hormuz Plain in eastern Khuzestan
and parts of lower Khuzestan between 1946 and 1948 (Alizadeh 1985) and
excavated at Tall-e Ghazir (Qasir) in 1947 and 1948 (McCown 1949;
Caldwell 1968).
From 1949 Robert Braidwood began a series of surveys and
test excavations in northern Mesopotamia aimed at exploring the
transitional period from food procurement to food production,
especially the questions of domestication of plants and animals and the
beginning of sedentary life (L. Braidwood et al. 1983). After several
seasons of excavations at a number of sites in Iraqi Kurdestan, the
work of Braidwood’s “Iraq-Jarmo Project” came to a halt with the 1958
coup in Iraq. The team was, however, invited by Ezat Negahban (a recent
graduate of the University of Chicago and then a faculty member at
Department of Archaeology, Tehran University and a Technical Advisor to
the Archaeological Service of Iran) to shift their work to Iran
(Braidwood and Braidwood 1999). The resulting “Iranian Prehistory
Project” conducted a series of surveys and text excavations in western
Iran, especially in the Central Zagros in 1959-60 (cf. R. Braidwood
1961) that still form the basis of our understanding of the Neolithic
and Chalcolithic periods of western Iran (Hole 1987).
While Braidwood later shifted his field research to
eastern Anatolia and began the “Joint Chicago-Istanbul Project,” work
continued in Iran by junior members of the Iranian Prehistory Project,
including a survey of the Susiana Plain by Robert McCormick Adams in
1960-61 (Adams 1962) followed in 1963 by test excavations at the
Sasanian site of Jundi Shapur (Adams and Hansen 1968), and excavations
in 1961 and 1963 at a number of sites on the Deh Luran Plain by Frank
Hole (a recent graduate of the University of Chicago) and Kent Flannery
(then a graduate student at the University of Chicago) (Hole, Flannery,
and Neely 1969). With Hole being hired by the Rice University and
Flannery by the University of Michigan, the “Prehistory of Southwestern
Iran Project” shifted into other orbits, while the OI maintained its
presence in Iranian archaeology with a long-term project at Chogha Mish
in Susiana.
Initiated by Pierre Delougaz in 1961, the Chogha Mish
project became the most enduring OI field research in Iran (Delougaz
and Kantor 1996). After the last season of excavations at Diyala,
Delougaz moved to Chicago and served as a professor of archaeology at
the OI from 1960 to 1967 when he moved to UCLA as a professor of Near
Eastern archaeology. While working in the Diyala, Delougaz developed a
keen interest in Proto-Literate period (now commonly called Late Uruk
and Jemdet Nasr periods in Mesopotamian chronology and Susa II-III in
Susiana chronology). Although Delougaz seems to have obtained a permit
from the Iranian government to conduct fieldwork in Khuzestan in 1947
(Delougaz and Kantor, 1996, p. xix), actual work at Chogha Mish did not
begin until 1961. Primarily aimed at studying the Proto-Literate
period, the project, with its excavations at Chogha Mish (Delougaz and
Kantor 1996) and the nearby sites of Chogha Bonut (Alizadeh 2003) and
Boneh Fazili, grew into a full-fledged study of the prehistoric Susiana
sequence dating back as far as the beginning of village period in the
seventh millennium B.C.E. This was due much to prehistoric interests of
Delougaz’s co-director, Helene J. Kantor (1919-1993), also a professor
at the OI, who took over the sole directorship of the project in 1975
after Delougaz passed away of a heart attack in the field in 1975.
In the meantime in Iraq, the OI continued its field
research in the Diyala region with a brief season in 1957-58 by
Thorkild Jacobsen and Robert McCormick Adams, exploring the patterns of
settlement and irrigation in the region from prehistoric to Islamic
times (Adams 1965; Jacobsen 1982). With this project also coming to a
halt with the 1958 coup, Jacobsen devoted his time to Assyriology
(Jacobsen 1995), while Adams divided his survey effort between Iran
(Adams 1962) and Iraq (Adams 1965, 1981; Adams and Nissen 1972; Yoffee
1997). Another OI team returned to the Diyala region some twenty years
later as part of the Hamrin Dam Salvage Project (Gibson 1981).
