The Islamic State, or ISIS, has destroyed the Assyrian walls of Nineveh in Mosul, Iraq, according to a report on Thursday.
The walls date back to about 700 BC, when the ancient Assyrian civilization flourished in Iraq. Nineveh was the capital of the Assyrian and Neo-Assyrian empires, which fell in 605 BC.
The Assyrian International News Agency, citing “specialized sources,” reported that militants with ISIS destroyed “much of the historic city wall located on Tahrir neighborhood on the left coast of Mosul” on Tuesday. A historian living in Mosul made the discovery.
Tragic if true: jihadists destroy ancient walls of Nineveh in Iraq http://t.co/27xq3e6Di3 pic.twitter.com/RaHOhie2Iq
— Tim Stanley (@timothy_stanley) January 28, 2015
http://t.co/3YeuSsDsDO like naughty children they got to blow something up make them think they are still powerful, pic.twitter.com/EyQHLGsjYY
— IS is terrorist (@_ISisterrorist_) January 29, 2015