A shattered stone carving once displayed in the palace of the Assyrian king Sennacherib may have preserved the earliest known depiction of Jerusalem, according to new research that has sparked debate among historians and archaeologists.
Ishtartv.com –arkeonews.net
15 March 2026
A shattered stone carving once displayed in the palace of
the Assyrian king Sennacherib may have preserved the earliest known
depiction of Jerusalem, according to new research that has sparked debate among
historians and archaeologists.
The bas-relief, which originally adorned the throne room of
Sennacherib’s palace in ancient Nineveh, near modern Mosul in Iraq,
was among thousands of priceless artifacts destroyed by Islamic State (ISIS)
militants in 2016. Yet photographs, drawings, and earlier archaeological
documentation have allowed scholars to revisit the imagery and propose a
striking reinterpretation.
A recent study argues that the relief may depict Jerusalem
during the Assyrian campaign of 701 BCE, potentially pushing back the earliest
known visual representation of the city by more than a millennium.
The findings were widely discussed following coverage
in The Times of Israel, which highlighted the significance—and
controversy—surrounding the new interpretation.
A Lost Relief from Sennacherib’s Throne Room
Sennacherib, who ruled the Neo-Assyrian Empire from
705 to 681 BCE, commissioned elaborate stone reliefs throughout his vast palace
complex at Nineveh. These carvings illustrated military campaigns across the
Near East and served as powerful propaganda celebrating Assyrian imperial
dominance.
The king’s throne room alone once contained at least 33
carved panels depicting victories and sieges across Phoenicia, Philistia,
and the Kingdom of Judah.
Many of these reliefs were excavated by British
archaeologists during the nineteenth century. Several were transported to
London, where they remain in the collections of the British Museum, including
the famous reliefs showing the destruction of the Judean city of Lachish.
However, not all carvings survived. Some remained in Iraq,
including a relief known to scholars as “Slab 28.” This panel was largely
overlooked for decades and ultimately destroyed during the Islamic State’s
campaign to eradicate ancient cultural heritage across northern Iraq.
Ironically, the destruction has prompted renewed scrutiny of
surviving photographs and drawings of the slab.
A Radical Reinterpretation
The new interpretation comes from researcher Stephen Compton
of the University of South Africa, who reexamined historic images of the relief
before its destruction.
Compton argues that the carving does not depict the
Philistine city of Eltekeh, as long assumed, but instead represents Jerusalem
during Sennacherib’s siege in 701 BCE.
If correct, this would make the relief the oldest known
visual representation of Jerusalem, predating the famous Madaba Map—a
sixth-century Byzantine mosaic in Jordan—by roughly 1,200 years.
Several features of the relief support Compton’s hypothesis.
Unlike typical Assyrian siege scenes that depict cities
being burned and looted, the city in Slab 28 appears intact and orderly,
surrounded by the Assyrian army but not destroyed.
This detail closely matches historical accounts of
Sennacherib’s campaign.
Assyrian inscriptions record that the king trapped Hezekiah
of Judah inside Jerusalem but did not capture the city itself. In the Assyrian
annals, Sennacherib famously boasts that he “shut up Hezekiah in Jerusalem like
a bird in a cage.”
Biblical sources similarly describe a siege that ultimately
ended without Jerusalem being conquered.
According to Compton, the relief also includes a solitary
figure standing atop a building, holding what appears to be a royal standard—a
symbol often associated with kingship.
He suggests this figure may represent King Hezekiah, the
ruler of Judah during the Assyrian invasion.
Compton notes the presence of distinctive corbelled towers,
structures whose upper levels extend outward beyond their base. This unusual
design appears in only a few Assyrian reliefs, including those depicting the
Judean city of Lachish.
If the same architectural style appears in multiple scenes
connected to Judah, Compton argues, it strengthens the possibility that Slab 28
also portrays a Judean city—potentially Jerusalem itself.
The layout of the scene also appears to show a large open
space between the city wall and a major building, which Compton interprets as
the dry moat separating the Temple Mount from the City of David.
This perspective would match the northern approach taken by
the Assyrian army during the campaign.
Scholars Remain Skeptical
Not all experts are convinced by this reinterpretation.
Assyriologist Prof. Danel Kahn of the University of Haifa
has publicly rejected Compton’s conclusions. In comments reported by The
Times of Israel, Kahn argued that the landscape shown in the relief resembles
the lowland plains of Philistia, not the mountainous terrain surrounding
Jerusalem.
Instead, Kahn believes the relief likely represents Ekron,
another Philistine city whose ruler was restored to power by Sennacherib after
supporting Assyria.
Kahn also notes that the relief appears on the same wall as
scenes depicting a battle between Assyrian forces and Egyptian troops near
Eltekeh, suggesting the city portrayed should be located in the same region.
Other scholars remain unconvinced as well. German
Assyriologist Stefan Maul of Heidelberg University has stated that he finds the
arguments identifying the relief as Jerusalem unpersuasive.
The debate illustrates the challenges of interpreting
ancient art—especially when the original artifact has been destroyed.
Reconstructing What ISIS Destroyed
Today, archaeologists are working to reconstruct fragments
of the destroyed reliefs from Nineveh.
Since the defeat of Islamic State forces in Mosul in 2017,
international teams have been carefully documenting and preserving what remains
of the palace.
Researchers have recovered thousands of fragments, including
more than 8,500 large pieces and over 10,000 smaller fragments from the
shattered carvings.
Reconstruction is slow and painstaking. Each fragment must
be cleaned, measured, catalogued, and stored before attempts can be made to
reassemble portions of the reliefs.
Despite the immense damage, archaeologists believe the
effort is essential.
The destruction of Nineveh’s reliefs was intended to erase
the region’s ancient heritage. Reconstructing the fragments ensures that the
historical record—and the civilizations that created it—will endure.
A Debate That May Continue for Years
Whether Slab 28 truly depicts Jerusalem may remain
unresolved for years to come.
Yet the debate highlights the extraordinary historical value
of Assyrian palace reliefs, which combine imperial propaganda with remarkably
detailed depictions of cities, architecture, and warfare in the ancient Near
East.
If Compton’s interpretation ultimately proves correct, the
destroyed relief from Nineveh would represent the earliest known visual
depiction of Jerusalem, offering a rare glimpse into how the Assyrians
themselves viewed one of the most significant cities in biblical history.
For now, the shattered stone panel continues to provoke
discussion—reminding scholars how much knowledge can still emerge from
artifacts long thought lost.
Armstrong Institute of Biblical Archaeology
Cover Image Credit: Photo of Slab 28 taken by John M.
Russell in 1990. John M. Russell
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