The most enduring OI project in Mesopotamia has been
excavations the at Nippur. After four seasons of excavations between
1889 and 1900 by the Babylonian Exploration Fund of the University of
Pennsylvania Museum of Anthropology and Archaeology (Zettler 1992), in
1948 a joint OI-Penn expedition resumed work at the site under Donald
McCown. The OI-Penn collaboration continued for three seasons, until
Penn withdrew in 1953, to be briefly replaced by the Baghdad School of
the American Schools of Oriental Research after which the OI continued
to work alone. Until the outbreak of the Persian Gulf War in 1991, the
OI carried out nineteen seasons of excavations at Nippur under a
succession of directors including Richard C. Haines, James Knudstad,
and McGuire Gibson (see Bregstein and Schneider 1992 for comprehensive
bibliography). In conjunction with the Nippur Project, Donald P. Hansen
carried out two seasons of excavations at Abu Salabikh in 1963 and 1965
(Biggs 1974).
Thanks to these and other archaeological projects, the OI
boasts one of the few museums in the world with its collection almost
entirely from proper excavations and therefore with reliable
provenience. This extraordinary advantage has given the OI Museum an
edge as an outstanding research and teaching tool. The extensive
renovation and addition of a new wing between 1996 and 2001 provided
the Museum with a more up-to-date exhibition of its collection and a
chance to put on display hitherto stored artifacts.
Apart from the major projects briefly discussed above,
over the years the OI has also sponsored many other smaller or
short-term archaeological projects, including the Nubian Project
(1960-64), the Yemen Project (under different rubrics, starting from
1978), the Al-Quseir Project (1978-80), and the Aqaba Project
(1986-93), as well as an array of projects of philological nature,
including the Coffin Texts Project, the Book of the Dead Project, the
Cushitic Lexicon Project (later renamed Afroasiatic Index Project), and
the Achaemenid Royal Inscriptions Project (a description of these and
other projects, as well as their bibliography, can be found at the OI
website: http://www.oi.uchicago.edu).
With the Iranian Revolution of 1979 and the Persian Gulf
War of 1990-91, work in Iran and Iraq, two major centers for
archaeological field research by the OI, came to a halt. While some of
the OI staff sought fieldwork opportunities elsewhere, Helene Kantor
continued with preparing the Chogha Mish reports (Delougaz and Kantor
1996), but with her death in 1993, the responsibility fell upon her
Iranian student Abbas Alizadeh (now a Senior Research Associate at the
OI) to see the reports to press. This coincided with relative easing
off of restrictions on archaeological activities by foreign or joint
expeditions in Iran, a development that Alizadeh put into good use by
reviving the Iranian Prehistory Project and conducting a series of
surveys and excavations, including a survey of the headwaters of the
Kur River in 1995 (Alizadeh 1995), to be followed by excavations at
Chogha Bonut in 1996 (Alizadeh 2003), survey and test excavations in
eastern Susiana in 2002 (Alizadeh et al. 2004), and excavations at
sites of Mushki, Jari, and Bakun in 2003 (Alizadeh 2004). Work in Iraq,
however, is still hampered (as of October 2005 when this entry is
prepared) as a result of the U.S. embargo on Iraq during the 1990s and
the 2003 U.S.-British invasion of Iraq and the ensuing turmoil.
Bibliography: Robert McC. Adams, “Agriculture and Urban Life in early Southwestern Iran,” Science 136, 1962, pp. 109-22. Idem, Land Behind Baghdad, Chicago, 1965. Idem, Heartland of Cities, Chicago, 1981. R. McC. Adams and Donald P. Hansen, “Archaeological Reconnaissance and Soundings in Jundi Shahpur,” Ars Orientalis 7, 1968, pp. 53-73.
