Baghdad Iraq 33.31667 44.36667

Zone des éléments

Référentiel

Code

Note(s) sur la portée et contenu

    Note(s) sur la source

      Note(s) d'affichage

        Termes hiérarchiques

        Baghdad Iraq 33.31667 44.36667

          Termes équivalents

          Baghdad Iraq 33.31667 44.36667

            Termes associés

            Baghdad Iraq 33.31667 44.36667

              3 Description archivistique résultats pour Baghdad Iraq 33.31667 44.36667

              3 résultats directement liés Exclure les termes spécifiques
              GB 891 RAS GOV7-RAS GOV7/5 · Dossier · 27th Nov 1846
              Fait partie de Royal Asiatic Society Governance: Correspondence Volume Two

              'Extract from a letter addressed to Mr(Edwin) Norris by Major Rawlinson, dated Baghdad, 27 November 1846' in which he writes of inscriptions - that he thinks they may be relatively easy to interpret but that the language seems to be a compound of Turkish and Armenian and the names are apparently historical Kings of Armenia. He also writes of the progress of the excavations at Nineveh.

              Sans titre
              GB 891 RAS GOV7-RAS GOV7/6 · Dossier · 7th Dec 1846
              Fait partie de Royal Asiatic Society Governance: Correspondence Volume Two

              'Extract from a letter from Major Rawlinson to Mr (Edwin) Norris, dated Baghdad, 7 December 1846' in which he writes of his discovered inscriptions that their language is different to Babylonian though written in Babylonian characters. He thinks Assyrian is a connecting link and that old Egyptian may aid in deciphering. He is waiting for mail to come from Syria and hopes there will be something from Norris on the Babylonian excavations.

              Sans titre
              GB 891 RAS GOV7-RAS GOV7/12 · Dossier · 27th Apr 1847
              Fait partie de Royal Asiatic Society Governance: Correspondence Volume Two

              'Extract from a letter addressed by Major Rawlinson to Mr Norris, dated Baghdad, 27 April 1847' in which he writes of Dr Hincks' discovery of the numerals of cuneiform of which he has no doubt that Hincks is right. He continues to write of the information he has been able to interpret from the inscriptions and his deciphering of some of the symbols.

              Sans titre