sir leonard woolley การใช้
- Its remains were excavated in the 1920s and 1930s by Sir Leonard Woolley.
- Soon after she married my son, whom she had met in Mesopotamia while he was working under Sir Leonard Woolley.
- The first volume of the " Unesco History of Mankind " which she wrote with Sir Leonard Woolley appeared in 1963.
- In the Archeology report, Lapatin quotes from the memoirs of Sir Leonard Woolley, who excavated Ur in Mesopotamia, and saw firsthand the " unmasking of a forger's factory ."
- From 1921 to 1936 an Egypt Exploration Society expedition returned to excavation at Amarna under the direction of T . E . Peet, Sir Leonard Woolley, Henri Frankfort, Stephen Glanville and John Pendlebury.
- His tomb, discovered by English archaeologist Sir Leonard Woolley in the Royal Cemetery of Ur in 1924, contained numerous gold artifacts including a golden helmet with an inscription of the king's name.
- She was the inspiration for the murder victim in the novel " Murder in Mesopotamia " by Agatha Christie; Christie's second marriage in 1930 was to Max Mallowan, Sir Leonard Woolley's assistant at Ur.
- The first medal was awarded to Petrie himself ( 1925 ), and the first few recipients included Sir Aurel Stein ( 1928 ), Sir Arthur Evans ( 1931 ), Abb?Henri Breuil ( 1934 ), Prof J . B . Wace ( 1953 ), Sir Leonard Woolley ( 1957 ).
- Such anthropomorphic figures, merging animal and human features, may be seen in the top and bottom registers of the trapezoidal front panel of the famous Great Lyre from the " King's Grave " ( circa 2650 2550 B . C . ), which was discovered by British archaeologist Sir Leonard Woolley early in the twentieth century at Ur in present-day Iraq.
- The First Dynasty of Ur is believed to have flourished circa 2600 BCE circa 2500 BCE . Meskalamdug is the first archaeologically recording king of the city-state of Ur who does not appear in the SKL . His tomb ( discovered by English archaeologist Sir Leonard Woolley in the Royal Cemetery of Ur in 1924 CE ) contained numerous gold artifacts including a golden helmet with an inscription of the king's name.