Mosul Museum eagle prior to reconstruction. From Safar and Mustafa, Hatra: The City of the Sun God, pl. 133, p. 143.
4 reliefs on the black wall between the king of hatra and the lyed down statu
Small statue of lion. This lion was published by Safar and Mustafa.Ref:Hatra: The City of the Sun God, pl. 187, p. 198 Source:https://gatesofnineveh.wordpress.com/
A replica represents a seated goddess
9 offering tables with cuneiform inscription were decorating Mosul Cultural Museum entrance -Khorsabad-back to the modern Assyrian period-Limestone
Different shoots - the Museum's exterior
The Museum's exterior
Room with venus, king of Hatra etc... Main place of destruction displary in ISIS video. Real name to add
An incense table decorated with bas-relief depicts god Nirgul( the god of underworld) -Ce. AD 2nd
The beauty goddess of Hatra( Atara'ta)-Ce AD 2nd century
A nobleman with fine cloths rising his right hand in salute and holding a wrapped bag-The stage of lords-1st Ce. AD
Statue of Venus + other element in background [7] Safar and Mustafa, Hatra: The City of the Sun God, pl. 84, p. 110.
Next to Hercules statue. Dr. Lucinda Dirven writes that this eagle relief was discovered during excavations at the north gate of the city and was not published until 1978. Ref: Wathiq Isma’il al-Salihi, “Inscriptions from Hatra,” Sumer 34, No. 1 (1978): 69; al-Salihi, “Hatra – Excavations in the Southern Gate – A Preliminary Report,” Sumer 36, No. 1 (1980): 158-189, pl. 3-4 [both in Arabic]; Aggoula, Inventaire des inscriptions hatréennes (Paris: P. Geuthner, 1991), 155, pl. XXVI; Inscription published in: Basile Aggoula, “Remarques sur les inscriptions hatréennes (VI),” Syria 58. No. 3/4 (1981): 363-378; Aggoula, “Remarques sur les inscriptions hatréennes. XIII Ibr. IX, XIV, XX, XXI,” Syria 64. No. 3/4 (1987): 223-229; J.B. Segal, “Arabs at Hatra and the Vicinity: Marginalia on new Aramaic Texts,” Journal of Semitic Studies 31 (1986): 57-80; Klaus Beyer, Die aramäischen Inschriften aus Assur, Hatra und dem übrigen Ostmesopotamien (Göttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 1998), p. 90.(Source:https://gatesofnineveh.wordpress.com/)