R. McC. Adams and Hans J. Nissen, The Uruk Countryside, Chicago, 1972. Abbas Alizadeh, “Elymaean Occupation of Lower Khuzestan During the Seleucid and Parthian Periods: A Proposal,” Iranica Antiqua 20, 1985, pp. 175-195. Idem, “Tall-e Bakun,” The Oriental Institute Annual Report for 1991-1992, 1992, pp. 26-33. Idem, “Archaeological Surveys in Northwestern Fars, Iran,” The Oriental Institute Annual Report for 1994-1995, 1995, pp. 29-32. Idem, Excavations at the Prehistoric Mound of Chogha Bonut, Khuzestan, Iran, OIP 120, Chicago, 2003. Idem, “Recent Archaeological Investigations on the Persepolis Plain,” The Oriental Institute News and Notes 183,
2004, pp. 1-7. A. Alizadeh, N. Kouchoukos, T. J. Wilkinson, A. M.
Bauer, and M. Mashkour, “Human-Environment Interactions on the Upper
Khuzestan Plains, Southwestern Iran: Recent Investigations,” Paléorient 30/1, 2004, pp. 69-88. Edgar J. Banks, Bismaya or The Lost City of Adab, New York, 1912. Robert D. Biggs, Inscriptions from Tell Abu Salabikh, OIP 99, Chicago, 1974. Raymond A. Bowman, Aramaic Ritual Texts from Persepolis, OIP 91, Chicago, 1970. Linda S. Braidwood, R. J. Braidwood, B. Howe, C. A. Reed, and P. J. Watson (eds.), Prehistoric Archaeology Along the Zagros Flanks, OIP 105, Chicago, 1983. Robert J. Braidwood, “The Iranian Prehistoric Project, 1959-1960,” Iranica Antiqua 1, 1961, pp. 3-7. R.J. Braidwood and Linda S. Braidwood, “Ezat Negahban and the Oriental Institute’s Prehistoric Project,” The Iranian World: Essays on Iranian Art and Archaeology Presented to Ezat O. Negahban, Abbas Alizadeh, Yousef Majidzadeh, and Sadegh Malek Shahmirzadi (eds.), Tehran, 1999, pp. 1-4. Charles Breasted, Pioneer to the Past: The Story of James Henry Breasted, Archaeologist Told by His Son Charles Breasted, New York, 1943. James H. Breasted, Ancient Times: A History of the Early World, Boston, 1916. Idem, The Oriental Institute of the University of Chicago: A Beginning and a Program, OIC 1, Chicago, 1922. Linda B. Bregstein, and Tammi J. Schneider, “Nippur Bibliography,” Nippur at the Centennial: Papers Read at the 35e Rencontre Assyriologique Internationale, Philadelphia, 1988, Maria de Jong Ellis (ed.), Philadelphia, 1992, pp. 337-64. Joseph R. Caldwell, “Tell-i Ghazir,” Reallexikon der Assyriologie und Vorderasiatischen Archäologie 3, 1968, pp. 349-55. George G. Cameron, Persepolis Treasury Tablets, OIP, Chicago, 1948. Peter T. Daniels, ‘"We Can Do It.’: Chicago Oriental Studies before the Oriental Institute,” The Oriental Institute Annual Report for 1978-1979, 1979, pp. 4-17. Pinhas P. Delougaz, The Temple Oval at Khafajah, OIP 53, Chicago, 1940. Idem, Pottery from the Diyala Region, OIP 63, Chicago, 1952. Idem, Private Houses and Graves in the Diyala Region, OIP 88, Chicago, 1967. P.P. Delougaz and Helene J. Kantor, Chogha Mish, Vol. I: The First Five Seasons, 1961-1971, OIP 101, Chicago, 1996. P.P. Delougaz and Seton Lloyd, Pre-Sargonid Temples in the Diyala Region, OIP 58, Chicago, 1942. Elspeth R. M. Dusinberre, “Herzfeld in Persepolis,” Ernst Herzfeld and the Development of Near Eastern Studies, 1900-1950, Ann C. Gunter, and S. R. Hauser (eds.), Leiden and Boston, 2004, pp. 137-80. Henri Frankfort, Sculpture of the Third Millennium B.C. from Tell Asmar and Khafajah, OIP 44, Chicago, 1939. Idem, More Sculpture from the Diyala Region, OIP 60, Chicago, 1943. Idem, Kingship and the Gods: A Study of Ancient Near Eastern Religion as the Integration of Society and Nature, OIE, Chicago, 1948. Idem, The Art and Architecture of the Ancient Orient, Baltimore, 1954. 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(Kamyar Abdi)
October 18, 2005
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