Digital Logos Edition
A Popular Account of Discoveries at Nineveh offers an abridged version of Layard’s research and findings originally presented in Nineveh and Its Remains. It details his journey through Assyrian lands, his encounters with desert tribes, and his archaeological work and findings. This volume includes woodcut illustrations and an index.
Be sure to check out Austen Henry Layard Collection (10 vols.).
Austen Henry Layard (1817–1894) was born in Paris, but he traveled often in his youth. He was educated in Italy, England, Switzerland, and France. After spending six years working for his uncle’s law firm, he left to travel and explore the Middle East. After his first successful excavations at Kuyunjik and Nimrud, Layard continued his archeological explorations at the ruins of Babylon and the mounds of southern Mesopotamia. (Many of the specimens that he found make up a large part of the British Museum’s collection of Assyrian antiquities.) Layard then returned to England, where he took up a life of politics, serving as under-secretary for foreign affairs and ambassador at Constantinople. Layard retired in Italy, where he continued to write about Italian art and penned the popular account of his earliest travels, Early Adventures in Persia, Susiana, and Babylonia.