British Institute for the Study of Iraq

The British Institute for the Study of Iraq (BISI) funds and carries out research and public education on Iraq. They were founded in 1932, as the British School of Archaeology in Iraq, in memory of the renowned archaeologist and explorer Gertrude Bell. BISI’s academic coverage includes the anthropology, archaeology, history, geography and languages of Iraq and other fields in the arts, humanities and social sciences, from the earliest times until the present.

Abu Salabikh Excavations Vol 4

The 6G Ash-Tip and its Contents: cultic and administrative discard from the temple?
Format: Paperback
Pages: 234
ISBN: 9780903472135
Pub Date: 01 Dec 1993
Illustrations: 98pls
Description:
Volume four in the British School of Archaeology in Iraq's study of the city of Abu Salabikh. Volume Four is a two-volume set, with the first book containing the text and the second book containing the plates.
Excavations at Tell Rubeidheh Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 210
ISBN: 9780856684319
Pub Date: 01 Nov 1989
Series: Iraq Archaeological Reports
Description:
A report on the excavation of an Uruk period mound dug as part of the Hamrin Dam rescue project in East Iraq. It includes sections on the archaeology, finds, animal bones and flints.
Excavations at Ana Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 192
ISBN: 9780856684258
Pub Date: 01 Feb 1988
Series: Iraq Archaeological Reports
Illustrations: 16 plates, 57 figures
Description:
This was a rescue project in the basin of the Qadisiyya Dam recently completed at Haditha. Qal'at 'Ana is an island in the stream of the Euphrates, the site of the ancient and medieval city of 'Ana, since the 17th century downgraded to a village and palm-gardens, while the town moved to the right bank. 'Ana, on the Middle Euphrates some 150 km below the modern Iraqi-Syrian border, a very beautiful place, was the centre of an autonomous governorate under the Assyrians, a border fortress under the Parthians, Romans and Sasanians, and a caravan town and bedouin centre under Islam.