Abstract

One need only point to the destruction caused to the archaeological sites of Iraq and Syria by Islamic State to see an example of the role heritage plays in the construction of identities, and of a past serving a contemporary agenda. Credit for the ‘discovery’ of the antiquities of Mesopotamia goes to Paul-Emile Botta (1802–1870), and Austen Henry Layard (1817–1894). Most British scholars had long considered the Mesopotamian antiquities to be inferior to Greco-Roman antiquities. Before the 1840’s, this group of upper-class critics had been the most important public of the British Museum. During the middle of the nineteenth-century, however, Layard’s Assyrian remains became both symbols of, and stakes in, a struggle for wider public access. Their rejection by the critics was contrasted with both historical and aesthetic admiration by the middle- and working classes. Simultaneously, the critics stood on one side of a developing rift between themselves and the archaeologists of a new discipline. In this article I analyse the appraisal of the Mesopotamian sculptures through a critical appraisal of the historiography and an analysis of the Layard Papers, in order to gain a better insight into the reception of the Assyrian antiquities in Victorian Great-Britain.

Highlights

  • ‘Nineveh, the great city “of three days’ journey,” that was “laid waste and there was none to bemoan her,” whose greatness sank when that of Rome had just begun to rise, stands forth again to testify to her own splendor, and to the civilization and power and magnificence of the Assyrian Empire.’

  • Almost all of Layard’s works (1849a, 1849b, 1851, 1853, 1887, 1903) became best-sellers, despite the fact that British classical scholars and art critics considered the Mesopotamian antiquities to be unworthy of comparison with those of the Greco-Roman world

  • Hoeks: ‘Many Great Treasures’ of ‘Great Beauty’, or ‘Crude and Cramped’? The Appraisal of ‘Nineveh’s Remains’ by Austen Henry Layard, Stratford Canning, and Henry Rawlinson his publisher, John Murray (1808–1892), urged Layard to write a popular version of Nineveh and its Remains: A ­popular account of discoveries at Nineveh (Bohrer, 2003, p. 40 and 106–114; Layard, 1849a, 1851)

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Summary

Bulletin oftheHistoryof Archaeology

RESEARCH PAPER ‘Many Great Treasures’ of ‘Great Beauty’, or ‘Crude and Cramped’? The Appraisal of ‘Nineveh’s Remains’ by Austen Henry Layard, Stratford Canning, and Henry Rawlinson

Robin Hoeks
Conclusion
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