Nimrud ivories
0 sources
Nimrud ivories
Summary
Nimrud ivories is an archaeological artefact[1]. It draws 46 Wikipedia views per month (archaeological_artefact category, ranking #46 of 232).[2]
Key Facts
- Nimrud ivories is located in Baghdad[3].
- Nimrud ivories is located in London[4].
- Nimrud ivories is in the country of United Kingdom[5].
- Nimrud ivories's image is recorded as Nimrud ivory lion eating a man.jpg[6].
- Nimrud ivories's instance of is recorded as archaeological artefact[7].
- Nimrud ivories's instance of is recorded as Ancient Levantine ivory[8].
- Nimrud ivories's made from material is recorded as ivory[9].
- Nimrud ivories's collection is recorded as National Museum of Iraq[10].
- Nimrud ivories's collection is recorded as British Museum[11].
- Nimrud ivories's location is recorded as Nimrud[12].
- Nimrud ivories's Commons category is recorded as Nimrud ivories[13].
- -0900-00-00T00:00:00Z marks the founding of Nimrud ivories[14].
- Nimrud ivories's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/0gh8swk[15].
- Nimrud ivories's time period is recorded as Assyrian Empire[16].
- Nimrud ivories's World History Encyclopedia ID is recorded as article/784/the-nimrud-ivories-their-discovery--history/[17].
Body
Geography
Nimrud ivories is in the country of United Kingdom[5]. Located in include Baghdad[3], a big city[18], in Iraq[19], founded in 0762[20] and London[4], a metropolis[21], in Roman Empire[22], founded in 0047[23].
Designation and Status
Recorded instance of include archaeological artefact[7] and Ancient Levantine ivory[8].
History and Context
-0900-00-00T00:00:00Z marks the founding of Nimrud ivories[14].
Why It Matters
Nimrud ivories draws 46 Wikipedia views per month (archaeological_artefact category, ranking #46 of 232).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 6 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[24]