Abstract
This paper draws attention to a few objects and items of information which should have been included in a previous study on Nineveh and its neighbourhood during the Post-Assyrian and Greco-Parthian periods (Reade 1998). For earlier periods, see now the Reallexikon der Assyriologie entry on Nineveh (Reade 2000), although this regrettably cites only once an important volume of papers edited by Parpola and Whiting (1997); for later periods the Mosul entry in the Encyclopaedia of Islam is invaluable (Honigmann and Bosworth 1991). References below to museum objects, archives, drawings and photographs are all to the collections of the British Museum; they are kept unless otherwise stated in the Department of the Ancient Near East (formerly Western Asiatic Antiquities), and are published by courtesy of the Trustees of the British Museum.
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