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Bahija Khalil Ismail

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Bahija Khalil Ismail
Born
بهيجة خليل إسماعيل الجراح

1934
Baghdad, Kingdom of Iraq
DiedJanuary 13, 2019(2019-01-13) (aged 84–85)
Amman, Jordan
NationalityIraqi
OccupationMuseum director

Bahija Khalil (1934 – January 13, 2019) was an Iraqi Assyriologist and director of the Iraq Museum from 1983 to 1989. She was the first woman director of the museum.

Life

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Khalil was born in Baghdad in 1934. She obtained her first degree in archaeology at the University of Baghdad. She studied further in Germany where she gained her Ph.D from Humboldt University after studying cuneiform writing in 1967. She became the first Iraqi archaeologist reading the scripts in Iraq and the first Iraqi student to obtain a doctorate in Archaeology from Germany. She carried out post-doctoral research at the University of Baghdad.

She became the director of the Iraqi Museum in 1983. She was first woman director[1] and she held that role until 1989. Her position is a matter of pride in Iraq where her appointment together with many others is seen as a first for Iraq in the Arab world.[2]

She and Nicolas Postgate published "Texts in the Iraq Museum: Texts from Niniveh" in 1994.[3]

She published Eine zweisprachige Hymne aus dem Haus des Beschwörungspriesters in 1998 in German. This concerns a hymn that is in two different languages.[4]

Khalil died in Amman in 2019.

Works

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  • Mittelassyrische Keilschrifttexte aus Assurien, 1967[5]
  • Eine zweisprachige Hymne aus dem Haus des Beschwörungspriesters, 1998[4]
  • Obelisk of Hammurabi (1980).
  • The role of Assyrian colonies in Anatolia, (1981)
  • Medicine: Its Role and Status in the Civilization of Iraq, (1989)
  • Sokho and Mary Rulers (1990)
  • Writings from Nineveh (1992)

References

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  1. ^ "Iraqi 'treasure' Lamia Al Gailani Werr dies in Amman". The National. Retrieved 2019-12-06.
  2. ^ "Barham Salih supports the Iraqi woman and recalls her history". Altaghier TV News. 2019-03-12. Retrieved 2019-12-07.
  3. ^ Zaybāri, Akram; Dijk, J. J. A. van (1964). Texts in the Iraq Museum: Texts from Niniveh, by Nicolaus Postgate, Bahija Khalil Ismail. Directorate General of Antiquities.
  4. ^ a b Ismail, Bahija Khalil (1998). Eine zweisprachige Hymne aus dem Haus des Beschwörungspriesters (in German). University of Hiroshima. Faculty of Letters. Department of Linguistics.
  5. ^ Ismail-Sabir, Bahija Khalil (1967). Mittelassyrische Keilschrifttexte aus Assurien (in German).